Opera Workshop Performance

Sun Valley Opera House 1 Sun Valley Road, Sun Valley, Idaho

This concert features vocal and piano students from the Advanced Chamber Program performing staged opera scenes and piano ensembles.

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Mahler’s Symphony No. 6

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

Many of Mahlerā€™s symphonies depict a triumphant journey from darkness into light . . . but not this one. This is Mahlerā€™s Tragic symphonyā€“a name he gave it himself. The end is bitter, catastrophic, devastating, and hopeless. But itā€™s also a work of transcendent beauty, longing, and tenderness. Mahler described one passage as ā€œshadowy memories of my life pass before me, like long-forgotten ghosts of departed happiness.ā€ Please note that this program will last just under 90 minutes.

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Beethoven’s Triple Concerto

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

This concert offers an unusual piece: a concerto for violin, cello, and piano, performed by Festival Orchestra musicians. Few composers have tried this format, but of course Beethoven succeeded. The themes are fairly simple for Beethoven, butā€“then againā€“so is the first movement of his Moonlight Sonata, and no one complains about that. Throughout the piece, Beethoven finds elegant ways to give each instrument solo turns with the various melodies, including throughout the sunny finale. The program opens with Jessie Montgomeryā€™s Strum, a piece that, in the composerā€™s words, ā€œdraws on American folk idioms and the spirit of dance and movement.ā€

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James Ehnes plays Brahms

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

James Ehnes, ā€œA violinist in a class of his ownā€ ā€“ The Times, brings Brahmsā€™s gorgeous violin concerto (and his 1715 Stradivarius violin) to Sun Valley for this concert that previously was to feature Leonidas Kavakos, who unfortunately had to withdraw for medical reasons. Written for the greatest violinist alive in Brahmsā€™s day, this concerto tests the soloistā€™s technique and musicianship, but the virtuosity remains in service of the music at all times. And itā€™s delightful music, from the turbulent first movement to the foot-stomping, Hungarian-inspired finale. The program opens with A Joyous Trilogy, by American composer Quinn Mason. In Masonā€™s words, he intended his piece to be ā€œthe very embodiment of happiness, an accessible work that would put any listener in a good mood.ā€

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