1971
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Vänskä becomes principal clarinet of the Turku Philharmonic
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1977
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Vänskä begins conducting studies at the Sibelius Academy and is appointed co-principal clarinet of
the Helsinki Philharmonic
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1982
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Vänskä wins first prize at the Besançon International Young Conductors competition
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1985
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Vänskä hired as principal guest conductor of Lahti Symphony; city population of 100,000, located
an hour's drive north of Helsinki
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1987
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Swedish record label BIS makes its first Lahti Symphony recording under Vänskä
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1988
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Lahti Symphony appoints Vänskä principal conductor/artistic director
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1991
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Vänskä and Lahti Symphony receive first Gramophone award, one of Europe's most prestigious
recording prizes
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1993
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Vänskä becomes chief conductor of the Iceland Symphony Orchestra
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1995
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Vänskä makes first appearance at the London Proms, with the BBC Scottish Symphony
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1996
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Vänskä becomes chief conductor of BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra; also conducts Lahti
Symphony in first modern performance of a newly rediscovered tone poem by Jean Sibelius, The Wood Nymph
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2000
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City of Lahti, revitalized by the rising reputation of its orchestra, opens the 1,250-seat Sibelius Hall,
a state-of-the-art, all-wood concert hall (the elegant building overlooks the city's main natural feature, Water Lake)
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2001
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Minnesota Orchestra names Vänskä its tenth music director, effective September 2003.
The BBC Scottish Symphony tours eleven American cities under Vänskä's leadership
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2002
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Vänskä receives an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow in recognition
of his role as chief conductor of the BBC Scottish Symphony; also receives a Royal Philharmonic
Society Award in recognition of his outstanding contribution to classical music during 2001
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2003
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In September, Osmo Vänskä opens the Minnesota Orchestra's 101st season as its tenth music director;
Vänskä's recordings with BIS number more than 50, with plans for an ambitious new series of recordings with the Minnesota Orchestra to commence with the 2003-04 season.
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2004 |
Vänskä leads Minnesota Orchestra on an eleven city critically acclaimed tour of Europe;
in December is named 2005 Conductor of the Year by Musical America.
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2005
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Vänskä and Minnesota Orchestra release BIS recording featuring Beethoven Symphonies No. 4 & 5,
"where the whole orchestra shines in majestic joy," according to The New York Times; Vänskä
extends contract with the Minnesota Orchestra through 2011.
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2006 |
Vänskä leads the Minnesota Orchestra on a critically-lauded European Festivals tour that includes the ensemble’s debut at the BBC Proms in London. In October Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony becomes the third album released in the Vänskä/Minnesota Orchestra Beethoven symphony cycle. According to The New Yorker, “This is some of the most vivid Beethoven playing on the market.” |
2007 |
Vänskä supports work of American composers, leading seven new compositions in FutureClassics performance, as part of Orchestra’s ongoing Composer Institute. |
2008 |
Minnesota Orchestra’s recording of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony receives Grammy Award nomination for “Best Orchestral Recording.” |