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Louisville Orchestra and Music Director Teddy Abrams Announce 2024-25 Season; Highlights Include Valerie Coleman World Premiere Plus Three World Premieres in Creators Fest; Ullmann’s Der Kaiser von Atlantis; Soloists Ray Chen, Midori and Louis Lortie

(February 2024) — The Louisville Orchestra (LO) and Music Director Teddy Abrams – winners
of a Grammy Award for Best Classical Instrumental Solo for their collaboration with pianist
Yuja Wang on her album The American Project – are thrilled to announce the lineup for their
2024–25 season. Season highlights include Abrams leading Barber’s Violin Concerto with soloist
Ray Chen, along with the world premiere of Valerie Coleman’s Concerto for Orchestra and
works from the Creators Corps (Nov 15 & 16); Sibelius’s Violin Concerto with soloist Midori
along with Strauss’s monumental An Alpine Symphony (Jan 17 & 18); Orff’s Carmina Burana
with the Louisville Chamber Choir (Oct 19); and a staged production of Viktor Ullmann’s
one-act chamber opera Der Kaiser Von Atlantis (Jan 25). Celebrated Canadian pianist Louis
Lortie also performs with the orchestra this season, playing Ravel’s Concerto in G under the baton
of Ken-David Masur (Feb 14–15); and the second annual Creators Fest returns in the spring,
with Abrams leading world premieres from each of the three participants in the newest
incarnation of the Louisville Orchestra’s groundbreaking Creators Corps initiative – Baldwin
Giang, Brittany J. Green and Oswald Huỳnh (May 9 & 10). The season is rounded out by a series
of classic films with orchestral accompaniment including Nosferatu, Raiders of the Lost Ark,
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Parts 1 & 2 and The Nightmare Before Christmas; Coffee
Series concerts on Fridays at 11am; performances at Indiana University Southeast’s Ogle
Center in New Albany, Indiana; a Pops Series led by Principal Pops Conductor Bob Bernhardt;
and much more.

Abrams, who is ready to embark on his eleventh season with the orchestra, elaborates:

“Our 2024-2025 season is a demonstration of the Louisville Orchestra’s values and unique
capabilities. Our programming will showcase the extraordinary musicianship and virtuosity of our
musicians in the widest range of repertoire. This breadth of music-making is a core part of our
mission: we want to bring the world’s greatest music to Louisville while demonstrating that
Louisville has the world’s greatest musical talent at home, too. From Alpine Symphony to Michael
Tilson Thomas’ Meditations on Rilke, from Midori and Ray Chen to world premieres by our very own
Creators Corps, we are offering a season of music that will both reflect and strengthen our
community. While each program in our season explores powerful and profound narratives and
subtexts, every concert will be a celebration of our orchestra, of Louisville, and of the universality of
music itself.”

Graham Parker, Chief Executive of the Louisville Orchestra, adds:

“As we announce the Louisville Orchestra’s new season, we reaffirm our dedication to be a
vital and vibrant part of Louisville’s cultural tapestry. This season’s lineup is not only a
showcase of the orchestra’s versatility and artistic excellence but also a testament to our role
as a cultural leader and innovator. We are bringing to our stages a season filled with
masterworks of classical music, some of the world’s greatest guest artists, groundbreaking
new compositions, and programs that reflect our community’s spirit. The Louisville Orchestra
is a place where music meets passion, where tradition meets innovation, and where every
concert is an opportunity to inspire and be inspired. We invite you to join us on this
extraordinary musical journey.”

2024 Grammy win
Abrams and the LO are the proud recipients of a 2024 Grammy Award for “Best Classical
Instrumental Solo” for their collaboration with superstar pianist Yuja Wang on her latest album,
The American Project. Released on Deutsche Grammophon, the album features Abrams’s Piano
Concerto, composed for Wang in 2022 and recorded live with the LO at the Kentucky Center for
the Performing Arts. Rounding out the album is the encore You Come Here Often?, created for
Wang by another close friend, and Abrams’s mentor, Michael Tilson Thomas, and also recorded
live with Abrams and the LO.

