Former Adjunct Professor of Music at American University[5] in Washington, D.C., Thomas Ludwig is currently the founder and music director of the Ludwig Symphony Orchestra[6] and the Beethoven Chamber Orchestra[7] in Atlanta. He has conducted orchestras internationally including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra, the Odessa Symphony Orchestra,[8] the Orchestra Da Camera Fiorentina in Italy, OFUNAM in Mexico City, and in the United States at the Kennedy Center Opera House in Washington, D.C., Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, San Francisco Opera House, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Metropolitan Opera House in New York.[9]
In 1980, Thomas Ludwig conducted the London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios and recorded his Symphony in Two Movements.[14]The New York Times described his symphony as "vividly orchestrated, possesses tremendous emotional intensity, and yet is succinct and skillful in its control of form".[14] In 1982 Ludwig's symphony Age of Victory was premiered at the Inter-American Music Festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and was referred to as "Ludwig's Eloquent 'Victory'" by The Washington Post.[15] The same symphony was performed again later that year as part of the Kennedy Center Friedheim Competition, the performance was broadcast over NPR and Voice of America.[16]
Ludwig conducts Ludwig Symphony
Ludwig's music ranges from chamber music to large orchestral works including symphony, chorus, and soloists. His second symphony premiered in Mexico City with the Orquesta Filarmónica de la UNAM led by Maestro Jorge Velazco. Ludwig's String Symphony was premiered in Florence, Italy and was broadcast on Rome TV and his Four Lyric Songs for mezzo-soprano was premiered by the Orquesta Sinfonica de Mineria in Mexico City and broadcast live in Central and South America on Grupo Radio Centro.[17] Ludwig's Violin Concerto premiered in Miami by the University of Miami with violinist Mark Peskanov and conductor Thomas Sleeper.[18] The Miami Sun-Sentinel called it "strikingly passionate, lush, and lyrical".[19]
Selected works
Symphonic
Symphony No. 1 (1982)
Symphony No. 2 (1989)
Symphony No. 3 (2009)
Symphony No. 4 for chorus and soloists (2015)
Symphony No. 5 (2016)
Overture Fantasie for orchestra (1986)
Violin Concerto for violin and orchestra (1994)
Four Songs for mezzo-soprano and orchestra (1998)
Piano Concerto for piano and orchestra (2007)
Adagietto for orchestra (2010)
An Angel Awaits for soprano and orchestra (2015)
The Loneliness is Lifted for tenor solo, orchestra, and chorus (2015)
I'm a Ballet Girl for three dancers, actress, and orchestra (2015)
Chamber music
Woodwind Quintet Two Divertissements (1985)
String Quartet No. 1 (1985)
Sinfonia No. 1 for chamber orchestra (1987)
Pecume for bass vocalist and various instruments (1986)
Song for Nicholas for violin and piano (1990)
Piano Quartet (1996)
String Symphony Four Divertissements (2000)
Concerto for Piano and Strings (2005)
Transcriptions
Ashkelone Suite for orchestra (1999)
Offenbach introduction and bolero for cello and orchestra (2000)
Sarasate Zapateado for violin and orchestra (2002)
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