The Pacific Music Festival (PMF) (パシフィック・ミュージック・フェスティバル札幌 (Pashifikku Myūjikku Fesutibaru Sapporo)) is an international classical music festival held annually in Sapporo, Japan. It was founded in 1990 by Leonard Bernstein, along with the London Symphony Orchestra, and 123 young musicians from 18 countries. The original artistic directors were Bernstein and Michael Tilson Thomas.[1]
History
edit2018 / 29th
edit7 Jul (Sat) - 1 August (Wed) for 26 days
2017 / 28th
edit8 July - 1 August
Conductors
editArtistic Directors
edit- Leonard Bernstein (1990)
- Michael Tilson Thomas (1990–2000)
- Christoph Eschenbach (1991, 93-98)
- Charles Dutoit (2000–02)
- Fabio Luisi (2010–12)[3][4][5]
- Valery Gergiev (2015–2019)[6]
Principal Conductors
edit- Marin Alsop (1990, 2019)
- Bernard Haitink (2003)
- Valery Gergiev (2004, 06)
- Nello Santi (2005)
- Riccardo Muti (2007)
- Fabio Luisi (2008)
- Jun Märkl (2013, 15, 17)[7][8]
- John Axelrod (2016, 18)[9][10]
- Lahav Shani (2022)
Guest Conductors
edit- Edo de Waart (2003)
- Fabio Luisi (2004)
- Jun Märkl (2005, 08)
- Yakov Kreizberg (2006)
- Philippe Jordan (2007)
- Andrey Boreyko (2007)
- Tadaaki Otaka (2008)
- Xian Zhang (2009)
- Krzysztof Urbański (2011)[4]
- Eivind Gullberg Jensen (2012)[5]
- Alexander Vedernikov (2013)[7]
- Andris Poga (2015)[6]
- Edwin Outwater (2018)[10]
Faculty
editViolin
edit- Rainer Küchl / former concertmaster of the Wiener Phiharmoniker
- Daniel Froschauer / Wiener Philharmoniker
- David Chan / Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
- Stephen Rose / Cleveland Orchestra
Viola
edit- Heinrich Koll / former principal of the Wiener Philharmoniker
- Daniel Foster / National Symphony Orchestra
Cello
edit- Stefan Gartmayer / Wiener Philharmoniker
- Rafael Figueroa / Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Double Bass
edit- Michael Bladerer / Wiener Philharmoniker
- Alexander Hanna / Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Flute
edit- Andreas Blau / former principal of the Berliner Philharmoniker
- Stefán Ragnar Höskuldsson / Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Oboe
edit- Andreas Wittmann / Berliner Philharmoniker
- Eugene Izotov / San Francisco Symphony
Clarinet
edit- Alexander Bader / Berliner Philharmoniker
- Stephen Williamson / Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Bassoon
edit- Stefan Schweigert / Berliner Philharmoniker
- Daniel Matsukawa / Philadelphia Orchestra
Horn
edit- Sarah Willis / Berliner Philharmoniker
- William Caballero / Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Trumpet
edit- Tamás Velenczei / Berliner Philharmoniker
- Mark J. Inouye / San Francisco Symphony
Trombone
edit- Jesper Busk Sørensen / Berliner Philharmoniker
- Denson Paul Pollard / Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Percussion
edit- Cynthia Yeh / Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Timpani
edit- David Herbert / Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Harp
edit- Ladislav Papp / Wiener Staatsoper
- Mariko Anraku / Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Conducting Academy
edit- Leonard Bernstein (1990)[2]
- Fabio Luisi (2010–12)[3][4][5]
- Andris Poga (2015)[6]
- John Axelrod (2016)[9]
- Jun Märkl (2017)[8]
References
edit- ^ New York Times Bernstein and Thomas Head New Pacific Music Festival Jan 19, 1990... Bernstein and Michael Tilson Thomas are to be the artistic directors of the first Pacific Music Festival, a $7 million event to be held in Sapporo.
- ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2009). PMF-20 Years. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2010). PMF 2010 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2011). PMF 2011 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2012). PMF 2012 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2015). PMF 2015 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2013). PMF 2013 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2017). PMF 2017 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2016). PMF 2016 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Pacific Music Festival Organizing Committee (2018). PMF 2018 Official Report. Sapporo, Japan.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b "Artists". Pacific Music Festival.