Program:
J. Sibelius: Finlandia, Op.26 E.W. Korngold: Violin Concerto in D major, Op.35 H. Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique, Op.14
Quartet
Violin: Chantal Juillet Orchestra: The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Conductor: Charles Dutoit
Charles Dutoit
Throughout a career that has energetically spanned the globe and mined the riches of orchestral repertoire, Charles Dutoit has exhibited a passion for excellence and insatiable discovery. Renowned for polished and idiomatic interpretations of an eclectic array of musical styles, he regularly collaborates with the world's pre-eminent orchestras and soloists.
Since his debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1980, Charles Dutoit has been invited each season to conduct all the major orchestras of the United States, including those of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Pittsburgh and Cleveland. He has also performed regularly with all the great orchestras of Europe, including the Berlin Philharmonic and Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw Orchestra as well as with all the London orchestras, the Israel Philharmonic and all the major orchestras of Japan, South America and Australia.
Charles Dutoit has also recorded extensively for Decca, Deutsche Grammophon, EMI, Philips, CBS, Erato and other labels with American, European and Japanese orchestras. His more than 170 recordings, half of them with the Montreal Symphony, have garnered more than 40 awards and distinctions around the world. For 25 years (1977 to 2002), Charles Dutoit was Artistic Director of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, a dynamic musical partnership recognized the world over. Since 1990, he has been Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra's summer festival at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in upstate New York. Between 1990 and 1999, he also directed the orchestra's summer series at the Mann Music Center in Philadelphia, and led them in a series of distinctive recordings.
From 1991 to 2001, Charles Dutoit was Music Director of the Orchestre National de France with whom he made a number of critically lauded recordings and toured extensively on the five continents.
In 1996, he was appointed Principal Conductor and in 1998, Music Director of the NHK Symphony Orchestra (Tokyo) with whom he has toured Europe 3 times, the United States, China and Southeast Asia.
When still in his early 20’s, Charles Dutoit was invited by Von Karajan to lead the Vienna State Opera. He has since conducted regularly at Covent Garden, the Metropolitan Opera and the Deutsche Oper in Berlin. He also led a highly acclaimed new stage production of Berlioz's masterpiece Les Troyens at the Los Angeles Music Center Opera.
In 2003, he started to conduct a cycle of Wagner’s operas, The Flying Dutchman and the complete Ring Cycle at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires. Charles Dutoit has always been interested in working closely with student orchestras and his frequent collaborations include the Orchestra of the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, the Julliard Orchestra in New York, the Civic Orchestra in Chicago and the UBS Verbier Festival Orchestra in Switzerland. He was Artistic Director of the Sapporo Pacific Music Festival for three seasons and is presently Music Director of the Miyazaki International Music festival in Japan and Music Director of the Canton international Summer Music Academy (CISMA) in Guangzhou (Canton), China.
He has made ten documentary films for NHK Television in Japan for a series entitled Cities of Music featuring ten musical capitals of the world. In 1988, Charles Dutoit was invested as Officier, and in 1996 as Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the government of France. In 1991, he was made Honorary Citizen of the City of Philadelphia. In 1995, the government of Québec named him Grand Officier de l'Ordre national du Québec. He is the recipient of two awards by the Canadian Conference of the Arts, both in recognition of his distinguished service and exceptional contributions to music in Canada. In 1998, Charles Dutoit was invested as Honorary Officer of the Order of Canada, the country’s highest award of merit whose honorary recipients include John Kenneth Galbraith, James Hillier, Nelson Mandela, The Queen Mother, Vaclav Havel and Boutros Boutros-Ghali.
Charles Dutoit was born in Lausanne, Switzerland and his extensive musical training included violin, viola, piano, percussion, history of music and composition at the Conservatoires and Music Academies of Geneva, Siena, Venice and Boston.
A globetrotter motivated by his passion for history and archaeology, political science, art and architecture, Charles Dutoit has traveled and visited so far 172 countries. He maintains residences in Switzerland, Paris, Montreal, Buenos Aires and Tokyo.
Chantal Juillet
“It is hard to imagine a more persuasive performance” The Irish Times
Winning all major Canadian music competitions by the age of 16, Montréal-born violinist Chantal Juillet first came to international attention when she received First Prize at the Young Concert Artists Competition (NY), making successful débuts in Los Angeles, New York and in Washington DC. Recognised as one of Canada's most brilliant musicians, she appears frequently with the world’s most renowned orchestras, including the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the New York Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Orchestre de Paris, the Filarmonica della Scala, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, the Sydney Symphony and the Hong Kong Philharmonic. She has toured Europe, North and South America with the Montréal Symphony, Spain with The Philharmonia, Italy with the Orchestre de France and Japan with the NHK Symphony.
Her first recording for Decca, of Stravinsky's Violin Concerto and the two Szymanowski concerti, was released to outstanding critical acclaim. Subsequent releases include an all-Ravel disc, which won the Gramophone Award for the Best Chamber Music Recording of 1997, the Goldschmidt Rondeau and Violin Concerto conducted by the composer, the Korngold, Krenek and Weill violin concerti with the Berlin Rundfunk Symphony Orchestra, which formed part of Decca’s Entartete Musik project and Rêverie et Caprice, a collection of French pieces for violin and orchestra with the Montréal Symphony Orchestra. Chantal Juillet also recorded a disc of chamber music with Martha Argerich, her first for EMI, which was released in July 1999.
Fervent ambassador of new music, Chantal Juillet is an active proponent of première performances, associated with some of today’s foremost composers. In 1994 she gave the first public performance of Berthold Goldschmidt's Violin Concerto at the Festival de Radio France et de Montpellier, with the Orchestre National de France. After the performance the composer dedicated the concerto to her and subsequently Goldschmidt wrote Rondeau as a gesture of their musical friendship. Miss Juillet also collaborated closely with Krzysztof Penderecki on his 2nd Violin Concerto Metamorphoses, premièring this significant work in North America and several European countries in 1996.
World premières include André Prévost’s Violin Concerto (1998), written for her and the Montréal Symphony Orchestra to celebrate the Canada Council’s 40th anniversary, Richard Danielpour’s Violin Concerto (2000) and Lowell Liebermann’s Violin Concerto (2001), both written for her and the Philadelphia Orchestra, Denys Bouliane’s Triple Concerto, Tetrapharmarkos (2004), commissioned by the Montréal Symphony, as well as numerous chamber music works. In addition she gave the North American premiere (2003) of James MacMillan’s A Deep but Dazzling Darkness.
Since 1991, Chantal Juillet is Music Director of the Saratoga International Chamber Music Festival (NY). From 2001 to 2003 she held the same title at the Pacific Music Festival in Japan and since 2005 she combines the positions of Artistic Associate and Director of Chamber Music at the Canton International Summer Music Academy (CISMA), newly founded by China’s Ministry of Culture and IMG Artists.
Chantal Juillet is a graduate of Indiana University, where she studied with the eminent violinist Josef Gingold. Her previous teachers included Ivan Galamian at the Juilliard School and Luis Grinhauz in Montréal. In 2000 she was made a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de France and received in 2005 the Opus Prize for “Personality of the Year” from the Conseil Québécois de la Musique and was appointed Chevailier de l’Ordre National du Québec
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