TICKETS TO THE BOSTON SYMPHONY’S 2014-15 SEASON WILL GO ON SALE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC ON MONDAY, AUGUST 4, AVAILABLE BY CALLING 888-266-1200, VISITING WWW.BSO.ORG, OR IN PERSON AT THE SYMPHONY HALL BOX OFFICE

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TICKETS TO THE BOSTON SYMPHONY’S 2014-15 SEASON WILL GO ON SALE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC ON MONDAY, AUGUST 4, AVAILABLE BY CALLING 888-266-1200, VISITING WWW.BSO.ORG, OR IN PERSON AT THE SYMPHONY HALL BOX OFFICE AT 301 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE

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BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCES 2014-15 CONCERT SCHEDULE AND ENTHUSIASTICALLY WELCOMES ANDRIS NELSONS TO HIS FIRST SEASON AS BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR

ANDRIS NELSONS, THE 15th BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR SINCE THE ORCHESTRA’S FOUNDING IN 1881, TO LEAD THE ORCHESTRA IN TEN PROGRAMS AT SYMPHONY HALL; THREE PROGRAMS AT CARNEGIE HALL; THREE WEEKS AT TANGLEWOOD, AND AN 8-CITY SUMMER TOUR OF EUROPEAN MUSIC CAPITALS

IN HIS DEBUT SEASON AS MUSIC DIRECTOR, ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD THE BSO IN MUSIC THAT INSPIRED AND INFLUENCED HIS LIFE AS A MUSICIAN, AMERICAN AND WORLD PREMIERES FEATURING COMPOSERS BOTH NEW AND FAMILIAR TO THE BSO, AND PERFORMANCES SHOWCASING THE TALENTS OF SEVERAL OF HIS FAVORITE FREQUENT COLLABORATORS

ACCLAIMED SOPRANO KRISTĪNE OPOLAIS AND THE GREAT TENOR JONAS KAUFMANN
JOIN THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FOR A GALA PROGRAM CELEBRATING ANDRIS NELSONS’ FIRST CONCERT AS BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR ON SEPTEMBER 27; PROGRAM TO FEATURE OPERATIC AND ORCHESTRAL MASTERWORKS INCLUDING EXCERPTS FROM PUCCINI’S MANON LESCAUT AND WAGNER’S TANNHUSER, LOHENGRIN, AND TRISTAN UND ISOLDE, WITH A BSO GRAND FINALE OF RESPIGHI’S DAZZLING SHOWPIECE PINES OF ROME

ANDRIS NELSONS’ FIRST SEASON TO SHOWCASE MUSIC OF THE GREAT SLAVIC AND SCANDINAVIAN TRADITIONS INCLUDING SYMPHONIES BY SHOSTAKOVICH, SIBELIUS, AND TCHAIKOVSKY, AS WELL AS BARTK’S MIRACULOUS MANDARIN SUITE, PROKOFIEV’S SYMPHONY-CONCERTO FEATURING CELLIST YO-YO MA, RACHMANINOFF’S THE BELLS, AND STRAVINSKY’S THE RITE OF SPRING

ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD SOME OF HIS FAVORITES OF THE CORE GERMAN REPERTOIRE, INCLUDING WORKS BY BEETHOVEN, HAYDN, AND MOZART, AS WELL AS BRAHMS’S HAYDN VARIATIONS, BRUCKNER’S SEVENTH SYMPHONY, MAHLER’S SIXTH SYMPHONY, AND
STRAUSS’S DON QUIXOTE AND EIN HELDENLEBEN

NEW BSO CONDUCTOR TO LEAD TWO WORLD PREMIERE PERFORMANCES OF WORKS BY LATVIAN COMPOSER ĒRIKS EŠENVALDS AND AMERICAN COMPOSER MICHAEL GANDOLFI; THE AMERICAN PREMIERE OF BRETT DEAN’S TRUMPET CONCERTO, FEATURING HKAN HARDENBERGER; AND PERFORMANCES OFSOFIA GUBAIDULINA’S MASTERFUL OFFERTORIUM WITH VIOLINIST BAIBA SKRIDE, JOHN HARBISON’S KOUSSEVITZKY SAID, AND GUNTHER SCHULLER’S DREAMSCAPE

ANDRIS NELSONS’ PROGRAMS TO SPOTLIGHT SOME OF THE CONDUCTOR’S LONGTIME ESTEEMED COLLEAGUES INCLUDING CELLIST GAUTIER CAPUON, TRUMPETER HKAN HARDENBERGER, VIOLINISTS BAIBA SKRIDE AND CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF, PIANIST LARS VOGT, SINGERS PAVEL ČERNOCH,JONAS KAUFMANN, KRISTĪNE OPOLAIS, AND KOSTAS SMORIGINAS; AND THE TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS; NEW COLLABORATORS INCLUDE CELLIST YO-YO MA, BSO PRINCIPAL VIOLIST STEVEN ANSELL, PIANIST RICHARD GOODE, ORGANIST OLIVIER LATRY, AND SOPRANO VICTORIA YASTREBOVA

ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD THE ORCHESTRA IN CARNEGIE HALL IN WORKS OF BEETHOVEN, MAHLER, MOZART, SHOSTAKOVICH, AND STRAUSS, AS WELL AS THE NEW YORK PREMIERE OF GUNTHER SCHULLER’S DREAMSCAPE, APRIL 15, 16, AND 17, 2015

ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD BSO IN AN 8-CITY SUMMER TOUR TO MAJOR EUROPEAN MUSIC CAPITALS INCLUDING BERLIN, COLOGNE, LONDON, LUCERNE, PARIS, SALZBURG

ANDRIS NELSONS TO BE IN RESIDENCY FOR THREE WEEKS DURING 2015 TANGLEWOOD SEASON,
LEADING SEVERAL PROGRAMS WITH THE BSO AND CONDUCTING MAHLER’S SYMPHONY NO. 8 WITH THE TANGLEWOOD MUSIC CENTER ORCHESTRA IN CELEBRATION OF THE
PRESTIGIOUS ACADEMY’S 75TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON

SYMPHONY GALA ON SEPTEMBER 23 TO FETE NEW BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR IN GRAND STYLE

ANDRIS NELSONS TO TAKE PART IN APRIL 12 SYMPHONY HALL OPEN HOUSE WELCOMING
THE COMMUNITY INTO THE HALL FOR A FREE DAY OF PERFORMANCES

TO VIEW THE PORTION OF THE BSO’S 2014-15 SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT THAT OUTLINES ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS FEATURING AN ILLUSTRIOUS SCHEDULE OF GUEST CONDUCTORS
AND SOLOISTS, CLICK HERE

SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE BSO’S 2014-2015 SEASON ARE AVAILABLE BY CALLING
888-266-7575 OR VISITING WWW.BSO.ORG

THE 2014-15 SEASON IS SPONSORED BY BANK OF AMERICA AND EMC CORPORATION

[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s 2014-15 season shines a welcoming spotlight on Andris Nelsons as he makes hishighly anticipated debut as BSO Music Director, leading performances that feature an eclectic offering of music and an impressive lineup of guest artists, and presenting programs that illuminate touchstone moments in his life as a musician, from his youngest days as a child in Riga, to his present-day stature as one of the world’s most sought-after conductors. When Mr. Nelsons takes on the title of BSO Music Director in September 2014, at age 35, he will be the youngest conductor to hold that title with the orchestra in over 100 years. The fifteenth music director since the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s founding in 1881, Mr. Nelsons is also the first Latvian-born conductor to assume the post.

[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]Mr. Nelsons’ first season with the Boston Symphony Orchestra begins in grand style on Saturday, September 27, when he opens a celebratory program with Wagner’s Overture to Tannhuser—the work that first inspired a five-year-old Nelsons to a life in music. Two singers strongly associated with Mr. Nelsons’ artistic life, the acclaimed soprano Kristīne Opolais, Mr. Nelsons’ wife, and the great tenor Jonas Kaufmann, join the BSO and its new conductor for an evening of operatic and symphonic showpieces featuring works by Puccini, Respighi, and Wagner, among others. Together, Ms. Opolais and Mr. Kaufmann will join the orchestra and Mr. Nelsons for the dramatic duet, “Tu, tu, amore? Tu?” from Puccini’s Manon Lescaut. Ms. Opolais will also be featured along with the BSO in Wagner’s magnificent Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde, and Mr. Kaufmann will return to the BSO stage for a performance of the title character’s famous third-act narrative, “In fernem Land,” from Wagner’s Lohengrin. Each of the evening’s vocalists will also sing solo arias from the Italian opera repertoire. To bring this special evening to an end, the BSO and Mr. Nelsons will be front and center in a performance of Respighi’s glorious orchestral showpiece Pines of Rome.

The following week, October 1-3, Mr. Nelsons returns to the BSO to lead a powerhouse program of three major orchestral works—Beethoven’s Symphony No. 8, Bartk’s Miraculous Mandarin Suite, and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6, Pathtique, for his first full week of subscription programs. Mr. Nelsons’ three subsequent appearances with the BSO—in November 2014, January 2015, and March/April 2015—will each take on its own musical focus and offer insights into the many influences behind Mr. Nelsons’ musical life past and present, including the role of new music with programs featuring works by Brett Dean, Ēriks Ešenvalds, Michael Gandolfi, Sofia Gubaidulina, John Harbison, and Gunther Schuller.

