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Carnegie Hall Presents

Carnegie Hall’s Opening Night Gala
Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Wednesday, October 4, 2023 7 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
Riccardo Muti by Todd Rosenberg, Leonidas Kavakos by Marco Borggreve
Visceral excitement and pure, richly textured musicality come together in this opening night program that features the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conductor Riccardo Muti, and violin superstar Leonidas Kavakos. Breathtaking virtuosity is a given in Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, and in Kavakos’s hands audiences will also find an extraordinary depth that sets a high standard for the showpiece. In Mussorgsky’s essential Pictures from an Exhibition (popularly arranged for symphonic orchestra by Ravel), 10 paintings are brought to life through sound. The orchestra’s great range of colors are highlighted across this collection of musical riches. 

Complete this glamorous evening by attending a post-concert, black-tie gala dinner at Cipriani 42nd Street. Availability to purchase tickets (starting at $2,000) is limited. For more information, please contact the Special Events Office at sevents@carnegiehall.org or 212-903-9679. All ticket and table prices include a partially tax-deductible donation that benefits Carnegie Hall’s artistic, education, and social impact programming.

Part of: Carnegie Hall Live on WQXR

Performers

Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Riccardo Muti, Conductor
Leonidas Kavakos, Violin

Program

TCHAIKOVSKY Violin Concerto

MUSSORGSKY Pictures from an Exhibition (orch. Ravel)


Encore:

GIORDANO Intermezzo from Fedora

Event Duration

The printed program will last approximately 75 minutes with no intermission. Please note that there will be no late seating. 

Event Leadership

Gala Lead Chairmen

Mercedes T. Bass
Hope and Robert F. Smith

Gala Chairmen Committee

Veronica Atkins
Len and Emily Blavatnik
Maral and Sarkis Jebejian
Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis
Beatrice Santo Domingo
David M. Siegel and Dana Matsushita
Vista Friends of Hope and Robert F. Smith
Joan and Sanford I. Weill

Corporate Chairmen

Dennis M. Nally
Retired Chairman, PwC

Roy Weathers
Vice Chairman, PwC

Brad Silver
New York Office Managing Partner, PwC

Co-Chairmen

Evercore
Larry Gagosian
Bruce and Suzie Kovner
Xiaoshan Ren
Marvin S. Rosen, Shareholder of Greenberg Traurig
Richard A. Rosenbaum, Executive Chairman of Greenberg Traurig
Jean and Melanie Salata
Elizabeth Segerstrom

Tracy Chutorian Semler and Eric Semler
Georgia Irwin and David S. Winter


Event Details

5:30 PM      Cocktail Reception (Rohatyn Room, Carnegie Hall)

7 PM            Concert (Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage)

OR

7 PM            Concert (Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage)

8:30 PM      Gala Dinner (Cipriani 42nd Street)

Attire: Black Tie

 

Event Reservations

Availability to attend the post-concert gala dinner at Cipriani 42nd Street is limited. Pre-concert cocktail reception tickets are sold out. For more information, please contact the Special Events Office at sevents@carnegiehall.org or 212-903-9679.

Please note that exact seating assignments for the concert and dinner will not be determined until the month of the event.

Listen to Selected Works

PricewaterhouseCoopers
Opening Night Gala Lead Sponsor: PwC
Opening Night Gala Dinner Sponsor: Kirkland & Ellis LLP

At a Glance

TCHAIKOVSKY  Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35

It may be hard to imagine a time at which Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto was not beloved, but it in fact received a review so scathing at its premiere that it haunted the composer. For the rest of his life, it is said, Tchaikovsky could quote it by heart. Despite troubled beginnings in the composer’s personal life preceding its composition, initial rejection by its dedicatee violinist Leopold Auer, and under-rehearsed early performances, the concerto was eventually championed by Auer and his students, including Mischa Elman and Jascha Heifetz.

The dislike of Eduard Hanslick, the original offending critic, is hard to understand, for this is hardly an inflated, pretentious, and vulgar work, although those are the words he used. In fact, Tchaikovsky’s lyric gift has seldom seemed so natural, flowing effortlessly through all three movements. What Hanslick failed to notice is the way Tchaikovsky has taken care to cushion even the most challenging, exhibitionistic passages in music of unforced lyricism and restraint.

 

 

MUSSORGSKY  Pictures from an Exhibition (orch. Ravel)

When artist and architect Victor Hartmann died at the age of 39, little did he know that the pictures he left behind would live on. The idea for an exhibition of Hartmann’s work came from Vladimir Stassov, the influential critic who organized a show in St. Petersburg in the spring of 1874.

Stassov’s memorial show gave Mussorgsky the idea for a suite of piano pieces that depicted the composer “roving through the exhibition, now leisurely, now briskly, in order to come closer to a picture that had attracted his attention, and at times sadly, thinking of his departed friend.” Mussorgsky worked feverishly that spring, and by June 22, 1874,
Pictures from an Exhibition was finished. The thought of orchestrating Pictures evidently never occurred to Mussorgsky. But it has intrigued musicians ever since his death. Maurice Ravel unveiled his orchestration in 1922.

Bios

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Founded by Theodore Thomas in 1891, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (CSO) is consistently hailed as one of the world’s great orchestras. Riccardo Muti, the orchestra’s ...

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Riccardo Muti

Born in Naples, Italy, Riccardo Muti is one of the preeminent conductors of our day. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s (CSO) distinguished 10th music director from 2010 until 2023, Mr.  ...

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Leonidas Kavakos

Leonidas Kavakos is recognized around the world as a violinist and artist of rare quality, acclaimed for his matchless technique, his captivating artistry and superb musicianship, and the ...

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