An Evening of Ravel followed by Lawn Party

Sun Valley Pavilion 300 Dollar Rd, Sun Valley, Idaho, United States

Hereā€™s an all-Ravel program in honor of the great composerā€™s 150th birthday. The concert opens with two of Ravelā€™s Miroirs, pieces he dedicated to avant-garde artists who were also his friends. Next up: a set of seven waltzes and an epilogue under the title Valses nobles et sentimentales. Ravel acknowledged Schubert as his inspiration, but thereā€™s no mistaking Ravelā€™s distinctive sound and elegant orchestration. The evening concludes with Stephanie Childress conducting Daphnis et ChloĆ© Suite No. 2. Stravinsky called it ā€œnot only Ravelā€™s best work, but also one of the most beautiful products of all French music.ā€ Sit back, relax, and let the arrival of dawn wash over you.

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Gautier CapuƧon plays Elgar

Sun Valley Pavilion 300 Dollar Rd, Sun Valley, Idaho, United States

What do the movie TĆ”r and the Netflix show Wednesday have in common? Key characters playing Elgarā€™s cello concerto! Hailed as Elgarā€™s final masterpiece, itā€™s a gorgeous but not particularly happy work (would Wednesday Addams play anything remotely happy?) influenced by the devastating impact of World War I on the composerā€™s psyche. Gautier CapuƧon returns to Sun Valley to deliver this hauntingly beautiful music. Stephanie Childress opens the concert with Tumblebird Contrails, a piece the composer Gabriella Smith says was ā€œinspired by a single moment sitting in the sand at the edge of the ocean, listening to the hallucinatory sounds of the Pacific, watching a pair of ravens playing in the wind.ā€

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Brahms Symphony No. 4

Sun Valley Pavilion 300 Dollar Rd, Sun Valley, Idaho, United States

Fans of Beethoven may bristle at the suggestion, but thereā€™s a sizable contingent that views Brahmsā€™s Fourth Symphony as the very embodiment of the symphonic ideal. Precisely constructed, it displays Brahmsā€™s absolutely mastery of the form. Filled with beautiful tunes and waves of romantic emotion, it also remains steadfastly earnest, even austere. Brahms recognized this quality, writing from his mountain retreat near Vienna that his symphony ā€œtastes of the climate here. The cherries donā€™t ripen in these parts; you wouldnā€™t eat them!ā€ Pay particular attention to the finale, a masterful homage to one of Bachā€™s chaconnesā€”a stately dance with 32 variations over a repeating bass line. Itā€™s brilliant.

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