< BACK

Japan Philharmonic Orchestra 2019 113rd Saitama regular concert

日本フィルハーモニー交響楽団2019第113回さいたま定期
Classic music

Beethoven's "Fate" will be given by Maestro Iimori who has been leading the Japanese classical music world for over half a century. It will be one night to enjoy the immortal love, the eternal masterpiece.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

The Japan Philharmonic Orchestra (日本フィルハーモニー交響楽団 , Nihon Firuhāmonī Kōkyō Gakudan) is a Japanese symphony orchestra based in Tokyo, with administrative offices in Suginami. The orchestra's current chief conductor is Pietari Inkinen, since 2016.
The Japan Philharmonic Orchestra was founded on June 22, 1956, as the exclusive subsidiary orchestra under the Nippon Cultural Broadcasting. Akeo Watanabe served the first chief conductor of the orchestra, from 1950 to 1968, with the titles of music director, permanent conductor, and executive director. Watanabe recorded the symphonies of Jean Sibelius with the orchestra twice, first in the 1960s for Nippon Columbia Company, and second for Denon, recorded in 1981. In 1958, the orchestra gave the first Japanese performance of Debussy's Pelleas and Melisande (opera), conducted by Jean Fournet.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

The orchestra formed a regular relationship with Suginami City in July 1994. The orchestra also established a residency in Yokohama at the Yokohama Minato Mirai Hall in 1998. The Suginami Public Hall was re-opened, after remodeling, in June 2006, which the orchestra uses for rehearsals and other events. The orchestra reorganised its financial basis in 2013, transitioning to a publicly held foundation basis.

Schedule & Ticket

There is no schedule or ticket right now.

Place information

Visuals help you imagine

More photo & video

Other languages

Chinese (Simplified)  English  French  German  Korean  Malayalam  Russian  Thai  Vietnamese 
More languages

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tokyo", "Taijiro Iimori", "Ayako Uehara (piano)", "Japan Philharmonic Orchestra", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Content listed above is edited and modified some for making article reading easily. All content above are auto generated by service.
All images used in articles are placed as quotation. Each quotation URL are placed under images.
All maps provided by Google.

Buy Ticket >