EdwardGardner

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Conductor
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News

  • 30 April 2024

    Royal Opera 2024/25 season to feature 22 Askonas Holt artists

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  • 18 March 2024

    Bayerische Staatsoper 2024/25 season to feature 23 Askonas Holt artists

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  • 01 March 2024

    Edward Gardner launches festival celebrating 'The Music in You' with the London Philharmonic Orchestra

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  • 22 February 2024

    Edward Gardner and London Philharmonic to star in Sky Arts documentary

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  • 04 October 2023

    Edward Gardner tours Asia and Europe with the London Philharmonic Orchestra

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  • 24 March 2023

    Edward Gardner returns to Den Norske Opera & Ballett

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  • 04 March 2022

    Edward Gardner debuts with Bayerische Staatsoper

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  • 01 February 2022

    Edward Gardner named Music Director of Den Norske Opera & Ballett

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  • 07 October 2021

    Gardner’s Grimes named Gramophone Record of the Year

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  • 01 July 2021

    Edward Gardner debuts with Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks

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  • 25 September 2020

    Edward Gardner opens London Philharmonic season

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Press

  • BBC Proms 2023

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Aug 2023
    • ★★★★ Gardner’s interpretation was a thing of extremes. The quiet, penumbral opening Introit seemed to hover on the verges of sound and silence. Later, the roaring brass of the Dies Irae pinned you to your seat.

    • ★★★★ All this music was thrillingly brought together here in a kind of 2001 reunion Prom by the London Philharmonic Orchestra under its principal conductor, Edward Gardner.

    • Gardner was in his element with this opulent material, and coaxed the orchestra into bringing every scintilla of nuance to this work of shifting moods, controlling tempo, dynamic and texture with fluid but commanding gestures to bring us a sensuously warm string sound, and bright, clear woodwinds.

    • ★★★★★ The London Philharmonic Orchestra were conducted by Edward Gardner with aplomb and determination, while the three choirs and two soloists left the capacity audience in delighted appreciation.

  • Mahler: Symphony No. 5

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Apr 2023
    • ★★★★ It was in the finale where Gardner’s play-it-cool approach paid off: solo turns oozed character, the string sound was eked from somewhere elemental and the lower brass blossomed ferociously, gleaming as the massive whole tumbled to a close.

    • ★★★★ There were many virtues in Gardner’s interpretation of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, among them the attention to articulation, to carefully balanced contrapuntal lines and a convincing overarching structure.

    • ★★★★ He shone clear light on the thrilling local shifts between hope and despair, serenity and turbulence, that drive the development not just between the five movements but inside each.

  • Berlioz: The Damnation of Faust

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Feb 2023
    • ★★★★★ With his choral and operatic roots, Gardner has a special flair for taming such genre-crossing, massed-choir monsters... Gardner elicited not just emphatic grandeur and scary jubilation but hushed tenderness from his huge forces.

    • ★★★★ During every stage of this performance of Berlioz’s “dramatic legend” The Damnation of Faust, conductor and musicians were equally superb, articulating and colouring the composers’ imaginings so skilfully that we saw everything the dream-like libretto laid out before us.

    • ★★★★ The evening ultimately belonged to Gardner, his orchestra, and those superb choirs.

    • ★★★★★ Uniting them all, Principal Conductor Edward Gardner was in complete control of his forces, leading the LPO in a richly textured reading of the score, abundant in both detail and drama.

  • Tippett: A Child of Our Time

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Nov 2022
    • ★★★★★ Gardner, with all his voices, had amply confirmed that Tippett’s forlorn child can still speak to, and of, our time.

    • ★★★★ As to be expected, Gardner’s interpretation demonstrated a consummate understanding of the drama of the work, and under his relaxed but analytical control both orchestra and chorus produced a moving account, chock-full of subtle shadings of dynamic, tempo and timbre.

    • ★★★★ Yet in a performance as fervent as Edward Gardner conducted here with the London Philharmonic (celebrating its 90th anniversary), the work still moves, outrages and consoles in equal measure.

