Semyon Bychkov extends contract with Czech Phil

The orchestra's chief conductor and music director will remain in Prague until 2028... and there's more Mahler to come this season

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Published: September 29, 2022 at 10:48 am

ON the eve of its 127th season, the Czech Philharmonic has announced that it is to renew its existing contract with chief conductor and music director Semyon Bychkov.

The conductor, who has been with the orchestra since 2018, has now signed a new contract which keeps him in the role until 2028. The announcement was made ahead of the Czech Phil's season opener: a concert featuring Beethoven’s Violin Concerto performed by Lisa Batiashvili, and Strauss’s Alpine Symphony.

Semyon Bychkov’s tenure with the Czech Philharmonic began with a tour to celebrate 100 years of Czechoslovak independence. The following year saw the release of The Tchaikovsky Project. Released by Decca Classics, this marked the culmination of four years of Tchaikovsky performance by Bychkov and the orchestra.

More recently, April 2022 saw the start of a new Mahler symphonic cycle by Bychkov and the Czech Phil on Pentatone. The opening disc, featuring Symphony No.4, earned a five-star review from us. That release will be followed, on 14 October, by the release of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony from the same forces.

Continuing the Mahler theme, the orchestra's 2022-23 season will also feature performances of the composer's Sixth and Seventh Symphonies, in Paris, Brussels, Hamburg, Munich, Vienna, Milan and the Gewandhaus Mahler Festival in Leipzig. Both symphonies will also be set down back home in Prague.

At the beginning of September, Bychkov and the Czech Philharmonic celebrated the Czech Republic’s EU Council Presidency with a special concert held on a stage floating on the Vltava River. A few weeks later, conductor and orchestra presented their first opera together: Dvořák’s Rusalka, with Asmik Grigorian in the title role.

Describing the first of three concert performances broadcast live and presented as part of the 2022 Dvořák Prague International Music Festival, Czech Radio enthused that 'Semyon Bychkov literally worked magic'.

Pic: Marco Borggreve

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