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Japan Philharmonic Orchestra 708th Tokyo Regular Concert

日本フィルハーモニー交響楽団 第357回横浜定期演奏会<春季>
Classic music Music festival

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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.

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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.

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Reiko Maehashi (pre-decade, December 11-1943) is a Japanese violinist.
She studied with Anna Ono, a Russian-based music teacher, and Hideo Saito, a music school for Tsubaki Gakuen children. Visit the concert of Josef Shigeti and David Oistrak who came to Japan as a girl, and aspire to the violinist's way. She studied Russian from junior high school students, studied at Leningrad Academy of Music at age 17 and studied under Mikhail Weimann. After returning to Japan temporarily in 1963, she traveled to the United States to get in touch with Robert Man of the Juliad String Quartet due to her interest in the new Viennese School and contemporary music, studied at the Juliado School of Music in New York State, she studied under Dorothy Delay. Furthermore, she traveled from New York to Switzerland, where she received the glaze of Joseph Shigeti and Natan Mircitein in Montreux. She lived in Montreux after Shigeti's death, and made friends with the last years of Chaplin and Kokoshka.

Active internationally. She made his US debut at Carnegie Hall under the direction of Stokowski, as well as Zubin Mehta, Kurt Masur, Seiji Ozawa, Christoph Eschenbach, and other prominent conductors, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Cleveland. She has also performed with leading orchestras and other orchestras. She has also made recordings with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the Zurich-Thonhalle Orchestra.

Awarded the Japan Academy of Arts in 2004.

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2007, Exxon Mobil Music Award.

In June 2011, she received the award of the Purple Rose. April 2017, received the Asahi-day Shogo.

Her sister, Yuko Maebashi (Yuko Maehashi, November 17, 1945-February 18, 1999) is a pianist, who has performed many concerts and recordings.

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Dame Mitsuko Uchida, DBE (内田光子, [ɯtɕiꜜda miꜜtsɯ̥ko]), born 20 December 1948) is a classical pianist and conductor, born in Japan and naturalised in Britain, particularly noted for her interpretations of Mozart and Schubert.

She has appeared with many notable orchestras, recorded a wide repertory with several labels, won numerous awards and honours (including Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2009), and has since 2013 been Artistic Director of the Marlboro Music School and Festival, the only musician to be its sole Artistic Director since co-founder Rudolf Serkin. She has also conducted several major orchestras.

Born in Atami, a seaside town close to Tokyo, Japan, Uchida moved to Vienna, Austria, with her diplomat parents when she was 12 years old, after her father was named the Japanese ambassador to Austria. She enrolled at the Vienna Academy of Music to study with Richard Hauser, and later Wilhelm Kempff and Stefan Askenase, and remained in Vienna to study when her father was transferred back to Japan after five years. She gave her first Viennese recital at the age of 14 at the Vienna Musikverein. She also studied with Maria Curcio, the last and favourite pupil of Artur Schnabel.

In 1969 Uchida won the first prize in the Beethoven Competition in Vienna and in 1970 the second prize in the International Chopin Piano Competition. In 1975, she won second prize in the Leeds Piano Competition.

In 1998 Uchida was the Music Director of the Ojai Music Festival in conjunction with conductor and violinist, David Zinman.

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She is an acclaimed interpreter of the works of Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, Debussy and Schoenberg. She has recorded all of Mozart's piano sonatas (a project that won the Gramophone Award in 1989), and concerti, the latter with the English Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Jeffrey Tate. Her recording of the Schoenberg Piano Concerto with Pierre Boulez won another Gramophone Award. Uchida is further noted for her recordings of Beethoven's complete piano concerti with Kurt Sanderling conducting, Beethoven's late piano sonatas, and a Schubert piano cycle. She is also respected as a distinguished interpreter of the works of the Second Viennese School.