Classics and Coffee Series
Abrams conducts five Classics Series programs in 2024–25, showcasing the dynamism and
versatility of the Louisville Orchestra along with a roster of world-class soloists. In October, he
takes the podium for Tilson Thomas’s Meditations on Rilke, juxtaposed with Carl Orff’s Carmina
Burana, with the Louisville Chamber Choir featured on the program (Oct 19). Also in the fall,
Abrams leads a Classics Series concert featuring violinist Ray Chen, praised in the Huffington Post
for playing that offers “emotional depth of great intimacy.” The violinist joins the orchestra as
soloist in Barber’s Violin Concerto, on a program with the world premiere of Louisville native
Valerie Coleman’s Concerto for Orchestra and works from the Creators Corps, the three
composers of which – along with Coleman herself – will make special guest appearances in the
concert (Nov 16). A preview of this performance will be given in the 11am Coffee Series the
previous day (Nov 15), as will be the case in January, when Abrams conducts the LO in Richard
Strauss’s monumental An Alpine Symphony, one of his largest non-operatic works, along with
visionary artist, activist and educator Midori performing Sibelius’s Violin Concerto (Jan 18). Later
in the same month, Abrams conducts a rare staged production of Viktor Ullmann’s one-act
chamber opera Der Kaiser Von Atlantis (Jan 25), written while he was imprisoned in the
Theresienstadt concentration camp. Both the composer and librettist, Peter Kien, were later
murdered at Auschwitz, but thanks to a fellow-prisoner to whom they were entrusted, Ullmann’s
manuscripts survived.

Guest conductors for the Classics Series include Chilean-Italian conductor Paolo Bortolameolli,
who opens the orchestra’s season leading Gustav Holst’s The Planets in Louisville’s historic
Palace Theatre, on a program with Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21, featuring French pianist
David Fray (Sep 14). A Valentine’s Day celebration titled “Ravel’s Romantic Reverie” is
conducted by Ken-David Masur and features pianist Louis Lortie in Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G.
Also on the program is the same composer’s Daphnis and Chloe and Toru Takemitsu’s Star-Isle
(Feb 15). The same program can be heard the previous day in the 11am Coffee Series (Feb 14).
Joseph Young, Music Director of the Berkeley Symphony and Resident Conductor of the National
Youth Orchestra–USA at Carnegie Hall, will be on hand in March to conduct three performances of
Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite, in Coffee and Classics Series concerts and in the NightLites Series at
Indiana University Southeast (March 7 & 8).

Creators Fest Season Finale
The Louisville Orchestra “Creators Corps” is a first-of-its-kind program that deeply integrates
artists in the city of Louisville and with the orchestra, selecting three Creators each year to move
to Louisville for the upcoming season and live in the Shelby Park neighborhood for at least 30
weeks. The Creators serve as LO staff members, receiving an annual salary, health insurance,
housing, and custom-built studio workspaces. Throughout their residencies, the Creators
compose new works to be performed by the orchestra, participate in educational and community
engagement activities, and become active, engaged citizens of Louisville. The 2024-25 season
concludes with the second annual “Creators Fest,” with Abrams conducting world premieres by
the three 2024-25 Creators Corps composers, Baldwin Giang, Brittany J. Green and Oswald
Huỳnh, inspired by their residency in Louisville and composed specially for the Louisville
Orchestra (May 10). This program will also be performed the previous day in the 11am Coffee
Series (May 9).

NightLites Series
Part of Abrams’s initiative to bring the music of the Louisville Orchestra to multiple venues outside
the confines of the traditional concert hall, the NightLites Series at Indiana University Southeast’s
Ogle Center features four events this season. “Star Trek: A Musical Voyage Through the Stars”
showcases the greatest hits from the Star Trek franchise, conducted by Principal Pops Conductor
Bob Bernhardt (Oct 25). The same program will also be presented in the Pops Series in Whitney
Hall (Oct 26). Handel’s Messiah will feature the Louisville Chamber Choir under the baton of its
conductor, Kent Hatteberg (Dec 6). Grammy and Emmy-winning string trio Time For Three
collaborates on a performance with the LO conducted by Abrams (Feb 7); and Stravinsky’s
Firebird Suite will be led by guest conductor Joseph Young (March 7).

