Berlin Philharmonic fails to elect new chief conductor
May 11, 2015
Despite more than 10 hours of deliberations, members of the Berlin Philharmonic have failed to select their new maestro. The successor will replace Britain's Sir Simon Rattle when his contract ends in 2018.
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The orchestra's 124 permanent musicians gathered together on Monday at the Protestant Jesus Christ Church in Berlin's southwest where they held a secret ballot for one of the most prestigious jobs in classical music. It is the only orchestra in the world where the musicians chose their chief conductor themselves.
Following several rounds of voting, however, the musicans failed to elect their next maestro with a clear majority.
Speculation around Philharmonic's next chief conductor has grown in recent weeks, with chief conductor of the Staatskapelle Dresden, Christian Thielemann and music directorof the Los Angeles Philharmonic Gustavo Dudamel among the possible names.
Founded in 1882, the Berlin Philharmonic is seen by many as the best orchestra in the world. Over the past six decades, the orchestra has had just three chief conductors: Herbert von Karajan from 1954 to1989, Claudio Abbado until 2002, and current maestro Sir Simon Rattle.
The 60-year-old is set to take over as chief conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra when his contract with the Berlin Philharmonic comes to an end in 2018.
Who'll take Simon Rattle's baton at the Berlin Phil?
Old, young, traditional or edgy? A new chapter of music history unfolds with the May 11 election of Simon Rattle's successor as principal conductor of the Berlin Phiharmonic. Here are the most serious contenders.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Charisma and integrity: Andris Nelsons, 36
The current music director of the Boston Symphony has been a conspicuously frequent guest conductor in Berlin. And in an informal poll, he was the Berlin audience's clear favorite. Like Simon Rattle, he's also led the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Seeing the young Latvian wield the baton is a pleasure for the eyes: Nelsons' motions are so fluid it almost seems he has no bones in his body.
Image: beethovenfest.de/Marco Borggreve
Earthy and airborne: Gustavo Dudamel, 34
The even younger Venezualean, music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, is a product of the highly-acclaimed "Systema" of his home country, which gives children from the slums a musical education. Elan and vision are among Dudamel's qualities. And were he to be chosen, he'd bring along some New World vitality - just like the Pope.
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A German chief? Christian Thielemann, 56
The principal conductor of the Staatskappelle Dresden is also artistic director of the Salzburg Easter Festival. Is he about to add the conductor's stool in Berlin to his collection? Thielemann could be expected to refocus the Philharmonic's repertory on the German Classical and Romantic eras - something badly needed after the Rattle era, according to critics.
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Multi-talented: Daniel Barenboim, 72
Whether with his East-Western Divan Orchestra, as pianist or as general music director at the Berlin State Opera, the Argentine-born Israeli frequently finds himself in the limelight. A plus: Barenboim debuted with the Berliner Philharmonic 50 years ago and has the longest performance history with them. A minus: his age.
Image: Santiago Perez
Warmth and vitality: Yannick Nézet-Séguin, 40
A rising star, the Philadelphia Orchestra's music director stands at the helm of the Rotterdam Philharmonic and guest-conducts on the world's top stages. Charismatic seems too mild a description for the French-Canadian bundle of energy. Nézet-Séguin spellbinds orchestra members and audiences. No other conductor since Leonard Bernstein has unfurled that kind of magic, observers say.
Image: Barbara Frommann
Highly decorated: Mariss Jansons, 72
The chief conductor of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra led the Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam for 11 years. Under his direction it was named the world's finest. Charismatic yet understated, the star maestro is constantly on the go: on tour, on television and radio and in the recording studio. Jansons is heavily represented on recordings, many of which have won prizes.
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In the upper echelons: Riccardo Chailly, 62
Name the world's most important conductors, and his Chailly will invariably be among them. The Italian leads the Gewandhaus Orchestra Leipzig and is music director at La Scala in Milan. He, too, led the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, from 1998 until 2004. But should Berlin beckon, there might be an obstacle: Chailly recently extended his contract in Leizpig to the year 2020.
Image: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images
Precision and freedom: Kirill Petrenko, 43
Only 1.6 meters tall (5'2"), the press-avoiding maestro conducts at perhaps the world's most prestigious opera house, the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. Praised as the "Siberian Mozart," he is also a much-accomplished Wagnerian conductor. Named Conductor of the Year three times in a row, Petrenko's renditions are impeccably precise, but never pedantic.