Her 2009 recording of the Mozart piano concertos nos. 23 and 24, in which she conducted the Cleveland Orchestra as well as playing the solo part, won the Grammy Award in 2011. This recording was the start of a project to record all the Mozart piano concertos for a second time, conducting the Cleveland Orchestra from the piano. Further recordings for this project were released in 2011, 2012 and 2014.

From 2002 to 2007 she was artist-in-residence for the Cleveland Orchestra, where she led performances of all of Mozart's solo piano concertos. She has also conducted the English Chamber Orchestra, from the keyboard. In 2010, she was artist-in-residence for the Berlin Philharmonic. She was senior artist at the Marlboro Music School and Festival in 1974 and 1992, and has been permanently associated with Marlboro since 1994 when she became a member of the Committee for Artistic Direction. In 1999 she became one of two Artistic Directors along with fellow pianist Richard Goode. Since 2013 she has been sole Artistic Director.She is also a founding trustee of the Borletti-Buitoni Trust, an organisation established to help young artists develop and sustain international careers. In May 2012, the Royal Philharmonic Society announced that she would be honoured with their Gold Medal (she received the society's annual Music Award in 2003); previous recipients have included Johannes Brahms (1877), Frederick Delius and Sir Edward Elgar (1925), Richard Strauss (1936), Igor Stravinsky (1954), Benjamin Britten and Leonard Bernstein (1987).

Her 2015 performance with the Cleveland Orchestra elicited this review from the Cleveland Plain Dealer:

Call it the mark of a master. Just when Mitsuko Uchida was starting to seem predictable, the goddess of purity, the pianist goes and exhibits another persona altogether. Performing Mozart again with the Cleveland Orchestra Thursday, the pianist-conductor treated listeners to a heartier, more robust version of her art. More than just the layout of the strings, she rearranged, in a refreshing manner, her very sound.

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Education and Degree
1974: Graduated from the University of Indiana Music School (BM) Graduated Achievement Award at the
1976: Graduated from the University of Indiana Music School (MM)

Work history
1977: Musashino Music University part-time lecturer
1980: Musashino Music University full-time lecturer
1980: Naomi Higher Music Academy admissions course part-time lecturer (until 1985)
1994: Musashino Music University Associate Professor
2005: Musashino Music University

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Study
A. Simon, G. Shebock, S. Neigaus

[Performance, research, writing, etc.]
After completing a graduate school from Indiana University in the United States, he made a debut recital at Nikkei Hall in 1976. After that, he appeared in regular concerts of the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, the Kyoto City Symphony Orchestra, and the Sendai Philharmonic Orchestra. He performed in South America Mexico, Panama, Peru as a music envoy of the Japan Foundation in 1987, to violinists Mariko Senju and Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan in 1998, and to Keiko Terada and duo recital in Helsinki, Finland in 2002, 1996 A yearly recital with the recitals by Chopin's polonaise, the 1998 Saitama National Arts Theater "Pianist Series of 100 People", and a concert with the last three sonatas of Schubert at the Tokyo Cultural Center Small Hall in 2000. In March 2006, he performed with the Far East Symphony Orchestra in Khabarovsk, Russia.
Since 2003, he has been performing recitals at the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Small Hall under the All Sibelius Program four times, and CDs have been released from Octavia Records. In 2007, the violinist Sato Madoka and "Sibelius Violin Works I, II" were released (ALM record) in December 2015, and these activities were awarded the Sibelius Medal with tradition and honor from the Finnish Sibelius Association in December 2015. Performed two Mozart piano concertos at the Tokyo Suntory Hall in June 2010 and May 2016 with the Japan Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra conducted by Koichiro Kobayashi, and in August 2010 Rachmaninoff's piano concerto in St. Petersburg, Russia, Russia Perform a duo recital for the second at Latvia Riga. Recitals will be held in Toronto, Canada in September 2016, Kioi Hall in January 2017, Osaka The Phoenix Hall in May, and Niihama in August. In addition, he joined Osaka The Phoenix Hall Music Advisor in April 2017. Currently a professor at Musashino Music University.

