Finally, they are ready to meet the world.
The Minnesota Orchestra departs Thursday for a nine-day European tour, a high-stakes affair that is the ensemble's first visit across the ocean since the 2012-14 lockout. Audiences and critics will be eager to hear whether this is the same band that delighted London audiences in 2010.
"This tour is the final piece of re-establishing the Minnesota Orchestra to its previous, historic stature," said President and CEO Kevin Smith. "We're ready for critical attention and to evaluate whether this ensemble is the same, or maybe even better."
With stops in Finland, Edinburgh, Amsterdam and Copenhagen, the tour could be called "the last first" in the orchestra's reboot.
There was the first concert back, the first full season, the first recording session, the just-released first album from those sessions. Then there was the historic trip to Cuba — the first by a major U.S. orchestra since relations thawed.
Now music director Osmo Vänskä wants to take his ensemble to the sophisticated audiences of Europe and see if they've re-found the sound.
"Cuba was very special and we are happy that we were able to do it, but it is a once-in-a-lifetime to do that kind of trip," Vänskä said. "This is just like we are back to normal."
Significant roles have been filled in the ensemble. The budget has stabilized through aggressive and imaginative fundraising, the musicians have been "verking hard" under Vänskä and attendance has started to creep up.