Neujahrskonzert 2025 / New Year's Concert 2025
Release Date: 01/10/2025
On January 1, 2025, Maestro Riccardo Muti took the stage to conduct the New Year’s Concert for the seventh time in the world-renowned Golden Hall of the Vienna Musikverein.
The live recording of the 2025 New Year’s Concert will be available digitally from January 10, on CD from January 17, and on Vinyl, DVD and Blu-ray from January 24. The Visual album will be released on February 7.
There are few concerts in the world that are awaited with as much excitement as the New Year’s Concert from Vienna. This year, it will be broadcast to over 90 countries around the world, reaching an audience of millions of people. The program will feature a repertoire from the Strauß family and their contemporaries, with a unique addition: for the first time, a work by a female composer, and a friend of Johann Strauß II, will be performed. The Ferdinandus-Walzer, composed by the twelve-year-old Constanze Geiger in 1848, will be part of this year’s program.
The artistic collaboration with Maestro Muti that began in 1971 has given rise to more than 500 mutual concerts, including six New Year’s Concerts, Philharmonic subscription concerts, memorial concerts, guest performances and tours, as well as numerous opera productions. A special highlight of the 2024 season was the concert celebrating the 200th anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony under Muti’s baton.
Daniel Froschauer, Chairman of the Vienna Philharmonic, emphasizes the conductor’s special significance for the orchestra: “Riccardo Muti has held an exceptional position in the history of the Vienna Philharmonic for over fifty years. An honorary member of the orchestra since 2011, Muti has helped shape the repertoire and specific sound of the ensemble in a unique manner.”
Riccardo Muti first came to public attention in 1967, when he won the Guido Cantelli Conducting Competition in Milan. From 1968 to 1980, he served as Principal Conductor of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. In 1971, Herbert von Karajan invited him to conduct at the Salzburg Festival, which in 2020 marked fifty years of collaboration with the Austrian festival. During the 1970s, he was Chief Conductor of London’s Philharmonia Orchestra (1972–1982), and later served as Music Director of the Philadelphia Orchestra (1980–1992). From 1986 to 2005, he was Music Director of the Teatro alla Scala in Milan. Muti also became Music Director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2010, a position he held until 2023, whereupon he was named Music Director Emeritus for Life.
Throughout his career, Riccardo Muti has conducted the most important orchestras in the world, including the Berlin Philharmonic, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Orchestre National de France, and Vienna Philharmonic – an orchestra to which he has particularly close ties.
When Muti was invited to conduct the Vienna Philharmonic’s 150th anniversary concert in 1992, he was presented by the orchestra with the Golden Ring, awarded only to a few chosen conductors. After presiding over New Year’s Concerts in 1993, 1997, 2000, 2004 and 2018, Riccardo Muti conducted the Vienna Philharmonic in this annual celebration for the sixth time in 2021.
The story of the Vienna Philharmonic can be traced back to 1842, when Otto Nicolai conducted a “grand concert” with “all the members of the Orchestra of the Imperial and Royal Court Opera Theatre”. This event is generally regarded as marking the birth of the orchestra. Ever since it was founded, the orchestra has been run by a democratically elected committee and is artistically, organisationally and financially independent. In the twentieth century its artistic profile has been shaped by such leading musicians as Richard Strauss, Arturo Toscanini, Wilhelm Furtwängler and, after 1945, by three emeritus conductors, Karl Böhm, Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein. Since it was formed, the orchestra has given around 9,000 concerts in every part of the world. Since 1989 it has presented a Vienna Philharmonic Week in New York. A similar series of concerts has been held in Tokyo since 1993.
The tradition of presenting New Year’s Concerts began in 1941. The first concert marking the New Year was given in 1939, albeit on 31 December. The first conductor was Clemens Krauss. Willi Boskovsky took over in 1955 and conducted no fewer than twenty-five New Year’s Concerts between then and 1979. The list of musicians who have conducted New Year’s Concerts reads like a who’s who of leading maestros. The New Year’s Concert was first broadcast live on television in 1959. The Vienna Philharmonic regards this now traditional event as a way of wishing the world a Happy New Year through the medium of music in a spirit of hope, friendship and peace.