London Philharmonic Orchestra 2008/09

Season highlights for the London Philharmonic Orchestra include Revealing Tchaikovsky, in collaboration with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, which offers the chance to hear operatic, chamber and orchestral works by Tchaikovsky, alongside the music of his contemporaries and successors. The Orchestra also celebrates the appointment of Yannick Nezet-Seguin as Principal Guest Conductor, who conducts four concerts throughout the season.
Other highlights include orchestral and choral music by Dvorak, a season-long celebration of Mendelssohn’s 200th anniversary which includes a performance of a reconstruction of what would have been his third Piano Concerto, and the world premiere of Mark-Anthony Turnage’s Violin Concerto Mambo, Blues and Tarantella.
The Orchestra welcomes return visits by conductors including Neeme Järvi, Gennadi Rozhdestvensky and Yuri Temirkanov, and looks forward to some great performances by soloists including violinist Christian Tetzlaff, baritone Matthias Goerner and pianists Viktoria Postnikova and Martin Helmchen.
Series Savings:
Book 3-4
concerts and save 10%
Book 5-7 concerts and save 15%
Book 8-10 concerts and save 20%
Book 11-14 concerts and
save 25%
Book 15 or more concerts and save 30%
Please note: if you are booking online for more than one series, you will need to book each series in separate transactions in order to receive the appropriate series discount. Alternatively, please call the Ticket Office on 0871 663 2500.
events in this series
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 26 November 2008
Tchaikovsky's last symphony had its first performance only nine days before he died, and it's said Tchaikovsky had in effect written his own funeral music as an orthodox funeral chant haunts the first movement.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 premium £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra (Funharmonics)
Saturday 29 November 2008
A special family-orientated concert. Prepare to be whisked from your Royal Festival Hall seat and taken on a magical journey, courtesy of a sleigh, a steam-train, nine flying horses and fifty elephants!
Adults £14 £12 £10 £9 £8. Children £7 £6 £5 £4.50 £4
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 5 December 2008
Pianist Jean Louis Steuerman performs Schumann's Piano Concerto, written for his wife Clara, who also gave the work's first performance.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 6 December 2008
A concert performance of Donizetti's opera Parisina, which displays 'a dramatic energy unequalled by anything he composed up to this time', according to his biographer William Ashbrook.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 13 December 2008
'Since I have never enjoyed in life the real happiness of love, I will erect this most beautiful of all dreams in which this love shall drink its fill', so wrote Wagner when conceiving his opera Tristan und Isolde. The Orchestra perform Act Two in this programme.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 16 January 2009
Two off-beat scores from his 30s see Richard Strauss turning not to the grand concepts of human heroism and spiritual rebirth, but instead painting more immediate and local musical pictures, with Till Eulenspiegel performed in this programme.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 21 January 2009
A performance of Sibelius' haunting, languorous Violin Concerto, which combines the purity of a snow-driven Nordic panorama with a sense of frailty and hope.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 24 January 2009
Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter joins the Orchestra to peform Mendelssohn's well-loved Violin Concerto.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 4 February 2009
Beethoven lifted his symphonic catalogue onto a new plane of expression by including, in his Ninth Symphony, vocal soloists and a chorus. Almost 100 years later, Mahler re-orchestrated the work, and the Orchestra perform his version in this programme.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 7 February 2009
The London Philharmonic Orchestra perform Dvorak's Requiem, scored for four soloists, chorus and orchestra, for the first time in the Orchestra's history.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 11 February 2009
Cellist Truls Mork joins the London Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor Yannick Nezet-Seguin for a performance of Haydn's Cello Concerto in C and Bruckner's Symphony No.7.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 18 February 2009
The world premiere of a new work by Martynov, visual artist, musician and philosopher and one of Russia's most distinguished cultural figures.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 20 February 2009
A performance of Richard Strauss' extravagant, Nietzsche-inspired tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra, which displays the composer's truly extraordinary musical writing, later used by Stanley Kubrick in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 6 March 2009
Conductor Yan Pascal Tortelier and pianist Simon Trpceski present a programme of Messiaen, Tchaikovsky and Berlioz.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium Seats £55 Series Discounts apply
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra (Funharmonics)
Sunday 8 March 2009
A special family-orientated concert featuring a musical menagerie of animals big, small, cute, and ferocious!
Adults £14 £12 £10 £9 £8. Children £7 £6 £5 £4.50 £4
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 11 March 2009
'Why on earth didn't I know that one could write a cello concerto like this? If I had only known, I would have written one long ago' - so wrote Brahms of his colleague Dvorak's Cello Concerto, performed in this concert by young cellist Daniel Mueller-Schott.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 14 March 2009
A programme including Schubert's Ninth Symphony, described by Mendelssohn as 'bright, fascinating and original', featuring an exuberant and tirelessly energetic final movement.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 28 March 2009
An evening devoted to Rossini's opera Ermione.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 1 April 2009
A programme featuring Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony and Brahms' Second Piano Concerto performed by Nicholas Angelich.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 4 April 2009
Brahms' German Requiem, written shortly after his mother died, contains some of his most profoundly moving music, performed in this concert with soprano Barbara Bonney and baritone Teddy Tahu Rhodes.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 22 April 2009
A concert featuring the work of three composers born into the Soviet regime in the mid 20th-century: Giya Kancheli, Benjamin Yusopov and Valentin Silvestrov - musicians known for innovative, moving and atmospheric music.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Saturday 25 April 2009
Vladimir Jurowski conducts his first Mahler symphony with the London Philharmonic Orchestra.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Purcell Room
London Philharmonic Orchestra: Foyle Future Firsts
Wednesday 29 April 2009
This evening the Foyle Future Firsts, the Orchestra's outstanding young apprentice musicians, come together to play music by three masters of the 20th century.
£7
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 1 May 2009
Rachmaninov wrote his Third Symphony whilst living in America, and the Russian folk themes that pervade the work show a tangible senseof his sadness in the face of exile.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra (Funharmonics)
Saturday 16 May 2009
A family-orientated concert with a boisterous concert featuring battles, weddings, jovial japes and dazzling dances aplenty.
Adults £14 £12 £10 £9 £8. Children £7 £6 £5 £4.50 £4
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Friday 22 May 2009
A musically evocative concert featuring Vaughan Williams' The Lark Ascending and Holst's The Planets.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Wednesday 27 May 2009
Conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin leads the Orchestra in a programme featuring music by Mendelssohn, Rachmaninov and Dvorak.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium seats £55
Royal Festival Hall
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Sunday 31 May 2009
The UK premiere of My Heart is on Fire, by Torsten Rasch. Conceived as a classical song cycle, Torsten Rasch's songs - spoken, sung, whispered and shouted - are unspeakably powerful and as gripping as the Romanticism of Beethoven and Mahler, but with a contemporary edge.
£38 £32 £27 £21 £16 £12 £9 Premium Seats £55


