Press Release

June 23, 2016

Lincoln Center's Mostly Mozart Fesetival 2016: Opening Week (July 22-31)

Mostly Mozart Festival

Contact: Eric M. Gewirtz

212.875.5049

[email protected]

 

LINCOLN CENTER’S 50th MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL

Opening Week: July 22-July 31, 2016

 

Several Concerts and Free Events Kick Off the Festival’s 50th Anniversary Season:

The Illuminated Heart, Mozart Opera Showcase, Directed by Netia Jones and

Commissioned by Lincoln Center Featuring Star-Studded Cast;

International Contemporary Ensemble’s Free Micro-Concerts, Part of 50 for 50 Series;

Free Preview Concert with Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra,

Louis Langrée and Violinist Simone Porter;

Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra with Pianist Leif Ove Andsnes;

Pre-Festival Events Include Film Screening and Emanuel Ax Listening Party

 

NEW YORK, NY (June 23, 2016) — Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival, one of the world’s major music festivals and a beloved summer New York tradition, opens its milestone 50th anniversary season with a series of events, including concerts featuring some of the world’s greatest artists. The opening week is the first of five weeks that make up the 2016 festival, which will present more than 50 exceptional performances and events featuring a special focus on Mozart’s operas, major new commissions and premieres of over 50 new works, symphonic concerts, visiting ensembles, late-night recitals, a dance revival, and a wide range of free events.

 

Continuing a favorite festival tradition, the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra and Renée and Robert Belfer Music Director Louis Langrée will offer its annual gift to New York City with a free performance on Friday, July 22 at 7:30 pm. This year, the concert will be held outside at Damrosch Park, in a co-presentation with Lincoln Center Out of Doors. The all-Mozart concert will feature the festival debut of 19-year-old Simone Porter (a 2015 Avery Fisher Career Grant winner and an “engaging new violin star” according to the Cincinnati Enquirer) performing Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, K.216, and one of the composer’s most beloved works, Symphony No. 41 in C major, K.551 (“Jupiter”). This free preview concert of the Mostly Mozart Festival is made possible in part by the Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis Foundation. This event is FREE. Space is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

 

The official opening night of the 2016 festival takes place on Monday, July 25 at 8:00 pm with a special event that will transform David Geffen Hall into a theatrical environment for a specially commissioned evening with selections from Mozart’s operas. Conceived by the visionary British director and video artist Netia Jones, The Illuminated Heart will feature a white-box theater, which frames the action and serves as backdrop for a series of imaginative projections and visual imagery. Louis Langrée will conduct the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra in this opening program that traverses the many dimensions of Mozart’s opera oeuvre. The Illuminated Heart features an impressive range of singers, including sopranos Kiera Duffy (Mostly Mozart debut), Christine Goerke, Ana María Martínez (Mostly Mozart debut), and Nadine Sierra (Mostly Mozart debut); mezzo-sopranos Sasha Cooke and Marianne Crebassa (Mostly Mozart debut); tenor Matthew Polenzani; and baritones Christopher Maltman (Mostly Mozart debut) and Peter Mattei (Mostly Mozart debut). The Illuminated Heart is repeated on Tuesday, July 26 at 7:30 pm.

 

Later in the week, the Festival Orchestra gives three performances at Alice Tully Hall, July 28-30, as Renée and Robert Belfer Music Director Louis Langrée leads vibrant Mozart masterpieces paired with Bach. The orchestra will perform the New York premiere of George Benjamin’s 2007 arrangement of Bach’s Canon and Fugue from Art of Fugue, in addition to Webern’s 1935 arrangement of Bach’s Ricercare, from The Musical Offering, BWV 1079, and Mozart’s Symphony No. 38 in D major, K.504 (“Prague”). Soloist Leif Ove Andsnes will perform Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466. Prior to the July 29 and 30 concerts, Andsnes will join Festival Orchestra members Ruggero Allifranchini (Concertmaster), Shmuel Katz (Principal Viola), and Ilya Finkelshteyn (Principal Cello) for pre-concert recitals, performing Mozart’s Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K.493.

