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The San Diego Symphony’s musicians are trained at the finest music institutions from all over the world
TO BRING THE
WORLD OF MUSIC
to you.
This season we celebrate the remarkable musicians of the San Diego Symphony and their extraordinary performances, which are sure to engage, enlighten, surprise and delight you. Our new season includes the first concerts conducted by Rafael Payare as our new Music Director Designate. Also, piano superstar Lang Lang performs in a celebratory opening concert, Edo de Waart returns to conduct Mahler's Fourth Symphony and Joshua Bell performs under the baton of Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling. Conductor Robert Spano, famed for his tenure with the Atlanta Symphony, comes to San Diego with a program of Beethoven and Vaughan Williams, and Speranza Scappucci will conduct the rarely performed Puccini early work Messa di Gloria with the San Diego Master Chorale.
But what really makes our concerts special every season is the artistry and dedication of our musicians. From beloved classical repertoire to soaring film scores performed as the movie is projected on the big screen, to family concerts, to the intimacy of chamber music, the musicians of the San Diego Symphony—your symphony orchestra—continue to astound us with their musicality and virtuosity. Join us this season to experience your favorite music, as well as some beautiful works you may not be familiar with, but which we know you will come to love. This is a season to embrace the beauty of music and to celebrate the very talented musicians of the San Diego Symphony.
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Internationally acclaimed conductor Rafael Payare will become the San Diego Symphony’s next music director THIS SEASON, HE CONDUCTS FOUR CONCERTS IN JANUARY
On July 1, 2019, Rafael Payare will become the 13th music director in the San Diego Symphony’s 108-year history.
began his formal conducting studies in 2004 with
Since being awarded first prize at the Malko
the Simon Bolivar Orchestra, he took part in many
Conducting Competition in 2012, Payare has been celebrated as one of the most exciting conductors of his generation. He has appeared with many orchestras internationally including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Vienna Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Pittsburgh Symphony, Cincinnati Symphony, London Symphony Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, Rotterdam Philharmonic, City of Birmingham Symphony, Oslo Philharmonic, Gothenburg Symphony and the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra,
José Antonio Abreu. He has conducted all the major orchestras in Venezuela, including the Simón Bolívar Orchestra. Having also served as principal horn of prestigious tours and recordings with conductors, including Claudio Abbado, Lorin Maazel, Sir Simon Rattle, Gustavo Dudamel and Giuseppe Sinopoli. As San Diego Symphony’s music director, Payare will shape the musical vision for the orchestra moving forward. His international experience and profile will attract the very best orchestral players and guest artists to San Diego. In addition, his own personal story about the important role that music has played in his life supports his vision to reach into the community
amongst others.
to find new and enduring ways for the San Diego
Born in 1980 and a graduate of the celebrated
vibrancy of the San Diego community and region.
Venezuelan education program, El Sistema, Payare
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Symphony to play a greater role in the vitality and
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JOHN WILDS, SDSO
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ANDREW HAYHURST, SDSO
JOSHUA BELL, guest artist
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ROSE LOMBARDO, SDSO
SHERYL RENK, SDSO
JACOBS MASTERWORKS Highlights of the Jacobs Masterworks series this season include the first performances by Rafael Payare as Music Director Designate. The season also includes great symphonic masterworks, guest artists like Edo de Waart, Joshua Bell, Alisa Weilerstein and Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling. Take a moment to look over this season’s subscription series to select the concerts you’ll be looking forward to all year!
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FRIDAY AFICIONADO 14 CONCERTS | 8PM
OCT 12
NOV 16
DEC 7
Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody
Bernstein and His World
Vivaldi and Bach with Avi Avital
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
Steven Sloane, conductor Orli Shaham, piano
Johannes Debus, conductor Avi Avital, mandolin
MASON BATES: Garages of the Valley RACHMANINOFF: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini MOZART: Symphony No. 40
NOAM SHERIFF: Lenny (U.S. Premiere) COPLAND: Appalachian Spring IVES: The Unanswered Question BERNSTEIN: Symphony No. 2: The Age of Anxiety
PURCELL/Arr. Britten: Chacony VIVALDI: “Winter” from The Four Seasons ARENSKY: Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky J.S. BACH: Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052 LIADOV: The Enchanted Lake STRAVINSKY: Divertimento from The Fairy’s Kiss
Master conductor Edo de Waart opens this program with a work dedicated to him by one of today’s hottest composing talents, Mason Bates, while Joyce Yang continues her residency with Rachmaninoff’s beloved series of 24 variations on the Violin Caprice No. 24 by Niccolò Paganini.
NOV 2
Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New Work (Text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 7 The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
We continue our celebration of Bernstein@100 with works inspired by him and written by close colleagues. The urban sophistication of Bernstein’s own The Age of Anxiety, which is structured as a concerto for piano with orchestra, contrasts with the pastoral nostalgia invoked by Aaron Copland’s American masterpiece, Appalachian Spring.
NOV 30
Mozart and Dvořák Johannes Debus, conductor Jeff Thayer, violin LUTOSŁAWSKI: Little Suite MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 5: Turkish DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 6 Lutosławski wrote his charming Polish folk music-based Little Suite in response to criticism of his First Symphony as being “too modern." Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony brought him international recognition, and shows his developed style following German traditional form infused with Czech folk melodies. Concertmaster Jeff Thayer performs Mozart’s final violin concerto, which contains a hint of international influence in the final movement.
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Renowned artist Avi Avital performs two well-known Baroque concertos on the mandolin in his Jacobs Masterworks debut with the San Diego Symphony. The juxtaposition of baroque with Russian masterworks, including tributes by Arensky and Stravinsky to Tchaikovsky, creates a rich textural contrast.
JAN 11
Payare and Weilerstein Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10 Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
JAN 18
MAY 3
The Young Romantics
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony
Michael Francis, conductor Rodolfo Leone, piano
Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ
MENDELSSOHN: The Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave) LISZT: Piano Concerto No. 1 BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique
BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony
The Romantic movement was launched by the three early innovators on this program, who shook the world and shaped the future with these youthful masterworks, all originating in the bountiful year of 1830.
Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
JAN 25
Matt’s Playlist: Echoes of the Future
MAY 24
RAFAEL PAYARE, Music Director Designate
Matthew Aucoin, conductor Los Angeles Opera’s first ever “Artist-inResidence” Matthew Aucoin (b. 1990) has some music he wants to share with you — from the past, from the present and predicting the future.
