Saturday Evenings C
SIBELIUS & SAINT-SAËNS
Ramón Tebar, conductor
Benjamin Beilman, violin
Sibelius’s First Symphony arrives with the composer’s icy and expansive musical language fully formed, forged from influences by Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Berlioz and Beethoven. Violinist Benjamin Beilman joins the CSO for Saint-Saëns’ Third Concerto, a piece that oozes melodic and technical exuberance. Wang Lu’s Surge bottles the rush of hearing an orchestra for the very first time.
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Program
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Wang LU: Surge
SAINT-SAËNS: Violin Concerto No. 3SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 1
BERNSTEIN & SHOSTAKOVICH
Marin Alsop, conductor
Conductor Marin Alsop leads the CSO in essential classics by Leonard Bernstein and Dmitri Shostakovich. The May Festival Chorus joins for Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms, sacred music that illuminates a path to eternal peace, and which notably includes music cut from the Prologue of West Side Story. Shostakovich’s Leningrad martials every artistic defense, and might of the whole Orchestra, against a merciless and tyrannical siege threatening to consume all.
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Program
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BERNSTEIN: Chichester Psalms
SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 7, Leningrad
RACHMANINOFF & COPLAND
Matthias Pintscher, conductor
George Li, piano
Rachmaninoff’s Third Piano Concerto churns with uber-romantic melodies and Unsuk Chin’s music delights in contrasts. Copland’s last symphony, ringing with bells and brass, brings us home. The finale builds on Fanfare for the Common Man — an enduring masterpiece written for and premiered by the CSO at Music Hall — signaling the culmination and convergence of the composer’s entire career.
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Program
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Unsuk CHIN: subito con forza
RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 3
COPLAND: Symphony No. 3
DVOŘÁK NEW WORLD SYMPHONY
Cristian Măcelaru, conductor
Randall Goosby, violin
Dvořák’s New World Symphony moves with magnificent energies and melodies that feel like home. Hearing it performed by the CSO at Music Hall, under the baton of Music Director Designate Cristian Măcelaru, is a must-have experience. Randall Goosby, a new champion of Florence Price’s solo works, returns for the composer’s Second Violin Concerto plus Chausson’s most popular work. Selections from Wynton Marsalis Blues Symphony trace the blueprints of a quintessential American style.
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Program
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Wynton MARSALIS: "Southwestern Shakedown” from Blues Symphony
CHAUSSON: Poème
PRICE: Violin Concerto No. 2
DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 9, From the New World
FOUNTAINS & PINES OF ROME
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor
Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha, soprano
Take a musical tour of Rome with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Two of Respighi’s epic showpieces bring rushing fountains, towering pines, mysterious catacombs, and triumphant Roman legions to Music Hall. Richard Strauss’ final work, four hauntingly beautiful last songs, sing of acceptance, transformation, and fruition at the end of one’s long journey.
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Program
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PERRY: A Short Piece for Orchestra
STRAUSS: Four Last Songs
RESPIGHI: Fountains of Rome
RESPIGHI: Pines of Rome
STRAUSS ALPINE SYMPHONY
Sir Donald Runnicles, conductor
Maria Ioudenitch, violin
Sir Donald Runnicles leads a peak orchestral experience. Violinist Maria Ioudenitch brings elegance and poise to Mendelssohn’s soaring violin concerto. Strauss’ An Alpine Symphony follows the path of a mountain ascent, from dawn until night, through mist and storms, darkness and unfathomable heights, taking you to another world from the very first chords. Where it leads is nothing less than a total exploration of the possibilities of sound and the CSO at Music Hall.
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Program
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MacCUNN: The Land of the Mountain and the Flood
MENDELSSOHN: Violin Concerto
STRAUSS: An Alpine Symphony