Following an extensive, global search, the Cincinnati May Festival announced Juanjo Mena as the Principal Conductor for three years starting in the 2017-18 season. He will lead two performances at the 2018 May Festival and begins duties as the Principal Conductor Designate immediately.
The unanimous choice of the Festival's Artistic Leadership Search Committee, Mr. Mena made his Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra (CSO) conducting debut in 2012 and, with his extraordinary artistic sensitivity and podium presence, immediately became both a musician and audience favorite.
He has led the CSO in programs four out of the last five seasons including memorable concerts this past April featuring Manuel De Falla's La vida breve with the May Festival Chorus, which was hailed as a "performance of mesmerizing power."
"My lifelong connection to music started as a child," said the Spanish-born Mena. "When I was just even years old, a teacher encouraged me to sing the note that he played on his recorder, and after singing it in tune he invited me to sing in the school choir. From that experience grew a passion for choral music and the beautiful start to my musical journey. I am humbled and honored to be part of one of the world's greatest choral traditions in the Cincinnati May Festival."
"Juanjo was selected as the May Festival's Principal Conductor because of his artistry, vision, and experience, along with his collaborative nature and approach," said May Festival Board Member and Artistic Leadership Search Committee Chair Kelley Downing. "He has a strong track record with both orchestras and choruses, extensive experience with choral repertoire and a passion for the May Festival, its remarkable history and its role in the Greater Cincinnati community today."
In lieu of a traditional music director model, moving forward the Festival is being led artistically by three positions. As Principal Conductor, Mr. Mena assumes a multi-year position responsible for ensuring that the Festival's artistic potential is realized. A rotating Creative Partner is responsible each season for infusing the Festival with artistic innovation and imagination, and these two new artistic leadership positions are joined by the May Festival's longtime Director of Choruses, Robert Porco, to plan future May Festival seasons. This new model expands the Festival's circle of artistic relationships to include collaborations with world-renowned guest conductors, composers, soloists and classical music innovators, enabling the May Festival to more fully explore the entire breadth of the choral repertoire, and deliver greater impact to its audiences and community.
"Our charge from the Board of Directors was to develop the best artistic leadership model to fit a 21st century May Festival concept and advance the May Festival's vision to be the most exciting force in the choral world," said Ms. Downing. "This model brings together acclaimed artists and specialists from around the world to collaborate and reinforces the Festival's role as a leader and catalyst in the production, presentation and promotion of great choral music. We're confident this new model builds on the extraordinary success we had under our now Music Director Laureate, James Conlon."
Mr. Conlon, who succeeded James Levine as May Festival Director in 1979, announced he was ending his music directorship last year and finished a remarkable 37-year tenure as at the conclusion of the 2016 Festival when he was named Music Director Laureate.
"Juanjo is a consummate artist who has a wonderful rapport with the dedicated singers who make up the May Festival Chorus," said Director of Choruses Robert Porco. "I am thrilled
to be working with him and look forward to many engaging collaborations." "The extraordinary quality of the May Festival Chorus is a testament to Robert Porco's outstanding leadership," said Mr. Mena. "That artistic relationship grows stronger every time we work together."
"We're confident the Festival will grow and flourish under the collective artistic leadership of Principal Conductor Juanjo Mena, Director of Choruses Robert Porco and a diverse array of rotating creative partners to come," said May Festival Executive Director Steven Sunderman. "This is an exciting time in the remarkable history of the May Festival."
New Leadership at the Podium
A popular conductor among prestigious orchestras around the globe, Mr. Mena also serves as Chief Conductor of the BBC Philharmonic in Manchester. He previously served as Artistic Director of the Bilbao Symphony Orchestra, Chief Guest Conductor of the Orchestra del Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa and Principal Guest Conductor of the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra. He has collaborated with many prestigious orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic, New York Philharmonic, Oslo Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Boston Symphony Orchestra, The Cleveland Orchestra and the Orchestre National de France, among many others.
He has forged a special bond in Cincinnati, conducting performances in four out of the last five seasons. As a Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra guest conductor, he'll be leading the May Festival Chorus and the CSO in Beethoven's Missa Solemnis as part of the CSO's subscription season on October 27 and 29 at the Taft Theatre. "My experiences with the CSO and the May Festival Chorus have all been very special," said Mr. Mena. "With the Orchestra, we could immediately make music together at a high level, and the May Festival Chorus amazed me from the first minute. I was so impressed with their vocal power, musicality and responsiveness."