 

Throughout the opening week, members of the International Contemporary Ensemble—returning for a sixth summer as artists-in-residence—will perform new music as part of their 50 for 50 series, including 50 local, U.S. and world premieres performed at micro-concerts at Lincoln Center’s Hearst Plaza and other Festival events. The opening week micro-concert performances, lasting approximately 15 minutes, feature a wide range of new and emerging voices, including composers Rand Steiger, Okkyung Lee, Ken Ueno, among others, as well as performers from a string orchestra from PS316 in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. Each of these micro-concerts are co-presented by the Mostly Mozart Festival and Lincoln Center Out of Doors. A schedule of ICE micro-concerts from July 27-31 follows below, including updates from the previously announced schedule in March 2016.

 

In addition to the concert events which open the festival there are a number of free pre-festival events, welcoming audiences to celebrate the milestone season. Pianist Emanuel Ax hosts a special listening party, sharing his favorite recordings on Thursday, June 30 at the Bruno Walter Auditorium at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. On Wednesday, July 13, Mostly Mozart hosts a screening of the 2006 documentary In Search of Mozart by Phil Grabsky, presented in association with the Film Society of Lincoln Center, exploring the life and work of the grand master through interviews with musicologists and musicians. One week later, on July 20, members of the Festival Orchestra join Lincoln Center’s Ehrenkranz Artistic Director Jane Moss for a discussion and chamber music performance at the David Rubenstein Atrium. Additionally, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts presents Mozart Forever: Fifty Years of the Mostly Mozart Festival, which traces the history of Lincoln Center’s annual summer festival through artwork, photographs, memorabilia, interviews, concert excerpts, and more, illuminating the path from its all-Mozart roots to its current ambitious, visionary place in the cultural landscape. Mozart Forever: Fifty Years of the Mostly Mozart Festival is on display through August 27.

 

LOUIS LANGRÉE

 

Louis Langrée, Music Director of the Mostly Mozart Festival since December 2002, was named Renée and Robert Belfer Music Director in August 2006. Under his musical leadership, the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra has received extensive critical acclaim, and its performances are an annual summertime highlight for classical music lovers in New York City.

 

Mr. Langrée is also music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. During the 2016-17 season their musical journey will include a continued exploration of the Pelléas Trilogy and Brahms Fest, as well as the orchestra’s first tour under Mr. Langrée’s baton, to Asia. He will make his debut the Philadelphia Orchestra in the fall and in February, returns to the Metropolitan Opera for performances of Carmen. In Europe he will conduct the Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig, and the Orchestre National de France in orchestral repertoire as well as performances of Pelléas et Mélisande.

 

Mr. Langrée was chief conductor of Camerata Salzburg until this summer and frequently appears as guest conductor with the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonics, Budapest Festival Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, and NHK Symphony Orchestra, as well as with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra and Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. His opera engagements include appearances with La Scala, Opéra Bastille, Vienna State Opera, and Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Mr. Langrée was appointed Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres in 2006 and Chevalier de l’Ordre National de la Légion in 2014.

 

Mr. Langrée’s first recording with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra features commissioned works by Nico Muhly and David Lang, as well as Copland’s Lincoln Portrait narrated by Maya Angelou. His DVD of Verdi’s La traviata from the Aix-en-Provence Festival featuring Natalie Dessay and the London Symphony Orchestra was awarded a Diapason d’Or. His discography also includes recordings on the Accord, Naïve, Universal, and Virgin Classics labels.

 

JANE MOSS

 

Jane Moss is the Ehrenkranz Artistic Director of Lincoln Center, a position that includes her role as Artistic Director of the Mostly Mozart Festival. In that capacity, she has initiated and led the transformation and expansion of the festival into a multidisciplinary, multilayered, and far-reaching exploration of its namesake genius and his influence on succeeding generations. Ms. Moss also created several major new initiatives at Lincoln Center, including the international, multigenre Lincoln Center Festival, the New Visions series—which linked the worlds of the theater, dance, visual arts, and classical music—and Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series, which focuses on classic and contemporary expressions of American song. In 2010 she launched the multidisciplinary White Light Festival, focused on exploring how the performing arts illuminate our interior lives as expressed by a dynamic, international spectrum of distinctive musical, dance, and theater artists. The programming she has introduced and directs represents a continuing contribution to the vitality of New York’s cultural landscape. Ms. Moss also oversees Great Performers, Lincoln Center’s major season-long classical music series; Midsummer Night Swing; and the free Lincoln Center Out of Doors summer series. Ms. Moss has played an important role as an innovator in musical and music-based presentation and is a recipient of the French Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur.

