Three global orchestras make Irish debuts in new concert season | Classical

The new season is strong on singing and orchestral debuts, and composers from Sibelius to Mahler


The new concert season kicks off in earnest on Friday, with one of the most explosive works ever written. Stravinsky's still awe-inspiring Rite of Spring is the big piece in the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra's National Concert Hall debut under Andrew Litton. The concert also brings a welcome return by ace Russian violinist Alina Ibragimova (in Mendelssohn's evergreen Concerto) and opens with Johan Svendsen's colourfully upbeat Carnival in Paris of 1872.

The Basel Symphony Orchestra and Dennis Russell Davies come to town for the first time on Tuesday, September 29th, when the much-vaunted German- Japanese pianist Alice Sara Ott makes her Irish debut in the glittering, jazzy Concerto in G by Ravel. The evening's major work is Holst's The Planets.

The season's third orchestral debut brings one of the most highly praised of smaller orchestras, the Swedish Chamber Orchestra, to Ireland for the first time (Thursday, November 5th). Under their Danish conductor Thomas Dausgaard, they give the Irish premiere of Albert Schnelzer's Tim Burton-inspired A Freak in Burbank. The main work is Brahms's Second Symphony, and Norway's Christian Ihle Hadland is the soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No 26 in D, K537.

The same Brahms symphony was on the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra's first visit to the NCH in 1984. But their programme this time is an all-Sibelius affair, to mark the 150th anniversary of the composer's birth. John Storgårds's programme includes En Saga, the Violin Concerto, the Karelia Suite and Seventh Symphony.

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The name of the soloist won't be known until early December, when the 2015 International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition chooses its next winner.

The next couple of months are strong on singing. The Irish mezzo soprano of the moment, Tara Erraught, gives recitals at Wexford Festival Opera (Monday, October 26th), the NCH (Sunday, November 1st, in the afternoon) and Galway (Wednesday, November 4th). She'll be back in the new year to sing Mahler with the RTÉ NSO (Friday, February 26th, when the baton will be wielded by Nathalie Stutzmann), and to star as Rosina in a new Wide Open Opera production of Rossini's Barbiere di Siviglia at the National Opera House in Wexford (Saturday, April 16th) and Bord Gáis Energy Theatre (Wednesday 20th, Friday 22nd, Saturday 23rd).

Baritone Bryn Terfel's cancelled concert with the RTÉ Concert Orchestra has been rescheduled for October (Thursday 22nd), and tenor Ian Bostridge makes his RTÉCO debut under John Wilson the following month (Thursday 26th). Another leading British tenor is at the NCH a few days earlier: Sunday 22nd is the date for Mark Padmore's afternoon performance of Schubert's Die schöne Müllerin with Paul Lewis.

Embrace of choral music

One of the most welcome developments in the National Concert Hall’s programming in recent years has been its embrace of choral music. That pattern continues this year.

First up are The Sixteen under Harry Christophers, who perform Monteverdi's 1610 Vespers in an off-site concert at St Patrick's Cathedral (Saturday, October 10th).

Chamber Choir Ireland join forces with the Irish Baroque Orchestra for Handel's Samson under Matthew Halls (Saturday, January 23rd). And Asia's most celebrated performers of Bach – the Bach Collegium Japan and their conductor, Masaaki Suzuki – make their Irish debut in the B minor Mass in April (Tuesday 16th).

Chamber Choir Ireland's own programme includes an Arvo Pärt at 80 programme in Belfast (St George's Church, Saturday, November 7th), Dublin (Christ Church Cathedral, Saturday 8th) and Cork (Triskel Christchurch, Thursday, December 3rd). The choir's conductor, Paul Hillier, is a leading Pärt interpreter and author of an important monograph on the composer's music.

The first fruit of RTÉ's new composer residency will see the Irish premiere of Gerald Barry's 2013 Piano Concerto by Hugh Tinney and the RTÉ NSO under Cristian Macelaru in October (Friday 30th).

The major focus of the NSO's season is Mahler, The Wunderhorn Years (Fridays September 11th and 18th, October 16th, February 26th and May 29th) in which Alan Buribayev will conduct the first four symphonies and two song cycles; the vocal soloists include baritone Benjamin Appl (who returns for a Music Network tour in November), soprano Máire Flavin, contralto Patricia Bardon, baritone Stéphane Degout, mezzo soprano Imelda Drumm and soprano Ailish Tynan.

The first opera of the new season is Handel's Agrippina from Irish Youth Opera with the Irish Chamber Orchestra under Jonathan Cohen (on tour from Tuesday, September 8th, to Saturday 19th).

Donnacha Dennehy's The Last Hotel comes to the Dublin Theatre Festival fresh from its success at the Edinburgh Festival (Sunday, September 27th to Saturday, October 3rd). Lyric Opera presents Puccini's La Bohème in October (NCH, Saturday, October 17th to Tuesday 20th).

Wexford Festival Opera's offerings are Delius's Koanga, Mascagni's Guglielmo Ratcliff, Hérold's Le Pré aux clercs, Massenet's The Portrait of Manon, Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel and Puccini's Tosca (Wednesday, October 21st to Sunday, November 1st). And Puccini is the focus in Belfast when NI Opera presents his Turandot, directed by Calixto Bieito at the Grand Opera House (Friday, October 30th to Sunday, November 1st).

The third Westport Chamber Music Festival, a kind of West Cork Chamber Music Festival in miniature (Friday, September 11th to Sunday 13th) is built around performances by its artistic directors Catherine Leonard (violin) and Hugh Tinney (piano).

The 20th Sligo Baroque Festival (Friday, September 25th to Sunday 27th) focuses on Prague with Hana Blazikova and Collegium Marianum. The 10th New Ross Piano Festival (Thursday, September 24th to Sunday 27th) celebrates, with a visit by the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, an all-piano concerto programme: Finghin Collins, Cédric Tiberghien and Alexei Grynyuk playing Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Scriabin.

A new ensemble, Evlana, makes its debut under Keith Pascoe at Newman University Church in Siobhán Cleary's new Her kind and works by Karin Rehnqvist, Britten and Kaija Saariaho (Tuesday, September 29th at 6pm).

The first solo recital of the NCH’s International Season is by Norwegian pianist Leif-Ove Andsnes (Thursday, October 29th). A new Phil Grabsky documentary about Andsnes’s four-year Beethoven project is released on September 7th, and is due to run at Screen in Dublin and cinemas in Dún Laoghaire, Swords, Dundrum, Carlow, Dungarvan, and Gorey.

  • mdervan@irishtimes.com