[Others]

Open lectures at Tashkent Music School (Uzbekistan) in 1998 and Sibelius Academy (Finland) in 2002.

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Alexander Nikolayevich Lazarev (Russian: Алекса́ндр Никола́евич Ла́зарев ; born 5 July 1945, Moscow, Soviet Union) is a Russian conductor. He studied at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, and later at the Moscow Conservatory with Leo Ginsbourg. In 1971, he was the first prize winner in a national conducting competition in the USSR. In 1972, he won a first prize and gold medal in the Karajan conducting competition in Berlin.

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From 1987-1995, Lazarev was both chief conductor and artistic director of the Bolshoi Theatre, the first person in over thirty years to hold both positions simultaneously. From 1992-1995, he was principal guest conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1994, Lazarev became principal guest conductor of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra (RSNO). From 1997-2005, he served as principal conductor of the RSNO, and is now its conductor emeritus. Lazarev was the chief conductor of Japan Philharmonic Orchestra from 2009 September.

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Alice = Aira Otto (Alice = Sara Otto, Alice-Sara Ott, August 1, 1988-) is a female pianist from Munich, Germany. She has the experience of winning piano competitions mainly in German speaking areas. She studied with Karl Heinz Kemarink at Salzburg Mozarteum University in Austria.

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Miki Kobayashi (小林美貴 , Kobayashi Miki, born (1987-11-10 ) November 10, 1987) is a Japanese biathlete. She competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, in the individual, sprint and relay.

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Pietari Inkinen (born 29 April 1980, Kouvola, Finland) is a Finnish violinist and conductor. He began violin and piano studies at age 4. As a youth, he also performed in a rock band. He attended the Sibelius Academy and graduated with diplomas in violin (2003) and conducting (2005). He studied violin at the Hochschule für Musik Köln with Zakhar Bron. Inkinen has performed on a Carlo Bergonzi 1732 violin. He leads a chamber trio, the Inkinen Trio.
In May 2007, Inkinen was named the second music director of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. He formally assumed the post in January 2008. In October 2013, the NZSO announced the extension of Inkinen's contract through the 2015 season. Inkinen concluded his NZSO tenure at the end of 2015, and now has the title of Honorary Conductor of the NZSO. He and the NZSO have recorded music of Einojuhani Rautavaara and of Jean Sibelius for the Naxos label, and of Richard Wagner for EMI Classics.

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In September 2009, Inkinen became principal guest conductor of the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra. In April 2015, the Japan Philharmonic appointed Inkinen as its next chief conductor, effective September 2016, with an initial contract of 3 seasons. His work in opera has included his conducting of Opera Australia's Melbourne Ring Cycle in 2013, following the resignation of Richard Mills.
In Europe, Inkinen was named the new chief conductor of the Ludwigsburg Schlossfestspiele in March 2014, for the period from 2015 through 2017. In October 2014, the Prague Symphony Orchestra announced the appointment of Inkinen as its next chief conductor, as of September 2015. He had first conducted the Prague Symphony Orchestra in 2007. His first guest-conducting appearance with the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie Saarbrücken Kaiserslautern was in 2010. In September 2016, the orchestra named Inkinen its next chief conductor, effective with the 2017-2018 season, with an initial contract of 4 years.

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Debuted in the 2005 CD with Scarlati's Sonatas and received overwhelming criticism. The subsequent recordings and recitals of Rachmaninoff and the No. 1 piano concerto by Tchaikovsky and Methner have a high reputation with one of the world's most intriguing and exciting young performers. The 2007 Scriabin recording was also the BBC Music Magazine monthly best, the Daily Telegraph annual best, and the CAN's MIDEM Classics Award 2008 Best Instrumental Music CD Award.

Born in 1980 in St. Petersburg. He has an excellent musical talent since childhood, and entered the St. Petersburg Conservatory in 1987. After studying in Berlin in 1990, he has been living in London since 1997 and studied with Christopher Elton at the Royal Conservatory. In the meantime, she participated in the Lake Como International Piano Academy in Italy, and studied with Murray Pelaya, Claude Frank, Leon Freyshire, Stephen Huff, Alexander Thatz.

