NEW YORK, NY.- The threats facing democracy will be a central focus of Carnegie Halls coming season, the presenter announced Tuesday, with a festival devoted to the flourishing cultural scene in Germany between the two world wars.
From January to May, Carnegie will host Fall of the Weimar Republic: Dancing on the Precipice, an exploration of creative expression during the fragile democracy in Germany from 1919 to 1933. The festival will feature ensembles such as the Vienna Philharmonic and the Orchestra of St. Lukes performing works by composers of the time, including Paul Hindemith and Kurt Weill.
Were seeing the challenges to democracy more and more clearly, and its all the more reason we have to treasure it, Clive Gillinson, Carnegies executive and artistic director, said in an interview. We want people to ask questions and contemplate why democracy matters and what the threats are in our day.
The 2023-24 season, which begins in October, will feature some 170 performances, beginning with two concerts by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of its outgoing music director, Riccardo Muti. Pianist Mitsuko Uchida and conductor Franz Welser-Möst, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, will each organize a series of Perspectives concerts.
Composer Tania León, who won the Pulitzer Prize for music in 2021, will lead a season-long residency; in January, the Boston Symphony Orchestra will offer the New York premiere of a new piece by her.
Here are a dozen highlights of the coming season, chosen by critics for The New York Times. JAVIER C. HERNÁNDEZ
English Baroque Soloists and Monteverdi Choir, Oct. 25
You can safely bet on a few things whenever conductor John Eliot Gardiner comes to town: agile, historically informed performance; obsessively precise articulation; and virtually ideal readings of beloved repertoire. In early 2020, he led his Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique in just about as good a Beethoven symphony cycle as you could imagine. Now he brings the English Baroque Soloists and the Monteverdi Choir to Carnegie for Bachs Mass in B minor and, on Oct. 26, Handels LAllegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato. JOSHUA BARONE
Lea Desandre and Thomas Dunford, Nov. 2
These two artists Desandre, a clarinet-mellow mezzo-soprano who can burst with bright agility, and Dunford, an eloquent lutenist are among the brightest lights of a young generation of early-music specialists. They join in Weill Recital Hall, ideally intimate for this repertory, for Lettera Amorosa, a program of love-focused Baroque works by Monteverdi, Frescobaldi and Handel, alongside names like Tarquinio Merula (his songs exquisite) and Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger (a specialist in music for lute). ZACHARY WOOLFE
American Composers Orchestra, Nov. 9
This essential organization has brought music by George Lewis to Carnegies various spaces before, the most notable instance being his Virtual Concerto (for a computer-driven piano soloist) in 2004. The orchestra will continue its productive relationship with the composer to perform one of his latest orchestral works. No title for the piece is available yet; the same goes for a few other new works on the bill (including those from the likes of Guillermo Klein and Augusta Read Thomas). We do have one title: Out of whose womb came the ice, by up-and-coming composer Nina C. Young, whose premiere was co-commissioned by Carnegie. SETH COLTER WALLS
Staatskapelle Berlin, Nov. 30
When the Staatskapelle Berlin and its longtime music director, Daniel Barenboim, last appeared at Carnegie, in 2017, it was an epic nine-performance stand that paired Mozart piano concertos and Bruckner symphonies. A lot has happened since then; most recently, in January, Barenboim stepped down from the orchestras podium because of health problems. So their return will be poignant: just two nights, and the four symphonies of Brahms, a composer Barenboim performed as a pianist in this space in 1962. ZACHARY WOOLFE
English Concert, Dec. 10
British soprano Lucy Crowes expertise and imagination in Baroque music gives her the freedom to turn da capo arias into feats of feeling. That exhilarating sense of spontaneity uplifted the English Concerts performance of Handels Serse at Carnegie last year, and it will be exciting to hear Crowe apply her gifts to more dramatic material when she takes the title role in Rodelinda. OUSSAMA ZAHR
Daniil Trifonov, Dec. 12
Arguably the mightiest of the under-40 generation of superstar pianists meets the mightiest of repertoire in this recital, as Daniil Trifonov takes on Beethovens Hammerklavier Sonata. Its a banner year for youngish soloists in ambitious repertoire, in fact: Vikingur Olafsson plays the Goldberg Variations (Feb. 7), Beatrice Rana does the Liszt Sonata (Feb. 28) and Seong-Jin Cho journeys through the second book of the same composers Années de Pèlerinage (May 17). DAVID ALLEN
Met Orchestra, Feb. 1
Yannick Nézet-Séguin has decided not to share next season. Rather than engage a guest conductor, he helms all three of the Met Orchestras concerts himself, embracing opportunities to bask in the tonal floodgates of Lise Davidsens soprano in Wagners Wesendonck Lieder and, later, the heavenliness of Lisette Oropesas Mozart arias (June 11), and the intense standoff of Bartóks Bluebeards Castle with Elina Garanca and Christian Van Horn (June 14). OUSSAMA ZAHR
Yunchan Lim, Feb. 21
This precociously mature pianist, still in his teens, played Liszts deliriously difficult Transcendental Études on the way to becoming the youngest-ever winner of the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition last year. Hell reprise the Liszt as part of his recital introduction on Carnegies main stage. By this point, another pianist, the spectacularly creative Igor Levit, needs no introduction to this halls audience; on Jan. 20, hell play two symphony transcriptions (Liszts of Beethovens Third and Ronald Stevensons of Mahlers 10th) alongside Hindemiths Suite 1922, raucous and very Roaring Twenties. ZACHARY WOOLFE
Vienna Philharmonic, March 1
Most of the five concerts in Welser-Mösts Perspectives series Jan. 20 and 21 with the Cleveland Orchestra, March 1-3 with Vienna are emblematic of his thoughtful, idiosyncratic, ultimately endearing approach to programming, but the March 1 performance looks especially constructive, full of connections and contrasts to draw: Hindemiths Konzertmusik for Wind Orchestra, Strauss Symphonic Fantasy from Die Frau Ohne Schatten, Schoenbergs Variations for Orchestra and, as if to bid farewell to a whole world of music, Ravels La Valse. DAVID ALLEN
Jason Moran, March 9
In addition to being an elite improvising pianist, Jason Moran is a keen programmer; his Carnegie survey of Black American music from the Great Migration was a well-attended success. You can all but bank on the same when Moran brings his latest concert concept to Zankel Hall. This time, the focus will be on the music of early 20th-century American original James Reese Europe. You might expect some of the same expert arrangements heard on Morans latest album, From the Dancehall to the Battlefield. But prepare also for some surprises; this restless innovator rarely does anything the same way twice. SETH COLTER WALLS
Ensemble Modern, April 12
Much of the festival Fall of the Weimar Republic: Dancing on the Precipice is more confusing than informative. This period in history produced so much excellent and overlooked music; why are we seeing Beethoven, Wagner and Mahler (among other head-scratchers)? At least there are engagements like that of Ensemble Modern, which will perform works including a lithe but still barbed smaller arrangement of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brechts The Seven Deadly Sins, led by HK Gruber, one of our greatest living Weill interpreters. The group returns April 13 as part of Leóns residency, playing her Indígena and Rítmicas alongside pieces by Conlon Nancarrow and others. JOSHUA BARONE
Danish String Quartet, April 18
A highlight of Carnegies spring months in recent seasons has been the Danish String Quartets Doppelgänger project, which juxtaposes Schubert quartets with premieres. Coming this April: a new work by Anna Thorvaldsdottir. And, for the fourth installment next year, the group is adding cellist Johannes Rostamo to perform Schuberts endlessly moving, even sublime String Quintet in C, paired with a commission from Thomas Adès. JOSHUA BARONE
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.