Perry So opens his third season as musical and artistic director of the Orquesta Sinfónica de Navarra with a programme that includes Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in G major, op. 44, with Elisabeth Leonskaja as the soloist, and a selection from Beethoven’s The Creatures of Prometheus, op. 43. The concerts will take place on the 10th and 11th of October in Pamplona and Tudela. Just a few days ago, on 22nd September, Perry So inaugurated his first season as Music Director of the New Haven Symphony Orchestra with Beethoven’s 9th Symphony and Gathering Son, a short work for baritone and orchestra by Courtney Brian.

Perry So was born in Hong Kong in 1982, where he received his early training in piano, organ, violin, viola and composition. He graduated from Yale University with a degree in literature, specialising in Central European music and modernist literature, during which time he founded an academic orchestra and conducted the university’s opera company. He studied conducting at the Peabody Institute in Baltimore, first with James Sinclair and later with Gustav Meier. In 2008 he won first prize and a special prize at the 5th International Prokofiev Conducting Competition in St Petersburg. Following this recognition, he was appointed Assistant Conductor and then Associate Conductor of the Hong Kong Philharmonic, Gustavo Dudamel Conducting Fellow of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Artistic Collaborator of the Principality of Asturias Symphony Orchestra and Member of the Conducting Department of the Manhattan School of Music.

Perry So opens his third season with the Sinfónica de Navarra

In recent seasons Perry So made his subscription series debut with the San Francisco Symphony and his European operatic debut at the Royal Danish Opera in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. Other highlights include a tour to Milan with the Nuremberg Symphony and a seven-week tour of South Africa with three orchestras including Verdi’s Requiem in Cape Town. He has appeared with the Cleveland and Minnesota Orchestras, the symphony orchestras of Israel, New Zealand, Shanghai, Houston, Detroit, New Jersey, Tucson, Tenerife and Málaga; the London, China, Seoul and Szezcin Philharmonics; the Residentie Orkest in the Hague and the Staatsorchester Rheinische Philharmonie in Koblenz, among others. He toured the Balkan Peninsula at the helm of the Zagreb Philharmonic in the first series of cultural exchanges established after the breakup of Yugoslavia.

His work in the recording studio encompasses a broad sampling of twentieth century British, French and Russian music with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the BBC Concert Orchestra, and his album of Barber and Korngold’s violin concertos with soloist Alexander Gilman and the Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra was awarded the Diapason d’Or in 2012. His wide-ranging musical interests encompass world premieres on four continents as well as championing the reintroduction of the Renaissance and Baroque repertory into symphonic programs. His work with young musicians has taken him to the Round Top Festival, where he serves on the board of trustees, the Australian Youth Orchestra, the National Youth Orchestra of Canada, the Manhattan School of Music, the Hong Kong Academy for the Performing Arts and the Yale School of Music.