[Hakan Hardenberger (photo by Marco Borggreve)]Works by Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Sibelius, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninoff, and performances by Hkan Hardenberger andBaiba Skride, will be featured in three BSO programs focusing on music from the Slavic and Scandinavian traditions, and on musicians with whom Mr. Nelsons has frequently collaborated, November 6-22. In two programs devoted to some of his favorite works from the great German-Austrian tradition, January 8-17, Mr. Nelsons will lead the BSO in music of Beethoven, Brahms, Bruckner, Haydn, and Mozart, among others. Monumental works by Mahler, Shostakovich, and Strauss will each be featured prominently in Mr. Nelsons’ final three BSO programs of the season, March 26-April 14, also to be repeated at Carnegie Hall, April 15-17.

Bringing Andris Nelsons’ passion for music’s storytelling powers to the fore, a thematic thread throughout many of the conductor’s programs will be favorite orchestral works inspired by great narratives, including texts by Shakespeare, Cervantes, and Edgar All[Gautier Capucon]en Poe, along with new music and 20th-century masterpieces inspired by a wide variety of sources.

In addition to Ms. Opolais and Mr. Kaufmann, Mr. Nelsons will bring some of his longtime collaborators to the Symphony Hall stage, including cellist Gautier Capuon, trumpeter Hkan Hardenberger, violinists Baiba Skride and Christian Tetzlaff, pianist Lars Vogt, singers Pavel Černoch and Kostas Smorigninas, and the Tanglewood Festival Chorus. Mr. Nelsons looks forward to new collaborations with cellist Yo-Yo Ma, BSO principal violist Steven Ansell, pianist Richard Goode, organist Olivier Latry, and soprano Victoria Yastrebova.

“In planning my first season as the Boston Symphony’s music director, I wanted really to concentrate on deepening my relationship with the orchestra and its wonderfully enthusiastic audience and community,” said Andris Nelsons.“Music is food for our souls, and my ambition is to work very closely with the BSO to bring the deepest passion and love that we all share for music to ever greater numbers of music lovers at Symphony Hall and throughout the world. It was clear to me that the only way for me to do this was to listen to my heart and share the great music and wonderful artists that have inspired meas a musician, from mychildhood in Latvia to my current good fortune in leading many of the world’s great orchestras. I truly hope the programs I’ve chosen for our first season already express mypassion for the great masterpieces, the extraordinary creativity behind the music of our time, theamazingvirtuosity of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the remarkable musicianship of the guest artists with whom I have the privilege of working and the pleasure of bringing to Symphony Hall. Most important, I want to say how thrilled and honored I am to introduce our first season together, every moment of which I look forward to sharing with the BSO’s special audience. We are all embarking upon a great musical journey, and I look forward to many years of enjoying music together!”

The 134th season of the Boston Symphony Orchestra takes place September 18, 2014–May 2, 2015. Subscriptions for the BSO’s 2014-2015 season are available by calling the BSO Subscription Office at 888-266-7575 or online through the BSO’s website (www.bso.org). Single tickets are now on sale and may be purchased by phone through SymphonyCharge (617-266-1200 or 888-266-1200), online through the BSO’s website (www.bso.org), or in person at the Symphony Hall Box Office (301 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston).

2014-15 BSO SEASON OVERVIEW OF PROGRAMS WITH RAY AND MARIA STATA
MUSIC DIRECTOR ANDRIS NELSONS

TWO CELEBRATORY PROGRAMS LAUNCH ANDRIS NELSONS’ FIRST SEASON AS BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR
[Jonas Kaufmann] On September 27, the Boston Symphony Orchestra will celebrate the arrival of its new music director with a gala concert featuring Andris Nelsons leading a program filled with works and guest artists that have inspired his musical life. In an evening of operatic and orchestral showpieces, Mr. Nelsons opens the program with the overture to Wagner’s Tannhuser—the first live opera Nelsons ever heard as a child [Kristine Opolais (photo by Tatyana Vlasova)] and the work that would set him on the path of becoming a conductor—putting a special focus on this exciting new collaboration between conductor and orchestra. That focus on the orchestra and its new conductor continues with Wagner’s Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde, which also features the highly acclaimed singer Kristīne Opolais; the Intermezzo from Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana, and Respighi’s resplendent Pines of Rome, which will bring the program to an end. The opera portion of the evening will feature the great tenor Jonas Kaufmann along with Ms. Opolais—two artists with whom Mr. Nelsons frequently collaborates—in a performance of the famous duet “Tu, tu, amore? Tu?” from Puccini’s Manon Lescaut. Each singer will also take center stage for solo arias, with Ms. Opolais singing the moving Italian aria “Ebben? Ne andr lontana” from Catalani’s La Wally. When Mr.Kaufmann returns to the stage he will sing two beloved selections for tenor: the title character’s magical third-act narrative, “In fernem Land,” from Wagner’s Lohengrin, and the moving aria, “Mamma, quel vino generoso,” from Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana.

This program’s celebratory spirit continues into the following week when Mr. Nelsons leads his first week of subscription concerts, October 1-3. In what promises to be a special occasion for BSO audiences, Mr. Nelsons showcases the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a program featuring three major symphonic masterworks: Beethoven’s Symphony No. 8, Bartk’s Miraculous Mandarin Suite, and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6, Pathtique.

THREE PROGRAMS, OCTOBER 6-22, FOCUS ON ANDRIS NELSONS’ ROOTS AS A MUSICIAN AND SPOTLIGHT HIS FREQUENT COLLABORATORS
[Baiba Skride (photo by Marco Borggreve)]  When Andris Nelsons returns to the BSO podium, November 6-22, he will lead three programs including works by Prokofiev, Rachmaninoff, Shostakovich, Sibelius, and Tchaikovsky, putting a special focus on the rich Slavic and Scandinavian music traditions and offering audiences a glimpse into the repertoire that has made such a deep imprint on the conductor, from his early life as a student of music to his current life leading performances worldwide. In addition, Mr. Nelsons will bring to the Symphony Hall stage several of his favorite frequent collaborators, including Swedish trumpeter Hkan Hardenberger andLatvian musicians violinist Baiba Skride and composer Ēriks Ešenvalds—all important members of his ever-growing musical family.

On November 6, 7, 8, and 11, Mr. Nelsons brings Latvian violinist Baiba Skride to the BSO for a performance of preeminent Russian composer Sofia Gubaidulina’s masterful Offertorium, on a program closing with Sibelius’s majestic Second Symphony. The following week, November 13, 14, 15, and 18, Mr. Nelsons welcomes his frequent collaborator, Swedish trumpeter Hkan Hardenberger, for the American premiere of Australian composer Dean Brett’s Trumpet Concerto, Dramatis personae, a title that refers to the varied characters the composer associates with the instrument. This program opens with Tchaikovsky’s Hamlet and closes with Stravinsky’s monumental The Rite of Spring.

[Yo-Yo Ma (photo by Hilary Scott)] The third program in this series, November 20, 21, and 22, opens with John Harbison’s Koussevitzky Said: for chorus and orchestra, a musical tribute to one of the BSO’s legendary music directors, the Russian-born Serge Koussevitzky, and originally composed for Tanglewood’s 75th anniversary season in 2012. Following the Harbison work, Maestro Nelsons, the BSO, and Tanglewood Festival Chorus will present the world premiere of a new work for chorus and orchestra by Latvian composer Ēriks Ešenvalds, a co-commission between the BSO and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, where Maestro Nelsons will have served as music director from 2008 to 2015. Yo-Yo Ma joins Maestro Nelsons and the BSO for the opening work of the second half of the program, Prokofiev’s Symphony-Concerto for cello and orchestra, which will be followed by Rachmaninoff’s The Bells, a choral symphony the composer considered one of his own favorite works. Soloists for the Rachmaninoff include Czechoslovakian tenor Pavel Černoch and Lithuanian baritone Kostas Smoriginas, both being previouscollaborators of Mr. Nelsons, as well as Russian soprano Victoria Yastrebova, with whom Mr. Nelsons will work for the first time; all three will be making their BSO debuts.

ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD THE BSO IN SOME OF HIS FAVORITE WORKS FROM THE CORE GERMAN-AUSTRIAN REPERTOIRE, JANUARY 8-17, 2015
[Lars Vogt (photo by Felix Broede)]Maestro Nelsons brings a special focus to some of his favorite works from the core German-Austrian music tradition, January 8-17, with two BSO programs of music by Brahms, Bruckner, Haydn, Mozart, and Strauss. These programs will also place a special spotlight on two artists with whom Mr. Nelsons frequently collaborates: cellist Gautier Capuon and pianist Lars Vogt.

Brahms’s Haydn Variations opens the first of these programs, January 8, 9, and 10, followed by Haydn’s Symphony No. 90 and Strauss’s Don Quixote, with cellist Gautier Capuon and BSO principal viola Steven Ansell. Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24, with soloist Lars Vogt, is paired with Bruckner’s Symphony No. 7 for Mr. Nelsons’ program of January 15, 16, and 17.

ANDRIS NELSONS LEADS THE BSO IN THREE ORCHESTRAL MASTERWORKS AND A NEW WORK BY MICHAEL GANDOLFI, MARCH 26-APRIL 14, 2015
[Gunther Schuller]For his final series of programs in his first season as the BSO’s new music director, Mr. Nelsons will lead three orchestral masterworks, the world premiere of a new work by Michael Gandolfi, and the Boston premiere of a recent work by Gunther Schuller premiered by the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra during the 2012 Tanglewood season. These programs will mark the first time Mr. Nelsons will conduct works by Mr. Gandolfi and Mr. Schuller.

