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AP: You are taking over this position held by some of the biggest names in music and at a time when the economy's hurting and things aren't going so well for arts institutions. How nervous do you feel? Gilbert: There's an obvious challenge in trying to develop an orchestra that's already developed like the New York Philharmonic. ... Technically, the orchestra plays wonderfully. There's an enormous amount of understanding and insight as to what music can express. But I'm looking for very clear articulation and differentiation between the way the orchestra plays different pieces of different composers. What I think the challenge will be is to find our unique chemistry. ... I think what people ... deserve in hearing an orchestra like this is the sense that it really matters, and that it's a matter of life and death, and that every note the orchestra plays is infused with an honesty and will to express something that's very honest and open and personal. AP: Your opening night program -- Berlioz's "Symphonie Fantastique" plus a world premiere by Magnus Lindberg and Messiaen's "Poemes pour Mi"
-- is almost shocking for a nationally televised gala. Ultimately, the big question is how does the audience receive it and other new works you plan to present? Gilbert: Sometimes you don't know about the piece's longevity and meaning in the long run until long after they've been premiered. But I will say that literally every single piece that we program is presented with honest belief and sincerity. ... I think even those people who might think that they want to hear only Tchaikovsky all the time will find that their Tchaikovsky or their Beethoven is enhanced or is illuminated because of the combinations and contexts that we present those acknowledged masterpieces. It's all part of the big picture and I think everything will shed light on everything else. ___ On the Net:
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