Schubert's Symphony No. 9, âThe Great,â the prelude to Act I of Wagner's âLohengrinâ and Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4, with Evgeny Kissin as soloist, will make up the program for James Levine's comeback as a conductor on May 19. Mr. Levine will lead the Metropolitan Opera orchestra at Carnegie Hall, and it will be his first public performance in two years after a series of health problems. The program replaces the original version, which was announced when it was not clear whether Mr. Levine could conduct and no conductor was listed. The lineup then was Sibelius' Symphony No. 4, the Grieg piano concerto and Schumann's âKonzertstückâ for four horns and orchestra.
In mid-October, Mr. Levine announced his return to conducting, including several opera productions next season at the Met, where he has remained music director despite a number of absences. The Met released the new Carnegie program on Thursday, a sign that Mr. Levine, 69, remains confident th at he can return to conducting after lengthy physical therapy following damage to his spine and back operations. Fabio Luisi, the Met's principal conductor, will lead the orchestra at Carnegie on Dec. 2.