[Oliver Latry (photo by Jean-Franois Badias)]Acclaimed French organist Olivier Latry joins Maestro Nelsons and the BSO for the world premiere of a new work for organ and orchestra by Mr. Gandolfi, composed in memory of former BSO organist Berj Zamkochian, to open the orchestra’s program of March 26, 27, 28, and 31, which will conclude with Mahler’s monumental Symphony No. 6. On April 2, 3, and 4, Christian Tetzlaff is the soloist for Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, on a program with Shostakovich’s dramatic Symphony No. 10. Gunther Schuller’s Dreamscape opens Maestro Nelsons’ final program of the season, April 9, 10, 11, and 14, which will also feature Richard Goode in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27, and Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben. Maestro Nelsons and the BSO will bring these three programs to Carnegie Hall—except for the Gandolfi work, due to the lack of a concert organ at Carnegie Hall—for performances on April 15, 16, and 17.

ANDRIS NELSONS AND THE BSO AT TANGLEWOOD IN 2015
[Andris Nelsons at Tanglewood (Tom Fitzsimmons)]Mr. Nelsons will be in residency at Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, for three weeks during the 2015 season. In addition to several programs with the BSO, Maestro Nelsons will lead the Tanglewood Music Center in Mahler’s Symphony No. 8, “Symphony of a Thousand,” as part of a summer-long celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Tanglewood Music Center, the BSO’s prestigious summer music academy founded by former BSO music director (1924-49) Serge Koussevitzky in 1940.

ANDRIS NELSONS TO LEAD BSO IN AN 8-CITY 2015 SUMMER TOUR TO MAJOR EUROPEAN MUSIC CAPITALS INCLUDING BERLIN, COLOGNE, LONDON, LUCERNE, PARIS, AND SALZBURG
In late August/early September 2015, Andris Nelsons and the BSO will be featured in an 8-city tour to major European capitals, including Berlin, Cologne, London, Paris, as well as the Lucerne and Salzburg festival. Further details about the tour will be announced at a later date.

A SYMPHONY GALA, SYMPHONY HALL OPEN HOUSE, AND MEDIA PROJECTS DURING ANDRIS NELSONS’ FIRST SEASON AS MUSIC DIRECTOR
A Symphony Gala in honor of Andris Nelsons’ first season as BSO music director will take place on Tuesday, September 23. Featuring a variety of musical performances, this festive evening will be a celebration of Mr. Nelsons’ musical life designed to welcome him, his wife Kristīne Opolais, and their two-year-old daughter Adriana into the Boston community.

Symphony Hall will open its doors for a free day of musical activities on Sunday, April 12, 2015, giving members of the Boston community a chance to see Mr. Nelsons lead the BSO and Tanglewood Festival Chorus in performance. The day will be filled with family-fun activities and a wide variety of performances.

In addition, the Boston Symphony Orchestra is currently in discussions with several media partners about a wide range of broadcast and recording projects focusing on Mr. Nelsons’ work with the orchestra during the 2014-15 season.

Further information about the Symphony Gala, Symphony Hall Open House, and media projects for the 2014-15 BSO season will be announced at a later date.

BS0 2014-15 SEASON TICKET INFORMATION IN BRIEF
The 134th season of the Boston Symphony Orchestra takes place September 18, 2014–May 2, 2015. Subscriptions for the BSO’s 2014-2015 season are available by calling the BSO Subscription Office at 888-266-7575 or online through the BSO’s website (www.bso.org). Single tickets are now on sale and may be purchased by phone through SymphonyCharge (617-266-1200 or 888-266-1200), online through the BSO’s website (www.bso.org), or in person at the Symphony Hall Box Office (301 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston).

The BSO’s <40=$20 program allows patrons under the age of 40 to purchase tickets for $20. The BSO College Card and High School Card are the best way for students and aspiring young musicians to experience the BSO on a regular basis. A limited number of Rush Tickets for Boston Symphony Orchestra subscription concerts on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Friday afternoons are set aside to be sold on the day of a performance. The Boston Symphony Orchestra offers groups advanced ticket reservations and flexible payment options for BSO concerts at Symphony Hall. Further ticket information is available at the end of this release.

The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s extensive website, BSO.org, is the largest and most-visited orchestral website in the country, receiving approximately 7 million visitors annually and generating over $92 million in revenue since its launch in 1996. The site’s Media Center consolidates its numerous new media initiatives in one location, including audio concert preview podcasts; Emmy Award-winning interviews with guest artists and BSO musicians; “It’s Your BSO” member interviews; concert program notes; WGBH radio broadcast streams of select BSO, Boston Pops, and Tanglewood performances; and all self-produced albums by the BSO, Boston Pops, Boston Symphony Chamber Players, Tanglewood Festival Chorus, and Tanglewood Music Center Fellows. BSO.org is now accessible in a smart phone-/mobile device-friendly format, where patrons can access performance schedules, purchase tickets and pre-performance food and beverages, access the BSO’s new media content, and make donations to the BSO – all in the palm of their hand. BSO.org also launched eTicketing and Print-at-Home tickets, making it easier for patrons attending a concert to access their tickets at home or on their smartphones. The Boston Symphony Orchestra is on Facebook at Facebook.com/BostonSymphony on Twitter at Twitter.com/BostonSymphony, and on Google+ at Google.com/+bostonsymphony. Video content from the BSO is also available at YouTube.com/BostonSymphony.

 

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IN ADDITION TO PROGRAMS LED BY ANDRIS NELSONS DURING HIS INAUGURAL SEASON AS BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR (LINK FOR DETAILS), THE 2014-15 BSO SEASON ALSO BOASTS AN ILLUSTRIOUS SCHEDULE OF GUEST ARTISTS, MASTERPIECES OF THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY ASSOCIATED WITH THE BALLETS RUSSES, THE DEBUT OF SEVERAL PROMINENT VOCALISTS NEW TO BSO AUDIENCES, AN IMPRESSIVE ARRAY OF WORKS BY MOZART, AND TWO-WEEK RESIDENCIES BY
SUCH CONDUCTING LUMINARIES AS CHRISTOPH VON DOHNNYI, CHARLES DUTOIT,
ANDBSO CONDUCTOR EMERITUS BERNARD HAITINK

BSO SEASON OPENS ON SEPTEMBER 18 WITH BSO ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR MARCELO LEHNINGER LEADING BEETHOVEN’S FIFTH SYMPHONY, MOZART’S SINFONIA CONCERTANTE FEATURING BSO WIND PRINCIPALS, AND HEITOR VILLA-LOBOS’S BACHIANAS BRASILEIRAS
WITH AMERICAN SOPRANO NICOLE CABELL

MAJOR WORKS OF THE SEASON INCLUDE THE FIRST-EVER BSO PERFORMANCES OF
SZYMANOWSKI’S KING ROGER, WITH POLISH BARITONE MARIUSZ KWIECIEN INHIS BSO
SUBSCRIPTION SERIES DEBUT;BRAHMS’S GERMAN REQUIEM, FEATURING BARITONE BRYN TERFEL AND SOPRANO ROSEMARY JOSHUA IN HER BSO DEBUT; MOZART’S SYMPHONIES 39, 40, AND 41 IN A SINGLE PROGRAM; MUSSORGSKY’S PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION, NIELSEN’S SYMPHONY NO. 4, THE INEXTINGUISHABLE, RAVEL’S COMPLETE MOTHER GOOSE, AND STRAVINSKY’S COMPLETE FIREBIRD

ACCLAIMED YOUNG RUSSIAN CONDUCTOR TUGAN SOKHIEV MAKES HIS BSO DEBUT WITH MUSIC OF BERLIOZ, SAINT-SANS, AND RIMSKY-KORSAKOV, AND THE CHARISMATIC VLADIMIR JUROWSKI RETURNS TO THE BSO TO LEAD THE AMERICAN PREMIERE OF HARRISON BIRTWISTLE’S PIANO CONCERTO WITH THE BRILLIANT FRENCH PIANIST PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD AS SOLOIST

PIANIST CHRISTIAN ZACHARIAS AND VIOLINIST LEONIDAS KAVAKOS RETURN TO BSO PODIUM IN DUAL CONDUCTOR-SOLOIST ROLES; ISRAELI CONDUCTOR ASHER FISCH, IN HIS SUBSCRIPTION SERIES DEBUT, INTRODUCES MUSIC BY THE ISRAELI COMPOSER AVNER DORMAN; AND STPHANE DENVE RETURNS FOR A COLORFUL PROGRAM OF MUSIC BY STRAVINSKY, MILHAUD, AND POULENC

INSTRUMENTALISTS JOINING THE BSO’S 2014-15 SEASON INCLUDE PIANISTS
EMANUEL AX (Mozart Piano Concerto No. 14), RUDOLF BUCHBINDER (Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1), MARIA JOO PIRES (Mozart Piano Concerto No. 23), AND JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET
(Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G); VIOLINISTS JAMES EHNES (Prokofiev Violin Concerto No. 1),
JULIA FISCHER (Brahms’s Violin Concerto), JULIAN RACHLIN (Prokofiev Violin Concerto No. 2),
AND FRANK PETER ZIMMERMANN (Sibelius Violin Concerto);AND
CELLIST JOHANNES MOSER (BSO DEBUT in Saint-Sans Cello Concerto No. 1)