 

Prior to joining Lincoln Center, Ms. Moss worked as an arts consultant, designing and developing projects and programming initiatives for a variety of foundations and arts organizations, including the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund and the Pew Charitable Trusts. As Executive Director of Meet the Composer, a national organization serving American composers, Ms. Moss created the country’s largest composer commissioning program, as well as a program supporting collaborations between composers and choreographers. In addition, she served as Executive Director of New York’s leading off-Broadway theater company, Playwrights Horizons, and Executive Director of the Alliance of Resident Theaters/New York.

 

About the Mostly Mozart Festival

 

Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival—America’s first indoor summer music festival—was launched as an experiment in 1966. Called “Midsummer Serenades: A Mozart Festival,” its first two seasons were devoted exclusively to the music of Mozart. The official title of Mostly Mozart was coined in 1970, and the festival has evolved over time to become a New York institution and a highlight of the city’s summer classical music season. Over time, and through the leadership of Ehrenkranz Artistic Director Jane Moss and Renée and Robert Belfer Music Director Louis Langrée, Mostly Mozart has broadened its focus beyond the music of Mozart to include works by his predecessors, contemporaries, and successors. In addition to concerts by the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra, Mostly Mozart now includes performances by the world’s outstanding period-instrument ensembles, chamber orchestras, and acclaimed soloists, as well as opera productions, dance, film, and late-night concerts. Contemporary music has become an essential part of the festival, embodied in annual artist and composer residencies that have included Osvaldo Golijov, John Adams, Kaija Saariaho, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, George Benjamin, and the International Contemporary Ensemble. Among the many artists and ensembles who have had long associations with the festival are Joshua Bell, Christian Tetzlaff, Itzhak Perlman, Emanuel Ax, Garrick Ohlsson, Stephen Hough, Osmo Vänskä, the Budapest Festival Orchestra, Emerson String Quartet, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, and the Mark Morris Dance Group. The festival’s popularity has been reflected in several cultural touchstones, including an Al Hirschfeld illustration, a Peanuts cartoon strip, beer cans, and a cover of The New Yorker magazine.

 

The Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra is the resident orchestra of the Mostly Mozart Festival, and is the only chamber orchestra in the U.S. dedicated to the music of the Classical period. Since 2002 Louis Langrée has been the Orchestra’s music director, and since 2005 the Orchestra’s David Geffen Hall home has been transformed each summer into an appropriately intimate venue for its performances. Over the years, the Orchestra has been the festival’s ambassador, touring to such notable festivals and venues as Ravinia, Great Woods, Tanglewood, Bunkamura in Tokyo, the Kennedy Center, and The White House. Conductors who made their New York debuts leading the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra include Michael Tilson Thomas, David Zinman, Jérémie Rhorer, Edward Gardner, Lionel Bringuier, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Charles Dutoit, Leonard Slatkin, Susanna Mälkki, and Edo de Waart. Mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli, flutist James Galway, soprano Elly Ameling, and pianist Mitsuko Uchida all made their U.S. debuts with the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra.

 

ABOUT LINCOLN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS

 

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (LCPA) serves three primary roles: presenter of artistic programming, national leader in arts and education and community engagement, and manager of the Lincoln Center campus. A presenter of more than 3,000 free and ticketed events, performances, tours, and educational activities annually, LCPA offers 16 series, festivals, and programs, including American Songbook, Avery Fisher Career Grants and Artist program, David Rubenstein Atrium programming, Great Performers, Legends at Lincoln Center: The Performing Arts Hall of Fame, Lincoln Center at the Movies, Lincoln Center Emerging Artist Awards, Lincoln Center Festival, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, Lincoln Center Vera List Art Project, Midsummer Night Swing, Mostly Mozart Festival, White Light Festival, the Emmy Award-winning Live From Lincoln Center, which airs nationally on PBS, and Lincoln Center Education, which is celebrating 40 years enriching the lives of students, educators, and lifelong learners.  As manager of the Lincoln Center campus, LCPA provides support and services for the Lincoln Center complex and the 11 resident organizations: The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Film Society of Lincoln Center, Jazz at Lincoln Center, The Juilliard School, Lincoln Center Theater, The Metropolitan Opera, New York City Ballet, New York Philharmonic, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, School of American Ballet, and Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.  For more information, visit LincolnCenter.org.