In addition to the European and Northern European tours in 2006, the highly acclaimed Canadian and American tours will be realized, and the New York debut in the Frick Collection series will be made. Debuted at the 2007 Aspen Music Festival, La Rock Dantelon International Piano Music Festival in France, and the Metropolitan Museum Piano Forte Series in New York.

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Other activities include Grant Rewellin's North Carolina Symphony Orchestra, Osmo Vanska's Beethoven piano concerto with the Minnesota Orchestra, and all the songs by Vladimir Ashkenazy, co-star with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, Neme Jarvi, London Philharmonic The Royal Festival Hall Series with the Orchestra and BBC Proms debut in 2008 with the BBC Philharmonic under the direction of Jan Pascal Tortolier.

January 2011, first visit to Japan. A recital is planned, as well as the Saitama National Arts Theater.

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Akeo Watanabe (渡邉 暁雄 Watanabe Akeo, 1919–1990) was a Japanese symphonic conductor, known for his recordings of the works of Jean Sibelius.

Watanabe was born in 1919 to a Japanese father and Finnish mother. He studied music and conducted at the Tokyo Academy of Music in Japan and the Juilliard School of Music in New York City, USA. His conducting premiere was with the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra in 1945. He was music director of the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra from 1948 to 1954 (Kennedy 2006).

In 1956, Watanabe founded the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra and continued as its resident conductor until 1968. In 1970, he became music director of the Kyoto Symphony Orchestra, and remained so until 1972. From 1972 to 1978, he was the music director of the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra. In 1978, he once again became resident conductor of the newly reformed Japan Philharmonic (now renamed the Japan Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra), with whom he stayed until 1983. In 1988, he became the music director of the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra, and remained there until 1990. He was also a professor of conducting at the Tokyo University of Arts from 1962 to 1967 (Kennedy 2006).

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Watanabe was a regular guest conductor with orchestras in the United States and Europe (Kennedy 2006). Watanabe made the first complete set of recordings of Sibelius' symphonies in stereophonic sound with the Japan Philharmonic from 1960 to 1962 for the Nippon Columbia Company (these were released on Columbia's Epic label in the United States). He re-recorded the Sibelius symphony cycle in digital sound with the same orchestra in 1981 for Denon.

Watanabe died in 1990. Japan Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra records note that he remained as music director of the orchestra, which he founded, until his death.

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John Richard Lill CBE (born 17 March 1944 in London) is a British classical pianist.
Lill studied at the Royal College of Music and with Wilhelm Kempff. His talent emerged at an early age, and he gave his first piano recital at the age of nine. At age 18, he performed Rachmaninoff's 3rd Piano Concerto under Sir Adrian Boult. This was followed by his much-acclaimed 1963 London debut playing Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 at the Royal Festival Hall. In 1970 he won the Moscow International Tchaikovsky Competition (ex-aequo with Vladimir Krainev). It was said by Sidney Harrison that "he (John Lill) simply devours Beethoven. I set him work for the week - he does that and more."

Lill has made a number of recordings, including the complete piano concertos of Beethoven, Brahms and Rachmaninoff and the complete piano sonatas of Beethoven and Prokofiev.

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Lill has performed in over fifty countries, both as a recitalist and as a concerto soloist. He has worked in the major European concert cities, including Amsterdam, Berlin, Paris, Prague, Rome, Stockholm and Vienna, as well as in Russia, the Far East and Australasia (including several Australian Broadcasting Corporation tours). He has also performed in the United States with the Symphony Orchestras of Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia, Dallas, Seattle, Baltimore, Boston, Washington, D.C. and San Diego.