VOCALISTS JOINING THE BSO INCLUDE SOPRANO ROSEMARY JOSHUA AND BASS-BARITONE BRYN TERFEL (BRAHMS’S GERMAN REQUIEM) AND BARITONE MARIUSZ KWIECIEN (KING ROGER), SOPRANO OLGA PASICHNYK, MEZZO-SOPRANO YVONNE NAEF, TENORS EDGARAS MONTVIDAS AND ALEXANDER RICHARDSON, AND BASS RAYMOND ACETO (SZYMANOWSKI’S KING ROGER); THE TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS IS ALSO FEATURED IN THE BRAHMS AND SZYMANOWSKI WORKS

SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE BSO’S 2014-2015 SEASON ARE AVAILABLE NOW BY CALLING
888-266-7575 OR VISITING WWW.BSO.ORG

THE 2014-15 SEASON IS SPONSORED BY BANK OF AMERICA AND EMC CORPORATION

In addition to the programs detailed separately that Andris Nelsons will lead for his inaugural season as BSO Music Director (see link for details), the BSO’s 2014-15 season, September 18-May 2, also boasts an impressive roster of legendary figures of the classical music world with an equal measure of guest artist debuts and return appearances by guests who have proved themselves BSO favorites—all taking part in a season honoring both the great traditions of the classical music world and the extraordinary power of new and less familiar works heard for the first time.

The 134th season of the Boston Symphony Orchestra takes place September 18, 2014–May 2, 2015. Single tickets are on sale and can be purchased by phone at 888-266-7575, on the web at www.bso.org, or at the Symphony Hall box office at 301 Massachusetts Avenue; subscription options are also available.

During the mid-winter month of February, the BSO will introduce a series of programs that put a spotlight on some of the magnificent dance-inspired music of the early 20th century, with a special emphasis on composers closely associated with Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, including Debussy, Milhaud, Poulenc, Prokofiev, and Stravinsky—all composers who were also championed early on by Serge Koussevitzky, the BSO’s legendary music director from 1925 to 1949. The 2014-15 subscription season also offers BSO patrons an impressive wealth of Mozart, including—besides the composer’s Haffner, Linz, and last three symphonies—five of the composer’s astonishingly inventive piano concertos, which placed him center-stage as both composer and pianist: No. 17 in G, K.453, with Christian Zacharias in October; No. 24 in C minor, K.491, with Lars Vogt in January; No. 14 in E-flat, K.449, with Emanuel Ax in March; No. 27 in B-flat, K.595, Mozart’s last piano concerto, with Richard Goode in April; and No. 23 in A, K.488, with Maria Joo Pires, also in April.

2014-15 BSO SEASON HIGHLIGHTS
[Mariusz Kwiecien (photo by Mikolaj Mikolajczyk)]Musical highlights of the BSO’s 2014-15 season include the first-ever BSO performances of Szymanowski’s King Roger, with Metropolitan Opera star Mariusz Kwiecien in his BSO subscription series debut under the direction of Charles Dutoit,and the American premiere of a new Harrison Birtwistle work for piano and orchestra, featuring Pierre-Laurent Aimard as soloist under the [Maria Joao Pires]direction of Vladimir Jurowski. In two separate programs, Brahms’s German Requiem with vocalists Bryn Terfel and Rosemary Joshua in her BSO debut, and Nielsen’s monumental Symphony No. 4, The Inextinguishable. Christoph von Dohnnyi conducts three of Mozart’s greatest symphonies, Nos. 39, 40, and 41, in a single program, and Stphane Denve leads the orchestra in music of Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Milhaud, and Poulenc.Closing the BSO’s 2014-15 season with two programs, April 23-May 2, BSO Conductor Emeritus Bernard Haitink leads the BSO in music of Ravel, Thomas Ads, Mozart, Schumann, and Brahms, including the return to the BSO stage after a 15-year absence of the masterful Portuguese pianist Maria Joo Pires, in Mozart’s A major piano concerto, K.488.

[Tugan Sokhiev (photo by Marco Borggreve)]In addition, the highly acclaimed young Russian conductor Tugan Sokhiev makes his BSO debut leading music by Berlioz and Rimsky-Korsakov on a program with Saint-Sans’ Cello Concerto No. 1, featuring the first BSO appearances by German cellist Johannes Moser. Israeli conductor Asher Fisch in his subscription series debut introduces BSO audiences to music by Israeli composer Avner Dorman, a former Fellow of the Tanglewood Music Center, the BSO’s prestigious summer music academy.

2014-15 BSO SEASON OVERVIEW OF PROGRAMS WITH GUEST CONDUCTORS

BSO SEASON OPENS ON SEPTEMBER 18
[Marcelo Lehninger (photo by Stu Rosner)]The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s 2014-15 season officially opens on September 18, 19, and 20 with a special program of music by Mozart and Beethoven led by the BSO’s popular and much-praised associate conductor, Brazilian-born Marcelo Lehninger. The first half of the program features BSO wind principals John Ferrillo, William R. Hudgins, Richard Svoboda, and James Sommerville in Mozart’s seldom-heard Sinfonia concertante in E-flat for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and horn, after which the young American soprano Nicole Cabell and the BSO’s cello section join forces for a rarity—Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas brasileiras No. 5 for soprano and cellos. The program closes with one of the most exciting and best-known works in the orchestral repertoire—Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.

CHRISTIAN ZACHARIAS AND LEONIDAS KAVAKOS RETURN TO BSO IN DUAL ROLES AS CONDUCTOR/SOLOISTS
[Christian Zacharias]Returning to the BSO podium this fall are two multi-talented conductor-soloists. In October, Christian Zacharias does double duty for Mozart’s elegant G major piano concerto, K.453, the centerpiece of a Mozart-Schubert program beginning with Schubert’s charming music from Rosamunde and ending with his ever-popular Unfinished Symphony (October 9, 10, and 11). November brings the return of violin virtuoso and conductor Leonidas Kavakos, who leads Bartk’s Two Portraits for violin and orchestra, Haydn’s boisterous Symphony No. 82, The Bear, and Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition in the brilliant orchestration by Maurice Ravel (November 25, 28, and 29).

RUSSIAN CONDUCTOR TUGAN SOKHIEV IN HIS BSO DEBUT AND ISRAELI CONDUCTOR ASHER FISCH IN HIS SUBSCRIPTION SEASON DEBUT
[Johannes Moser (photo by Uwe Arens)]Acclaimed Russian conductor Tugan Sokhiev, widely considered one of the most sought after young conductors in Europe, makes his BSO debut leading Berlioz’s Le Corsaire Overture and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade, on a program with Saint-Sans’ Cello Concerto No. 1 with the young German cellist Johannes Moser in his BSO debut (January 22, 23, and 24).

The following week (January 29, 30, and 31), Israeli conductor Asher Fisch, in his subscription series debut, introduces Symphony Hall audiences to music by the Israeli composer and Tanglewood Music Center alumnus Avner Dorman, teams with Lithuanian violinist Julian Rachlin for Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2, and challenges winter with Schumann’s Symphony No. 1, Spring.

EARLY-20TH-CENTURY MASTERPIECES ASSOCIATED WITH THE BALLETS RUSSES AND THE BSO’S OWN SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY
Over a series of three programs, February 12-March 3, 2015, the BSO will present performances of influential works from the first three decades of the 20th century, many of which share the common thread of association with the Ballets Russes. Many are also works that represent a key component of the BSO’s history, having been written by composers whom Serge Koussevitzky championed during his twenty-five-year tenure as BSO music director from 1925 to 1949.

[Vladimir Jurowski]To open this special series of concerts, February 12, 13, and 14, Vladimir Jurowski will lead the BSO in Stravinsky’s complete Firebird, the first work Stravinsky composed for the legendary Russian choreographer Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, a collaboration that played a significant role in introducing Stravinsky as a major composer of international significance. The program opens with Baba-Yaga, Kikimora, From the Apocalypse, and Nenie by Anatol Liadov, a student of the great Russian composer Rimsky-Korsakov. This program will also feature Pierre-Laurent Aimard performing the American premiere of English composer Harrison Birtwistle’s Responses: Of sweet disorder and the carefully careless, for piano and orchestra, a BSO commission reflecting the orchestra’s continuing commitment to new music.

[Stephane Deneve]The following week, February 19, 20, and 21, Stphane Denve leads the orchestra in three works closely associated with the Ballets Russes: Stravinsky’s Pulcinella Suite, a ballet commissioned by Diaghilev and premiered at the Paris Opera in 1920; Milhaud’s The Creation of the World, composed in 1923 for the ballet company Ballets Suedois, the Swedish contemporaries of Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes; and Poulenc’s Les Biches, a ballet choreographed by the great Russian dancer/choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky, premiered by the Ballets Russes in 1924, and the work that helped establish Poulenc as a dynamic leader of a new generation of French composers. The program will also include the BSO debut of James Ehnes performing Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 1.

[Charles Dutoit (photo by Priska Ketterer)]Charles Dutoit continues this programmatic theme, February 26, 27, 28, and March 3, with performances of Stravinsky’s Dumbarton Oaks, a chamber concerto composed in Stravinsky’s neo-classical period, and Debussy’s Images, putting a spotlight on the French composer most closely associated with the Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes. Filling out this program, the elegant German violinist Julia Fischer joins Mr. Dutoit and the BSO as soloist in Brahms’s Violin Concerto.