 

Lincoln Center is committed to providing and improving accessibility for people with disabilities. For information, call the Department of Programs and Services for People with Disabilities at 212.875.5375

 

* * *

 

The Mostly Mozart Festival is made possible by Renée and Robert Belfer, Sarah Billinghurst Solomon and Howard Solomon, Rita E. and Gustave Hauser, Chris and Bruce Crawford, The Laurie M. Tisch Illumination Fund, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz, The Howard Gilman Foundation, The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, Inc., Charles E. Culpeper Foundation, S.H. and Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation, and Friends of Mostly Mozart.

 

Public support is provided by the New York State Council on the Arts.

 

American Airlines is the Official Airline of Lincoln Center

 

Nespresso is the Official Coffee of Lincoln Center

 

NewYork-Presbyterian is the Official Hospital of Lincoln Center

 

MetLife is the National Sponsor of Lincoln Center

 

“Summer at Lincoln Center” is supported by Diet Pepsi

 

Media Partner WQXR

 

* * *

 

INFORMATION AND UPDATES

Visit MostlyMozart.org for information about the festival and other updates.

 

PHONE NUMBERS/CONTACT INFORMATION

Lincoln Center general website: LincolnCenter.org

Mostly Mozart Festival website: MostlyMozart.org

Lincoln Center Customer Service: 212.875.5456

CenterCharge: 212.721.6500

 

VENUE LOCATIONS

Alice Tully Hall, 65th Street and Broadway

Damrosch Park, 62nd Street and Amsterdam Avenue

David Geffen Hall, 65th Street and Broadway

David Rubenstein Atrium, Broadway between 62nd and 63rd Streets

Hearst Plaza, North of the Metropolitan Opera House and in front of Lincoln Center Theater, near West 65th Street

New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, 40 Lincoln Center Plaza, between the Metropolitan Opera House and Lincoln Center Theater


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To request press tickets, please contact [email protected]

 

Additional information, as well as photos and videos of the artists can be found at

Lincoln Center’s Press Room: http://AboutLincolnCenter.org/press-room
Login or register to access

 

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FOLLOW LINCOLN CENTER AND MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL ON SOCIAL MEDIA

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Instagram: @LincolnCenter

 

 

 

 

 

MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL 2016

WEEK ONE

July 22-July 31

 

Program and artists subject to change

 

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENT

Tuesday, May 24 to Saturday, August 27, 2016   The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

Mozart Forever: Fifty Years of the Mostly Mozart Festival

Exhibition

Presented in collaboration with the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

 

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENT

Thursday, June 30, 2016, at 6 pm                                                                        Bruno Walter Auditorium

                                                                            The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

Emanuel Ax’s Listening Party

Presented in collaboration with the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

 

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENT

Wednesday, July 13, 2016 at 6 pm                                                                David Rubenstein Atrium

Film: In Search of Mozart

Filmed and directed by Phil Grabsky

Seventh Art Productions, 2006, 128 minutes

Presented in association with the Film Society of Lincoln Center

 

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENT

Wednesday, July 20, 2016 at 6 pm                                                                David Rubenstein Atrium

Pre-festival panel discussion and performance with members of the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra

Jon Manasse, clarinet

Liam Burke, clarinet

Marc Goldberg, bassoon

Thomas Sefcovic, bassoon
Lawrence DiBello, horn
Richard Hagen, horn
Mozart:                                    Serenade for Winds in E-flat major, K.375
 

FREE PREVIEW CONCERT

Friday, July 22, 2016 at 7:30 pm                                                                                   Damrosch Park

Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra

Louis Langrée, conductor

Simone Porter, violin M|M

Mozart:                                     Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, K.216

Mozart:                                     Symphony No. 41 in C major, K.551 (“Jupiter”)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Monday, July 25, 2016 at 8:00 pm                                                                              David Geffen Hall

Tuesday, July 26, 2016 at 7:30 pm

Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra

Louis Langrée, conductor

Netia Jones, director and designer M|M

Kiera Duffy, soprano M|M

Christine Goerke, soprano

Ana María Martínez, soprano M|M

Nadine Sierra, soprano M|M

Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano

Marianne Crebassa, mezzo-soprano M|M

Matthew Polenzani, tenor

Christopher Maltman, baritone M|M

Peter Mattei, baritone M|M

The Illuminated Heart

Selections from Mozart’s Operas

 

