March 10, 2018
Tchaikovsky Concert Hall
directions to the hallGet full access to services at your Personal Account page
Personal Account page:
Already registered?
Account LoginThe orchestra was founded by Rudolf Barshai, a world-class violist and founding member of Borodin Quartet. Barshai engaged young music talents from Moscow and formed the first chamber orchestra in the USSR that fashioned the European tradition (specifically, Wilhelm Stross Chamber Orchestra from West Germany that had performed in Moscow in September 1955). Moscow Chamber Orchestra made its orchestral debut on 5 March, 1956 at Small Hall of Moscow Conservatory. The orchestra immediately won recognition from the public in Russia and abroad. Soon after this the Orchestra becomes integrated as part of Moscow Philharmonic Society.
“The chamber orchestra presents an amazing perfection of music and performance. Unity of history and contemporaneity is distinctive for musicians of the Moscow Chamber Orchestra: without distorting the text and spirit of early music, musicians make it modern and full of youth for our patrons,” – wrote Dmitri Shostakovich, who called the orchestra “the best chamber orchestra in the world.”
In 1950–1960 the Orchestra featured such famous violin players as Boris Shulgin (MCO first violinist ), Lev Markiz, Vladimir Rabei, Andrei Abramenkov (violin), Heinrich Talalyan (viola), Alla Vasilieva and Boris Dobrohotov (cello), Leopold Andreyev (bass), Alexandr Korneyev and Naum Zaidel (flute), Albert Zajonc (oboe), Boris Afanasiev (French horn), Sergei Dijur (organ and harpsichord) who performed in the orchestra under the baton of Rudolf Barshai.
Aside from performing and recording numerous pieces of European Baroque music, Russian and Western classical music, works by international composers of the 20th century (some of compositions were first performed in the USSR), the Orchestra actively promoted music of contemporary Soviet composers: Nikolai Rakov, Yuri Levitin, Georgi Sviridov, Kara Karaev, Mieczysław Weinberg, Alexandr Lokshin, German Galynin, Revol Bunin, Boris Tchaikovsky, Edison Denisov, Vytautas Barkauskas, Jaan Rääts, Alfred Schnittke and others. Many of them composed music specifically for Moscow Chamber Orchestra. For example, Dmitri Shostakovich dedicated his 14th Symphony to MCO, its kickoff performed by the Orchestra lead by Rudolf Barshai on 29 September, 1969 in Leningrad.
Following Barshai's emigration in 1976 the Orchestra was successively lead and conducted by Igor Bezrodny (1977–1981), Eugeny Nepalo (1981–1983), Viktor Tretyakov (1983–1990), Andrey Korsakov (1990–1991) and Konstantin Orbelyan (1991– 2009). In 1983 MCO was rebranded as State Chamber Orchestra of the USSR; and since 1994 the ensemble has boasted the title of an “academic orchestra”.
Today SCO is one of the top chamber orchestras in Russia. Its extensive repertoire features pieces from all music periods and styles. The orchestra has performed in Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, France, Switzerland, USA, Canada, Japan, Republic of South Africa, Scandinavia and Southeast Asia. MCO performed on prestigious stages such as Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Alte Oper in Frankfurt, Schauspielhaus in Berlin, Queen Elisabeth Hall in London, Salle Pleyel in Paris, Carnegie Hall in NYC, Davis Hall in San Francisco, and Suntori Hall in Tokyo. Musicians represented Russia at the landmark United Nations 50th Anniversary Celebration Concert in 1995 and at the World Economic Forum in Davos in 1998.
For over 60 years the Orchestra has performed with spectacular guest artists such as: Sviatoslav Richter, Emil Gilels, Lev Oborin, Maria Grinberg, Nikolai Petrov, Vladimir Krainev, Vladimir Viardo, Eliso Virsaladze, Mikhail Pletnev, Boris Berezovsky, Freddy Kempf, John Lill, Stefan Vladar, Christian Zacharias, Igor Chetuev, Lucas Debargue (piano); David Oistrakh, Igor Oistrakh, Yehudi Menuhin, Leonid Kogan, Oleg Kagan, Vladimir Spivakov, Viktor Tretyakov, Igor Gringoltz, Boris Garlitsky, Andres Mustonen and Jean-Christophe Spinosi (violin); Yuri Bashmet (viola); Mstislav Rostropovitch, Natalia Gutman, Boris Pergamenschikow, Gaspar Cassado, Antonio Meneses and Alexandr Kniazev (cello); Weites Land Olga Erdeli (harp); Nina Dorliak, Zara Dolukhanova, Irina Arkhipova, Eugeny Nesterenko, Galina Pisarenko, Alexandr Vedernikov, Makvala Kasrashvili, Nikolai Gedda, Renee Fleming, Inga Kalna, Sandrin Piau, Vivica Genaux, Roberto Alagna and Dmitri Hvorostovski (vocals); Jean-Pierre Rampal, Patrick Gallois and Sir James Galway (flute); Federico Mondelci (saxophone); Timofei Dokschitzer (trumpet) and numerous other top-notch soloists and conductors.
