Conducting "legend" Abbado to perform in London

CASPER

New member
Italian conductor Claudio Abbado, dubbed the world's greatest by the Financial Times, will perform at London's Royal Festival Hall in October with his acclaimed Lucerne Festival Orchestra.

The rare appearance by the 77-year-old, who has recovered from stomach cancer, is billed as a highlight of the Southbank Centre's 2011/12 season, which also includes heavyweights like Briton Simon Rattle and Israeli Daniel Barenboim.

Abbado last played at the Royal Festival Hall in 1999 with the Berliner Philharmoniker, a year before he was diagnosed with cancer. Three years later he formed the Lucerne orchestra, many of whose members were picked by the conductor himself.

For the two Festival Hall appearances, Abbado will conduct Bruckner's Symphony No. 5 in both concerts, Mozart's Haffner Symphony (October 11) and Schumann's Piano Concerto with Helene Grimaud as the soloist (October 10).

Speaking of the Lucerne orchestra, Abbado has said: "Everyone is willing to do the craziest things I make them do for the sake of the music -- to fly, to walk through fire."

Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel returns to the Southbank Center in June 2012 with the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela.

Their 2009 residency won rave reviews in London and attracted over 60,000 visitors to Southbank over a single week.
 
Top