Pops Series
The LO’s Pops Series, led by Bob Bernhardt, promises an eclectic mix of nostalgia and innovation.
In “Rick Steves’ Europe,” celebrated travel expert Rick Steves guides an auditory and visual tour
of Europe through music and storytelling (Nov 9). Other Pops highlights include tribute nights
dedicated to the 80s and 90s featuring vocal talents from O-Town, NSYNC, and 98 Degrees (Feb
22 & March 22), the annual Holiday Pops (Dec 14), and “Star Trek: A Musical Voyage Through
the Stars” (Oct 26).

Film Series
The 2024–25 season boasts a full roster of blockbuster films with live orchestral accompaniment.
Back by popular demand is the eerie silent film Nosferatu, with a new score by Sebastian Chang
(Oct 23). In keeping with that theme, the following month’s offering is Tim Burton’s The
Nightmare Before Christmas (Nov 23), and the supernatural continues with Harry Potter and
The Deathly Hallows Parts 1 and 2 (April 9 & 11). Finally, the family favorite Raiders of the Lost
Ark, with an instantly recognizable sweeping score by John Williams, will be led by guest
conductor Jason Seber (Feb 19). All films except Nosferatu will be at the historic Palace Theatre,
and all will be accompanied live by the Louisville Orchestra.

Ticket and Subscription Information
Subscriptions for the Classics, Classics Mini A & B, Coffee, NightLites, Pops, and Film series are now
available at LouisvilleOrchestra.org.

For more information, please contact Mallory Kramer, Director of Marketing, at
[email protected].

About the Louisville Orchestra
The Louisville Orchestra was created in 1937 and sprang up in a time of need, just after the Ohio
River Great Flood and in the wake of the Great Depression. Robert Whitney was invited to conduct
the newly established orchestra, then known as the Louisville Philharmonic, and arrived from
Chicago that same year. With its formation, the goal was to create a new model for the American
symphony orchestra, as it was conceived through an ambitious effort that emphasized innovation
through the commissioning, performance, and recording of new works by contemporary
composers. The Louisville Orchestra garnered international critical acclaim, became the first
orchestra to establish a record label, and cemented a place in history for its contributions to
contemporary classical music. In its first two decades, the Louisville Orchestra
commissioned/recorded up to 52 new works annually and ultimately created 150 vinyl recordings
(LPs) of more than 450 works. The Louisville Orchestra continues to be recognized as a
cornerstone of the Louisville performing arts community. Music Director Teddy Abrams has
helmed the Louisville Orchestra since 2014, and the Louisville Orchestra has returned to its origins
of commissioning new music and recording, having released two albums under the prestigious
Decca Gold label, and recently winning a 2024 Grammy Award for “Best Classical Instrumental
Solo” for The American Project, featuring the conductor’s own Piano Concerto with its dedicatee
and Abrams’s longtime friend and collaborator, Yuja Wang, as soloist. A wide variety of immersive
and innovative concert performances and educational programming continue to receive national
attention. Recent press coverage includes a feature story on PBS NewsHour and articles and
mentions in the New Yorker, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork,
and on CBS Sunday Morning. Accolades include three invitations to perform at Carnegie Hall; the
Leonard Bernstein Award for Excellence in Educational Programming; the League of American
Orchestras 2019 Ford Musician Awards for Excellence in Community Service; and 19 American
Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) awards for adventurous programming in
use of contemporary music.

High-resolution photos are available here.

www.louisvilleorchestra.org
Instagram.com/LouisvilleOrchestra
TikTok.com/@LouisvilleOrchestra

Louisville Orchestra 2024–25 season
Sep 14
Louisville, KY
CLASSICS SERIES
“THE PLANETS”
Louisville Palace
Paolo Bortolameolli, conductor
HOLST: The Planets
MOZART: Piano Concerto No. 21 (David Fray, piano)

Oct 19
Louisville, KY
CLASSICS SERIES
“CARMINA BURANA”
Whitney Hall
Teddy Abrams, conductor
ORFF: Carmina Burana
Michael Tilson THOMAS: Meditations on Rilke