The Orchestra has released an impressive collection of radio and CD recordings covering a wide repertoire ranging from early music arias and Baroque music to works by Russian and international composers of the 20th century. The recordings were released under Melodia, Chandos, Philips, Delos and other leading world music labels.
In January 2010 Alexey Utkin, a world's renowned oboist and conductor, was appointed as SCO Art Director and Chief Conductor. Under his guidance and leadership the Orchestra has been significantly revamped and revitalized. Its style and genre range got drastically expanded. SCO poster billboards show a marriage of Bach's St Matthew Passion, masses by Haydn and Vivaldi, symphonies and concertos by Mozart and Boccherini, Led Zeppelin covers, world music hits and movie soundtracks. Orchestra and its leader's insights and creative exploits have metamorphosed into series of music projects in the recent years, which boldly mingle diverse music art periods, styles and trends. In 2011 and 2015 SCO lead by Mr. Utkin backed up the participants of the 2nd round of the International Tchaikovsky Competitions (piano category). In 2021 State Chamber Orchestra, in addition to customary performances and subscription concerts, took part in “George Frederic Handel: Earthly World & Heavenly World” festival with the concert performances of Handel’s Rodelinda, Tamerlano and Giulio Cesare under Christopher Moulds’ baton.
SCO's season performances feature Alexey Utkin, Philipp Chizhevsky, Yekaterina Antonenko, Konstantin Emelyanov, Philipp Kopachevsky, Fyodor Beznosikov, Narek Hakhnazaryan, Alexander Fiseisky, Daniel Kogan, Alexander Ramm, to name a few.
Freddy Kempf is one of today’s most successful young artists performing to sell-out audiences all over the world. He has built a unique reputation both as an explosive and physical performer not afraid to take risks as well as serious, sensitive and profoundly musical artist.
Born in London in 1977 Freddy began piano lessons at the young age of four. He came to national prominence in 1992 when he won the BBC Young Musician of the Year Competition following a memorable performance of Rachmaninov Paganini Variations. It was perhaps his award of third prize in the 1998 Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition in Moscow that rapidly established his international career. For him not to have won the first prize provoked protests from the audience and an outcry in the Russian press, which proclaimed him "the hero of the competition" and his unprecedented popularity with Russian audiences since then has been reflected in several sold-out concerts and numerous television broadcasts.
Many international debuts followed including engagements at the Munich Gasteig, the Alter Oper in Frankfurt, Berlin’s Philharmonie & Konzerthaus, New York’s 92nd Street “Y”, Chicago’s Grant Park festival, Vienna’s Musikverein & Konzerthaus, Salzburg’s Mozarteum and the Concertgebouw amongst others. His immense versatility as a performer has since taken him all over the world from opening the Shanghai Concert Hall in October 2004, to recording Chopin’s Etudes for DVD in a Chateau close to Paris for BBC Television and acclaimed Beethoven Concerto Cycles in London and Sydney.
Freddy has worked with the world’s leading orchestras and acclaimed conductors such as the Philharmonia Orchestra under Sir Andrew Davis and Kurt Sanderling, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Daniele Gatti and Matthias Bamert, City of Birmingham Symphony/Oramo, La Scala Philharmonic/Chailly, St. Petersburg Philharmonic/Termirkanov, Russian State Symphony/Sinaisky, Dresden Symphony/Herbig, Seattle Symphony/Schwarz, San Francisco Symphony/Tortelier, Philadelphia Orchestra/Sawallisch, NHK Symphony/Simonov, European Union Youth Orchestra/Ashkenazy, Prague Philharmonia/Belahovek, Rotterdam Philharmonic/Viotti, the Residentie Orkest/Jaarvi, Vancouver Symphony/Tovey, Luxembourg Philharmonic/Krivine and the Sao Paolo State Symphony/Kalmar.
Recent and forthcoming highlights include engagements with the Philharmonia Orchestra, several concerts with the RPO in Europe, at London’s Cadogan Hall and Royal Festival Hall, City of Birmingham Symphony, English Chamber, projects with the European Union Chamber Orchestra, St. Petersburg Philharmonia, a major UK tour with the Moscow Philharmonic,Prague Philharmonia, Staatstheater Stuttgart, Oregon Symphony, Hong Kong Sinfonietta, Bergen Philharmonic to perform and record Prokofiev’s 2nd and 3rd Piano Concerti, New Zealand Symphony, a Beethoven cycle with the Orchestra della Toscana amongst others. A favourite to Australian and Asian audiences, Freddy will return for concerts with the Tasmania, Adelaide and Queensland Orchestras, tour Japan with the RPO and he recently made his debut with the KBS Symphony Orchestra.
