Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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70 years of the Philharmonia
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I know Salonen sees himself primarily as a composer, but does anyone else? I don't think the Philharmonia played much of his work (unlike the LA Phil), and it seems that San Francisco are giving him more scope for that side of things. It's a pity he's moving on, particularly as Jurowski is leaving the LPO too, which I think is the bigger loss.
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Originally posted by Darkbloom View PostI know Salonen sees himself primarily as a composer, but does anyone else? I don't think the Philharmonia played much of his work (unlike the LA Phil), and it seems that San Francisco are giving him more scope for that side of things. It's a pity he's moving on, particularly as Jurowski is leaving the LPO too, which I think is the bigger loss.
Any rumours on the LPO front?
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post13 years as principal conductor / chief conductor / music director (choose as appropriate) these days is a pretty long stretch for an orchestra-conductor relationship, so in that sense, it makes sense for E-PS to call time on this particular chapter of his career. Plus, this bombshell news from San Francisco may also explain another part of it:
There had been some speculation that Pablo Heras-Casado was in the running for San Francisco. But with E-PS moving back to California, musically speaking, that does open up the Philharmonia for PH-C, if PH-C is interested. I've actually never seen PH-C conduct live, so I can't testify to his qualities / debits as a conductor. Sorry to disappoint Alison on this question ;) .
Not too sure about PH-C and his current commitments, he seems to get all around the globe looking at his Twitter activity.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostVery much agreed. EPS very inconsequential as a composer, loadsa teeming detail and big gesture all to no significant end.
Any rumours on the LPO front?
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