FEB 15
Augustin Hadelich Returns Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
MAR 22
Puccini’s Glorious Mass Speranza Scappucci, conductor Leonardo Capalbo, tenor Daniel Okulitch, baritone Michael Sumuel, bass San Diego Master Chorale HAYDN: Symphony No. 88 PUCCINI: Messa di Gloria Opera genius Giacomo Puccini wrote his Messa di Gloria as a graduation exercise at the age of 22. In it we hear ideas that would later find their way to his well-loved operas. Italian conductor Speranza Scappucci, who is at home in the opera house or concert hall, makes her San Diego Symphony debut in these performances.
Edo de Waart, conductor Joélle Harvey, soprano
WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4
Pre-eminent conductor Edo de Waart, who thrilled San Diego audiences with his interpretation of Mahler’s First Symphony, returns for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Guest soprano Joélle Harvey, in her SDSO debut, also sings Barber’s haunting and nostalgic snapshot of early 20th century Tennessee.
SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
APR 12
Jahja Ling, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano
BARBER: Knoxville: Summer of 1915 MAHLER: Symphony No. 4
Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano
Ling Conducts Brahms
MAR 1
De Waart Conducts Mahler 4
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru
Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling has created a tradition in San Diego with his performances of the symphonies of Brahms. Polish-Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki makes his San Diego debut in the Second Concerto of Chopin, the recording of which brought Lisiecki to world-wide attention at the age of 14.
AUGUSTIN HADELICH, guest artist
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FRIDAY ALLEGRO
MOZART, BACH AND RACHMANINOFF, STARTING AT JUST
7 CONCERTS | 8PM
$126!
FEB 15
Augustin Hadelich Returns Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
KYLE COVINGTON, SDSO
OCT 12
DEC 7
Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody
Vivaldi and Bach with Avi Avital
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
Johannes Debus, conductor Avi Avital, mandolin
MASON BATES: Garages of the Valley RACHMANINOFF: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini MOZART: Symphony No. 40
PURCELL/Arr. Britten: Chacony VIVALDI: “Winter” from The Four Seasons ARENSKY: Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky J.S. BACH: Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052 LIADOV: The Enchanted Lake STRAVINSKY: Divertimento from The Fairy’s Kiss
Master conductor Edo de Waart opens this program with a work dedicated to him by one of today’s hottest composing talents, Mason Bates, while Joyce Yang continues her residency with Rachmaninoff’s beloved series of 24 variations on the Violin Caprice No. 24 by Niccolò Paganini.
NOV 16
Bernstein and His World Steven Sloane, conductor Orli Shaham, piano NOAM SHERIFF: Lenny (U.S. Premiere) COPLAND: Appalachian Spring IVES: The Unanswered Question BERNSTEIN: Symphony No. 2: The Age of Anxiety We continue our celebration of Bernstein@100 with works inspired by him and written by close colleagues. The urban sophistication of Bernstein’s own The Age of Anxiety, which is structured as a concerto for piano with orchestra, contrasts with the pastoral nostalgia invoked by Aaron Copland’s American masterpiece, Appalachian Spring.
Renowned artist Avi Avital performs two wellknown Baroque concertos on the mandolin in his Jacobs Masterworks debut with the San Diego Symphony. The juxtaposition of baroque with Russian masterworks, including tributes by Arensky and Stravinsky to Tchaikovsky, creates a rich textural contrast.
JAN 18
The Young Romantics Michael Francis, conductor Rodolfo Leone, piano MENDELSSOHN: The Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave) LISZT: Piano Concerto No. 1 BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique The Romantic movement was launched by the three early innovators on this program, who shook the world and shaped the future with these youthful masterworks, all originating in the bountiful year of 1830.
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MAR 22
Puccini’s Glorious Mass Speranza Scappucci, conductor Leonardo Capalbo, tenor Daniel Okulitch, baritone Michael Sumuel, bass San Diego Master Chorale HAYDN: Symphony No. 88 PUCCINI: Messa di Gloria Opera genius Giacomo Puccini wrote his Messa di Gloria as a graduation exercise at the age of 22. In it we hear ideas that would later find their way to his well-loved operas. Italian conductor Speranza Scappucci, who is at home in the opera house or concert hall, makes her San Diego Symphony debut in these performances.
MAY 3
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
FRIDAY RHAPSODY 7 CONCERTS | 8PM
NOV 2
Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New Work (Text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 7 The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
NOV 30
Mozart and Dvořák Johannes Debus, conductor Jeff Thayer, violin LUTOSŁAWSKI: Little Suite MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 5: Turkish DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 6 Lutosławski wrote his charming Polish folk music-based Little Suite in response to criticism of his First Symphony as being “too modern." Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony brought him international recognition, and shows his developed style following German traditional form infused with Czech folk melodies. Concertmaster Jeff Thayer performs Mozart’s final violin concerto, which contains a hint of international influence in the final movement.
JAN 11
Payare and Weilerstein Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello
JAN 25
MAY 24
Matt’s Playlist: Echoes of the Future
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru
Matthew Aucoin, conductor
Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano
Los Angeles Opera’s first ever “Artist-inResidence” Matthew Aucoin (b. 1990) has some music he wants to share with you — from the past, from the present and predicting the future.
MAR 1
De Waart Conducts Mahler 4 Edo de Waart, conductor Joélle Harvey, soprano
SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
BARBER: Knoxville: Summer of 1915 MAHLER: Symphony No. 4 Pre-eminent conductor Edo de Waart, who thrilled San Diego audiences with his interpretation of Mahler’s First Symphony, returns for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Guest soprano Joélle Harvey, in her SDSO debut, also sings Barber’s haunting and nostalgic snapshot of early 20th century Tennessee.
APR 12
Ling Conducts Brahms Jahja Ling, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4 Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling has created a tradition in San Diego with his performances of the symphonies of Brahms. Polish-Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki makes his San Diego debut in the Second Concerto of Chopin, the recording of which brought Lisiecki to world-wide attention at the age of 14.
R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10 Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
CATERINA LONGHI, SDSO
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WESLEY PRECOURT AND HANAH STUART, SDSO
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HEARING THE FUTURE January 2019 Festival
Sometimes a composer, early in his or her career, catches a glimpse of some musical development to come. Often it happens before the composer has all the tools to fully realize this vision: for example, Berlioz’s formal and sonic experiments appeared before he had a harmonic palette to match them; and Beethoven’s First Symphony contains tantalizing glimmers of the radical developments to come in his later symphonies. — MATTHEW AUCOIN, FESTIVAL CURATOR
For the month of January we explore the concept of “creation” and the artistic expression that springs from youthful composers and artists.
and the world stage reflects his youthful perspective with fervor and an infectious enthusiasm as to what is possible.
