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Published: Tuesday, 18 June 2024 at 14:09 PM


The orchestra will be performing at the 2024 BBC Proms under its principal conductor Kirill Petrenko. But why is the Berlin Philharmonic so famous?

Who are the Berlin Philharmonic?

The Berlin Philharmonic (Berliner Philharmoniker) is a German orchestra, and one of the most respected and popular ensembles in the world. Attracting the very best players and conductors, the Berlin Philharmonic performs with a special richness of sound seldom achieved by other ensembles. 

Among its famous roster of conductors are Otto Klemperer; Wilhelm Furtwängler; Herbert von Karajan, under whose tenure the orchestra dominated the classical recording industry in the 1980s; Claudio Abbado who led the ensemble during the 1990s; and British conductor Sir Simon Rattle, who served as chief conductor from 2002-2018, and who made it his mission to bring the Berlin Phil into the 21st century, while keeping mindful of its history and tradition

When was the Berlin Philharmonic formed?

The Berlin Philharmonic was formed in 1882 in Berlin, Germany, when 54 players from Benjamin Bilse’s self-titled Bilsesche Kapelle – the orchestra he’d founded 15 years earlier  – lost patience with their employer’s mean and autocratic nature and set up their own ensemble, initially called the Philharmonische Orchester.

Who are the Berlin Phil’s past chief conductors?

The orchestra’s former conductors are:

Ludwig von Brenner (1882–1887)
Hans von Bülow (1887-1892)
Arthur Nikisch (1895-1922)
Wilhelm Furtwängler (1922-1945)
Leo Borchard (May-August 1945)
Sergiu Celibidache (1945-1952)
Wilhelm Furtwängler (1952-1954)
Herbert von Karajan (1954-1989)
Claudio Abbado (1989-2002)
Simon Rattle (2002-2018)
Kirill Petrenko (]2019–present)

You can read more about each conductor here: Past chief conductors of the Berlin Philharmonic