“The
cargo people messed up one of the pallets, so a load of the instruments didn’t
arrive,” co-principal horn Matthew Knight said. “Our trumpet section had to
borrow trumpets from Yamaha and do the first concert on those — and then rent
or buy tails, because all their tails were in the box.”
With
their own instruments and evening clothes in hand, the Royal Philharmonic
completed a 14-concert, nine-city
New
music director Vasily Petrenko and cellist Kian Soltani received long and loud
ovations for an all-British program of Britten’s Four Sea Interludes from
“Peter Grimes,” Elgar’s cello concerto and Holst’s “The Planets." The
program was broadcast on radio and streamed online.
Before
the opening notes, Petrenko took the unusual step of using a wireless
microphone to address the nearly full house in the 2,804-seat hall, speaking
proudly of his musicians becoming the first orchestra back in the
“To
us it means that everything is possible, in even such difficult circumstances,”
Petrenko said.
It
had been 708 days since conductor John Eliot Gardiner led the Orchestre
Révolutionnaire et Romantique in Beethoven’s Eighth and Ninth Symphonies at
Carnegie, which was shuttered from March 13, 2020, until last Oct. 6. The hall
reopened with mostly soloists and smaller ensembles, delaying a steadier schedule
of larger-scale performances until 2022.
The
Royal Philharmonic traveled with an orchestra manager, tour manager, three
stage crew and six assistants, and filled Carnegie’s stage with 104 players.
The orchestra began the tour in California — Santa Barbara on Jan. 11, followed
by concerts in Palm Desert, Northridge, Costa Mesa and Davis — then to Orlando,
Florida, for a residency at the new Steinmetz Hall. The tour concluded with
performances in
Three
buses and a truck were needed for the traveling party, which was tested daily.
“Cargo
is one of the costs that have hit us hard this year,” said James Williams, the
orchestra’s managing director. “Logistics and shipping and all that sort of
stuff, costs have absolutely rocketed. And so for us to fly our instruments
here has cost us a significant amount more money than it would normally cost us
in a pre-pandemic time.”
A
handful of musicians, in the single digits, tested positive for COVID-19 and
were left behind in their hotel rooms in
“It’s
been unbelievably challenging for all the reasons you can imagine,” Williams
said. “It is just the unexpected consequences of COVID-related issues, and
that’s changing testing regimes, it’s players contracting COVID and what do you
do with those, how do you replace them, the logistics.”
Royal
Philharmonic musicians are self-employed, like the other major
“If
they’re not working, they don’t get paid, so the incentive for them to keep
themselves safe is extremely high,” Williams said, “because If they’re struck
in a hotel room for five days missing five concerts, that’s five fees they
don’t get paid. So it is a real challenge for them, and hat’s off to them for
taking the risk.”
The
pandemic shutdowns eliminated income for the players.
“A
lot of our work just disappeared overnight,” said Knight, vice chair of the
orchestra’s board. “That’s why we’re pretty happy when a tour like this happens
— OK, January’s going to be a good month. We’re going to survive.”
When concerts first resumed during the pandemic,
they were without spectators and streamed. Musicians were distanced by 2 or 2
1/2 yards.
“Live music doesn’t work without an audience,”
Knight said. “It was a very strange feeling to sit in an empty Albert Hall and
try and perform and really give a performance.”
The
Vienna Philharmonic is the next European orchestra scheduled to arrive in the
“I’m
really hoping it will give other orchestras, domestically and internationally,
the confidence that actually it is possible to realize these things,” he said.
“It’s tough, but it's perfectly possible. And I think all of us now have to
start thinking about how do we live with this virus. It’s not going to go away.”
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