The first brush stroke on a canvas. The first note on a staff. The first sentence of a novel. The opening scene of a drama.
Michael Francis, Music Director of Mainly Mozart, takes us back to a single year nearly 200 years ago when three young composers stood at the beginning of their creative genius and compared notes. They learned the rules, then dared to break them.
Our exploration begins with the first concerts conducted by Rafael Payare, San Diego Symphony’s Music Director Designate. In two programs in the span of one week, Payare will provide a glimpse of his creative vision as our 13th Music Director.
Partnering with San Diego arts, film, educational and literary organizations, this festival of springtime hope and fearlessness will include programs throughout the region to explore the concept of youthful creative inspiration and the spark that connects us all through art.
Festival curator Matthew Aucoin is, at the age of 28, a passionate futurist. His outlook on music, theater, poetry
Join us as we examine where creative genius begins and how its ultimate expression profoundly changes lives.
Where does creativity begin and where does it go?
Stay tuned for the complete “Hearing the Future” festival line-up which will be available on our website at: sandiegosymphony.org/festival
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SATURDAY AFICIONADO
THE ULTIMATE MUSIC-LOVERS SERIES!
14 CONCERTS | 8PM
OCT 6
DEC 8
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
Vivaldi and Bach with Avi Avital
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
Johannes Debus, conductor Avi Avital, mandolin
MICHAEL IPPOLITO: Nocturne GRIEG: Piano Concerto BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7
PURCELL/Arr. Britten: Chacony VIVALDI: “Winter” from The Four Seasons ARENSKY: Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky J.S. BACH: Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052 LIADOV: The Enchanted Lake STRAVINSKY: Divertimento from The Fairy’s Kiss
One of the most acclaimed pianists of her generation returns to Copley Symphony Hall to perform music of Edvard Grieg as the first concert in her two-week residency on our Jacobs Masterworks opening. Beethoven’s immortal Seventh Symphony concludes the program.
NOV 17
Bernstein and His World Steven Sloane, conductor Orli Shaham, piano NOAM SHERIFF: Lenny (U.S. Premiere) COPLAND: Appalachian Spring IVES: The Unanswered Question BERNSTEIN: Symphony No. 2: The Age of Anxiety We continue our celebration of Bernstein@100 with works inspired by him and written by close colleagues. The urban sophistication of Bernstein’s own The Age of Anxiety, which is structured as a concerto for piano with orchestra, contrasts with the pastoral nostalgia invoked by Aaron Copland’s American masterpiece, Appalachian Spring.
Renowned artist Avi Avital performs two wellknown Baroque concertos on the mandolin in his Jacobs Masterworks debut with the San Diego Symphony. The juxtaposition of baroque with Russian masterworks, including tributes by Arensky and Stravinsky to Tchaikovsky, creates a rich textural contrast.
JAN 12
Payare and Weilerstein Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10 Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
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EDO DE WAART, guest artist
JAN 19
Beyond the Score®: Symphonie fantastique Michael Francis, conductor BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique Hector Berlioz’s passionate fever dreams changed the world of classical music forever when he unleashed his Symphonie fantastique onto unsuspecting audiences in 1830. This Beyond the Score® presentation dramatizes how this surprising symphony came to be.
FEB 16
Augustin Hadelich Returns Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
MAR 2
APR 13
MAY 18
De Waart Conducts Mahler 4
Ling Conducts Brahms
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5
Edo de Waart, conductor Joélle Harvey, soprano
Jahja Ling, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano
Gemma New, conductor Michael Barenboim, violin
BARBER: Knoxville: Summer of 1915 MAHLER: Symphony No. 4
WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4
ALYSSA WEINBERG: Reign of Logic (West Coast Premiere) GLAZUNOV: Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5
Pre-eminent conductor Edo de Waart, who thrilled San Diego audiences with his interpretation of Mahler’s First Symphony, returns for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Guest soprano Joélle Harvey, in her SDSO debut, also sings Barber’s haunting and nostalgic snapshot of early 20th century Tennessee.
Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling has created a tradition in San Diego with his performances of the symphonies of Brahms. Polish-Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki makes his San Diego debut in the Second Concerto of Chopin, the recording of which brought Lisiecki to world-wide attention at the age of 14.
MAR 9
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 Robert Spano, conductor Jorge Federico Osorio, piano CHRISTOPHER THEOFANIDIS: Dreamtime Ancestors BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 2 VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2: A London Symphony Atlanta Symphony Music Director and Aspen Music Festival Director Robert Spano conducts this concert featuring Mexican-born pianist Jorge Federico Osorio performing one of Beethoven’s earliest breakthrough works. Also on the program is a rare performance of Vaughan Williams’ evocative A London Symphony.
MAR 23
Puccini’s Glorious Mass Speranza Scappucci, conductor Leonardo Capalbo, tenor Daniel Okulitch, baritone Michael Sumuel, bass San Diego Master Chorale HAYDN: Symphony No. 88 PUCCINI: Messa di Gloria Opera genius Giacomo Puccini wrote his Messa di Gloria as a graduation exercise at the age of 22. In it we hear ideas that would later find their way to his well-loved operas. Italian conductor Speranza Scappucci, who is at home in the opera house or concert hall, makes her San Diego Symphony debut in these performances.
A concert that features three Jacobs Masterworks debuts! Gemma New makes her debut conducting a program which begins with the first San Diego performance of Alyssa Weinberg’s Reign of Logic. Described as “fearless … unapologetic … beautiful … transforming” (Kaleidoscope), Weinberg’s work is influenced by her collaborations in multiple artistic genres. Also making his debut, acclaimed violinist Michael Barenboim will perform Glazunov’s Violin Concerto written in 1904.
MAY 25
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano JAHJA LING, conductor laureate
APR 27
Danzmayr Conducts Sibelius David Danzmayr, conductor Benjamin Jaber, horn SIBELIUS: Finlandia JOHN WILLIAMS: Horn Concerto SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1 Principal Horn Benjamin Jaber is featured in a Horn Concerto by John Williams (yes, that John Williams) for this program that also includes two Jean Sibelius works most directly inspired by his Finnish nationalism.
SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
MAY 4
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
WESLEY PRECOURT, SDSO
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SATURDAY ALLEGRO 7 CONCERTS | 8PM
OCT 6
MAR 2
MAY 18
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
De Waart Conducts Mahler 4
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
Edo de Waart, conductor Joélle Harvey, soprano
Gemma New, conductor Michael Barenboim, violin
MICHAEL IPPOLITO: Nocturne GRIEG: Piano Concerto BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7
BARBER: Knoxville: Summer of 1915 MAHLER: Symphony No. 4
ALYSSA WEINBERG: Reign of Logic (West Coast Premiere) GLAZUNOV: Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5
One of the most acclaimed pianists of her generation returns to Copley Symphony Hall to perform music of Edvard Grieg as the first concert in her two-week residency on our Jacobs Masterworks opening. Beethoven’s immortal Seventh Symphony concludes the program.
DEC 8
Vivaldi and Bach with Avi Avital Johannes Debus, conductor Avi Avital, mandolin PURCELL/Arr. Britten: Chacony VIVALDI: “Winter” from The Four Seasons ARENSKY: Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky J.S. BACH: Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052 LIADOV: The Enchanted Lake STRAVINSKY: Divertimento from The Fairy’s Kiss Renowned artist Avi Avital performs two well-known Baroque concertos on the mandolin in his Jacobs Masterworks debut with the San Diego Symphony. The juxtaposition of baroque with Russian masterworks, including tributes by Arensky and Stravinsky to Tchaikovsky, creates a rich textural contrast.
Pre-eminent conductor Edo de Waart, who thrilled San Diego audiences with his interpretation of Mahler’s First Symphony, returns for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Guest soprano Joélle Harvey, in her SDSO debut, also sings Barber’s haunting and nostalgic snapshot of early 20th century Tennessee.
MAR 23
Puccini’s Glorious Mass Speranza Scappucci, conductor Leonardo Capalbo, tenor Daniel Okulitch, baritone Michael Sumuel, bass San Diego Master Chorale HAYDN: Symphony No. 88 PUCCINI: Messa di Gloria Opera genius Giacomo Puccini wrote his Messa di Gloria as a graduation exercise at the age of 22. In it we hear ideas that would later find their way to his well-loved operas. Italian conductor Speranza Scappucci, who is at home in the opera house or concert hall, makes her San Diego Symphony debut in these performances.
APR 13
Ling Conducts Brahms
JAN 19
Jahja Ling, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano
Michael Francis, conductor
WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4
Beyond the Score®: Symphonie fantastique BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique Hector Berlioz’s passionate fever dreams changed the world of classical music forever when he unleashed his Symphonie fantastique onto unsuspecting audiences in 1830. This Beyond the Score® presentation dramatizes how this surprising symphony came to be.
A concert that features three Jacobs Masterworks debuts! Gemma New makes her debut conducting a program which begins with the first San Diego performance of Alyssa Weinberg’s Reign of Logic. Described as “fearless … unapologetic … beautiful … transforming” (Kaleidoscope), Weinberg’s work is influenced by her collaborations in multiple artistic genres. Also making his debut, acclaimed violinist Michael Barenboim will perform Glazunov’s Violin Concerto written in 1904.
Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling has created a tradition in San Diego with his performances of the symphonies of Brahms. Polish-Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki makes his San Diego debut in the Second Concerto of Chopin, the recording of which brought Lisiecki to world-wide attention at the age of 14.
15 SUBSCRIBE TODAY SANDIEGOSYMPHONY.ORG / (619) 235-0804
JULIA PAUTZ, SDSO
SATURDAY RHAPSODY 7 CONCERTS | 8PM
NOV 17
Bernstein and His World Steven Sloane, conductor Orli Shaham, piano NOAM SHERIFF: Lenny (U.S. Premiere) COPLAND: Appalachian Spring IVES: The Unanswered Question BERNSTEIN: Symphony No. 2: The Age of Anxiety We continue our celebration of Bernstein@100 with works inspired by him and written by close colleagues. The urban sophistication of Bernstein’s own The Age of Anxiety, which is structured as a concerto for piano with orchestra, contrasts with the pastoral nostalgia invoked by Aaron Copland’s American masterpiece, Appalachian Spring.
MAR 9
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 Robert Spano, conductor Jorge Federico Osorio, piano CHRISTOPHER THEOFANIDIS: Dreamtime Ancestors BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 2 VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2: A London Symphony Atlanta Symphony Music Director and Aspen Music Festival Director Robert Spano conducts this concert featuring Mexican-born pianist Jorge Federico Osorio performing one of Beethoven’s earliest breakthrough works. Also on the program is a rare performance of Vaughan Williams’ evocative A London Symphony.
JAN 12
Payare and Weilerstein Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10 Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
FEB 16
Augustin Hadelich Returns Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
APR 27
Danzmayr Conducts Sibelius David Danzmayr, conductor Benjamin Jaber, horn SIBELIUS: Finlandia JOHN WILLIAMS: Horn Concerto SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1
SUSAN WULFF, SDSO
Principal Horn Benjamin Jaber is featured in a Horn Concerto by John Williams (yes, that John Williams) for this program that also includes two Jean Sibelius works most directly inspired by his Finnish nationalism.
MAY 4
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony
MAY 25
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
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JING YAN BOWCOTT, SDSO
BENJAMIN JABER, SDSO
HERNAN CONSTANTINO, SDSO
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JEFF THAYER, SDSO
AVI AVITAL, guest artist
MICHAEL FRANCIS, guest artist
SPERANZA SCAPPUCCI, guest artist
JOYCE YANG, guest artist
SUNDAY AFICIONADO
SPEND SUNDAY AFTERNOONS LISTENING TO SOME OF YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC FOR AS LITTLE AS
$238!
14 CONCERTS | 2PM
OCT 7
NOV 4
JAN 13
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev
Payare and Weilerstein
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano
Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello
MICHAEL IPPOLITO: Nocturne GRIEG: Piano Concerto BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7
JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New Work (Text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 7
R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10
One of the most acclaimed pianists of her generation returns to Copley Symphony Hall to perform music of Edvard Grieg as the first concert in her two-week residency on our Jacobs Masterworks opening. Beethoven’s immortal Seventh Symphony concludes the program.
