Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_JanFeb_19 | Page 27
MOZART SYMPHONY NO. 40
JOSEPH MEYERHOFF SYMPHONY HALL
Friday, February 8, 2019, 8 pm
Sunday, February 10, 2019, 3 pm
MUSIC CENTER AT STRATHMORE
Saturday, February 9, 2019, 8 pm
Markus Stenz, conductor
Paul Huang, violin
Emmanuel Chabrier España
Aram Khachaturian
Violin Concerto
Allegro con fermezza
Andante sostenuto
Allegro vivace
Paul Huang
INTERMISSION
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550
Molto allegro
Andante
Menuetto: Allegretto
Allegro assai
Ludwig van Beethoven
Leonore Overture No. 3 in C Major, op. 72b
The concert will end at approximately 10 pm on Friday and Saturday
and 5 pm on Sunday.
PRESENTING SPONSOR:
SUPPORTING SPONSOR:
About the Artists
Markus Stenz
For Markus Stenz’s bio, please see pg. 16.
Paul Huang
Recipient of the
prestigious 2015 Avery
Fisher Career Grant
and the 2017 Lincoln
Center Award for
Emerging Artists, violinist Paul Huang
has gained attention for his eloquent
music-making, distinctive sound and
effortless virtuosity. The Washington
Post proclaimed Huang as “an artist
with the goods for a significant career.”
His recent and forthcoming
engagements include his recital debut
at the Lucerne Festival, as well as
solo appearances with the Mariinsky
Orchestra, Berliner Symphoniker,
Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Houston
Symphony, Orchestra of St. Luke’s, Seoul
Philharmonic Orchestra and Taipei
Symphony Orchestra. This season,
he will also be making his Chicago
orchestral debut at the Grant Park
Music Festival, as well as appearances
with the Buffalo Philharmonic and
with the Baltimore, Alabama, Pacific,
Santa Barbara, Charlotte and Taiwan’s
National symphony orchestras.
During the 2018 – 19 season, Huang
makes debuts at the Hong Kong
International Chamber Music Festival,
Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival and
returns to the Palm Beach Chamber
Music Society with the Emerson String
Quartet and pianist Gilles Vonsattel.
In addition, Huang continues his
association with the Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln Center and
Camerata Pacifica.
Huang’s recent recital engagements
included Lincoln Center’s Great
Performers series and return engagement
at the Kennedy Center with pianist
Orion Weiss. Huang has also made
debuts at the Wigmore Hall, Seoul Arts
Center and the Louvre.
His first solo CD, Intimate
Inspiration, is a collection of favorite
virtuoso and romantic encore pieces
released on the CHIMEI label. In
association with Camerata Pacifica,
he recorded Four Songs of Solitude for
solo violin on their album of John
Harbison’s works.
He has performed at Music@Menlo
Chamber Music Festival, Caramoor
Center for Music and the Arts, La Jolla
Music Society and the Sion Festival.
His collaborators have included Gil
Shaham, Cho-Liang Lin, Nobuko Imai,
Lawrence Power, Maxim Rysanov,
Mischa Maisky, Yefim Bronfman and
Marc-André Hamelin.
Honors include winning of the 2011
Young Concert Artists International
Auditions, First Prize at the 2009 Tibor
Varga International Violin Competition
Sion Valais in Switzerland, the 2009
Chi Mei Cultural Foundation Arts
Award, the 2013 Salon de Virtuosi
Career Grant and the 2014 Classical
Recording Foundation Award.
Born in Taiwan, Huang began
violin lessons at the age of seven. He
is a proud recipient of the inaugural
JA N – F E B 201 9 / OV E R T U R E
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