Maestro Dutoit will also lead the first BSO performances of Polish composer Karol Szymanowski’s moving opera King Roger (March 5 and 6), loosely based on Euripides’ Bacchae, premiered in 1926 in Warsaw, to be sung in Polish with English supertitles, and featuring an internationally acclaimed cast headed by star Polish baritone Marius Kwiecien making his BSO subscription series debut in the title role. King Roger has long been championed by Maestro Dutoit, who led the Paris, New York, and Canadian premieres of this rarely heard work, which focuses on the conflict between Christianity and paganism in 12th-century Sicily. These two programs with Maestro Dutoit continue his multi-year survey with the BSO of some of the musical landmarks of the early 20th century.

CHRISTOPH VON DOHNNYI BRINGS HIS MASTERY TO MOZART’S SYMPHONIES 39, 40, AND 41; BERNARD HAITINK CLOSES BSO SEASON WITH WORKS OF RAVEL, MOZART, AND BRAHMS
[Christoph von Dohnanyi (photo by Andreas Garrels)]Christoph von Dohnnyi puts Mozart front and center in his two programs, March 12-21. The first juxtaposes music of Mozart and Richard Strauss—who acknowledged Mozart’s influence on several of his own works—with Emanuel Ax as soloist in Mozart’s E-flat piano concerto, K.449, and Strauss’s Burleske for piano and orchestra (March 12, 13, 14, and 17). Maestro Dohnnyi’s second program offers the rare opportunity to experience in a single concert the contrasting worlds of Mozart’s last three symphonies, Nos. 39, 40, and 41, which taken together represent a pinnacle of Classical style (March 19, 20, and 21).

[Bernard Haitink (photo by Todd Rosenberg)]BSO Conductor Emeritus Bernard Haitink closes the BSO’s 2014-15 season with French and German repertoire for which he has special affinity. For the first of his two season-ending programs he juxtaposes music of Ravel—the complete Mother Goose ballet score, and the Piano Concerto in G with renowned Ravel exponent Jean-Yves Thibaudet—with Mozart’s flavorful Linz Symphony, and British composer Thomas Ads’s modern take on music by the great French Baroque composer Couperin (April 23, 24, 25, and 28). For his second program, Maestro Haitink is joined by the masterful Portuguese pianist Maria Joo Pires—not heard with the BSO since 1999—for Mozart’s A major concerto, K.488, with Schumann’s dramatic Manfred Overture as curtain-raiser, and Brahms’s Symphony No. 1 to end the season in triumph.

WEEK-BY-WEEK PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS OF THE BSO’S 2014-15 SEASON

2014-15 SEASON BEGINS SEPTEMBER 18-20 WITH CONDUCTOR MARCELO LEHNINGER, SOPRANO NICOLE CABELL, AND BSO PRINCIPAL SOLOISTS IN MUSIC BY MOZART, VILLA-LOBOS, AND BEETHOVEN
[Marcelo Lehninger (photo by Stu Rosner)]The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s 201415 season begins September 18-20 with a program of music by Mozart, Beethoven, and Villa-Lobos that shines the spotlight on principal players from the orchestra. The concerts are led by BSO Associate Conductor Marcelo Lehninger and also feature sought-after American soprano Nicole Cabell. The program begins with Mozart’s Sinfonia concertante in E-flat for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and horn, K.297b—with BSO principals John Ferrillo, William R. Hudgins, Richard Svoboda, and James Sommerville as soloists—followed by Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas brasileiras No. 5, for soprano and cellos. Concluding the concerts is Beethoven’s immortal Symphony No. 5.

ANDRIS NELSONS MAKES HIGHLY ANTICIPATED DEBUT AS BSO MUSIC DIRECTOR IN GALA CONCERT SEPTEMBER 27
[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]Andris Nelsons takes the podium as the BSO’s Music Director for the first time September 27, making his highly awaited debut in a gala program featuring music and soloists—soprano Kristīne Opolais, the maestro’s wife, and tenor Jonas Kaufmann, a frequent collaborator with Mr. Nelsons and one of the leading operatic figures of our time—that are near to his heart. The first half of the concert i[Kristine Opolais (photo by Tatyana Vlasova)]s devoted to music by Wagner, a composer who has had an overwhelming influence on the conductor, and begins with the Overture to Tannhuser, the first opera Mr. Nelsons heard as a child. The other Wagner selections are “In fernem Land” from Act III of Lohengrin (with Mr. Kaufmann) and the Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde (with Ms. Opolais). After intermission, Mr. Nelsons leads four Italian operatic excerpts: “Mamma, quel vino generoso” and the Intermezzo from Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana (Mr. Kaufmann), “Ebben? Ne andr lontana” from Catalani’s La Wally (Ms. Opolais), and “Tu, tu, amore? Tu?” from Puccini’s Manon Lescaut (Ms. Opolais and Mr. Kaufmann). The orchestra’s new music director ends his debut performance with another work demonstrating his affinity for Italian music, Respighi’s exuberant Pines of Rome.

ANDRIS NELSONS LEADS BSO IN MUSIC BY BEETHOVEN, BARTK, AND TCHAIKOVSKY
OCTOBER 1-3

[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]BSO Music Director Andris Nelsons leads his first full subscription weekend October 1-3 in a diverse program of music by Beethoven, Bartk, and Tchaikovsky showcasing the range and virtuosity of the orchestra. The concerts begin with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 8, the composer’s most jubilant work in the genre, and continue with Bartk’s Suite from exotic ballet The Miraculous Mandarin, which displays the full measure of Bartk’s brilliant orchestration and uniquely angular style. Bringing the program to a close in dramatic and profound fashion is Tchaikovsky’s beloved Symphony No. 6, Pathtique, a cathartic, powerfully emotional work that received its world premiere under the composer’s baton just nine days before his death.

CHRISTIAN ZACHARIAS LEADS ORCHESTRA AS CONDUCTOR AND PIANO SOLOIST OCTOBER 9-11
[Christian Zacharias]Acclaimed German conductor and pianist Christian Zacharias comes to Symphony Hall October 9-11 to perform with the BSO in both capacities in works by Mozart and Schubert, composers that are two of the maestro’s specialties. Mr. Zacharias begins and ends the program with baton in hand, conducting the orchestra in incidental music from Schubert’s Rosamunde—composed for an 1823 play by Helmina von Chzy that has since been lost—and the same composer’s Symphony in B minor, Unfinished, a work that, despite being only two movements, endures as one of Schubert’s greatest and most popular creations. At the heart of the program, Mr. Zacharias leads the BSO from the keyboard in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 17 in G, K.453, one of the series of transcendent Vienna concertos.

PIANIST RUDOLF BUCHBINDER JOINS BSO OCTOBER 16-21
[Rudolf Buchbinder (photo by Marco Borggreve)]A leading interpreter of the great Austro-German music at the core of the repertoire, Austrian pianist Rufolf Buchbinder appears as soloist Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1 October 16-21. Joining the Brahms on the program is Danish composer Carl Nielsen’s Symphony No. 4, The Inextinguishable, a work composed contemporaneously with World War I and expressing, according to the composer, “the spirit of life or manifestations of life, that is: everything that moves, that wants to live ….”

BSO IS JOINED BY ROSEMARY JOSHUA, BRYN TERFEL, AND THE TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS FOR TWO GREAT MASTERPIECES OF ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL MUSIC OCTOBER 23-25
[Rosemary Joshua (Photo by Ruth Crafer)]On October 23-25, the BSO welcomes two distinguished Welsh vocal soloists—soprano Rosemary Joshua [Bryn Terfel]and bass-baritone Bryn Terfel—as well as the Tanglewood Festival Chorus for concerts presenting two of the most poignant vocal-orchestral works inthe canon. Opening the program in Bach’s Cantata No. 82, Ich habe genug, a divinely beautiful declaration of faith that is heartbreaking in its expression of the desire to leave earthly troubles behind and ascend to a higher plane. More humanistic but equally affecting is Brahms’s Ein deutsches Requiem, a non-liturgical setting of German-language text from Scripture—inspired at least in part by the death of the composer’s mother—that emphasizes the mourning process of those left behind by the dead, which concludes the program.

CONDUCTOR JUANJO MENA AND VIOLINIST FRANK PETER ZIMMERMANN RETURN TO SYMPHONY HALL FOR MUSIC BY SIBELIUS AND SCHUBERT OCTOBER 30-NOVEMBER 4
[Juanjo Mena]Spanish conductor Juanjo Mena—chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic—takes the BSO podium October 30-November 4 for a program featuring eminent German violinist Frank Peter Zimmerman as soloist in Sibelius’s Violin Concerto,a pinnacle of the concerto repertoire and uniquely Sibelian in its alternately hushed and rhapsodic atmosphere.The concerts conclude with another pillar of the repertoire, Schubert’s Symphony in C, The Great. The composer’s ultimate symphony (in both senses of the word: it is his biggest and last word in the genre), the C major was famously praised for its “heavenly length” by Robert Schumann, who observed also that it “transports us into a world we cannot recall ever having been before.”