OCT 14
Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano MASON BATES: Garages of the Valley RACHMANINOFF: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini W.A. MOZART: Symphony No. 40 Master conductor Edo de Waart opens this program with a work dedicated to him by one of today’s hottest composing talents, Mason Bates, while Joyce Yang continues her residency with Rachmaninoff’s beloved series of 24 variations on the Violin Caprice No. 24 by Niccolò Paganini.
The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
DEC 2
Mozart and Dvořák Johannes Debus, conductor Jeff Thayer, violin LUTOSŁAWSKI: Little Suite MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 5: Turkish DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 6 Lutosławski wrote his charming Polish folk music-based Little Suite in response to criticism of his First Symphony as being “too modern." Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony brought him international recognition and shows his developed style following German traditional form infused with Czech folk melodies. Concertmaster Jeff Thayer performs Mozart’s final violin concerto, which contains a hint of international influence in the final movement. ALISA WEILERSTEIN, guest artist
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MAY 19
JAN 20
The Young Romantics
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5
Michael Francis, conductor Rodolfo Leone, piano
Gemma New, conductor Michael Barenboim, violin
MENDELSSOHN: The Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave) LISZT: Piano Concerto No. 1 BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique
ALYSSA WEINBERG: Reign of Logic (West Coast Premiere) GLAZUNOV: Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5
The Romantic movement was launched by the three early innovators on this program, who shook the world and shaped the future with these youthful masterworks, all originating in the bountiful year of 1830.
A concert that features three Jacobs Masterworks debuts! Gemma New makes her debut conducting a program which begins with the first San Diego performance of Alyssa Weinberg’s Reign of Logic. Described as “fearless … unapologetic … beautiful … transforming” (Kaleidoscope), Weinberg’s work is influenced by her collaborations in multiple artistic genres. Also making his debut, acclaimed violinist Michael Barenboim will perform Glazunov’s Violin Concerto written in 1904.
JAN 27
Matt’s Playlist: Echoes of the Future
GEMMA NEW, guest artist
APR 14
Matthew Aucoin, conductor
Joshua Bell Plays Bruch
Los Angeles Opera’s first ever “Artist-inResidence” Matthew Aucoin (b. 1990) has some music he wants to share with you — from the past, from the present and predicting the future.
Jahja Ling, conductor Joshua Bell, violin
FEB 17
For one afternoon only, violin superstar Joshua Bell brings his artistry to San Diego Symphony audiences, performing Max Bruch’s hallmark concerto.
Augustin Hadelich Returns Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
MAR 10
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 Robert Spano, conductor Jorge Federico Osorio, piano CHRISTOPHER THEOFANIDIS: Dreamtime Ancestors BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 2 VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2: A London Symphony Atlanta Symphony Music Director and Aspen Music Festival Director Robert Spano conducts this concert featuring Mexican-born pianist Jorge Federico Osorio performing one of Beethoven’s earliest breakthrough works. Also on the program is a rare performance of Vaughan Williams’ evocative A London Symphony.
MAY 26
WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz BRUCH: Violin Concerto No. 1 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4
APR 28
Danzmayr Conducts Sibelius David Danzmayr, conductor Benjamin Jaber, horn SIBELIUS: Finlandia JOHN WILLIAMS: Horn Concerto SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
Principal Horn Benjamin Jaber is featured in a Horn Concerto by John Williams (yes, that John Williams) for this program that also includes two Jean Sibelius works most directly inspired by his Finnish nationalism.
MAY 5
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
ROBERT SPANO, guest artist
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SUNDAY ALLEGRO
THIS SERIES INCLUDES JOSHUA BELL AND BEETHOVEN'S SEVENTH SYMPHONY!
7 CONCERTS | 2PM
OCT 7
Beethoven Symphony No. 7 Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano MICHAEL IPPOLITO: Nocturne GRIEG: Piano Concerto BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7 One of the most acclaimed pianists of her generation returns to Copley Symphony Hall to perform music of Edvard Grieg as the first concert in her two-week residency on our Jacobs Masterworks opening. Beethoven’s immortal Seventh Symphony concludes the program.
NOV 4
Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New Work (Text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 7 The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
JAN 27
Matt’s Playlist: Echoes of the Future
APR 14
Matthew Aucoin, conductor
Joshua Bell Plays Bruch
Los Angeles Opera’s first ever “Artist-inResidence” Matthew Aucoin (b. 1990) has some music he wants to share with you — from the past, from the present and predicting the future.
Jahja Ling, conductor Joshua Bell, violin
MAR 10
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 Robert Spano, conductor Jorge Federico Osorio, piano CHRISTOPHER THEOFANIDIS: Dreamtime Ancestors BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 2 VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2: A London Symphony Atlanta Symphony Music Director and Aspen Music Festival Director Robert Spano conducts this concert featuring Mexican-born pianist Jorge Federico Osorio performing one of Beethoven’s earliest breakthrough works. Also on the program is a rare performance of Vaughan Williams’ evocative A London Symphony.
JAN 13
Payare and Weilerstein Rafael Payare, conductor Alisa Weilerstein, cello R. STRAUSS: Don Juan BRITTEN: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 10 Music Director Designate Rafael Payare makes his only Jacobs Masterworks appearance this season with acclaimed cellist Alisa Weilerstein and the SDSO’s first-ever performance of Benjamin Britten’s Symphony for Cello and Orchestra. Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed months after the death of Stalin, and is a self-reflective composition containing embedded messages of personal identity.
21 SUBSCRIBE TODAY SANDIEGOSYMPHONY.ORG / (619) 235-0804
JOSHUA BELL, guest artist
WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz BRUCH: Violin Concerto No. 1 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4 For one afternoon only, violin superstar Joshua Bell brings his artistry to San Diego Symphony audiences, performing Max Bruch’s hallmark concerto.
MAY 19
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5 Gemma New, conductor Michael Barenboim, violin ALYSSA WEINBERG: Reign of Logic (West Coast Premiere) GLAZUNOV: Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5 A concert that features three Jacobs Masterworks debuts! Gemma New makes her debut conducting a program which begins with the first San Diego performance of Alyssa Weinberg’s Reign of Logic. Described as “fearless … unapologetic … beautiful … transforming” (Kaleidoscope), Weinberg’s work is influenced by her collaborations in multiple artistic genres. Also making his debut, acclaimed violinist Michael Barenboim will perform Glazunov’s Violin Concerto written in 1904.
