"Ladies and gentlemen, we're back."
With those words, principal trombone Douglas Wright on Friday welcomed the first audience to hear the Minnesota Orchestra in Orchestra Hall since June 14, 2012.
Concertgoers responded with multiple standing ovations.
In the ensuing 20 months, the hall underwent a $50 million face-lift, musicians were locked out in the longest work stoppage in U.S. orchestra history, and the 2012-13 season and the first five months of the current season were canceled.
The orchestra will play again Saturday. These homecoming concerts are the first since a contract was ratified on Jan. 14.
Despite, or perhaps because of all that has happened, the sold-out house Friday warmly welcomed the musicians back to the hall they have called home since 1974, even waving bright green hankies in the air.
Wright appeared on stage with new board chairman Gordon Sprenger at intermission. Both men said collaboration was the antidote to the bitterness that defined the last 16 months.
"We need to forge a partnership among the musicians, the board and the entire community," Sprenger said. "The hall is full tonight, and that's the way it needs to be."