Wednesday July 27, 2016 at 1 pm                                                                                     Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Members of International Contemporary Ensemble

String Orchestra from PS316 (Crown Heights, Brooklyn)

Jeff Snyder:                              Science Fiction Was Wrong 2 (world premiere)

Jeff Snyder:                              ICEblocks 2 (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Wednesday, July 27, 2016 at 6:30 pm                                                                               Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Michael Lormand, trombone

Gareth Flowers, flute

Josh Modney, violin

Nathan Davis, percussion

Rama Gottfried:                         Speckle (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Thursday, July 28, 2016 at 1 pm                                                                                       Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Claire Chase, flute

Rand Steiger, laptop

Rand Steiger:                            beacon (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Thursday, July 28, 2016 at 6:30 pm                                                                                   Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Cory Smythe, piano

Joshua Rubin, clarinet

Okkyung Lee:                            ha-yeom (world premiere)

Tyshawn Sorey:                        ICE 15 - memo (world premiere)

Rebecka Ahvenniemi:                An Ode to a Tree (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Thursday, July 28, 2016 at 7:30 pm                                                                               Alice Tully Hall

Friday, July 29, 2016 at 7:30 pm

Saturday, July 30, 2016 at 7:30 pm

Pre-concert recitals with Leif Ove Andsnes, piano, Ruggero Allifranchini, violin,
Shmuel Katz, viola, and Ilya Finkelshteyn, cello, July 29 and 30 at 6:30                               Alice Tully Hall

Mozart:                                     Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K.493

Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra

Louis Langrée, conductor

Leif Ove Andsnes, piano

Bach (trans. George Benjamin):  Canon & Fugue from Art of Fugue (New York premiere)

Mozart:                                     Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K.466

Bach (arr. Webern):                    Ricercare, from The Musical Offering, BWV 1079

Mozart:                                     Symphony No. 38 in D major, K.504 (“Prague”)

 

Friday, July 29, 2016 at 1 pm                                                                                            Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Daniel Lippel, guitar

Nuiko Wadden, harp

Mikel Kuehn:                             Entanglements (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Friday, July 29, 2016 at 6:30 pm                                                                                       Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Jennifer Curtis, violin

Claire Chase, flute

Nathan Davis, percussion

Logan Coale, bass

Pauchi Sasaki:                                      MAYU (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Saturday, July 30, 2016 at 6:30 pm                                                                                   Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Wendy Richman, viola

Daniel Lippel, guitar

Nathan Davis, percussion

Ken Ueno:                                 Ghost Flowers (world premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

Sunday, July 31, 2016 at 6:30 pm                                                                                     Hearst Plaza

Free International Contemporary Ensemble Micro-Concert

Katinka Kleijn, cello

Monte Weber, electronics

Monte Weber:                            For Katinka Kleijn (New York premiere)

Co-presented with Lincoln Center Out of Doors

 

 

M|M Mostly Mozart Festival debut

 

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High Resolution Images Return to Top

Caption: Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra; Louis Langrée, conductor
Photo Credit: © Richard Termine
Size: 2700x1800
Caption: Louis Langrée, conductor
Photo Credit: Matt Dine and courtesy of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Size: 2004x3000
Caption: Nadine Sierra, soprano
Photo Credit: Merri Cyr
Size: 3660x5490
Caption: Christine Goerke, soprano
Photo Credit: Arielle Doneson
Size: 3861x2574
Caption: Ana María Martínez, soprano
Photo Credit: Tom Specht
Size: 2324x2928
Caption: Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano
Photo Credit: Dario Acosta
Size: 5800x3866
Caption: Matthew Polenzani, tenor
Photo Credit: Dario Acosta
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Caption: Christopher Maltman, baritone
Size: 2249x1800
Caption: Peter Mattei, baritone
Photo Credit: © Håkan Flank
Size: 2832x4116
Caption: Leif Ove Andsnes, piano
Photo Credit: O¨zgu¨r Albayrak
Size: 3650x2434
Caption: International Contemporary Ensemble
Photo Credit: © Armen Elliott
Size: 2400x1600
Caption: International Contemporary Ensemble
Photo Credit: Armen Elliot
Size: 3000x1548

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