Oct 23
Louisville, KY
FILM SERIES
“(UN)SILENT FILM: NOSFERATU”
Whitney Hall
Sebastian CHANG: Nosferatu

Oct 25
New Albany, IN
NIGHTLITES SERIES
“STAR TREK: MUSICAL VOYAGE THROUGH THE STARS”
The Ogle Center at Indiana University Southeast
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

Oct 26
Louisville, KY
POPS SERIES
“STAR TREK: MUSICAL VOYAGE THROUGH THE STARS”
Whitney Hall
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

Nov 9
Louisville, KY
POPS SERIES
“RICK STEVES’ EUROPE”
Whitney Hall
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

Nov 15 & 16
Louisville, KY
COFFEE & CLASSICS SERIES
“RAY CHEN PLAYS BARBER”
Whitney Hall
Teddy Abrams, conductor
Additional appearances by Valerie Coleman and Louisville Creator Corps: Baldwin Giang, Brittany Green,
Oswald Huynh
BARBER: Violin Concerto (Ray Chen, violin)
Valerie COLEMAN: Concerto for Orchestra (world premiere)
Works from LO Creators Corps

Nov 23
Louisville, KY
FILM SERIES
“THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS”
Louisville Palace
Jason Seber, conductor

Dec 6
New Albany, IN
NIGHTLITES SERIES
“HANDEL’S MESSIAH”
The Ogle Center at Indiana University Southeast
Kent Hatteberg, conductor
Louisville Chamber Choir

Dec 14
Louisville, KY
POPS SERIES
“HOLIDAY POPS”
Louisville Palace
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

Jan 17 & 18
Louisville, KY
COFFEE & CLASSICS SERIES
“MIDORI AND AN ALPINE SYMPHONY”
Whitney Hall
SIBELIUS: Violin Concerto (Midori, violin)
R. STRAUSS: An Alpine Symphony

Jan 25
Louisville, KY
CLASSICS SERIES
“TEDDY CONDUCTS DER KAISER VON ATLANTIS”
Whitney Hall
Teddy Abrams, conductor
ULLMANN: Der Kaiser von Atlantis

Feb 7
New Albany, IN
NIGHTLITES SERIES
“TIME FOR THREE”
The Ogle Center at Indiana University Southeast
Teddy Abrams, conductor
Time For Three string trio
Louisville Orchestra

Feb 14 & 15
Louisville, KY
COFFEE & CLASSICS SERIES
“RAVEL’S ROMANTIC REVERIE”
Whitney Hall
Ken-David Masur, conductor
RAVEL: Piano Concerto in G (Louis Lortie, piano)
TAKEMITSU: Star-Isle
RAVEL: Daphnis and Chloe

Feb 19
Louisville, KY
FILM SERIES
“RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK”
Louisville Palace
Jason Seber, conductor

Feb 22
Louisville, KY
POPS SERIES
“DECADES BACK TO THE 80S”
Louisville Palace
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

March 7
New Albany, IN
NIGHTLITES SERIES
“STRAVINSKY’S FIREBIRD”
The Ogle Center at Indiana University Southeast
Joseph Young, conductor
STRAVINSKY: The Firebird Suite

March 7 & 8
Louisville, KY
COFFEE & CLASSICS SERIES
“STRAVINSKY’S FIREBIRD”
Whitney Hall
Joseph Young, conductor
STRAVINSKY: The Firebird Suite

March 22
Louisville, KY
POPS SERIES
“A NIGHT OF SYMPHONIC BOY BANDS”
Whitney Hall
Bob Bernhardt, conductor

April 9
Louisville, KY
FILM SERIES
“HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 1”
Louisville Palace

April 11
Louisville, KY
FILM SERIES
“HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS – PART 2”
Louisville Palace

May 9 & 10
Louisville, KY
COFFEE & CLASSICS SERIES
“CREATORS FEST”
Whitney Hall
Teddy Abrams, conductor
World premieres by Baldwin GIANG, Brittany J. GREEN and Oswald HUỲNH

© 21C Media Group, February 2024

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