Biography
The Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne (Gürzenich Orchester Köln) is one of Germany's major symphony orchestras and one of two important orchestras with headquarters in the western German city of Cologne (the other is the West German Radio Symphony Orchestra). It is a venerable group that gave the premieres of a number of major works in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

The Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne traces its origins to a Musikalische Gesellschaft (Musical Company) of the middle 18th century, which mounted one of continental Europe's first independent concert series. This organization re-formed after the Napoleonic Wars and, in 1827, established a Concert-Gesellschaft that organized a new orchestra and concert series. In 1840, the group hired composer and conductor Ferdinand Hiller as city kapellmeister (music director); he regularized the orchestra, built its reputation, and in 1857, moved it into a space in Cologne's medieval city hall, known as the Gürzenich; it took that building's name for its own. Hiller remained the orchestra's conductor until 1884. His successors, Franz Wüllner (1884-1902) and Fritz Steinbach (1903–1914), gave the premieres of major works such as the Brahms Double Concerto in A minor, Op. 102 (1887), Richard Strauss' tone poem Don Quixote (1898), and the Symphony No. 3 (1896) and Symphony No. 5 (1904) of Mahler. Later music directors have included Hermann Abendroth (1915-1934), Günter Wand (1946-1975), Yuri Ahronovitch (1975-1986, the orchestra's first non-German conductor), James Conlon (1990-2002), Markus Stenz (2003-2014), and since 2015, Franz-Xavier Roth. The Gürzenich building was destroyed during World War II but was rebuilt; it still exists as a conference center, but in 1986, the orchestra moved into Cologne's new concert hall, the Philharmonie. Since World War II, the orchestra has sometimes used the name Kölner Philharmoniker or Cologne Philharmonic, especially on recordings. The group has continued to champion new music, giving the premiere in 1964 of Bernd Alois Zimmermann's Sinfonia Prosodica.

The Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne has a long recording history stretching back into the LP era. Since 2000, it has issued more than 40 recordings, mostly on the EMI, Oehms Classics, and Harmonia Mundi labels. The group has frequently recorded the symphonies of Mahler and Tchaikovsky. In 2020, the orchestra moved to the Myrios Classics label for a recording, under Roth, of Schumann's Symphony No. 1 in B flat major, Op. 38, and Symphony No. 4 in D minor, Op. 120. ~ James Manheim, Rovi




 
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Anton Webern: Cantata No. 1 Op. 29 - Günter Wand, Gürzenich Orchester Köln, 1962 - Nonesuch H-71192
German Conducting Award 2023 - Claudio Novati, 3rd Prize
Apply now: German Conducting Award
Joseph Haydn - Symphony No. 103 "The Drumroll" / Günter Wand & Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne
Die Hebriden (Mendelssohn) - Dayner Tafur Díaz, 1st Prize - German Conducting Award 2023
Deutscher Dirigentenpreis - German Conductors' Award - Application 2021
German Conducting Award 2023 - Nathanaël Iselin, 2nd Prize
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