A committed recitalist, Freddy has built up dedicated audiences world-wide appearing at London’s Barbican Centre, Birmingham’s Symphony Hall, Munich’s Herkulessaal, Hamburg’s Musikhalle, Tokyo’s Suntory Hall, Osaka’s Symphony Hall, Grande Teatro di Verona, Milan Conservatorio’s Sala Verdi, Zurich’s Tonhalle, Moscow’s Great Hall of the Conservatoire and St. Petersburg’s Philharmonic Hall. Current highlights include return visits to the Moscow Grand Conservatory, St. Petersburg Philharmonia, Conservatorio G.Verdi Milano and in October 2009 Freddy will perform a UK recital tour with a programme featuring Bach’s Goldberg Variations in leading concert halls including London’s Cadogan Hall, Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall, the Sage Gateshead, Cardiff’s St. David’s Hall and Dublin’s National Concert Hall.
Freddy records exclusively for BIS Records, for whom he has recorded recital discs of Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Prokofiev, Rachmaninov, Schumann and his most recent release includes the works of Mussorgsky, Ravel and Balakirev. This recording has already been received with critical acclaim being chosen as Editor’s Choice in the Gramophone Magazine and Geoffrey Norris writes for the Telegraph that:
Freddy Kempf here tackles three giants of the piano repertoire and conquers them with spirit and imagination. Armed with all the necessary technical resources, he is able to bring colour and well-defined character to Pictures from an Exhibition, revealing how ingeniously Mussorgsky exploited the piano's palette of sound without the aid of all those later arrangers who chose to embellish it with orchestral timbres.
One of those was Ravel, whose Gaspard de la nuit here glows, ripples and, in "Scarbo", bristles with malevolence. The bravura of Balakirev's Islamey is brilliant.
Born in 1957 in Moscow, Alexey Utkin studied at the Central School of Music. He graduated from the Moscow Conservatory (1980) and completed his post-graduate studies (1983) in the oboe class with Anatoly Petrov. The training that the young oboist followed in the Moscow Virtuosi chamber orchestra, along with his brilliant musical education and natural talent, made him a prominent figure in the world of music. Utkin is one of the musicians who were able to bring the oboe as a solo instrument to the world stage.
Having performed most of solo works written for oboe, Utkin began to expand the instrument's range and capacity through arrangements. Utkin's repertoire includes works by Bach and Haydn, Vivaldi and Mozart, Richard Strauss, Shostakovich, Bruch and Britten. The musicians's stage partners include Vladimir Spivakov, Yuri Bashmet, Heinz Holliger, Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Natalia Gutman, Eliso Virsaladze, Alexander Rudin, Radovan Vlatković, Valery Popov, Elena Obraztsova, David Daniels, Dmitry Khvorostovsky, Christian Zacharias, Frederick Kempf, Boris Berezovsky, Viktor Tretiakov, David Fray, Igor Chetuev. Utkin has been applauded by Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall (New York), the Concertgebouw (Amsterdam), the Palau de la Música Catalana (Barcelona), the National Auditorium of Music (Madrid), the Accademia di Santa Cecilia (Rome), the Théâtre des Champs Élysées (Paris), the Hercules Hall (Munich) and the Beethovenhalle (Bonn).
Many of Utkin's programmes have been recorded on CDs, including Bach's Concertos for oboe and oboe d'amour, works by Rossini, Pasculli, Vivaldi, Salieri, and Penderecki's Capriccio. In the late 1990s, while continuing to work with the Moscow Virtuosi, Utkin embarked on an independent career, and in 2000 he founded the Hermitage Ensemble. With this ensemble, the maestro has performed numerous concerts and recorded 12 CDs for the Caro Mitis label, including works by Johann Sebastian Bach, C.F.E. Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Richard Strauss, Shostakovich, and Britten.
In 2010, Alexey Utkin became Director of the State Chamber Orchestra of Russia. While maintaining the ensemble's traditions, he sees himself not just as its Artistic Director and conductor, but also as a soloist, first among equals. The maestro began his work with the orchestra by expanding the range of styles and genres of the works they perform. In 2011 and 2015, the orchestra under maestro Utkin accompanied pianists participating in the second round of the International Tchaikovsky Competition. In the 2021/22 season the orchestra takes part in the Moscow Philharmonic's festival "Georg Friedrich Handel: The World of the Mountains and the World of the Valley" (featuring the concert versions of Rodelinda, Tamerlane and Julius Caesar in Egypt) with world-famous soloists, and closes the season with a concert performance of Mozart's Mitridate, re di Ponto.
Alexey Utkin continues to arrange famous works for oboe. In recent years, he has appeared in various parts of Russia, from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok. Utkin's new ideas and discoveries are reflected in such programmes as Ost-West Fantasy for chamber orchestra, electric guitar, bass guitar, Indian flute, and percussion; and Andrey Rubtsov's Festival Divertimento Fairy-Tale (for chamber orchestra, children's choir, electric guitar, and percussion) among others. His friendship with actor Alexander Filippenko gave him an impetus for the creation of Reflection in Water, based on Alexander Solzhenitsyn's Krokhotki and Shostakovich's Preludes.
In 2016, Alexey Utkin received the Moscow Literature and Art Award (Musical Arts category) for his contribution to the development of national musical art and the promotion of classical music at Moscow concert venues. He is a professor at the Moscow Conservatory and plays the unique oboe by F. LOREE, the oldest oboe brand. This instrument was custom-made for the musician by Alain de Gourdon, a renowned French master and the company’s owner.