SUNDAY RHAPSODY 7 CONCERTS | 2PM
OCT 14
FEB 17
Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody
Augustin Hadelich Returns
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin
MASON BATES: Garages of the Valley RACHMANINOFF: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini MOZART: Symphony No. 40
JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances
Master conductor Edo de Waart opens this program with a work dedicated to him by one of today’s hottest composing talents, Mason Bates, while Joyce Yang continues her residency with Rachmaninoff’s beloved series of 24 variations on the Violin Caprice No. 24 by Niccolò Paganini.
The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
DEC 2
Danzmayr Conducts Sibelius
Mozart and Dvořák Johannes Debus, conductor Jeff Thayer, violin LUTOSŁAWSKI: Little Suite MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 5: Turkish DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 6 Lutosławski wrote his charming Polish folk music-based Little Suite in response to criticism of his First Symphony as being “too modern." Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony brought him international recognition and shows his developed style following German traditional form infused with Czech folk melodies. Concertmaster Jeff Thayer performs Mozart’s final violin concerto, which contains a hint of international influence in the final movement.
JAN 20
The Young Romantics Michael Francis, conductor Rodolfo Leone, piano MENDELSSOHN: The Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave) LISZT: Piano Concerto No. 1 BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique The Romantic movement was launched by the three early innovators on this program, who shook the world and shaped the future with these youthful masterworks, all originating in the bountiful year of 1830.
APR 28
David Danzmayr, conductor Benjamin Jaber, horn
YEH SHEN, SDSO
MAY 26
SIBELIUS: Finlandia JOHN WILLIAMS: Horn Concerto SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1 Principal Horn Benjamin Jaber is featured in a Horn Concerto by John Williams (yes, that John Williams) for this program that also includes two Jean Sibelius works most directly inspired by his Finnish nationalism.
MAY 5
Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony Jahja Ling, conductor Chelsea Chen, organ
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
BERLIOZ: Overture to Benvenuto Cellini POULENC: Concerto for Organ, Timpani and Strings SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3: Organ Symphony Copley Symphony Hall’s mighty Robert Morton theater organ takes center stage in two of the most famous orchestral works written for the “King of instruments.” Leading the concert will be Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling.
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ROSE LOMBARDO, SDSO
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WANDA LAW, SDSO
BENJAMIN JABER AND DOUG HALL, SDSO
ERIN DOWREY, SDSO
SPECIAL PACKAGES These three special Jacobs Masterworks Mini-Packages have been designed to make selecting your favorite concerts easy. If you’re new to classical music, any of these packages would be a perfect choice. And if you’ve been attending concerts for years, then you’ll know just which one is perfect for you!
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GREAT MASTERWORKS PACKAGE 3 CONCERTS
This three-concert package features some of the greatest symphonies ever composed, and three beloved piano concertos.
SUN OCT 7 | 2PM
3-CONCERT PACKAGE STARTS AT JUST
$54!
FRI NOV 2 | 8PM
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev
Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano
David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano
MICHAEL IPPOLITO: Nocturne GRIEG: Piano Concerto BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7 One of the most acclaimed pianists of her generation returns to Copley Symphony Hall to perform music of Edvard Grieg as the first concert in her two-week residency on our Jacobs Masterworks opening. Beethoven’s immortal Seventh Symphony concludes the program.
JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New Work (Text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 7 The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
FRI APR 12 | 8PM
Ling Conducts Brahms Jahja Ling, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano WEBER: Overture to Der Freischütz CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No. 4 Conductor Laureate Jahja Ling has created a tradition in San Diego with his performances of the symphonies of Brahms. Polish-Canadian pianist, Jan Lisiecki makes his San Diego debut in the Second Concerto of Chopin, the recording of which brought Lisiecki to world-wide attention at the age of 14.
CONRAD TAO, guest artist
25 SUBSCRIBE TODAY SANDIEGOSYMPHONY.ORG / (619) 235-0804
PIANO LOVERS PACKAGE 4 CONCERTS
For lovers of great music written for the piano, this Sunday series of four concerts is perfect for you! Two works by Rachmaninoff and one by Beethoven, as well as Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1 make this a dream series.
SUN OCT 14 | 2PM
Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody Edo de Waart, conductor Joyce Yang, piano MASON BATES: Garages of the Valley RACHMANINOFF: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini MOZART: Symphony No. 40 Master conductor Edo de Waart opens this program with a work dedicated to him by one of today’s hottest composing talents, Mason Bates, while Joyce Yang continues her residency with Rachmaninoff’s beloved series of 24 variations on the Violin Caprice No. 24 by Niccolò Paganini.
SUN JAN 20 | 2PM
The Young Romantics Michael Francis, conductor Rodolfo Leone, piano MENDELSSOHN: The Hebrides Overture (Fingal’s Cave) LISZT: Piano Concerto No. 1 BERLIOZ: Symphonie fantastique The Romantic movement was launched by the three early innovators on this program, who shook the world and shaped the future with these youthful masterworks, all originating in the bountiful year of 1830.
SUN MAR 10 | 2PM
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2 Robert Spano, conductor Jorge Federico Osorio, piano
JOYCE YANG, guest artist
SUN MAY 26 | 2PM
Season Finale with Cristian Măcelaru Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Simon Trpčeski, piano SEAN SHEPHERD: New Work RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. STRAUSS: Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks BERNSTEIN: Divertimento for Orchestra A banquet of popular composers is on the menu for this season finale concert which includes Sergei Rachmaninoff’s passionate Second Piano Concerto as well as playful masterpieces by Richard Strauss and Leonard Bernstein, all led by frequent guest conductor Cristian Măcelaru.
CHRISTOPHER THEOFANIDIS: Dreamtime Ancestors BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 2 VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2: A London Symphony Atlanta Symphony Music Director and Aspen Music Festival Director Robert Spano conducts this concert featuring a debut by acclaimed Mexican-born pianist Jorge Federico Osorio performing one of Beethoven’s earliest breakthrough works. Also on the program is a rare performance of Vaughan Williams’ evocative A London Symphony.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY SANDIEGOSYMPHONY.ORG / (619) 235-0804 26
VIOLIN SPOTLIGHT SERIES 3 CONCERTS
SIT IN THE FRONT ORCHESTRA FOR THIS SERIES FOR ONLY
$222!
This Sunday matinee series of great music for the violin features Jeff Thayer, Augustin Hadelich and Michael Barenboim.
