listen to Elim Chan conduct
Jun. 14th, 2026 09:41 pmIn search of online interviews and other such publicity material about Elim Chan, the San Francisco Symphony's new music director, I found a number of full-length concert videos of her conducting various European orchestras in standard classics of the repertoire. They were all good performances - I listened to the bunch of them with full appreciation - but two struck me as particularly outstanding. They captured the fervor and intensity that these pieces had when new and bold, they were led and played with full commitment to the music, and they had me captivated on the edge of my seat throughout - an experience I find rare enough in concert and even rarer in recordings. But this is the amazing conducting that I heard in person when she led Holst's The Planets in a guest appearance at SFS a few years ago.
One of these particularly outstanding renditions was of Brahms's Fourth Symphony, his last and most experimental essay in the form, and my long-time favorite of his. Compelling and urgent.
The other was the monster itself, Beethoven's Fifth, the work that originally sold me on the heavy classics. If bad performances have led you to find this work dull and routine, just listen to this fiery attack.
The other full-length recordings I listened to of Elim Chan conducting included:
Tchaikovsky's Fifth
Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade
Shostakovich's Fifth
Shostakovich's Tenth
Beethoven's First
One of these particularly outstanding renditions was of Brahms's Fourth Symphony, his last and most experimental essay in the form, and my long-time favorite of his. Compelling and urgent.
The other was the monster itself, Beethoven's Fifth, the work that originally sold me on the heavy classics. If bad performances have led you to find this work dull and routine, just listen to this fiery attack.
The other full-length recordings I listened to of Elim Chan conducting included:
Tchaikovsky's Fifth
Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade
Shostakovich's Fifth
Shostakovich's Tenth
Beethoven's First