ANDRIS NELSONS RETURNS TO LEAD WORKS BY SIBELIUS AND SOFIA GUBAIDULINA
NOVEMBER 6-11

[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]BSO Music Director Andris Nelsons returns to Symphony Hall November 6-11 to lead the orchestra in the first of three weeks of programs with ties to Scandinavian and[Baiba Skride (photo by Marco Borggreve)] Slavic music and artists. For these four concerts, Mr. Nelsons and the BSO arejoined by Latvian violinist Baiba Skride, who is featured as soloist in sophisticated and widely celebrated Russian composer Sofia Gubaidulina’s moving violin concerto Offertorium, a 1980s work inspired by two of the composer’s greatest influences, Bach and Webern, and incorporating, as much of her music does, religious elements. Also on the program is Sibelius’s Symphony No. 2, one of his most popular works, a vibrant and rousing dialogue between Sibelius and the preceding two centuries of musical influences from across the European continent.

NELSONS LEADS THE RITE OF SPRING AND AMERICAN PREMIERE OF MUSIC BY BRETT DEAN NOVEMBER 13-18
[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]High drama is the order of the day November 13-18 as BSO Music Director Andris Nelsons leads a program of works with strong ties to the theater and/or film, beginning with Tchaikovsky’s Hamlet. Like the same composer’s more famous Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet is a concert overture inspired by Shakespeare, [Hakan Hardenberger (photo by Marco Borggreve)]capturing the play’s darkness and moody mystery. At the center of the program is the American premiere of Australian composer Brett Dean’s Dramatis personae, for trumpet and orchestra. Featuring Swedish soloist Hkan Hardenberger, with whom Mr. Nelsons has worked frequently, Dean’s work incorporates the spirit of theater and the silver screen, with allusions to music from superhero movies to Charlie Chaplin. The concerts close with Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring, the score to an intensely dramatic ballet and on its own some of the most dramatic music ever written.

YO-YO MA AND VOCAL SOLOISTS JOIN NELSONS, BSO, AND TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS FOR PROGRAM INCLUDING RACHMANINOFF’S THE BELLS NOVEMBER 20-22
[Yo-Yo Ma (photo by Todd Rosenberg)]Andris Nelsons concludes his three-week stay November 20-22 with performances that welcome several guests and are filled with new and rarely heard music. International superstar cellist Yo-Yo Ma joins the orchestra for Prokofiev’s Symphony-Concerto for cello and orchestra, written in 1950-51 and dedicated to Mstislav Rostropovich, but otherwise these concerts are dedicated to vocal music. They open with Koussevitzky Said: Choral Scherzo with Orchestra, Boston-based composer John Harbison’s tribute to the BSO’s longtime music director, featuring the Tanglewood Festival Chorus. The chorus also joins the BSO for the world premiere of a new BSO co-commissioned work for chorus and orchestra by Latvian composer Ēriks Ešenvalds. These large forces are expanded even further—welcoming vocal soloists soprano Victoria Yastrebova, tenor Pavel Černoch, and bass-baritone Kostas Smoriginas—for the final work on the program, Rachmaninoff’s The Bells, an eerily powerful work inspired by the composer’s artistic hero, Edgar Allen Poe.

LEONIDAS KAVAKOS LEADS BSO AS CONDUCTOR AND VIOLIN SOLOIST NOVEMBER 25-29
[Leonidas Kavakos]For the second year in a row, acclaimed Greek artist Leonidas Kavakos leads the BSO as both conductor and violin soloist. In three concerts November 25-29, Mr. Kavakos first performs with bow in hand in Bartk’s Two Portraits for violin and orchestra, re-orchestrated portions of previous works that the composer repackaged into this smaller format. Kavakos then takes up his baton to lead two very different works: Haydn’s Symphony No. 82, The Bear, one of the so-called “Paris” symphonies and a fine example of the composer’s mastery of the Classical symphonic form; and one of the repertoire’s most barnstorming, kaleidoscopic showpieces, Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition.

ANDRIS NELSONS LEADS PROGRAM OF BRAHMS, HAYDN, AND STRAUSS JANUARY 8-10
[Gautier Capucon]Andris Nelsons leads a program of music by Brahms, Haydn, and Strauss to start the spring half of the BSO’s 2014-15 season. The opening work, Brahms’s Variations on a Theme by Haydn, was intended as a tribute to the great Classical composer—although current scholars now believe the tune on which Brahms based his variations was not actually written by Haydn. Brahms’s homage is followed by a work that certainly was written by Haydn, the Symphony No. 90, which emerged shortly before the composer’s more famous “London” symphonies but nonetheless is one of his finest and most elegant creations. Concluding the program is Strauss’s tone poem Don Quixote—featuring cellist Gautier Capuon and BSO principal violist Steven Ansell as soloists—a characteristically colorful work that portrays several scenes from Cervantes’s seminal novel.

NELSONS AND BSO WELCOME PIANIST LARS VOGT FOR PROGRAM OF MOZART AND BRUCKNER JANUARY 15-17
[Lars Vogt (photo by Felix Broede)]Distinguished German pianist Lars Vogt joins the BSO and Music Director Andris Nelsons January 15-17 as soloist in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor, K. 491, the composer’s most generously scored work in the genre and one of only two in a minor key. Following the Mozart on these concerts is Bruckner’s Symphony No. 7, one of Mr. Nelsons’ favorite works in the Austro-German symphonic repertoire. The only one of Bruckner’s symphonies to achieve real popular success during his lifetime, the Seventh became the composer’s monument to his hero Wagner, who died during its composition.

JOHANNES MOSER JOINS BSO AS SOLOIST IN SAINT-SANS’S CELLO CONCERTO NO. 1
JANUARY 22-24

[Johannes Moser (photo by Uwe Arens)]In a January 22-24 program conducted by rising Ossetian conductor Tugan Sokhiev—principal conductor and artistic director of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin—young German-Canadian cellist Johannes Moser performs as soloist in Saint-Sans’s Cello Concerto No. 1, structured in one continuous movement and requiring terrific virtuosity from the cellist. Also on the program are Berlioz’s Le Corsaire Overture, inspired by pirate novels and the turquoise Mediterranean waters at Nice, and Rimsky-Korsakov’s ever-popular Scheherazade, a brilliantly colorful and atmospheric musical depiction of the Thousand and One Nights.

CONDUCTOR ASHER FISCH RETURNS FOR MUSIC BY SCHUMANN, PROKOFIEV, AND
AVNER DORMAN JANUARY 29-31

[Asher Fisch]Following an acclaimed BSO debut at Tanglewood in 2012, Israeli conductor Asher Fisch leads BSO subscription concerts for the first time January 29-31 in music by Schumann, Prokofiev, and Israeli composer Avner Dorman. The program begins with Dorman’s Astrolatry, which is inspired by the previously citybound composer’s newfound love for stargazing, which developed after spending time in rural Pennsylvania. Following the new work, the orchestra is joined by Lithuanian violinist Julian Rachlin for Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2, a melodious later work with audible influences from Russian and Spanish folk music, and the program then concludes with Schumann’s Symphony No. 1, Spring.

MAESTRO VLADIMIR JUROWSKI AND PIANIST PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD JOIN BSO FEBRUARY 12-14
[Vladimir Jurowski]Two of classical music’s leading and most distinctive artists—Russian-born principal conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra Vladimir Jurowski and visionary French pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard—come to Symphony Hall February 12-14. A dedicated and compelling advocate for new music, Mr. Aimard i[Pierre-Laurent Aimard (photo by Marco Borggreve)]s featured as soloist in the American premiere of innovative British composer Harrison Birtwistle’s Responses: Of sweet disorder and the carefully careless, for piano and orchestra, a BSO co-commission. To open and close the program, Mr. Jurowski leads the orchestra in a vibrant selection of Russian music: four tone poems by Anatoly Liadov—Baba-Yaga, Kikimora, From the Apocalypse, and Nenie—and Stravinsky’s breakthrough early work The Firebird (complete), the commission for which he received only when Liadov was unable to complete a work in time.

STPHANE DENVE RETURNS WITH VIOLINIST JAMES EHNES FEBRUARY 19-21
[Stephane Deneve (photo by J. Henry Fair)]French conductor Stphane Denve, chief conductor of the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra and a frequent BSO guest in recent seasons, takes the podium February 19-21 for a program of Russian and French music. Before intermission, Maestro Denve leads the orchestra in Stravinsky’s glittering Pulcinella Suite—based on music from the largely Italian 18th-century music—and Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 1, for which the orchestra is joined by prodigious Canadian soloist James Ehnes. On the second half of the program, Mr. Denve focuses on music from his home nation, leading Milhaud’s jazz-inflected The Creation of the World and Poulenc’s music for Les Biches, an urbane ballet depicting a sophisticated 1920s house party.

CHARLES DUTOIT AND JULIA FISCHER COME TO SYMPHONY HALL FEBRUARY 26-MARCH 3
[Julia Fischer (photo by Felix Broede)]In the third consecutive week of programs featuring music by Stravinsky, eminent Swiss conductor Charles Dutoit leads the BSO in the Russian composer’s Concerto in E-flat, Dumbarton Oaks, commissioned by the owners of the Dumbarton Oaks estate in Washington, DC, and the last piece Stravinsky wrote in Europe before emigrating to America in 1939. To conclude the program, highly acclaimed German violinist Julia Fischer teams up with Mr. Dutoit and the orchestra for Brahms’s Romantic yet refined Violin Concerto, and in between are Debussy’s Images, for orchestra, which sparkle with color and evocative orchestral effects and in some ways even surpass his earlier masterpieces for sheer vividness of sound painting.

