David Geffen Hall reopens, hoping its $550 million renovation worked

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David Geffen Hall reopens, hoping its $550 million renovation worked
Lawrence Rock, audio director of the New York Philharmonic, makes last minute checks during the grand re-opening event for David Geffen Hall in New York on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022. The New York Philharmonic’s home at Lincoln Center was gutted and rebuilt as part of a $550 million renovation that aimed to fix its notoriously poor acoustics. Christopher Lee/The New York Times.

by Javier C. Hernández



NEW YORK, NY.- When the New York Philharmonic opened its new home at Lincoln Center in 1962, it held a white-tie gala, broadcast live on national television, with tickets having sold for up to $250 apiece, or nearly $2,500 in today’s dollars.

It was a glittering affair, but the hall’s poor acoustics — a critical problem for an art form that relies on unamplified instruments — ushered in decades of difficulties. After the last major attempt to fix its sound, with a gut renovation in 1976, the hall reopened with a black-tie gala and a burst of optimism. But its acoustic woes persisted.

Now Lincoln Center and the Philharmonic are hoping that they have finally broken the acoustic curse of the hall, now called David Geffen Hall, which reopened Saturday after a $550 million overhaul that preserved the building’s exterior but gutted and rebuilt its interior, making its auditorium more intimate and, they believe, better sounding.

But this time, they are taking a different approach to inaugurating the new hall. Geffen reopened to the public for the first time not with a pricey formal gala but with a choose-what-you-pay concert, with some free tickets distributed at the hall’s new welcome center.

And instead of opening with Beethoven (as the orchestra did in 1962) or Brahms (as in 1976), Geffen opened with the premiere of “San Juan Hill,” a work by jazz trumpeter and composer Etienne Charles that pays tribute to the rich Afro-diasporic musical heritage of the neighborhood that was razed to clear the land for Lincoln Center. The work, commissioned by Lincoln Center, was performed by Charles and his group, Creole Soul, and the Philharmonic under the baton of its music director, Jaap van Zweden.

“It really is like a homecoming, but there are some different family members around this time, which is a great thing,” Henry Timms, Lincoln Center’s president and CEO, said in an interview.

The reopening of the hall drew several elected officials, who saw it as a hopeful sign for a city still trying to recover from the damage wrought by the coronavirus.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul predicted that people would look back at the moment as more than the opening of a new concert hall: “They will say you got it done in the middle of a pandemic.”

Both Lincoln Center, which owns the hall, and the Philharmonic, its main tenant, see the new hall as an opportunity to become more accessible and welcoming. They are seeking both to lure back concertgoers and to reach a more diverse cross-section of New Yorkers, including Black and Latino residents, who have long been underrepresented at these events.

“This is not your grandmother’s Philharmonic,” said Deborah Borda, the orchestra’s president and CEO. “We are thinking of the totality of the artistic and human and social statement.”

Instead of one big celebration, there will essentially be a month of festivities, part of an effort to showcase the hall’s versatility, to break through into the consciousness of media-saturated New Yorkers — and to avoid placing too much emphasis on a single high-pressure night that could yield quick-fire judgments on the renovation and the acoustics.

Dozens of people lined up outside the hall Saturday morning for a chance to get free tickets to “San Juan Hill.”

Joanne Imohiosen, 83, who has been attending concerts since the New York Philharmonic came to Lincoln Center in 1962 and lives nearby, said she hoped the renovation would finally remedy the hall’s acoustic issues. “They should have figured it out by now,” said Imohiosen, who used to work as an assistant parks commissioner. “They’ve been fiddling with it for years.”

After “San Juan Hill,” the Philharmonic will return with a couple of weeks of homecoming concerts pairing works by Debussy and Respighi with pieces by contemporary composers including Tania León, Caroline Shaw and Marcos Balter, whose multimedia work “Oyá” is billed as a fantasia of sound and light.




There will be not one but two galas — one featuring Broadway stars Lin-Manuel Miranda, Brian Stokes Mitchell and Bernadette Peters, and another featuring a performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. A free open-house weekend will close out the month, with choirs, youth orchestras, Philharmonic players, hip-hop groups, dance troupes and others performing each day in different spaces in the hall.

Much is riding on the success of the revamped Geffen Hall. The 180-year-old Philharmonic, which is still recovering from the tumult of the pandemic and grappling with long-standing box-office declines, is hoping that a more glamorous hall with better sound will lure new audiences.

“The stakes are very high; everybody’s waiting and hoping that it’s going to work out,” said Joseph Polisi, a former president of The Juilliard School and whose new book, “Beacon to the World: A History of Lincoln Center,” has sections tracing the trials and tribulations of the building. “$550 million is a lot of money. It’s a very big bet.”

At the core of the Philharmonic’s strategy is a desire to make David Geffen Hall not just a concert venue but a welcoming gathering place. The new hall includes a coffee shop, an Afro Caribbean restaurant and a welcome center next to the lobby. Small performances, talks, and classes on music and wellness will take place inside a “sidewalk studio” visible from Broadway.

The renovation, which equipped the main auditorium with a film screen, an amplified sound system and other technical improvements, gave the Philharmonic an opportunity to re-imagine its programming. “San Juan Hill” and “Oyá” showcase the Philharmonic’s new abilities, mixing music with film, 3D imagery, electronics and light.

“The new hall can do things that we’re going to do as a 21st-century orchestra,” Borda said.

A critical test of the new hall will be its audiences. The Philharmonic and Lincoln Center have worked over the past several years to attract more low-income residents to performances, and Lincoln Center has been handing out flyers at nearby public-housing complexes advertising upcoming events at David Geffen Hall. For the opening, they made a point of inviting former residents of the San Juan Hill neighborhood, as well as schools that serve large numbers of Black and Latino students.

“This is a home for all New Yorkers,” Borda said. “We want to invite them in.”

Throughout the hall’s history, politicians, architects, musicians and critics have at times declared past renovations successful, only to see acoustical issues resurface soon after.

Polisi said this time seemed different, given the crucial decision to reduce the size of the hall — it now seats 2,200 people, down from 2,738. He said if the Philharmonic had finally remedied the sound problems, it would allow the orchestra to focus on other priorities, including building closer ties to the community and finding a conductor to replace van Zweden, who steps down as music director in 2024.

“If they’re a happy orchestra now and they’re able to feel comfortable in their home, that’s also going to be a very psychologically important element for the organization,” said Polisi, whose father, William Polisi, had been the principal bassoonist of the Philharmonic.

As construction workers made finishing touches on the hall this week, unpacking furniture and installing metal detectors in the lobby, the Philharmonic’s players filed into the auditorium for rehearsals. The early reviews from the musicians have been largely positive: Many say that they can finally hear one another onstage and that the sound feels warmer.

Borda and Timms said they were confident that the Philharmonic would finally have a hall to match its abilities, although they said they did not want to jinx the reopening. “The thing about curses,” Timms said, “is you never claim they’re broken. You let them speak for themselves.”

Borda, who first began trying to revamp the hall in the 1990s, when she served a previous stint as the Philharmonic’s leader, said she had prepared an image of an atomic explosion to send to Timms if the renovation turned out to be a disaster.

“If it’s really bad,” she joked, looking at Timms, “I’m sending you this first.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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