Ludwig van Beethoven loved the outdoors: “How happy I am to be able to wander among bushes and herbs, under trees and over rocks!”
In 1837, a scientist claimed that Swiss waterfalls, rivers and lakes resonate in F major. The same key, associated with the peace and balance of nature, also sounds in Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony, which expresses the joy of being out in nature.
Californian Gabriella Smith was never meant to be a composer. She wanted to study ecology or marine biology and learn about climate change. But she became a composer, nonetheless. Breathing Forests, commissioned for organist James McVinnie, reflects the complex relationship between humans, forests, climate change and fire.
James McVinnie
James McVinnie (born 1983) is an English organist and pianist whose unique career is distinguished by many different musical genres. His roots are steeped in the traditions of Anglican church music, and he has held organ playing positions at St Paul’s Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. McVinnie has since collaborated with Philip Glass, for instance, and many leading figures in contemporary music have written concerto and solo works for him. The composers with whom he has worked include Niko Muhly, David Lang, Bryce Dessner, and Hildur Guðnadóttir, to name a few.
He also directs the James McVinnie Ensemble, a collective of virtuoso keyboardists dedicated to exploring work by contemporary and emerging composers – often with strong political themes. The ensemble’s roots go back to 2017 with a performance of Music in Twelve Parts by Glass at London’s Barbican Centre.
McVinnie studied music in Cambridge under Sarah Baldock, Thomas Trotter and Hans Fagius, among others.
Pekka Kuusisto
Pekka Kuusisto (b. 1976) is one of Finland’s most renowned musicians. At the commencement of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra’s 2025/26 concert season, Kuusisto began his third and final year as Principal Guest Conductor. Additionally, as Co-Artistic director, he is a member of the Artistic Leadership Team responsible for planning the programme. In the HPO’s concerts, Pekka Kuusisto will perform as a soloist, conductor, and also as a player-director at the front of the orchestra with his violin.
Pekka Kuusisto’s career as a solo artist took off in 1995 when he won the International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition at the age of 19. Since then, he has toured concert halls around the world. Kuusisto’s repertoire spans classical music to modern experiments. He improvises and composes, readily intertwining music with other art forms, aiming to make concerts more accessible and engaging for the audience.
In addition to Helsinki, he frequents Oslo (Norwegian Chamber Orchestra), Gothenburg (Gothenburg Symphony), and Bremen (Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie).
Kuusisto plays the Antonio Stradivari ‘Scotta’ violin of 1709 generously loaned by a patron through the Tarisio auction house.