Conduct Yourself
Get insights about conducting from Maestro Leonard Slatkin in a hands-on workshop onstage at Chautauqua Auditorium.
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Get insights about conducting from Maestro Leonard Slatkin in a hands-on workshop onstage at Chautauqua Auditorium.
Six-time Grammy-winning conductor and Music Director Laureate of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Leonard Slatkin joins the Festival for a program celebrating the distinctive American sound. This spotlight on American composers begins with Aaron Coplandās Rodeo with its iconic āHoedown,ā followed by a chaconne from John Coriglianoās romantic score for the film The Red Violin. After the break: Ron Nelsonās paean to the Southās Savannah River, a haunting adagio by āunmistakably American-soundingā Cindy McTee (Washington Post), and finally George Gershwinās jazzy symphonic poem An American in Paris.
Music Director Peter Oundjian begins this all-Mozart marvel with a mysterious serenade for winds, which broods before turning suddenly buoyant. At the keyboard for Mozartās Piano Concerto No. 20 is Tony Siqi Yun, a nuanced performer who plays with āevery note personalizedā (Musical America). Closing this revel of Mozartās genius is his Haffner Symphony, a staggering work of energy and invention.
The Robert Mann Chamber Music Series continues with a program featuring the Festivalās own musicians. Beethovenās only quintet for piano and wind is rife with rhapsodic dialogue between its instruments. In Stravinskyās bitter LāHistoire du Soldat, a WWI soldier makes a deal with the devil in order to know the future, but ā after a rousing story animated by music ā the cunning devil keeps the upper hand.
Music Director Peter Oundjian helms one of musicās grandest spectacles: Holstās The Planets. From the hammering āMars, the Bringer of Warā to the ethereal āNeptune, the Mystic,ā this seven-planet suite lures the heavens into Chautauqua Auditorium. Electrifying pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii performs Rachmaninoffās dreamy Second Piano Concerto. This monumental program begins with the world premiere by Leigha Amick, a composer who aims āto spark intellectual curiosity and express human experience.ā
Get to know the violin and what it takes to be an orchestral musician. No musical background necessary (violins provided); limited to 8 participants.
Music Director Peter Oundjian helms one of musicās grandest spectacles: Holstās The Planets. From the hammering āMars, the Bringer of Warā to the ethereal āNeptune, the Mystic,ā this seven-planet suite lures the heavens into Chautauqua Auditorium. Electrifying pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii performs Rachmaninoffās dreamy Second Piano Concerto. This monumental program begins with the world premiere by Leigha Amick, a composer who aims āto spark intellectual curiosity and express human experience.ā
Conductor Gemma New returns to lead a varied program, beginning with Prokofievās cheerful āClassicalā Symphony, which he referred to as āa symphony as Mozart or Hayden might have written it.ā Ricardo Morales joins the Festival Orchestra to perform Coplandās Clarinet Concerto ā penned during a four-month tour of Latin America, the pulsing rhythms of Brazil are woven throughout Coplandās trademark jazz and lyricism. Morales continues with one of musicās finest showcases for the clarinet, Rossiniās challenging Introduction, Theme, and Variations. The program concludes with Ravelās beloved Ma mĆØre lāoye (Mother Goose) suite, where we meet Sleeping Beauty, Tom Thumb, Beauty and the Beast, and more.
āNone of us have any memory of our lives without the string quartet,ā claims this highly sought-after ensemble of energetic musicians who met each other at music camp as teenagers. By audience request, the Danish String Quartet returns to the Robert Mann Chamber Music Series with a delectable program including works by Mozart, Shostakovich, and Ravel.
Audiences raved about pianist Michelle Cannās Festival debut in 2023; now Cann returns to Chautauqua to perform the world premiere of a piano concerto by esteemed composer Valerie Coleman. After intermission, Berlioz invites us on a psychedelic romp: his Symphonie Fantastique is a musical hallucination that evokes dark revels, an execution, and a visit to the underworld.
Audiences raved about pianist Michelle Cannās Festival debut in 2023; now Cann returns to Chautauqua to perform the world premiere of a piano concerto by esteemed composer Valerie Coleman. After intermission, Berlioz invites us on a psychedelic romp: his Symphonie Fantastique is a musical hallucination that evokes dark revels, an execution, and a visit to the underworld.
Music Director Peter Oundjian continues his tradition of closing the Festival season with a massive Mahler symphony. Mahler referred to his sunny Third as āA Summerās Midday Dream,ā and was aware he was defying symphonic convention as he wrote it, saying, āBut to write a symphony means, to me, to construct a world with all the tools of the available technique.ā Grammy Award-winning mezzo soprano Fleur Barron and the Boulder Childrenās Chorus join the Festival Orchestra to give this epic symphony its voice.