2024-2025 KNIGHT MASTERWORKS SEASON –
CLASSICAL MUSIC SERIES
Featuring the world’s top orchestras led by today’s most lauded conductors, including the Arsht Center debut of the
London Symphony Orchestra and National Symphony Orchestra
CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Riccardo Muti, Music Director Emeritus for Life
January 16, 2025, at 8 p.m.
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Sir Antonio Pappano, Chief Conductor
March 2, 2025, at 7 p.m.
ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC
Lahav Shani, Music Director
March 19, 2025, at 8 p.m.
NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Gianandrea Noseda, Conductor
Hilary Hahn, Violin
March 22, 2025, at 8 p.m.
Early bird four-show subscription package starts at $130*
The Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County (@arshtcenter)is proud to announce the 2024-2025 KNIGHT MASTERWORKS SEASON CLASSICAL MUSIC SERIES which features an extraordinary lineup of some of the greatest orchestras from London, Chicago, Tel Aviv and Washington, D.C performing for one night only at the Center’s acoustically superb Knight Concert Hall. The new season boasts the anticipated return of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the legendary Riccardo Muti, and the Israel Philharmonic with Lahav Shani, as well as the Arsht Center debut of the London Symphony Orchestra with Sir Antonio Pappano, and National Symphony Orchestra with Gianandrea Noseda, who will be joined by remarkable violinist Hilary Hahn, an audience favorite across the world.
To enhance the musical experience, the Arsht Center will continue to offer free Classical Conversations led by Miami-based classical music experts and musicians. The pre-concert lectures are hosted in the Arsht Center’s Peacock Foundation Education Center (inside the Knight Concert Hall) prior to every concert in the series.
The 2024-2025 KNIGHT MASTERWORKS CLASSICAL MUSIC SERIES is made possible with leadership support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, with additional support from Steinway & Sons.
SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS
Four-show subscription packages are available now at an early bird rate ranging from $130 to $594* until April 29. Starting April 30, packages will range from $150-$634*. To renew a subscription or become a subscriber, visitarshtcenter.org or call the Arsht Center box office at 305.949.6722. The deadline to renew a subscription is May 31. Tickets for individual performances will be announced at a later date.
The new Knight Masterworks Classical Music four-show subscription series at the Arsht Center is as follows:
CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Riccardo Muti, Music Director Emeritus for Life
January 16, 2025, at 8 p.m.
Repertoire:
Bellini: Overture to Norma
Schubert: Symphony No. 8 in B minor, D. 759 (Unfinished)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 4
Audiences will be treated to an evening of “high drama and thrilling orchestral playing” (The New York Times) when the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Riccardo Muti open the 2024-25 Knight Masterworks Classical Music season.
Witness the legendary sound of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (CSO), led by indomitable music director emeritus Riccardo Muti. Now 82 and with an astonishing 550 concerts with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under his belt, “Muti can still galvanize musicians as few others ever will. He has never been better” (The Times, London). Muti and the CSO have forged one of the most riveting classical music partnerships of our time. Their musicmaking is all plush power and shimmering finesse, performing with “a crackling energy and a sense of reveling … with crashing cymbals, all-out brasses and majestic strings” (The New York Times).
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Sir Antonio Pappano, Chief Conductor
Janine Jansen, Violin
March 2, 2025, at 7 p.m.
Repertoire:
George Walker: Sinfonia No. 5
Leonard Bernstein: Serenade
Edward Elgar: Enigma Variations
“Pappano’s musicians held nothing back. The performance was exhilarating!” — The Times, London
South Florida classical music lovers will experience one of the world’s top orchestras when the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO), led by “incandescent” (Sunday Times, London) maestro Sir Antonio Pappano, perform at the Knight Concert Hall for the first time. Founded in 1904, the LSO has a reputation for uncompromising quality and inspirational beauty. This year marks the beginning of an exciting new era for the venerable orchestra when it welcomes Chief Conductor Sir Antonio Pappano, a frequent LSO guest conductor since 1996, long acclaimed for his charismatic leadership and inspirational performances of symphonic and operatic repertory. Following a recent LSO performance, inews.uk predicted there are great things in store for the orchestra’s audiences all over the world: “A lavish glory of strings, a grand battery of percussion, the woodwind and brass glaring and blaring, provides an inspiring preview of the London Symphony Orchestra under its new principal.”
Joining Pappano and the LSO will be the great violinist Janine Jansen, whose sound has been praised as “one of astonishing power and beauty” (The New York Times).
ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC
Lahav Shani, Music Director
March 19, 2025, at 8 p.m.
Repertoire:
Tzvi Avni: Prayer
Leonard Bernstein: Halil (featuring Guy Eshed, Principal Flute)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony 6
“There’s an emotional quality that the Israel Philharmonic delivers, perhaps due to its history and certainly due to its continued excellence, that makes their concerts a moving experience.” — Forbes
Immerse yourself in the glory of Israel’s oldest and most influential cultural institution when the “exceptional” (Los Angeles Times) Israel Philharmonic return to the Knight Concert Hall, led by music director Lahav Shani, one of the most talked-about young talents in the international music scene.
Known as the “Heartbeat of a Nation,” the Israel Philharmonic stands as a powerful symbol of freedom and peace in its role as the cultural emissary of Israel. Ever since its first concert conducted by Arturo Toscanini in 1936, the orchestra has been associated with the greatest names in classical music, including Leonard Bernstein and Zubin Mehta. Now, Lahav Shani, the orchestra’s first native Israeli music director, leads the orchestra like a “single instrument of unstoppable force, not a collection of individuals” (Los Angeles Times) and yet has the “especially beautiful ability to give individual players and sections the space to shine” (The Jerusalem Post).
National Symphony Orchestra
Gianandrea Noseda, Music Director
Hilary Hahn, Violin
March 22, 2025, at 8 p.m.
Repertoire:
Carlos Simon: Four Black American Dances
Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35
Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67
“Noseda guided the orchestra through bold surges of color and hushed shadings with an uncanny mix of elegance and gusto.” — The Washington Post
Hilary Hahn plays with a “golden age richness and astonishing technique that have long made her a standout.” — The New York Times
The National Symphony Orchestra and its nearly 100 musicians are coming to the Arsht Center for the first time. Led by Milan-born music director Gianandrea Noseda and based at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., “one of the hardest-working orchestras in the biz” (The Washington Post) is known for its “exhilarating performances” (The New York Times). The Economist proclaimed that “the Italian maestro and the NSO make magic.”
For added dazzle, Hilary Hahn, three-time Grammy winner and Musical America’s 2023 “Artist of the Year,” joins them in Miami. Her performances with Noseda and the NSO are already legendary and have been described as “unleashing epic cinematic sweep” (Washington Classical Review) with “tempering feats of acrobatic virtuosity with stretches of extreme vulnerability” (The Washington Post).