  • Schoenberg: Gurrelieder

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Sep 2022
    • ★★★★ The London Philharmonic’s new season opened with Schoenberg’s Gurrelieder, superbly conducted by Edward Gardner, and finely sung. Pivoting between post-Romantic excess and modernist experimentation, it’s a work that in many ways suits Gardner down to the ground, and throughout he was marvellously alert to the complexities of its soundworld, yet all the while focused on its dramatic momentum and metaphysical grandeur.

  • Elgar: Dream of Gerontius

    London Philharmonic Orchestra
    Aug 2022
    • ★★★★★ The tremendous driving impulse of this superb performance, with Edward Gardner conducting the London Philharmonic Orchestra with magisterial assurance, was the way it combined theatricality, believability and sheer orchestral and choral beauty into one wonderfully complex tapestry.

    • ★★★★★ [Edward Gardner] is a superb Elgarian, but never an infatuated one: no slush clogged his interpretation here, although there were moments of painful sweetness and pianissimo poignancy. Crystalline lucidity characterised the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s playing, clarifying the instrumental detail, the staccati and fugato; words were never swamped by climaxes, and the diction of the massed Hallé and London Philharmonic choirs was exemplary throughout … Gardner vividly dramatised all the hot anguish and feverish longing for calm that surges through the restless Wagnerian Prelude, the urgent imprecations of ‘Sanctus fortis, Sanctus Deus’ and Gerontius’s dying terror. Even if Cardinal Newman’s verse is morbidly religiose, and his view of the approach to Heaven (as a passport hall with the Angel acting as a friendly immigration officer) seems faintly risible to modern sensibilities, Elgar believed fervently in it all, and Gardner honoured his sincerity.

  • Britten: Peter Grimes

    Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra
    Nov 2019
    • ★★★★★ [the Bergen Philharmonic’s semi-staging of Britten’s Peter Grimes] can only be described as a formidable achievement, at once fiercely intelligent and visceral in its power... Gardner’s interpretation, already familiar from performances at ENO and the Proms, places the emphasis on the metaphysical links between the arbitrary violence of nature and the abyss of the human soul. The Bergen orchestra’s playing combines richness with precision, and Britten’s seascapes glittered balefully even in moments of uneasy calm. The storm of act one, meanwhile, found its hideous human counterpart in the lynch mob that later bays for Grimes’s blood.

    • ★★★★★  [Ed Gardner and Stuart Skelton’s] is one of the great musical partnerships, and they continue to find compelling new depths in this tragic masterpiece... Having the orchestra out front, rather than confined in the pit, not only imparted a tremendous punch to the fortissimo passages, it also allowed Gardner to reveal more fully than I have ever heard the wealth of atmospheric instrumental detail Britten poured into his score.

    • ★★★★ Every little detail, like the gutty pizzicati for the Nieces' wailing in the gale and the flurries of the magnificent Passacaglia, hit home with renewed realisation of Britten's genius at every turn… The total triumph of the evening, then, rested with Gardner and his magnificent players. We need them back in concert at the Festival Hall, and soon.

    • ★★★★ [Ed Gardner’s] command of Britten’s dramatic idiom is second to none. His pacing was perfect, his ability to make way for the singers’ words the work of a true operatic master, and in his hands the Sea Interludes took their place as central parts of the drama, rather than as mere scene-setting, most thrillingly in a real “bitch of a gale” in the Act 1 storm (to quote Captain Balstrode).

    • ★★★★★ This poleaxing performance by a stellar cast backed by the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra under Edward Gardner cut into the bone like an icy North Sea wind.

  • Massenet: Werther

    Royal Opera House, London
    Sep 2019
    • Gardner, meanwhile, is superb in his understanding of both the score’s emotional complexities and its dark Wagnerian undertow.

    • Edward Gardner is outstanding

    • Conductor Edward Gardner does full justice to Massenet’s expansive orchestra without sacrificing dramatic momentum.