Carnegie Hall returns to pre-pandemic full schedule in 23-24

FILE - The exterior of Carnegie Hall in New York appears on May 12, 2020. . (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File) (Evan Agostini, Invision)

NEW YORK ā€“ Carnegie Hall will reach its pre-pandemic level of 170 concerts during a 2023-24 season that includes a focus on the fall of the Weimar Republic.

The hall said Tuesday the season will open Oct. 4 with the Riccardo Muti conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestraā€™s in Tchaikovskyā€™s Violin Concerto with Leonidas Kavakos and Mussorgskyā€™s ā€œPictures at an Exhibition.ā€

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Carnegie was closed by the coronavirus pandemic from March 2020 until early October the following year. It presented about 115 events during the 2021-22 season and has about 150 this season. The 170 next season approximately matches its total in 2018-19.

Carnegie has averaged 89% capacity this season, down from 93% in 2018-19 but slightly above 88% in the first season back from the pandemic.

ā€œLast season, we were slightly conservative about the number of concerts we programmed because we thought maybe people wouldnā€™t be coming to concerts,ā€ Carnegie Hall executive director Clive Gillinson said at a news conference. ā€œAnd then when we saw people were desperate to get back to live entertainment, not just music, we added quite a lot of concerts.ā€

The Weimar programs will run from January until May and include jazz, cabaret and art song in addition to classical and opera. Concerts include Franz Welser-Mƶst conducting the Cleveland Orchestra (Jan. 20-21) and Vienna Philharmonic (March 1-3), Yannick NƩzet-SƩguin leading the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra (Feb. 1), Gianandrea Noseda leading the National Symphony Orchestra (Feb. 3), Simon Rattle leading the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (May 2-3).

ā€œWeimer demonstrates many lessons about the fragility of democracy that are as relevant today as they were then and it makes it so clear that democracy is a very fragile flower that has to be nurtured and protected all the time,ā€ Gillinson said.

Scheduled performances include Daniel Barenboim with the Staatskapelle Berlin in the four Brahms symphonies (Nov. 30 and Dec. 1); Zubin Mehta leading the Munich Philharmonic (Feb. 3-4); Klaus MƤkelƤā€™s Carnegie Hall debut with the Orchestre de Paris (March 16); and Jakub HrÅÆÅ”a's Carnegie Hall debut with the Bamberg Symphony (April 24).

Tania LeĆ³n will hold next seasonā€™s composerā€™s chair and the Boston Symphony Orchestra with music director Andris Nelsons will present the New York premiere of a new work. Nelsons will lead a concert version of Shotakovichā€™s ā€œMacbeth of Mtsenkā€ on Jan. 30 with a cast that includes his ex-wife, soprano Kristine Opolais, and John Williams will combine with cellist Yo-Yo Ma for a concert on Feb. 22.

Pianist Mitsuko Uchida will play in four concerts in the second installment of her three-season Perspectives series.

Recitals include bass-baritone Bryn Terfel (Nov. 14), tenor Juan Diego FlĆ³rez (Nov. 29), soprano Diana Damrau (Feb. 6) and Igor Levit playing transcriptions of Beethovenā€™s Third Symphony, Mahlerā€™s 10th and Hindemithā€™s ā€œ1922ā€ suite (March 7).


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