A barrier-breaking conductor will lead the Seattle Symphony
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


A barrier-breaking conductor will lead the Seattle Symphony
Xian Zhang in Summit, N.J., Oct. 31, 2020. (Douglas Segars/The New York Times)



NEW YORK, NY.- Xian Zhang, a renowned conductor who has helped bring the New Jersey Symphony to new heights over the past eight years, will be the Seattle Symphony’s next music director, the orchestra announced Thursday.

When she takes the podium in 2025, Zhang, 51, will be the first woman and the first person of color to lead the Seattle Symphony in its 121-year history, and one of only two women leading a top-tier U.S. orchestra. (The other is Nathalie Stutzmann, the Atlanta Symphony’s music director since 2022.)

Zhang, who was born in Dandong, China, and moved to the United States in 1998, said that she would work to attract new audiences in Seattle, including more young professionals, families and people of color.

“My goal is to have the symphony become even more of a musical icon and a magnet for the city,” she said. “We need to be more obvious and attractive.”

Zhang emerged as a favorite because of her “impeccable technique” and her warm relationship with the orchestra’s musicians and audiences, said Krishna Thiagarajan, the orchestra’s president and CEO. She made her debut with the Seattle Symphony in 2008 and has been a regular in recent years, earning praise from critics and audience members.

“There’s an electricity between her and the orchestra, and an electricity between her and the audience,” Thiagarajan said. “You can feel it in the hall.”

Zhang will arrive in Seattle after a turbulent few years for the orchestra. In 2022, the ensemble’s previous music director, Danish conductor Thomas Dausgaard, abruptly resigned, saying he felt “not safe” amid a strained relationship with the orchestra’s managers. It was an unusually bitter dispute, forcing the orchestra to scramble midseason to find replacements and begin a search for a new leader.

And the orchestra, like many arts organizations, has been dealing with the continuing effects of the pandemic. Subscriptions, once an important source of revenue, have fallen to 6,583 this year, compared with 8,757 in 2019. The number of performances remains slightly below prepandemic levels: 176 this season, compared with 179 in 2018-19.

But the orchestra has seen signs of progress. Attendance at concerts was about 70% last season, compared with 59% before the pandemic. And fundraising has been strong: Donations totaled about $19 million last year, compared with about $12 million in 2019.

Thiagarajan said he was confident the ensemble was now on the right track.

“With Xian joining us,” he said, “I am very optimistic that we’re not just going to turn around, but we’re going to start a new era for the Seattle Symphony.”

Zhang helped the Seattle Symphony get through the turmoil of the pandemic, when the ensemble was separated from Dausgaard because of travel restrictions. She was one of the first conductors to return to the stage with the orchestra in 2020, leading a streamed program of Mozart and Beethoven from Benaroya Hall, the ensemble’s home. And in fall 2021, when the orchestra resumed live performances before full audiences, Zhang was on the podium.

After that concert, The Seattle Times called her “incredibly dynamic,” saying the ensemble was fortunate to have found a conductor “nimble enough” to step in for Dausgaard on opening night.

Zhang began studying the piano when she was 3. Her father, an instrument maker, built her a piano, since they were hard to find in China at the end of the Cultural Revolution.

At 20, she made her professional debut conducting Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro” in Beijing. She got her big break in 2002, when she shared first prize in the inaugural Maazel/Vilar Conductors’ Competition at Carnegie Hall and became an assistant conductor at the New York Philharmonic.

Zhang is only the third woman to lead a top-tier U.S. orchestra (the designation is based on budget). Marin Alsop was the first; she led the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra for 14 years before stepping down in 2021. (Some smaller organizations, including the Buffalo Philharmonic, have female music directors.)

There has been some progress recently for female conductors: South Korean conductor Eun Sun Kim has been music director of the San Francisco Opera since 2021; and at the Metropolitan Opera this season, five of 18 productions will be led by women.

Zhang has said that as an Asian woman in conducting, she can feel a bit like an “endangered species” and has sometimes had difficulty persuading male musicians to take her seriously.

She plans to lead a bicoastal life over the next years. She will continue to serve as music director of the New Jersey Symphony at least through the 2027-28 season, when her contract expires. She will serve as music director designate in Seattle this season before beginning an initial five-year contract as music director in the 2025-26 season.

Zhang said she was eager to bring more Schumann and Bruckner to Seattle, among other composers, and to lead the orchestra on tours in the United States and abroad.

“Stability is very much on everybody’s mind,” she said. “When everybody feels more comfortable, then we can grow even further from there.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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