CHARLES DUTOIT RETURNS TO LEAD SZYMANOWSKI’S COMPLETE OPERA KING ROGER MARCH 5-7
[Charles Dutoit (photo by Priska Ketterer)]BSO audiences have two rare opportunities March 5 and 7 to hear complete concert presentations of the opera King Roger by early-20th-century Polish composer Karol Szymanowki, one of Poland’s greatest composers after Chopin. For these performances, sung in Polish with English supertitles, the orchestra is conducted by Charles Dutoit and joined by the Tanglewood Festival Chorus and Voices Boston, as well as a distinguished case of vocal soloists, headlined by Polish baritone and Met opera star Mariusz Kwiecien in the title role and also featuring soprano Olga Pasichnyk; mezzo-soprano Yvonne Naef; tenors Edgaras Montvidas and Alexander Richardson, and bass Raymond Aceto. The opera, composed between 1918 and 1924, is based on the life of 12th-century Sicilian monarch King Roger II.

BSO IS JOINED BY CONDUCTOR CHRISTOPH VON DOHNNYI AND PIANIST EMANUEL AX
MARCH 12-17

[Emanuel Ax]German maestro Christoph von Dohnnyi takes the podium March 12-17 for works by Mozart and Strauss. Leading American pianist and frequent BSO guest soloist Emanuel Ax is featured in two works: Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 14 in E-flat, K.449—the first work in the second series of concertos Mozart wrote after moving to Vienna and the beginning of a string of mature masterpieces in the genre—and Strauss’s Burleske for piano and orchestra, a brilliant one-movement mini-concerto from very early in the composer’s long career. Also on the program are Strauss’s Sextet from Capriccio, which serves as the overture to the composer’s final opera, and Mozart’s Symphony No. 35, Haffner.

CHRISTOPH VON DOHNNYI RETURNS TO LEAD MOZART’S FINAL THREE SYMPHONIES
MARCH 19-21

[Christoph von Dohnanyi (photo by Stefan Malzkorn)]In three concerts March 19-21, the BSO, conductor Christoph von Dohnnyi, and Symphony Hall audiences have the chance to revel in the transcendence of Mozart’s final three symphonies, a pinnacle of the great composer’s career, the Classical period, and the entire symphonic repertoire. Composed in rapid succession during the summer of 1788, the Symphonies Nos. 39, 40, and 41 cover a remarkable breadth of stylistic and emotional ground, but each displays Mozart’s combination of technical mastery (both of the elegant Classical style and of complex counterpoint), imaginative originality, and melodic inspiration. The program proceeds in numerical order, beginning with the grand and capricious No. 39, proceeding with the drama and pathos of the minor-key No. 40, and concluding with the magnificence of No. 41, Jupiter.

ANDRIS NELSONS LEADS MAHLER’S SIXTH SYMPHONY AND WORLD PREMIERE OF MUSIC BY MICHAEL GANDOLFI MARCH 26-31
[Andris Nelsons (photo by Marco Borggreve)]BSO Music Director Andris Nelsons is back on the podium March 26-31 for a program featuring the world premiere of a new work for organ and orchestra by Boston-based American composer and close BSO collaborator Michael Gandolfi. The work, featuring French organist Olivier Latry and was composed in memory of former BSO organist Berj Zamkochian, the BSO’s regular organist for many years. The program also features Mahler’s monumental, intricate, and devastatingly tragic Symphony No. 6, the finale of which features three cataclysmic hammer blows that the composer later believed presaged three great misfortunes in his life: the death of his daughter, the loss of the directorship of the Vienna Court Opera, and the diagnosis of the heart condition that would ultimately lead to his death.

MAESTRO NELSONS WELCOMES VIOLINIST CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF APRIL 2-4
[Christian Tetzlaff (photo by Giorgia Bertazzi)]In three performances April 2-4, Andris Nelsons is joined by his friend and world-renowned German violinist Christian Tetzlaff for Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, one of the composer’s many great masterpieces and a work that holds a cherished place at the heart of the violin repertoire. After intermission, Mr. Nelsons leads his orchestra in Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10, an intense and emotionally draining work that is contentiously claimed to represent the Stalin years of the Soviet Union but certainly represents one of the composer’s highest achievements in the symphonic genre.

RICHARD GOODE JOINS BSO FOR MOZART AND NELSONS LEADS STRAUSS AND SCHULLER
APRIL 9-14

[Richard Goode (photo by Steve Riskind)]In his final appearances of the 2014-15 season April 9-14, Music Director Andris Nelsons leads a program showcasing the orchestra in a crystalline Classical concerto, the lush late-Romanticism of Richard Strauss, and the modernism of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Gunther Schuller. At the heart of the program is Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat, K.595, with eminent American Mozart specialist Richard Goode. To begin the concerts, Mr. Nelsons leads the BSO in Schuller’s scintillating Dreamscape, a symphony-in-miniature revealed to the composer in a dream; it was composed for and premiered by the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra in 2012. The program concludes with Strauss’s epic, episodic, and brilliantly colorful Ein Heldenleben, which is based on the composer’s own life and incorporates quotations from several of his previous works.

BERNARD HAITINK AND JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET JOIN BSO FOR RAVEL, ADS, AND MOZART
APRIL 23-28

[Bernard Haitink (photo by Clive Barda)]BSO Conductor Emeritus Bernard Haitink arrives in Boston for the final two weekends of the 2014-15 season, beginning with an April 23-28 program of Ravel and Mozart. Mr. Haitink leads the orchestra in the complete score of Ravel’s fairy tale-inspired ballet Mother Goose, including movements depicting the tales of Sleeping Beauty, Tom Thumb, and Beauty and the Beast. Acclaimed French [Jean-Yves Thibaudet (photo by Eric Dahan)]pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet then joins the orchestra for the Piano Concerto in G, a work both modern and tuneful and one of Ravel’s finest works. English composer Thomas Ads wrote his Three Studies from Couperin as an homage to the French Baroque composer—much as Ravel had done with his Tombeau de Couperin a hundred years ago. Unlike Ravel, Ads borrows directly from his source, resulting in an elegant, exotic style existing simultaneously in the past and present. Bringing the program to an end is Mozart’s Symphony No. 36, Linz, which, not having a symphony on hand to perform, he wrote in a four-day flurry during a stopover in that Austrian city.

BERNARD HAITINK, MARIA JOO PIRES, AND BSO BRING 2014-15 SEASON TO AN END
APRIL 30-MAY 2

[Maria Joao Pires]Maestro Bernard Haitink is on the podium for the BSO’s final Symphony Hall performances of the 2014-15 season April 30-May 2. The great Portuguese pianist Maria Joo Pires is soloist in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23 in A, K.488, written toward the end of the composer’s life and notable for its intimate, chamber-musical character and heightened lyricism (even for Mozart). Robert Schumann’s Manfred Overture, composed in 1848 as part of the incidental music to Byron’s dramatic poem, is one of the composer’s most overtly Romantic works. Closing these concerts is Brahms’s lyrical and powerful Symphony No. 1, a work of long gestation that both refers to, and pointedly departs from, the symphonies of Beethoven.

TICKET, SPONSORSHIP, AND OTHER PATRON INFORMATION

TICKET INFORMATION
Subscriptions for the BSO’s 2014-15 are available by calling the BSO Subscription Office at 888-266-7575 or online through the BSO’s website (http://www.bso.org/subscriptions). Single tickets are now on sale and may be purchased by phone through SymphonyCharge (617-266-1200 or 888-266-1200), online through the BSO’s website (www.bso.org), or in person at the Symphony Hall Box Office (301 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston). There is a $6.25 service fee for all tickets purchased online or by phone through SymphonyCharge.

A limited number of Rush Tickets for Boston Symphony Orchestra subscription concerts on Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday evenings and Friday afternoons are set aside to be sold on the day of a performance. These tickets are sold at $9 each, one to a customer, at the Symphony Hall Box Office. For Friday afternoon concerts Rush Tickets are available beginning at 10 a.m. For Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday evening concerts Rush Tickets are available beginning at 5 p.m.

The BSO’s <40=$20 program allows patrons under the age of 40 to purchase tickets for $20. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis on both the orchestra and balcony levels. There is a limit of one pair per performance, but patrons may attend as many performances as desired.

The Boston Symphony Orchestra offers groups advanced ticket reservations and flexible payment options for BSO concerts at Symphony Hall. Groups of 20 or more may take advantage of ticket discounts, backstage tours, clinics, and master classes. Pre- and post-concert dining options and private function space are available. More information is available through the group sales office at [email protected]

The BSO College Card and High School Card are the best way for students and aspiring young musicians to experience the BSO on a regular basis. For only $25 (College Card) or $10 (High School Card) students can attend most BSO concerts at no additional cost by registering the card online to receive text and email notifications of real-time ticket availability.

American Express, MasterCard, Visa, Diners Club, and Discover (in person or by mail) and cash (in person only) are all accepted at the Symphony Hall Box Office. Gift certificates are available in any amount and may be used toward the purchase of tickets (subject to availability) to any Boston Symphony Orchestra or Boston Pops performance at Symphony Hall or Tanglewood. Gift certificates may also be used at the Symphony Shop to purchase merchandise.

