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Berg Orchestra

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Native name
  
Orchestr Berg

Location
  
Prague, Czech Republic

Music director
  
P. Vrábel

Founded
  
2001 (2001)

Principal conductor
  
P. Vrábel

Website
  
www.berg.cz

Similar
  
Petr Wajsar, Heiner Goebbels, Prague Philharmonia, Pierre Jodlowski, Prague Radio Symphon

Berg Orchestra (in Czech, Orchestr Berg), initially formed as a group of like-minded music students in 1995 and officially founded in 2001 by Slovak conductor Peter Vrábel, is a professional orchestra in Prague, Czech Republic whose stated objective is "to constantly search for inspiration and accommodate new impulses from every sphere of contemporary life."

Contents

Aside from its performances in traditional concert halls, Berg performs in museums and sewage treatment facilities, on theater stages, in churches and synagogues, and sometimes accompanies silent film screenings or dance performances. The orchestra is well known for its unusual venue choices.

History

Vrábel launched his concert career early, collaborating as a student with numerous symphony and chamber orchestras, as well as with Kühn's Children Choir. In 1995 he founded Berg Orchestra as a means of promoting new music, actively collaborating with Czech composers, and creating opportunities for the younger generation of composers and performers through various projects. Berg's enterprises are diverse—despite its concentration on new music, the orchestra also programs older works and is thus occupied with period interpretation. Berg has produced many recordings for Czech Radio and also proven its versatility with jazz and film music.

When Berg launched its first season as an independent chamber orchestra in January 2001, the organizers knew very well what they were facing. "The music scene could be described as post-socialist," says Vrabel, who became Berg's conductor and artistic director. "Audiences rejected anything that was a bit more avant-garde, and many musicians looked at contemporary music with total disrespect. We had to learn how to live in freedom."

Concomitantly Vrábel is a guest conductor at the National Theater in Prague.

Collaborations

Collaboration is central to Berg Orchestra. Composers with whom the orchestra has worked closely include Heiner Goebbels, Fausto Romitelli, Lera Auerbach, Martin Klusák and many others.

Berg Orchestra enjoys a longstanding collaborative association with the Spitfire dance theatre company.

Films

In 2009, at the Spanish Synagogue in Prague, Berg premiered Jan Dušek's incidental music for E. Mason Hopper's 1922 silent film Hungry Hearts.

Nuberg Award

The Nuberg competition, established in 2006, selects winners from among the newly composed work commissioned by the orchestra during the previous year. Given the short lifespan of individual concerts, it is another means of providing young composers with valuable and generally hard-to-find exposure. The competition gives out one Nuberg Award per year. The jury consists of distinguished figures from the international contemporary music world who, according to Vrábel, are entirely from outside the Czech Republic, and not only for the objectivity they provide. "It’s also for the young composers to have feedback from the international music scene," he told Česká pozice.

Outside awards and recognition

Peter Vrábel is a Gideon Klein Prize holder. In 2010, Vrábel and Berg Orchestra were commended for artistic excellence and the promotion of Czech music by the Czech section of the International Music Council of UNESCO.

References

Berg Orchestra Wikipedia