1/26/2017

Philip Glass 80th Birthday Season to Include Richard and Barbara Debs Composer's Chair Yearlong Residency at Carnegie Hall for 2017-2018 Season

PHILIP GLASS TO HOLD RICHARD AND BARBARA DEBS COMPOSER’S CHAIR AT CARNEGIE HALL FOR 2017–2018 SEASON
RESIDENCY JOINS GLASS’S 80TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATIONS AND INCLUDES YEAR OF PREMIERES AND GLASS CLASSICS PERFORMED BY NOTABLE PERFORMERS AND ENSEMBLES
COMPOSER’S CELEBRATORY 80TH BIRTHDAY SEASON ALSO FEATURES:
WORLD PREMIERE OF SYMPHONY NO. 11 AT
CARNEGIE HALL ON THE COMPOSER’S BIRTHDAY
80TH BIRTHDAY PROGRAMS AT THE BARBICAN
IN LONDON, UNC CHAPEL HILL AND
NATIONAL SAWDUST IN BROOKLYN
30TH ANNIVERSARY TIBET HOUSE U.S. BENEFIT CONCERT AT CARNEGIE HALL DEDICATED TO
GLASS’S 80TH BIRTHDAY
TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS JEAN COCTEAU’S LA BELLE ET LA BETE PERFORMED LIVE BY
THE PHILIP GLASS ENSEMBLE AT TOWN HALL
ADDITIONAL EVENTS TO BE ANNOUNCED
 
In celebration of his 80th birthday year, esteemed American composer Philip Glass has been appointed to hold the Richard and Barbara Debs Composer’s Chair at Carnegie Hall for the 2017–2018 season. The yearlong residency will present performances that feature both Glass classics and premieres:American Composers Orchestra dedicates a program to composers inspired by Glass; the Philip Glass Ensemble and the San Francisco Girls Chorus perform his groundbreaking but rarely performed masterpiece, Music with Changing Parts, as part of the citywide festival The ‘60s: The Years that Changed America; notable premieres include a string quartet for the JACK Quartet and arrangements by composer Nico Muhly of lesser-known Glass songs—both Carnegie Hall commissions; additionally, the Louisiana Philharmonic and Pacific Symphony both make their Carnegie Hall debuts in programs selected, in part, by Glass in response to invitations extended to U.S. orchestras to submit programs that place important works by the composer in illuminating contexts. Full details on the residency may be found at http://www.carnegiehall.org/glass/.
The honor and year of events associated with it join the following programs celebrating Glass’s 80th birthday, which takes place on January 31 and is marked by the world premiere of his Eleventh Symphony performed by the Bruckner Orchester Linz at Carnegie Hall. Highlights of the season follow, with additional events and honors to be announced throughout the season.


“PHILIP GLASS AT 80” AT THE BARBICAN, LONDON
The Barbican in London celebrates Glass’s 80th Birthday January 27–29 with “Philip Glass at 80,” a long weekend of programs that includes the Royal Ballet performing Les Enfants Terribles, Glass’s dance opera for ensemble, soloists and dancers with choreography and direction by Javier de Frutos; a BBC Symphony Orchestra Philip Glass Total Immersion Day featuring the U.K. premiere of Glass’s Concerto for Two Pianos with Katia and Marielle Labèque and his monumental symphonic portrait,Itaipú, in a program conducted by Marin Alsop; performances by the BBC Singers and musicians from the Guildhall School of Music & Drama; and a screening of Godfrey Reggio’s 2013 filmVISITORS, the fourth collaboration between Glass and Reggio (following the legendary Qatsi trilogy), in which Glass’s original score will be performed live by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted byMichael Riesman.
SYMPHONY NO. 11 WORLD PREMIERE ON THE COMPOSER’S BIRTHDAY, CARNEGIE HALL, NEW YORK
On his 80th birthday, January 31, Glass’s Symphony No. 11 will receive its world premiere atCarnegie Hall as part of an all-Glass program performed by the Bruckner Orchester Linz, led by Music Director Dennis Russell Davies. The evening will also include the New York premiere of Ifé: Three Yorùbá Songs, Glass’s collaboration with Angélique Kidjo, as well as his Days and Nights in Rocinha.
“GLASS AT 80” AT CAROLINA PERFORMING ARTS, UNC CHAPEL HILL,
NORTH CAROLINA
February 1–10 Carolina Performing Arts at UNC Chapel Hill presents “Glass at 80,” a celebration of Glass’s work and its impact on music and intellectual life through performances featuring some of his most important collaborators. Programming includes Dennis Russell Davies conducting the Bruckner Orchester Linz in a program featuring Glass’s Days and Nights in Rocinha along with his new Symphony No. 11 and Violin Concerto No. 1, which will be performed by Grammy-nominated violinistRobert McDuffie; Heroes Tribute: A Celebration of the Music of Philip Glass, David Bowie and Brian Eno with the UNC Symphony Orchestra and a host of Merge Records artists and collaborators including singer/songwriter Dan Bejar of Destroyer and Superchunk frontman and Merge co-founderMac McCaughan; Glass’s Complete Piano Etudes performed by Glass himself and nine other remarkable pianists including longtime collaborators and contemporary music specialists; Lucinda Childs Dance Company presenting the rarely performed DANCE, a seminal collaboration between Glass, Childs and visual artist Sol LeWitt; Kronos Quartet performing Glass’s Dracula score, conducted by Michael Reisman, alongside a screening of the Universal Pictures 1931 classic starring Bela Lugosi; and Glass and Laurie Anderson performing a special evening of music and poetry.
“PHILIP @ 80” AT NATIONAL SAWDUST, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Throughout 2017 National Sawdust in Brooklyn will present a series of programs under the banner “Philip @ 80,” which will include The Complete Piano Etudes with Maki Namekawa on February 24(co-presented with Orange Mountain Music); Bridging the Gap—works by Paola Prestini, John Zorn and Philip Glass performed by Jeffrey Zeigler with students from the Yale School of Music onMarch 5; and an evening with Glass and Foday Musa Suso on March 12 (co-presented with World Music Institute). Additional programming to be announced.
TIBET HOUSE U.S. BENEFIT CONCERT AT CARNEGIE HALL, NEW YORK
The 2017 edition of the annual Tibet House U.S. Benefit Concert takes place March 16 at Carnegie Hall and will be dedicated to the celebration of Glass’s 80th birthday and his long association with the organization and its acclaimed yearly event. The special event, which also marks the 30th Anniversary of the benefit, will include performances by Glass himself, Laurie Anderson, Ben Harper, Iggy Pop, New Order’s Bernard Sumner, Phil Cunningham and Tom Chapman, Alabama Shakes, Patti Smith and her Band, Sufjan Stevens, Tenzin Choegyal and Jesse Paris Smith, Scorchio Quartet and Lavinia Meijer. Honorary chairpersons include Uma Thurman, Chuck Close, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Peter Sarsgaard and Arden Wohl. Tickets and further details to be announced at https://tibethouse.us/benefit-concert-2017/.
TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS JEAN COCTEAU’S LA BELLE ET LA BETEPERFORMED LIVE BY THE PHILIP GLASS ENSEMBLE AT TOWN HALL
On April 20 The Tribeca Film Festival and The Town Hall in association with Pomegranate Arts present a screening of Jean Cocteau’s film La Belle et la Bete, featuring Glass’s original score played live by The Philip Glass Ensemble.

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