Credit: Hans van der Woerd |
On January 27, 2016, the New York
Philharmonic Chairman announced that conductor Jaap van Zweden will become the Orchestra’s next Music Director,
beginning in 2018–19, the Orchestra’s 177th season. Mr. van Zweden will serve
as Music Director Designate in the 2017–18 season. Jaap
van Zweden has risen rapidly in little more than a decade to become one of
today’s most sought-after conductors. He has been music director of the Dallas
Symphony Orchestra since 2008, holding the Louise W. & Edmund J. Kahn Music
Directorship, and music director of the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra since
2012. Mr. van Zweden remains honorary chief conductor of the Netherlands Radio
Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor emeritus of the Netherlands Radio Chamber
Orchestra. In November 2011, Mr. van Zweden was named Musical
America’s 2012 Conductor of the Year in recognition of his
critically acclaimed work as music director of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra
and as a guest conductor with the most prestigious U.S. orchestras. Mr.
van Zweden last appeared with the New York Philharmonic in October 2015 in
concerts of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, Britten’sSinfonia da
Requiem, Op. 20, and Mozart’s Piano Concerto in A major,
K.488, with the Philharmonic’s Artist-in-Association Inon Barnatan. Additional
highlights of the 2015–16 season include return visits to the Orchestre de
Paris and the Rotterdam and London Philharmonic Orchestras, as well as debut
performances with the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and the Czech
Philharmonic. Mr. van Zweden returned to the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic in
the fall of 2015 to lead a concert performance of Wagner’s Tristan
und Isolde, and makes his debut at the Vienna Staatsoper in
performances of Wagner’sLohengrin in May. Jaap
van Zweden has appeared as guest conductor with many leading orchestras across
the globe that, in addition to those above, include The Cleveland Orchestra,
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, WDR
Symphony Orchestra Cologne, Orchestre National de France, Oslo Philharmonic,
Rotterdam Philharmonic, and Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Recent highlights
have included highly successful appearances at the Verbier Festival, tours of
major venues in Europe and China with the Hong Kong Philharmonic, and debuts
with the Berlin Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic, Budapest Festival Orchestra,
Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, the Boston and
London Symphony Orchestras, and his BBC Proms debut conducting the Netherlands
Radio Philharmonic in Bruckner’s Eighth Symphony. With the Dallas Symphony he
launched the inaugural SOLUNA International Music & Arts
Festival, and with the Hong Kong Philharmonic he has begun a
four-year project to conduct the first-ever performances in Hong Kong of
Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen, which
is being recorded for release on Naxos Records. Jaap
van Zweden has made numerous acclaimed recordings, which include Stravinsky’s The
Rite of Spring and Petrushka, Britten’s War
Requiem, and the complete Beethoven and Brahms symphonies. He
has recently completed a cycle of Bruckner symphonies with the Netherlands
Radio Philharmonic. He has recorded Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 with the London
Philharmonic (LPO Live), and Mozart Piano Concertos with the Philharmonia
Orchestra and David Fray (Virgin). His highly praised performances of Lohengrin, Die
Meistersinger, andParsifal are
also available on CD/DVD, the last of which earned Maestro van Zweden the
prestigious Edison award for Best Opera Recording in 2012. For the Dallas
Symphony’s own record label, he has released the symphonies of Tchaikovsky
(Nos. 4 and 5), Beethoven (Nos. 5 and 7), Mahler (Nos. 3 and 6), and Dvořák
(No. 9), and the world premiere recording of Steven Stucky’s concert drama August
4, 1964. Most recently released on Naxos is his recording with
the Hong Kong Philharmonic of Wagner’s Das
Rheingold. In
1997, Jaap van Zweden and his wife, Aaltje, established the Papageno
Foundation, the objective being to support families of children with autism.
Over the years, that support has taken shape through a number of programs in
which professional music therapists and musicians, receiving additional
training from Papageno, use music as a major tool in their work with autistic
children. Papageno House, a new home for autistic young adults and children,
was opened in Laren, The Netherlands, in August 2015, with Queen Maxima in
attendance.
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