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Long regarded as the premier interpreter of the songs of Gustav Mahler (1860-1911), Thomas Hampson will dedicate much of his summer and the upcoming 2010-11 season to performances of the Austrian composer's works. The celebration begins with Hampson's recital from Mahler's birth-house in Kaliste, Czech Republic, on July 7 - the date of Mahler's birth 150 years ago - that will be web-cast live on medici.tv - and an evening concert from Kaliste with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Manfred Honeck, which the European Broadcasting Union will transmit live across Europe. Additional Mahler performances will follow throughout the summer - making more than 50 concerts over the course of the 2010-11 season - including Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen at the Zurich Opera with conductor Philippe Jordan; Rückert-Lieder with the Schleswig-Holstein Orchestra and Christoph Eschenbach at the Rheingau Music Festival and Schleswig-Holstein Festival; and Das Lied von der Erde with the NDR Symphony Orchestra, Hamburg, and Alan Gilbert on a four-city tour that includes the final concert of the Schleswig-Holstein Festival. Additional summer highlights include a gala concert plus a single performance four days later in Wagner's Parsifal at the Vienna State Opera, in tribute to the company's outgoing Intendant, Ioan Holender, and an operetta program with mezzo-soprano Angelika Kirschlager from Munich's Odeonsplatz conducted by Mariss Jansons and broadcast live on European television. Detailed information about these events follows below.
The music of Gustav Mahler has been a major touchstone throughout Thomas Hampson's career. Since hearing Mahler's music for the first time when he was barely 20 on a car tape-deck - Hampson recalls having to pull his Toyota Celica over onto a freeway rest-stop so that he could pay full attention to the cassette recording of the composer's First Symphony that he had borrowed from the local public library in Spokane - Hampson has sung, studied, researched, and recordEd Mahler's music - most famously with Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic - with the greatest passion and unquestioned authority. It was through Mahler's music that Hampson discovered the entire world of the German Romantic song literature, and an early Mahler recording for Teldec launched the baritone's storied recording career. "I take Mahler's music very seriously," Hampson explains, "and it has had a profound impact on my life personally and as an artist. Mahler told us that all of life should be in a symphony, and his art subsequently reflects all of the trivia and tragedy in life simultaneously. His creative works and musical genius prepare as well as cajole, and force his listener to understand the time they are living in regardless of the century."
In addition to dozens of Mahler concerts and recitals this summer and throughout 2010-11 - including performances next season with the Vienna Philharmonic and Mariss Jansons, Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic, Eliahu Inbal and the Czech Philharmonic, and the Royal Opera House Orchestra and Antonio Pappano - Hampson will also record Des Knaben Wunderhorn with the Wiener Virtuosen - a chamber group comprised of the principal players of the Vienna Philharmonic - for release in January 2011 on Deutsche Grammophon. Taking advantage of Hampson's bountiful array of Mahler activities - and the fact that the centenary of Mahler's death, on May 18, 1911, will add a second major date to the international Mahler calendar - a film crew will follow the baritone throughout the season for a documentary that will illuminate the life and personality of Mahler through Hampson's performances and discussions of his music.
Opera and operetta will also play an important part in Thomas Hampson's summer season, with gala concerts in Mannheim (June 20), the Vienna State Opera (June 26), Budapest (June 28), and St. Georgen, Austria (July 27). Hampson will join soprano Renée Fleming at Zurich Opera for two performances in Verdi's La traviata (June 24 and July 4). Hampson's single performance in the role of Amfortas in Wagner's Parsifal at the Vienna State Opera (June 30) will be one of two events celebrating the tenure of Ioan Holender, who is in his final season as Intendant of the company.For more light-hearted summer fare, Hampson turns to the world of operetta with an open-air concert at Munich's Odeonsplatz (July 18) that will be televised live throughout Europe. "A Journey through Vienna" pairs Hampson with mezzo-soprano Angelika Kirchschlager and conductor Mariss Jansons in a program of festive arias by Johann Strauss, Jr., Joseph Lanner, Franz von Suppé, Otto Nicolai, and Franz Lehár, among others.
Thomas Hampson - summer 2010 engagementsJune 20 Mannheim, Germany Opera GalaJune 24; July 4 Zurich, Switzerland Verdi: La traviata (Alfredo) Zurich OperaJune 26 Vienna, Austria Vienna State Opera GalaJune 28 Budapest, Hungary Opera GalaJune 30 Vienna, Austria Wagner: Parsifal (Amfortas)July 7 Kaliste, Czech Republic Mahler Sesquicentennial Celebration Recital with Wolfram Rieger, webcast live on medici.tv (9am EDT) Concert with Mahler Chamber Orchestra / Manfred Honeck with live EBU TV broadcast across EuropeJuly 11 Zurich, Switzerland Mahler concert (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen) Zurich Opera / Philippe JordanJuly 13 Wiesbaden, Germany Mahler concert (Rückert-Lieder) at Rheingau Music Festival Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra / Christoph EschenbachJuly 14 Hamburg, Germany Mahler concert (Rückert-Lieder) at Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra / Christoph EschenbachJuly 18 Munich, Germany "A Journey through Vienna" - open air concert with Angelika Kirschlager in Odeonsplatz Bavarian Radio Symphony / Mariss Jansons Broadcast live on TV across EuropeJuly 27 St. Georgen, Austria Opera Gala Wiener Opernballorchester / Luca PisaroniAugust 28-30, September 1 Tour with NDR Symphony Orchestra, Hamburg / Alan Gilbert Mahler Song of the Earth Lübeck (August 28) Kiel (August 29) Hamburg at Schleswig-Holstein Festival (August 30) Copenhagen, Denmark (September 1)
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