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The Strauss Collection

15.2M streams

15,208,699

J.S. Bach: Christmas Oratorio

9.9M streams

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Bach: Christmas Oratorio, BWV 248

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Fröhliche Weihnacht überall

3.6M streams

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Klarinettenko...

3.4M streams

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Bach, Mozart, Brahms, Grieg, Ravel, Sa...

2.6M streams

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Beethoven, Brahms & Others: Orchestral...

1.8M streams

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Beethoven, L. Van: Symphonies Nos. 1-9

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Saint-Saens, C.: Oratorio De Noel / Me...

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Bruch & Brahms: Violin Concertos

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Biography

One of Germany's oldest orchestras, the Dresden Philharmonic Orchestra (Dresdner Philharmonie) has earned international respect for its performance standards. With the motto "Music for All," the orchestra has dedicated itself to music education and community outreach. Dresden's Kulturpalast has been its home since 2017, but they also perform at other venues in the city. The Dresden Philharmonic dates back to 1870 when a group of citizens organized the Gewerbehausorchester, giving its first concert in November of that year at the Gewerbehaus Hall. The orchestra's principal conductor from inception until 1885 was Hermann Mannsfeldt, and it hosted such prominent guest conductors of the day as Richard Strauss, Johannes Brahms, and Antonín Dvořák. Other significant principal conductors in its early years were August Trenkler (1890-1903), Willy Olsen (1903-1915), and Edwin Lindner (1915-1923). At the end of Lindner's tenure, the orchestra took its current name. The Dresden Philharmonic was able to continue functioning through World War I and the Great Depression. In 1934, a year after the Nazis rose to power, Paul van Kempen took up the baton as principal conductor and was integral to the orchestra's growing reputation as he inaugurated the orchestra's recording history in 1937. He left the orchestra in 1942. Despite concert halls being closed because of the fighting in the European theater during World War II and the 1945 bombing campaign that destroyed much of the city, Dresden residents remained loyal to the Philharmonic. A number of prominent internationally significant conductors led the orchestra during the difficult postwar era in the German Democratic Republic ("East Germany"). Notable among these is Kurt Masur, who led the orchestra from 1967 to 1972, overseeing the orchestra's move to the newly built Kulturpalast Dresden in 1969. Principal conductors who followed Masur include Herbert Kegel (1977-1985) and Jörg-Peter Weigle (1986-1994, who oversaw the orchestra through the end of Soviet rule and the reunification of Germany). Masur was named honorary conductor in 1994, holding that title until he died in 2015. Marek Janowski served as the principal conductor from 2001 to 2003, and he was followed by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos (2004-2011) and Michael Sanderling (2011-2019). In 2017, the Dresden Philharmonic moved to its new home at Dresden's Kulturpalast, and it created the non-profit educational program the Kurt Masur Academy. Academy graduates immediately began permeating the rosters of major orchestras. Janowski returned to the principal conductor role in 2019 and served until 2023. In 2022, the Dresden Philharmonic was featured in the multi-Academy Award-nominated movie Tár. The following year, the orchestra announced that Donald Runnicles would become the principal conductor in 2025. The Dresden Philharmonic, under Janowski, was heard on a pair of recordings in 2024, the complete symphonies of Robert Schumann and Haydn's oratorio Die Schöpfung. ~ Keith Finke, Rovi