Patrons with disabilities can access Symphony Hall through the Massachusetts Avenue lobby or the Cohen Wing on Huntington Avenue. An access service center, accessible restrooms, and elevators are available inside the Cohen Wing entrance. For ticket information, call the Access Services Administrator at 617-638-9431 or TDD/TTY 617-638-9289.

EDUCATIONAL INITIATIVES AT SYMPHONY HALL
As part of the BSO’s ongoing initiative to enhance its patrons’ awareness and knowledge of the music being performed, the Boston Symphony Orchestra continues to offer a variety of adult education initiatives at Symphony Hall for the 2014-15 season.

UnderScore Fridays is a uniquely formatted concert series. At all Friday-evening performances, members of the BSO introduce the concerts from the stage. Selected concerts also include comments from the stage by guest artists appearing in the program. Tickets for UnderScore Fridays range from $32 to $130.

“BSO 101: Are You Listening?” returns in 2014-15. In this popular Wednesday-evening series, BSO Director of Program Publications Marc Mandel is joined by members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra for presentations designed to enhance one’s listening abilities and general appreciation of music by focusing on works from the BSO’s repertoire. No prior musical training, or attendance at any previous session, is required, since each session is self-contained. “BSO: 101: An Insider’s View” also returns in 2014-15, offering three Tuesday-evening sessions focusing on behind-the-scenes activities at Symphony Hall with BSO musicians and administrative staff, including player perspectives on performing with the orchestra. All “BSO 101” sessions take place from 5:30-6:45 p.m. at Symphony Hall, and each is followed by a reception. Though the “BSO 101” sessions are free, please note that there is a nominal charge for the reception. Full details of the 2014-15 “BSO 101” schedule will be announced at a later date.

The popular Friday Preview Talks continue to take place from 12:15-12:45 p.m. before each Friday-afternoon subscription concert; the Symphony Hall doors open at 11:30am. Given by BSO Director of Program Publications Marc Mandel, Assistant Director of Program Publications Robert Kirzinger, and occasional guest speakers, these informative half-hour talks incorporate recorded examples from the music to be performed. The BSO also offers talks before each of the season’s four Thursday-morning Open Rehearsals at Symphony Hall. These take place from 9:30-10 a.m. The Symphony Hall doors open at 9 a.m., and the Open Rehearsal itself begins at 10:30 a.m. Admission to the Friday Preview Talks and Open Rehearsal Talks is free of charge free to ticket holders for the Friday-afternoon subscription concerts and Thursday-morning Open Rehearsals.

BSO MEDIA OFFERINGS

The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s extensive website, BSO.org, is the largest and most-visited orchestral website in the country, receiving approximately 7 million visitors annually and generating over $92 million in revenue since its launch in 1996. The Boston Symphony Orchestra is on Facebook at Facebook.com/BostonSymphony on Twitter at Twitter.com/BostonSymphony, and on Google+ at Google.com/+bostonsymphony. Video content from the BSO is also available at YouTube.com/BostonSymphony.

The site’s Media Center, consolidates its numerous new media initiatives in one location. In addition to comprehensive access to all BSO, Boston Pops, Tanglewood, and Symphony Hall performance schedules, patrons have access to a number of free and paid media options. Free offerings include WGBH radio broadcast streams of select BSO, Boston Pops, and Tanglewood performances; free live music steams for select seasonal offerings including the recent Holiday Pops music stream (December 2013); audio concert preview podcasts; Emmy Award-winning audio and video interviews with guest artists and BSO musicians; music excerpts, of up to three minutes, highlighting upcoming programs as well as all self-produced albums by the BSO, Boston Pops, Boston Symphony Chamber Players, Tanglewood Festival Chorus, and Tanglewood Music Center Fellows, and complete program notes for all performances, which can be downloaded and printed or saved offline to an e-reading device such as a Kindle or Nook.

Paid content includes digital music downloads produced and published under the BSO’s music label BSO Classics and includes performances by the BSO, Boston Pops, Boston Symphony Chamber Players, Tanglewood Festival Chorus, and Tanglewood Music Center Fellows. The BSO Media Center is available by visiting BSO.org/mediacenter.

BSO.org is mobile device compatible. Patrons can visit BSO.org on their mobile device to access performance schedules, purchase tickets as well as pre-performance food and beverages, download program notes, listen to radio broadcasts, music clips, and concert previews, watch video exclusives, and make donations to the BSO—all in the palm of their hand.

RADIO BROADCASTS AND STREAMING
BSO concerts are broadcast regularly on 99.5 WCRB, a service of WGBH. Saturday evening concerts are broadcast live on 99.5 in Boston and 88.7 in Providence, on HD radio at 89.7 HD2 in Boston, and online—both live and archived—at www.classicalwcrb.org. Live and archived BSO concerts can also be streamed online at www.bso.org. Listeners can enjoy the “BSO Concert Channel” online, a continuous high-quality audio stream of live BSO performances from Symphony Hall and Tanglewood. In addition, BSO concerts are now heard throughout New England and upstate New York, on a network of stations including WAMC in Albany, NY, WMNR in Monroe, CT, Vermont Public Radio, New England Public Radio, and the Maine Public Broadcasting Network. BSO broadcasts on 99.5 WCRB begin at 8 p.m. on Saturday nights, and are repeated at 8 p.m. on Monday evenings.

FOOD SERVICES AT SYMPHONY HALL
The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s catering partner, Boston Gourmet, offers a fresh perspective on the food and beverage options offered at Symphony Hall before concerts, during intermission, and in the popular Symphony Caf.Symphony Caf offers buffet-style dining from 5:30 p.m. until concert time for all evening Boston Symphony Orchestra concerts. In addition, Symphony Caf is open for lunch prior to Friday-afternoon concerts. Patrons enjoy the convenience of pre-concert dining at the Caf in the unique ambiance of historic Symphony Hall. The cost of dinner is $41 per person; the cost of lunch is $27, tax included. The Caf is located in Higginson Hall; patrons enter through the Cohen Wing entrance on Huntington Avenue. Please call 617-638-9328 for reservations.

Additionally, casual pre-concert and intermission dining, including sandwiches, light appetizers, and desserts, is available at the bars in Symphony Hall’s Cabot-Cahners Room and O’Block-Kay Room. Light appetizers and sandwiches can also be ordered and picked up at the snack bar outside the O’Block-Kay Room. A tapas style menu is available in the Symphony Caf Lounge area alongside Huntington Avenue. Reservations for the Lounge can be made by calling 617-638-9328. Patrons can order in advance a pre-concert package that features an appetizer and half-bottle of wine and they can also take advantage of the hall-wide beverage service by purchasing beverage coupons in advance through the BSO’s website at www.bso.org/dining.

SYMPHONY HALL SHOP AND TOURS
The Symphony Shop, located in the Cohen Wing on Huntington Avenue, is open Thursdays and Saturdays from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., and from one hour before concert time through intermission. A satellite shop, located on the first-balcony level, is open only during concerts. Merchandise may also be purchased by visiting the BSO website at http://www.bso.org/shop. The shop can be reached at 617-638-9383.

The Boston Symphony Association of Volunteers offers weekly public and private tours of Symphony Hall during the BSO and Pops seasons. For more information on taking an Irving W. and Charlotte F. Rabb Symphony Hall tour, please visit us at www.bso.org. You may also email [email protected], or call 617-638-9390 to confirm specific dates and times. Schedules are subject to change.

SPONSORSHIPS
Longstanding major corporate partners Bank of America and EMC Corporation return as the BSO Season Sponsors for the 2014-15 Season.

As a company with employees and clients in more than 40 countries around the world, Bank of America is committed to a diverse program of cultural support, designed to engage individuals, organizations, communities and cultures in creative ways to build mutual respect and understanding of the arts. By partnering with our stakeholders, we create shared value that empowers individuals and communities to thrive and contributes to the long-term success of our business. Bank of America is one of the world’s leading corporate supporters of the arts, supporting thousands of arts organizations worldwide. For additional information, please visit: http://museums.bankofamerica.com/arts/Default.aspx

“The BSO attracts visitors from around the world with engaging programming and a history steeped in powerful performances,” said Bob Gallery, Bank of America Massachusetts president. “It’s long been a source of pride for the Massachusetts arts community, and a driver of local economies from Boston to the Berkshires.”

EMC is a global leader in enabling businesses and service providers to transform their operations and deliver information technology as a service (ITaaS). Fundamental to this transformation is cloud computing. Through innovative products and services, EMC accelerates the journey to cloud computing, helping IT departments to store, manage, protect, and analyze their most valuable asset—information—in a more agile, trusted and cost-efficient way.

“As a Great Benefactor, EMC is proud to help preserve the wonderful musical heritage of the BSO, so that it may continue to enrich the lives of listeners and create a new generation of music lovers, not only in Boston, but around the world.” said Joe Tucci, Chairman and CEO, EMC Corporation.

The BSO is proud to announce that longtime sponsor Arbella Insurance Foundation will continue its support this season with its sponsorship of the BSO College Card and BSO Youth and Family Concerts.

The Fairmont Copley Plaza, together with Fairmont Hotels & Resorts, begins its 13th season as the Official Hotel of the BSO, and Commonwealth Worldwide Chauffeured Transportation begins its 12th season as the Official Chauffeured Transportation Provider of the BSO.

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