His repertoire includes more than seventy concertos, and he is acclaimed in particular as a leading interpreter of Beethoven, whose complete sonata cycle he has performed on several occasions in the UK, US and Japan. In Britain, he has given over 30 BBC Promenade concerts and regularly appears with all the major Symphony Orchestras. He has toured overseas with the London Symphony, London Philharmonic, BBC Symphony, CBSO, Hallé, Royal Scottish National and BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestras.

Lill has recorded for Deutsche Grammophon, EMI (Complete Beethoven Piano Concertos with RSNO and Gibson), ASV (both Brahms Concertos with the Hallé and Loughran) plus the complete Beethoven Sonatas and Tchaikovsky l with the LSO and Judd. More recently, he has recorded the complete Prokofiev sonatas with ASV and his recent recording of the complete Beethoven Bagatelles and Piano Concertos with the CBSO and Weller is available on Chandos. He recorded Malcolm Arnold's Fantasy on a Theme of John Field (dedicated to John Lill) with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Vernon Handley for Conifer. He has also recorded the complete Rachmaninoff Concertos and major solo piano works for Nimbus Records. His most recent recording projects have been the 60th birthday release of piano works by Schumann on the Classics for Pleasure label and new releases for Signum records of Schumann, Brahms and Haydn.

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Graduated from Kamakura in 1968 with an award for excellence at the Senzoku Gakuen University School of Music. Passed the NHK Western Music Audition, the third place in the Japan Woodwind Competition, the second place in the Japan Clarinet Competition (no first place), and received a scholarship from the Meiji Yasuda Life Quality of Life Cultural Foundation.
He studied chamber music with Jun Jun Date, with clarinets by Kei Tsunoda, Kazuhiko Ikematsu and Koichi Hamanaka.

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Currently a leading clarinet player of the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, he is a visiting associate professor at the National College of Music, a visiting professor at the Senzoku Gakuen College of Music, and a coach at the Naomi Music College Diploma department.

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Name of performance: Japan Philharmonic Orchestra 709 Tokyo Regular Concert
Venue: Suntory Hall Great Hall
Open: 2018/12/13 (Thu) 10:00
Notes:
4/20 performance = Tokyo Saturday limited pre-talk "today's listening place" is. 13: 10-Pre-talk start (Please ask in the 1st floor-1-14 columns)
There is a childcare service. (Advance pre-registration system. The deadline is one week before the show). Contact information: Event childcare mothers TEL: 0120-788-222 (10:00 to 17:00 on weekdays)
Performers and songs may be changed. Please be forewarned.
If you have a wheelchair and a disability certificate, there is a discount. Please contact the Japan Philharmonic Service Center.
Please refrain from admission for preschoolers.
Limit number of tickets: You can book up to 8 tickets with a single application. Application limit 4 times
Type of seats and fees:
 S seat: ¥ 8,000
 A seat: ¥ 6,500

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 B seat: ¥ 6,000
Payment methods:
Credit card: It will be settled when the application is completed.
Convenience store / ATM: Please pay by at that time display of application.
Seven-Eleven
Family mart
Lawson Ministop
Page compatible ATM
Internet Banking: Please pay by at that deadline of display of application.
Delivery Delivery service: We will deliver in about a week after payment is complete.
Seven-Eleven: Please receive at the cash register after 2018/12/13 (Thu).
FamilyMart: Please receive it from the store's Fami port terminal after 2018/12/13 (Thu).

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tokyo", "John Lill", "Kamio Mayuko", "Mariko Senju", "Kaori Muraji", "Michie Koyama", "Kyohei Sorita", "Akiko Suwanai", "Kasumi Shimizu", "Sachio Fujioka", "Kunio Tokunaga", "Taijiro Iimori", "Maebashi Reiko", "Miki Kobayashi", "Hisako Kawamura", "Alice=Aira.Otto", "Pietari Inkinen", "Junichi Hirokami", "Tomomi Nishimoto", "Alexander Lazarev", "Kenichiro Kobayashi", "Ayako Uehara (piano)", "Japan Philharmonic Orchestra", "Michiyoshi Inoue (conductor)", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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