Tanglewood, Sevenars Offer Thrilling Music and Performances By Stephen Dankner, Special to iBerkshires 08:10AM / Wednesday, August 07, 2024 |  |  
 
 
	THE CLASSICAL BEAT 
	By 
	STEPHEN DANKNER 
	TANGLEWOOD, SEVENARS OFFER THRILLING MUSIC AND PERFORMERS 
	With the second week of August, Tanglewood continues its high energy 2024 classical programming with four powerhouse concerts in the Shed. These include performances by the Boston Symphony; the outstanding visiting guest artists the National Children's Symphony of Venezuela, led by the superlative, world-renowned maestro Gustavo Dudamel; the thrillingly Romantic and virtuosic Third Piano Concerto of Rachmaninoff, composed in 1909, and on the same program the transcendent "Le Sacre du printemps," composed by Igor Stravinsky in 1912-‘13 and premiered in Paris. Gratefully, there will be more from the Russian master: the phenomenal virtuoso violinist Leila Josefowicz will perform Stravinsky's energetic, neoclassical Violin Concerto, composed in 1931 and premiered in the U.S. by Serge Koussevitsky and the Boston Symphony in January, 1932. 
	Read below for all the details covering these outstanding programs and performing artists - the four Shed highlights, as well as the complete offerings in each magnificent Tanglewood venue during the six-day period from Wednesday, August 7 through Monday, August 12. 
	• Thursday, August 8, 8:00 p.m. in the Shed: Gustavo Dudamel conducts the National Children's Symphony of Venezuela in their Tanglewood debut. The major work on their program will be the Fifth Symphony of Dmitry Shostakovich. Composed in 1937, it is a masterwork of 20th century symphonism. 
	• Friday, August 9, 8:00 p.m. in the Shed: Maestro Alan Gilbert will lead the BSO with pianist Kirill Gerstein performing Rachmaninoff's rhapsodic Piano Concerto No. 3; the concert will conclude with Stravinsky's electrifying "The Rite of Spring." 
	• Saturday, August 10, 8:00 p.m. in the Shed: The stellar violinist Leila Josefowicz will have her much-anticipated Tanglewood debut with the BSO in the Shed with a performance of Stravinsky's Violin Concerto, under the baton of conductor Dalia Stasevska. The program also includes the innovative, three-movement Fifth Symphony of Jean Sibelius, composed in the years 1914-'15. 
	• Sunday, August 11, 2:30 p.m. in the Shed: Soprano Elena Villalón and conductor James Gaffigan will perform two Mozart arias from the operas "Idomeneo" and "The Marriage of Figaro." The concert concludes with Gustav Mahler's miraculously evocative Symphony No. 4, composed in 1892, which includes the song, sung by Ms. Villalón, "Das himmlische Leben" ("The Heavenly Life"), set to a text from "Des Knaben Wunderhorn."  
	Tanglewood programs and related events throughout the week 
	Wednesday, August 7 
	1:30 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Open Workshops: Kirill Gerstein, piano 
	______________________ 
	Thursday, August 8 
	1 p.m., Tent Club 
	TLI Talks and Walks 
	Anthony Fogg, moderator, with pianist Kirill Gerstein 
	  
	1:30 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Open Workshops: Jeremy Denk, piano 
	  
	8pm, Shed 
	National Children's Symphony of Venezuela 
	Gustavo Dudamel, conductor 
	John ADAMS Short Ride in a Fast Machine 
	ESTÉVEZ Mediodía en el Llano 
	GINASTERA Dances from Estancia 
	SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 5 
	______________________ 
	Friday, August 9 
	2:30 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Presents: "Decolonizing American Music in Eight Difficult Steps" with George Lewis 
	  
	4 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Presents: "This Is America," Part 1, with Johnny Gandelsman, violin 
	Violinist and producer Johnny Gandelsman developed This is America in 2020, out of a time of rupture and disconnection. Thinking about ways that one person could make a small difference, he brought together commissioning partners across eleven states and territories to commission 22 new works. He invited the composers, all US-based, to reflect on the time we're all living in. Since that initial burst of creativity, "This is America" has been performed throughout North America and grown to encompass 28 compositions for solo violin. 
	  
