* En anglais uniquement
The 52-player
Prague Philharmonia, one of the Czech Republic's major orchestras, occupies a space between chamber orchestra and symphony orchestra. It has often cultivated music of the Classical era and that of the 20th century.
The
Prague Philharmonia (Czech:
Pražská komorní filharmoni, or
Prague Chamber Philharmonic) was founded in 1994 by legendary conductor
Jiří Bělohlávek, who had recently departed the podium of the
Czech Philharmonic after acrimonious disagreements with that group. He had been offered state funding; that dried up, but with the private sector rapidly growing in the Czech Republic, he was able to find alternate funding sources. The
Prague Philharmonia made its debut in 1994 at a concert marking the peaceful separation of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and it quickly gained wider renown thanks in part to the widely respected
Bělohlávek. The orchestra mounted a Swiss tour the following year. The group has appeared in many European countries as well as in East Asia and even in Jordan. It has attracted top-notch soloists, including
Sarah Chang,
András Schiff, and
Raphael Wallfisch.
Bělohlávek stepped down as chief conductor in 2005 but remained as conductor laureate until he passed away in 2017. He was succeeded by
Kaspar Zehnder (2005-2008),
Jakub Hrusa (2008-2015), and
Emmanuel Villaume (2016-). Often heard on Czech radio and television, the orchestra has also performed at the Prague Spring Festival and various European summer festivals abroad, including those in Le Mans, Berlin, and Leipzig.
In 2004, the orchestra made its recording debut on the Harmonia Mundi label, with rising violin star
Isabelle Faust playing Dvořák's Violin Concerto in A minor, Op. 53. The
Prague Philharmonia has since recorded for Harmonia Mundi,
Supraphon, and PentaTone. In 2019, the orchestra backed tenor
Benjamin Bernheim on his debut recital album on Deutsche Grammophon.