Artistic Leadership Search Committee
Chaired by May Festival Board Member Kelley Downing, the Artistic Leadership Search Committee members included: May Festival Board Chair Mark Holcomb; May Festival Board members Melanie Chavez, Mary Gimpel, Susan Laffoon, Shane Starkey and Ginger Warner; May Festival Chorus members Chris Canarie and Lauren Peter; staff members Trey Devey, Robert McGrath, Steven Sunderman and Isaac Thompson; community members Tim Maloney and Carole Rigaud; Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra musicians Matthew Lad and Patrick Schleker; and May Festival Director of Choruses Robert Porco.
About the May Festival and May Festival Chorus
Founded in 1873 from the proud German traditions of singing societies, the May Festival is directly responsible for the development of Cincinnati's modern music life. Music Hall, the city's primary concert venue, was built specifically to house the Festival's performances. The celebrated roster of Festival Music Directors has included, among others, Theodore Thomas, Max Rudolf, James Levine and, most recently, James Conlon. As the oldest and one of the most prestigious choral festivals in the Western Hemisphere, the May Festival is a unique community asset unlike anything else in the world. In addition to the annual Festival, the May Festival Chorus performs year-round as the official chorus of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and Cincinnati Pops and with fellow arts partners in diverse venues across the region. With its mission to engage, energize and connect the community, the May Festival is a valuable Cincinnati resource. May Festival performances are extraordinary and immersive experiences, repeatedly described by audiences as "inspiring," "uplifting," "thrilling," and "dynamic."
Juanjo Mena
Principal Conductor Designate of the Cincinnati May Festival and Chief Conductor of the BBC Philharmonic in Manchester, United Kingdom, Juanjo Mena is one of Spain's most distinguished international conductors.
Following his recent debut with the Berlin Philharmonic and appearances with the New York Philharmonic and the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood, highlights of Maestro Mena's 2016-17 season include his debuts with the Rotterdam Philharmonic, NHK Symphony Orchestra, New World Symphony and the Swedish Radio Orchestra, as well as return visits to Boston, Cincinnati, Minnesota, Copenhagen, Dresden and Oslo, and two European tours with the BBC Philharmonic.
In Europe he has worked with many prestigious orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic, London Philharmonic, Oslo Philharmonic, Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre National de France, Orchestra FilarMonica Della Scala, Munich Radio Orchestra and the Dresden Philharmonic, as well as with all the major Spanish orchestras. He has been Artistic Director of the Bilbao Symphony Orchestra, Chief Guest Conductor of the Orchestra del Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa and Principal Guest Conductor of the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra.
He has conducted most of the leading orchestras in North America, including Chicago, Boston, Houston, Cincinnati, Montreal, Toronto, Baltimore and Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestras, the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestras, the Cleveland Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra.
A guest of international festivals, he has appeared at the Stars of White Nights Festival in St. Petersburg, Russia, the Hollywood Bowl, Grant Park (Chicago), Tanglewood and La Folle Journée (Nantes). He has led the BBC Philharmonic on tours of Europe and Asia, including performances in Cologne, Munich, Vienna, Madrid, Beijing and Seoul, and performs with them every year at the BBC Proms in London.
His operatic work includes The Flying Dutchman, Salome, Elektra, Ariadne auf Naxos, Duke Bluebeard's Castle and Erwartung and productions including Eugene Onegin in Genoa, The Marriage of Figaro in Lausanne and Billy Budd in Bilbao.
He has made several recordings with the BBC Philharmonic, including a disc of works by Manuel De Falla, which was a BBC Music Magazine Recording of the Month, Gabriel Pierné, which was a Gramophone Editor's Choice, and releases of music by Ginastera, Albéniz, Montsalvatge, Weber and Turina which have gained excellent reviews from the specialist music press. He has also recorded a critically acclaimed rendering of Messiaen's Turangalîla Symphony for Hyperion with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra. Juanjo Mena's Messiaen interpretation is said to "utterly redefine the terms under which past/current/future Turangalîlas need to be judged". (Gramophone, October 2012).
2017 May Festival
The 2017 May Festival will take place from May 19-27 at the Taft Theatre while Cincinnati Music Hall undergoes an historic renovation, and features acclaimed artists from around the globe. For more information, visit mayfestival.com.
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