	6 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	Prelude Concert 
	Tatiana Dimitriades & Catherine French, violins 
	Edward Gazouleas & Steven Laraia, violas 
	Christine Lee, cello 
	Fanny MENDELSSOHN-HENSEL String Quartet in E-flat 
	Felix MENDELSSOHN String Quartet in A, Op. 18 
	  
	8 p.m., Shed 
	Boston Symphony Orchestra 
	Alan Gilbert, conductor 
	Kirill Gerstein, piano 
	RACHMANINOFF Piano Concerto No. 3 
	STRAVINSKY The Rite of Spring 
	______________________ 
	Saturday, August 10 
	10:30 a.m., Shed 
	Boston Symphony Orchestra 
	Open Rehearsal, Sunday program 
	  
	1:30 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	Boston University Tanglewood Institute Young Artists Chorus 
	  
	2 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Presents: Palaver Strings§ with Nicholas Phan, tenor and Farayi Malek, jazz and contemporary 
	vocalist, perform "A Change Is Gonna Come" Featuring Grammy award-winning tenor Nicholas Phan and jazz & contemporary vocalist Farayi Malek this program explores our country's rich legacy of protest songs. Repertoire includes traditional songs of protest and music inspired by social movements and historical events, including Akenya Seymour's "Fear the Lamb," and a new commission by Errollyn Wallen. Spanning genres, eras, and movements, A Change Is Gonna Come provokes conversation, confronts our past and present, and celebrates the act of protest as one of our most precious rights. 
	  
	5 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	TLI Spotlight Series: Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Mr. 
	Gates, Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for 
	African & African American Research at Harvard University. Emmy and Peabody Award-winning filmmaker, literary scholar, journalist, cultural critic, and institution builder, Professor Gates has published numerous books and produced and hosted an array of documentary films. Finding Your Roots, his groundbreaking genealogy and genetics series, is in its tenth season on PBS, and his most recent history series, Gospel, premiered on PBS in February 2024. His latest book is "The Black Box: Writing the Race" (Penguin Random House, 2024). Harvey Young, is the Moderator 
	  
	6 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TMC Fellows 
	Prelude Concert 
	DEBUSSY Sonata for flute, viola, and harp 
	Jessie MONTGOMERY Concerto Grosso (BSO co- 
	commission, East Coast premiere) 
	RAVEL Piano Trio 
	  
	8 p.m., Shed 
	Boston Symphony Orchestra 
	Dalia Stasevska, conductor+ 
	Leila Josefowicz, violin§ 
	SIBELIUS (arr. STRAVINSKY) Canzonetta 
	STRAVINSKY Violin Concerto 
	SIBELIUS Symphony No. 5 
	______________________ 
	Sunday, August 11 
	10 a.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	TMC Chamber Music 
	George LEWIS Le témoignage des lumières 
	Lingbo MA In a Maze, In a Daze 
	IVES Piano Trio 
	Nicky SOHN Time's Dialogue 
	BRAHMS Piano Quartet in G minor, Op. 25 
	  
	2:30 p.m., Shed 
	Boston Symphony Orchestra, James Gaffigan, conductor 
	Elena Villalón, soprano 
	Anna CLYNE Sound and Fury 
	MOZART "Padre, germani, addio!" from Idomeneo 
	MOZART "Deh vieni, non tardar" from The Marriage 
	of Figaro 
	MAHLER Symphony No. 4 
	  
	5 p.m., Studio E, Linde Center for Music and Learning 
	TLI Presents: "This Is America," Part 2, with Johnny 
	Gandelsman, violin 
	7 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	TLI Presents: Jeremy Denk, piano, performs 
	The Battle of Manassas by ‘Blind Tom' WIGGINS 
	and Ives's Concord Sonata ‡ 
	______________________ 
	Monday, August 12 
	8 p.m., Seiji Ozawa Hall 
	Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra 
	TMC Conducting and Vocal Fellows 
	Program of opera excerpts 
	ALL-MOZART PROGRAM with selections from 
	The Marriage of Figaro 
	Don Giovanni 
	Die Zauberflöte 
	  
	For tickets to all Tanglewood events, call (888) 266-1200, or go online at tanglewood.org. 
	  
	CHAMBER MUSIC AT SEVENARS 
	• Sunday, August 11 at 4:00 p.m.: Sevenars is thrilled to welcome oboist Joel Bard,  pianist Sayuri Miyamoto and violinist/violist Jun-Ching Lin in a breathtaking program of solos, duos, and trios. Award-winning pianist Sayuri Miyamoto with her husband, the brilliant oboist/conductor Joel Bard often perform as a duo. They will perform a program consisting of both familiar and less well-known solo, duo, and trio repertoire by Mozart, Clara Schumann, Robert Schumann, Ottorino Respighi, Ignacy Jan Paderewski, Charles Martin Loeffler, and Leopold Wallner. 
	Founded in 1968, Sevenars Concerts, Inc., is celebrating its 56th season of six summer concerts, held at the Academy, a building designated "an acoustic gem in an idyllic setting," located in the  historic village of South Worthington,15 Ireland Street, off MA Route 112. 
	Concerts are presented on consecutive Sundays at 4:00 p.m. until August 18. Phone: (413) 238-5854 (please leave a message for a return call). Online: www.sevenars.org. Email: Sevenars@aol.com. Admission is by donation at the door (suggested $20). Refreshments will be available. 
	  
	  
	  
				
				
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