New Jersey Symphony Presents GRAMMY® Award-Winning Violinist Augustin Hadelich with Music Director Xian Zhang

Dec 14, 2023

NEWARK, NJ—The New Jersey Symphony presents one of the foremost concert violinists in the world, Augustin Hadelich, in three performances with Music Director Xian Zhang conducting. Hadelich performs Friday, January 12, 2024, at 8 pm in Richardson Auditorium in Princeton; Saturday, January 13, 2024, at 8 pm at Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Bank; and Sunday, January 14, 2024, at 3 pm at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark. 

The GRAMMY® Award-winning violinist will play Beethoven’s monumental violin concerto of which Hadelich recently told The Strad magazine, “Beethoven composed much of it in a high register that makes the sound shine with an incredible purity and transparency … [Its] length creates one of its greatest challenges: to sustain the long arc of the musical story, so it does not sound like an endless collection of ‘nice moments.’”

Also featured on the program is a piece originally commissioned by the New Jersey Symphony for the virtual 2020–21 season, i am a white person who _____ Black people, by Resident Artistic Catalyst Daniel Bernard Roumain. Roumain, who goes by his monogram DBR, was limited in the original version to just strings and percussion, but has expanded the piece for this performance to include wind and brass instruments. This will be the first performance of the piece in front of a live audience. 

When speaking of the piece in 2020, DBR said, “With i am a white person who _____ Black people, I am extending what has traditionally been my choice given to any white person: how do you see me and other BIPOC people, and what choice of word or phrase best reflects your opinion of Black people? Your choice, in part, reflects who you are.” 

The performance closes with audience-favorite Pictures at an Exhibition, written first as a solo piano piece by Modest Mussorgsky and later orchestrated by Maurice Ravel.

Beethoven’s Violin Concerto with Augustin Hadelich

Friday, January 12, 8 pm | Richardson Auditorium in Princeton
Saturday, January 13, 8 pm | Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Bank
Sunday, January 14, 3 pm | New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark

Xian Zhang conductor
Augustin Hadelich violin
New Jersey Symphony

Daniel Bernard Roumain i am a white person who _____ Black people
Beethoven Violin Concerto
Mussorgsky/Ravel Pictures at an Exhibition

More information on concerts and tickets: njsymphony.org/events

Augustin Hadelich

GRAMMY® Award-Winning Violinist Augustin Hadelich recently released a Warner Classics album in 2022 called Recuerdos—‘Memories,’ an album that unites three works for violin and orchestra and a piece originally written for solo guitar. For Britten’s Violin Concerto, Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No 2 and Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy, he is joined by the WDR Sinfonieorchester and its Chief Conductor, Cristian Măcelaru; he remains alone for Ruggero Ricci’s arrangement of Tárrega’s shimmering Recuerdos de la Alhambra.

Hadelich says, “For years, I’ve been thinking about how to tell the story of the Britten Violin Concerto.”  Written in 1938, the work expresses the pacifist composer’s anguish at the Spanish Civil War, which broke out just months after Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2 was premiered in Madrid.

Augustin Hadelich’s full biography and discography can be found here: augustinhadelich.com

New Jersey Symphony

The Emmy and Grammy Award-winning New Jersey Symphony is redefining what it means to be a nationally leading, relevant orchestra in the 21st century. The Symphony is renewing its deeply rooted commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion by championing new, and often local, artists; engaging audiences for whom the inspiring depth and breadth of classical music will be a new experience; and incorporating the broadest possible representation in all aspects of our organization-all to better reflect and serve our vibrant communities. Since 2021, Music Director Xian Zhang has worked together with composer, violinist, educator and social-justice advocate Daniel Bernard Roumain, the orchestra's Resident Artistic Catalyst, to offer programming that connects with diverse communities in Newark and throughout New Jersey.

Internationally renowned Chinese American conductor Xian Zhang began her tenure as the New Jersey Symphony's current Music Director in 2016. Since her arrival at the New Jersey Symphony, Zhang has revitalized programming with an industry-leading commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion in mainstage concerts. In its second century of bringing concerts to the people of New Jersey, the Symphony will present audience favorites in 2023–24 including Dvořák's "New World" Symphony, Orff's Carmina Burana, Vivaldi's The Four Seasons and pianist Daniil Trifonov playing Gershwin's Concerto in F. New Jersey Symphony co-commissions include Anna Clyne's ATLAS and Jessie Montgomery's Snapshots. Composers Rob Kapilow and Daniel Bernard Roumain will present world premieres.

For more information about the New Jersey Symphony, visit www.njsymphony.org or email information@njsymphony.org. Tickets are available for purchase by phone 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or on the Orchestra's website.

Press Contact

Geoffrey Anderson, New Jersey Symphony, Vice President of Marketing & External Affairs
973.735.1713 | ganderson@njsymphony.org

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The New Jersey Symphony's programs are made possible in part by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, along with many other foundations, corporations and individual donors.

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