SUN DEC 2 | 2PM
SUN FEB 17 | 2PM
Mozart and Dvořák
Augustin Hadelich Returns
Johannes Debus, conductor Jeff Thayer, violin
Cristian Măcelaru, conductor Augustin Hadelich, violin
LUTOSŁAWSKI: Little Suite MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 5: Turkish DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 6
JANÁČEK: Suite from The Cunning Little Vixen DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BARTÓK: Dance Suite BRAHMS: Selections from Hungarian Dances
Lutosławski wrote his charming Polish folk music-based Little Suite in response to criticism of his First Symphony as being “too modern." Dvořák’s Sixth Symphony brought him international recognition and shows his developed style following German traditional form infused with Czech folk melodies. Concertmaster Jeff Thayer performs Mozart’s final violin concerto, which contains a hint of international influence in the final movement.
The San Diego Symphony welcomes back one of our favorite musical friends of the past decade, violinist Augustin Hadelich, recently named Instrumentalist of the Year (2018) by Musical America, in this musical journey through Central and Eastern Europe.
SUN MAY 19 | 2PM
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5 Gemma New, conductor Michael Barenboim, violin ALYSSA WEINBERG: Reign of Logic (West Coast Premiere) GLAZUNOV: Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5 A concert that features three Jacobs Masterworks debuts! Gemma New makes her debut conducting a program which begins with the first San Diego performance of Alyssa Weinberg’s Reign of Logic. Described as “fearless … unapologetic … beautiful …transforming” (Kaleidoscope), Weinberg’s work is influenced by her collaborations in multiple artistic genres. Also making his debut, acclaimed violinist Michael Barenboim will perform Glazunov’s Violin Concerto written in 1904.
MICHAEL BARENBOIM, guest artist
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NEW THIS SEASON!
JACOBS MASTERWORKS
RUSH HOUR 2.0
ADD ON ONE OR ALL THREE TO YOUR ORDER FOR
$25
JUST PER CONCERT!
3 CONCERTS | 6:30PM
If you work and live downtown, or even if you don’t, here’s the perfect way to avoid the maddening rush hour traffic and enjoy a one hour concert of your favorite music. Our new Rush Hour 2.0 concerts begin at 6:30PM and with a shorter program and no intermission, you’ll be on your way home by 8:00PM!
THU NOV 1
Tao Plays Tchaikovsky David Danzmayr, conductor Conrad Tao, piano JAVIER ÁLVAREZ: New work (text by Juan Filipe Herrera) (World Premiere; SDSO commission) TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1 The unique commissioned work that opens this program brings together Mexican composer Javier Álvarez and genre-crossing United States Poet Laureate Juan Filipe Herrera. The work will be scored for orchestra, narrator and four vihuelas. The concert also features brilliant young pianist/composer Conrad Tao performing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
THU DEC 6
Baroque and the Mandolin Johannes Debus, conductor Avi Avital, mandolin PURCELL/Arr. Britten: Chacony VIVALDI: “Winter” from The Four Seasons ARENSKY: Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky J.S. BACH: Concerto No. 1 in D minor, BWV 1052 J. STRAUSS JR.: Pizzicato Polka Renowned mandolin artist Avi Avital is featured on this program that celebrates the Baroque and one of Vivaldi's best-known concertos from The Four Seasons.
THU JAN 24
Rush Hour Playlist Matthew Aucoin, conductor Program to be selected from the following: THOMAS ADÈS: These Premises Are Alarmed BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 1 (Movement 1) ANDREW NORMAN: Play (Level 1) LILI BOULANGER: D’un matin de printemps STRAVINSKY: Funeral Song MATTHEW AUCOIN: Excerpts from Crossing SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 9: Great (Movement 4) Los Angeles Opera’s first ever “Artist-in-Residence” Matthew Aucoin (b. 1990) has some music he wants to share with you – from the past, from the present and predicting the future.
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FOX THEATRE FILM SERIES
5 CONCERTS
Watching your favorite movie on our big screen while the orchestra performs the soundtrack live brings the film to life in new ways and creates an experience you’ll want to re-live time and again. Subscribe to this series and you will receive free tickets to our two classic silent film screenings this season.
THU NOV 8 | 6:30PM
THU MAR 14 | 6:30PM
Steamboat Bill, Jr.* (1928)
F.W.'s Murnau’s Sunrise* (1927)
Russ Peck, organ
Russ Peck, organ
Our film season opens with the final Silent Era Masterpiece from comedian extraordinaire, Buster Keaton. Buster plays a college graduate trying to gain the respect of his father, a roughneck riverboat captain, as well as the love of Kitty, pretty daughter of his father’s business rival. This film contains one of cinema’s most famous (and dangerous) stunts as Buster narrowly avoids being crushed by a tumbling house facade. FREE for Fox Theatre Film Series Subscribers!
Winner of the first (and, sadly, last) Academy Award for Unique and Artistic Production, F.W. Murnau’s Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans is one of the most critically acclaimed and influential films of the Silent Era, with modern movies as diverse as The Last Jedi and La La Land paying direct homage. A highly symbolic story of one eventful and terrifying night in the lives of an American everyman and his wife, Sunrise contains bold gestures of Murnau’s famous German Expressionist style married to the vivid cinematographic innovations of 1927 Hollywood. FREE for Fox Theatre Film Series Subscribers!
FRI DEC 14 | 8PM
Love Actually in Concert This 2003 beloved holiday classic follows eight very different couples dealing with varying stages of one very human emotion: love. Featuring a star-studded cast and nominated for two Golden Globes, this romantic comedy has all the charm, heartbreak and triumph for the holiday season. Join us for this holiday favorite with its charming score performed live with a full orchestra. Love Actually is a copyright of WT Venture LLC. Licensed by Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
SAT FEB 9 | 8PM
Jurassic Park in Concert One of the most thrilling science fiction adventures ever made, and featuring one of John Williams’ most iconic and beloved musical scores, Jurassic Park transformed the movie-going experience for an entire generation and became the highestgrossing film of all time in 1993, winning three Academy Awards®. Masterfully directed by Steven Spielberg, Jurassic Park transports us to a secluded island where scientists have succeeded in reviving the age of dinosaurs in a brand new, immersive theme park, the likes of which has never been seen before.
