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February 2012
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Örebro Konserthus
Fabriksgatan 2, Örebro
Opens one hour before the concert
Logotyp: Örebrompaniet
TICKETS
019-21 21 21, ticnet.se
SUBSCRIPTIONS
+46 (0)19-766 62 02
abonnent@orebrokonserthus.com
Phone hours: M 10-12, W 14-16
(Closed for Christmas &
New Years Dec 23-Jan 3.)

Thomas Dausgaard - Music director

tomas dausgaard
It seems like we had to wait for the Danish conductor Thomas Dausgaard to show us what makes a real “Egmont". Together with the Swedish Chamber Orchestra heper formed Beethoven's “Egmont" overture at the Konzerthaus. There's always something going on and that leaves no time for pathos: The confident roughness of the opening beats! The vivid, but smartly controlled progression until the whole orchestra steps into the light and finally the main theme! How we would have loved to listen to more music played by this strong and competent orchestra.
Christine Teewinkel, Der Tagespiegel, March 2007
Thomas Dausgaard has been the Swedish Chamber Orchestra´s Music Director since 1997. Having joined when they were still a fledgling ensemble which had not yet forged its own musical voice, Dausgaard was able to work with the musicians to find that voice and to make it very much their own, delving immediately into a project to perform and eventually record the complete Beethoven orchestral works for which they were joined by pianist, Boris Berezovsky.

Looking back at this project and the way it shaped his work with the ensemble, Thomas Dausgaard comments  “When we started this project over ten years ago it was still quite unusual to play Beethoven with such a small orchestra (38 players). I was very keen to find a way into the chamber musical core of the music. In this I was strongly inspired by the contribution that the period instrument orchestras had brought to this repertoire, not least in terms of timbre and colour. But the most important thing for this whole project, which has spanned ten years, if it was to be sucessful was for it to pull together the orchestra. I would say that, through our intense involvement with Beethoven, we have been able to achieve a collective language and identity, an awareness of what we are doing, how and why. This also gives us a purpose when we play Ravel, Bruckner or Brett Dean - but when there is music by Beethoven on the stands we are instantly as one.“

In 2009 Simax released Volume 10 of the Complete Beethoven Orchestral Works which include Symphony no. 9 and incidental music. Reviews of the cycle so far have highlighted the pe iod instrument flavour and abundant energy:

"Thomas Dausgaard and the Swedish Chamber Orchestra have obviously learned lessons from the period-instrument innovators, but there's nothing mannered or willfully contentious about the results. Instead there's abundant life, quick-witted musical intelligence, inwardly charged expression, scintillating precision, humour and a sense of awe before Beethoven' s more startling inspirations - yes, they can still startle even today."

BBC Music Magazine

"This series goes from strength to strength. In a world overflowing with Beethoven symphonies, these performances have in abundance the all-important qualities of freshness and vitality, of the kind that makes you perk up your ears and listen anew to music you thought you had memorized ages ago."

www.classicstoday.com

Whilst Beethoven remains central to Thomas Dausgaard´s work with the Swedish Chamber Orchestra, together conductor and ensemble have continued to expand their repertoire. Haydn, Brahms and Schumann are some of the composers that have been the focus of festivals in Örebro over the years and on Schumann Dausgaard exclaims  "It was fantastic! All the difficulties of balance I'd experienced before with a full-size orchestra disappeared.“  

Another labour of love had started and the result is a new series of recordings on BIS entitled “Opening Doors“ which already features the complete symphonies of Schumann as well as a recording of Dvorak Symphonies nos. 6 & 9.  In 2010 BIS releases two further recordings in the series - Schubert’s Great and Unfinished Symphonies (Spring) and Bruckner 2 (Autumn).

2010 marks the occasion of the orchestra’s 15th anniversary and, as a fledgling orchestra that has reached international acclaim in such a short time,  the musicians are proud to be making their Salzburg International Festival debut with Thomas Dausgaard and Swedish soprano Nina Stemme.
 
Full biography for Thomas Dausgaard (IMG Artists)