© Werner Kmetitsch style= © Werner Kmetitsch

Rachmaninow & Hindemith im Wiener Musikverein

Vienna, Wiener Musikverein — Großer Saal

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$ 100

About the Event

Hardly any other conductor has been as closely associated with the Tonkünstler Orchestra for as long as Hans Graf: since his debut in 1980, the Austrian, who is celebrated from the USA to the Far East, has enjoyed working with them time and again. Sergei Rachmaninoff, who left Russia in the wake of the 1917 revolution, was denied such a return to his beloved homeland at the time: In exile in the USA, he suffered greatly from this separation and also processed this melancholy in his music – for example in his large‐scale Third Symphony, which wonderfully evokes late Romantic melos without denying its classical roots. The juxtaposition with the only completed movement of Rachmaninoff's Youth Symphony, which he had written 44 years earlier as a student, is also moving, as is the entire program, a heartfelt wish of Hans Graf. Only a few years younger than Rachmaninoff's Third is Paul Hindemith's Violin Concerto, composed in 1939 – Hindemith was also an emigrant against his will after the Nazis branded him a “cultural Bolshevik.” Austrian‐Chinese violinist Ziyu He, born in 1999, makes his debut as a musician with this gripping work, which combines longing, virtuosity, and grandeur.

Wiener Musikverein


The Wiener Musikverein is one of the world's great concert halls. The home of the Vienna Philarmonic Orchestra and the centre of Viennese musical life, the building was opened in 1870 as a part of an ambitious plan to create an elegant cultural boulevard along the Ringstrasse. Designed in the Neo‐Classical style to resemble an Ancient Greek temple, the Great Hall of the Musikverein is deemed to be one of the best music halls in the world thanks to its impeccable acoustics.
In 2004 four new halls were added to the building. The Austrian architect Wilhelm Holzbauer recognised the aesthetic importance of the existing building and sought out ways to echo the style in a modern language of form. Each of the four New Halls focuses on a different material — glass, metal, stone, and wood.

Program

  • Sergei Vasilievich Rachmaninoff – «Jugendsymphonie» d‐Moll
  • Paul Hindemith – Konzert für Violine und Orchester
  • Sergei Vasilievich Rachmaninoff – Symphony No. 3 in A minor, op. 44
Program is subject to change

Artists

Orchestra: Tonkünstler‐Orchester Niederösterreich

The Tonkünstler Orchestra, with its five residences in the Musikverein Vienna and Lower Austria, is one of Austria's largest and most important musical ambassadors. The orchestra has a tradition stretching back more than 75 years of Sunday afternoon concerts at the Musikverein Vienna. The orchestra's repertoire ranges from classical to 20th‐century music. The Tonkünstler's alternative programming is appreciated by musicians and audiences alike. Musicians such as Walter Weller, Heinz Wallberg, Miltiades Caridis, Fabio Luisi, Kristjan Järvi, and Andrés Orozco‐Estrada have served as principal conductors of the orchestra. Since the 2025–2026 season, it has been led by Fabien Gabel. His predecessor, Yutaka Sado, was appointed the Tonkünstler's first honorary conductor after ten years as principal conductor. The orchestra's most recent tours have taken it to the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, and Czechia. Numerous CD recordings reflect its versatile artistic profile: the orchestra's own label releases up to four recordings per year, mostly live recordings from the Musikverein in Vienna.

Conductor: Hans Graf

One of the most reputable Austrian musicians, the conductor Hans Graf is known for the breadth of his repertoire and imaginativeness of his concert programme. Born in 1949, he studied conducting with F. Ferrara, S. Celibidache and A. Jansens. The first prize at the Carl Böhm Competition in 1979 was the launch of a conducting career that has included appearances with numerous orchestras, from Iran to Austria and France, most notably the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra and the Houston Symphony Orchestra, the latter marking his Carnegie Hall debut in 2006.
Graf regularly works with major North American orchestras (he closely cooperates with the Boston Symphony Orchestra), conducts celebrated European, Japanese and Australian orchestras and is highly in demand as a conductor to prominent European opera houses. He participates in various prestigious festivals, and records extensively for several international recording companies.

Violin: Ziyu He

Address

Wiener Musikverein, Bösendorferstraße 12, Vienna, Austria — Google Maps

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