THU APR 4 | 8PM SAT APR 6 | 8PM
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix™ in Concert The rebellion begins! Lord Voldemort is back, but the Ministry of Magic tries to keep a lid on the truth – including appointing a new, power-hungry Defense Against the Dark Arts professor at Hogwarts. Ron and Hermione convince Harry to secretly train students for the wizarding war ahead. A terrifying showdown between good and evil awaits! HARRY POTTER, characters, names and related indicia are © & ™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. J.K. ROWLING’S WIZARDING WORLD™ J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Publishing Rights © JKR. (s18)
TM & © Universal Studios JURASSIC PARK
*San Diego Symphony Orchestra does not appear as part of these screenings. 29 SUBSCRIBE TODAY SANDIEGOSYMPHONY.ORG / (619) 235-0804
FAMILY CONCERT SERIES
4 CONCERTS | 2PM
Our Family Series concerts are the perfect way for you and your child to explore the world of the symphony orchestra together. Every concert includes pre-concert activities in the lobby that provide hands-on opportunities to learn more about the instruments of the orchestra and music-making.
SUN OCT 21
SUN FEB 3
The Science of Sound
A Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra
We bet you didn’t think a scientist and a musician had anything in common, but there’s science in music and beauty in science. Children will put on their scientist’s goggles to take a closer look at the DNA of music and how music moves us. Goggles not included, but imagination is required for this performance.
Where does a bassoon come from? Is a French horn really French? In this introduction to the orchestra, we’ll explore how instruments have been created over time to tell a story and how technology has shaped how we create sound. We’ll use both our imagination and problem-solving skills as we dive into the basics of an orchestra.
SUN DEC 16
Noel Noel
Every holiday season there is just one activity for the family that makes the season feel especially joyful, and that's the San Diego Symphony's traditional celebration of the music of Christmas, including a sing-along for the whole audience! Treat yourself and your family to a celebration that is sure to fill your hearts and put a smile on your face.
SUN MAR 31
Peter and The Wolf: The Prokofiev Classic This symphonic fairy tale tells the story of a young boy who outsmarts a wolf. Each character is portrayed by a different instrument and children will recognize the bird’s flute, the wolf’s three horns and the cat’s clarinet throughout the story. Children will love this musical fairy tale and learn all about musical composition in this beloved classic.
4-CONCERT SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR CHILDREN ARE JUST
$24!
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HOLIDAY CONCERTS Subscribers always have the first opportunity to order additional special concerts far in advance of the general public, and at the very best price! Our annual Noel Noel holiday concert is a heart-warming musical tradition for everyone in San Diego.
SAT DEC 15 | 8PM FRI DEC 21 | 8PM SAT DEC 22 | 2PM & 8PM
Noel Noel
Sameer Patel, conductor San Diego Master Chorale San Diego’s favorite downtown holiday music tradition returns with another wonderful selection of Christmas gems, choral favorites, an audience sing-along and a visit from Old St. Nick! Associate Conductor Sameer Patel conducts the San Diego Symphony in four performances you can choose from!
FRI DEC 14 | 8PM
LOVE ACTUALLY
Love Actually in Concert This 2003 beloved holiday classic follows eight very different couples dealing with varying stages of one very human emotion: love. Featuring a star-studded cast and nominated for two Golden Globes, this romantic comedy has all the charm, heartbreak and triumph for the holiday season. Join us for this holiday favorite with its charming score performed live with a full orchestra. Love Actually is a copyright of WT Venture LLC. Licensed by Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
SPECIAL CONCERTS Add on to your subscription order any of these special concerts. As a subscriber, you receive the best seats at the best prices!
THU OCT 4 | 7:30PM
Lang Lang Plays Mozart Edo de Waart, conductor Lang Lang, piano BERLIOZ: Overture to Béatrice et Bénédict MOZART: Piano Concerto No. 24 RESPIGHI: Fountains of Rome The special not-to-be-missed season-opening concert features piano superstar Lang Lang in a performance of one of Mozart’s greatest concertos written for the piano. Conductor Edo de Waart opens the program with Berlioz’s Overture to Béatrice et Bénédict, an opera based on Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing. The program concludes with the magnificent and popular Fountains of Rome by Respighi.
TUE NOV 27 | 7:30PM
An Evening with Matthew Morrison and Kelli O’Hara Kelli O'Hara Matthew Morrison Two of Broadway’s brightest stars come together for one unforgettable evening of American song with the San Diego Symphony Orchestra! Matthew Morrison is well-known for his featured roles in Broadway’s Hairspray, The Light in the Piazza and South Pacific as well as the landmark Fox TV series Glee. Before winning the Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Musical for the 2015 revival of The King and I, Kelli O’Hara was Morrison’s co-star in The Light in the Piazza and South Pacific. Together they will make Copley Symphony Hall shine like the Great White Way!
LANG LANG, guest artist
THU JAN 10 | 7:30PM
Discovery Night
Rafael Payare, conductor MOZART: Overture to Don Giovanni R. STRAUSS: Don Juan MUSSORGSKY/Ravel: Pictures from an Exhibition Don’t miss Rafael Payare’s momentous inaugural concert as San Diego Symphony’s Music Director Designate. As part of our January “Hearing the Future” festival looking at youthful creation, this program features Don Juan, composed by a 24-year-old Richard Strauss, and Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures from an Exhibition (written in that composer’s 35th year) in its well-known orchestration by Maurice Ravel. The concert opens with the dramatic overture to Mozart’s Don Giovanni, which he debuted at age 31. All funds from this concert will go to support the San Diego Symphony’s Learning and Community Engagement programs.
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HOW TO ORDER FOR GROUPS OF 10+ CALL (619) 615-3941
NEED MORE INFORMATION?
VISIT OUR WEBSITE
Our website, sandiegosymphony.org, has a special section called “Help, I’m New Here” that includes everything you need to know about parking, nearby restaurants, what to wear, and what to expect. If you would like to talk to someone about purchasing your subscription, feel free to call our Box Office staff at (619) 235-0804, Monday–Friday, 10:00AM to 6:00PM. They would be happy to answer any questions you might have and take your order over the phone.
Go to sandiegosymphony.org for step-by-step ordering.
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(619) 235-0804 750 B Street, San Diego, CA 92101
your group of 10 or more! For more information, or to book your group today, please contact Samer Naoum at (619) 615-3941. Seating assignments in the Grand Tier and all sections will be based on the following order of precedence: A patron’s giving level, subscriber level, renewing paid subscriptions by date received and new paid subscriptions by date received.
If you require any assistance, please contact the Ticket Office in advance to accommodate your ticketing needs. Hours: Monday through Friday—10AM to 6PM Saturday and Sunday—12PM to 5PM
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DISCOVERY NIGHT WITH RAFAEL PAYARE
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