Cadenza Events Diary Classical and contemporary concerts in United States of America |
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17 November 2024 until 20 October 2024 | |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 | Boston Philharmonic Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert Boston Philharmonic Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Alexander Baillie, cello Radcliffe Choral Society Purcell (arr. Britten): Chacony in G Minor Elgar: Cello Concerto Holst: The Planets Boston Philharmonic 2024-25 Season event 2 The Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's second concert of the 2024-25 season features an all-British program, a nod to Conductor Benjamin Zander's native England and his personal connections to the composers (he studied with both Benjamin Britten and Imogen Holst, Gustav’s daughter). For the first time ever, the Orchestra performs Benjamin Britten's exquisite realization of Purcell’s Chacony in G Minor, which pays homage to the Baroque master while infusing it with modern sensibilities. Acclaimed British cellist Alexander Baillie, who has performed with the Orchestra eight times previously over the course of 30 years, performs next on Elgar's Cello Concerto, a poignant exploration of loss and longing. The concert culminates in Holst's popular The Planets (which heavily influenced the music of John Williams) featuring the Radcliffe Choral Society, a woman’s chorus that will sound as if it is singing from the farthest reaches of the solar system. |
2 November 2024 | |
4.pm The Town Hall 123 West 43rd Street, New York, NY Manhattan Details: Web site $25-$100 | The Dessoff Choirs presents Brahms’ "Ein deutsches Requiem" Kicking off its centennial season, Dessoff presents Brahms’ Requiem at The Town Hall, led by Malcolm J. Merriweather and featuring renowned artists baritone Will Liverman and soprano Joélle Harvey. Dessoff has invited all alumni to join on stage for this beloved work. In addition, former Dessoff conductors Kent Tritle and Christopher Shepard will speak and conduct some of the Requiem movements. |
3 November 2024 | |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Orchestra: Mahler Symphony No. 2 with soprano Miah Persson & mezzo-soprano Dame Sarah Connolly Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Orchestra: Mahler Symphony No. 2 with soprano Miah Persson & mezzo-soprano Dame Sarah Connolly Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert: Verdi, Dvorak & Stravinsky Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert: Verdi, Dvorak & Stravinsky Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert: Verdi, Dvorak & Stravinsky Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert: Verdi, Dvorak & Stravinsky Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $75, $45, $20, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Opening Concert: Verdi, Dvorak & Stravinsky Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductor Verdi: Overture to La Forza Del Destino (The Power of Destiny) Dvořák: Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra's 2024-25 season fittingly kicks off with a program appealing to people age 12 and older, with some of the most popular music ever written. It opens with the overture to Verdi's La Forza Del Destino, which is as bracing, dynamic and full of unexpected developments as the opera that follows. Next is Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, “For a New World”—his tribute to America—which reflects his visits to the American Heartland, his love of American spirituals, and his homesickness for his beloved Bohemia. It concludes with Stravinsky's revolutionary Rite of Spring, a landmark work that challenges and captivates, reflecting the raw power of nature and human emotion. |
8 November 2024 | |
7.30pm Zankel Hall 881 Seventh Avenue New York Details: Web site | Impromptu Stanley Jordan, guitar and piano Teodora Brody, vocalist Impromptu is an improvised performance by acclaimed singer Teodora Brody and guitarist and pianist Stanley Jordan, inspired by their own life experiences, training, and heritage. From jazz, Romanian folk, and African traditions, to a lullaby for a newborn or an ancestral cry, the program offers a musical journey—embracing the broad, sonorous wings of solitude, grief, and the celebration of life. |
8.00pm(PT) Old First Concerts 1751 Sacramento St, San Francisco, CA SF Bay Area 94109 Details: Matt Wolka Web site +1 415 4741608 0-$30 (in-person); $20 (livestream) | In Motion Ensemble for These Times Margaret Halbig, piano Laura Reynolds, guest oboe/English horn Lylia Guinon, guest violin Megan Chartier, cello Ursula Kwong-Brown: And I Made My Own Way, Deciphering That Fire (World Premiere) Darian Donovan Thomas: ubi lux floret (World Premiere) Mary Bianco: Oboe/Piano Duo (World Premiere) Benjamin Britten: Cello Sonata, Op. 65, Moto Perpetuo York Bowen: Moto Perpetuo (Toccata, Op. 155) Lisa Bielawa: Synopsis #10: I Know This Room So Well Vivian Fung: Ominous Machine Sage Shurman: composure Zhou Tian: Majestic Bells A musical conversation around motion, with World Premieres by Ursula Kwong-Brown, Darian Donovan Thomas, and Mary Bianco, plus Perpetuo mobile movements by Benjamin Britten and York Bowen and music by Lisa Bielawa, Vivian Fung, Sage Shurman, and Zhou Tian |
8.00pm(PT) Old First Concerts 1751 Sacramento St, San Francisco, CA SF Bay Area 94109 Details: Matt Wolka Web site +1 415 4741608 0-$30 (in-person); $20 (livestream) | In Motion Ensemble for These Times Margaret Halbig, piano Laura Reynolds, guest oboe/English horn Lylia Guinon, guest violin Megan Chartier, cello Ursula Kwong-Brown: And I Made My Own Way, Deciphering That Fire (World Premiere) Darian Donovan Thomas: ubi lux floret (World Premiere) Mary Bianco: Oboe/Piano Duo (World Premiere) Benjamin Britten: Cello Sonata, Op. 65, Moto Perpetuo York Bowen: Moto Perpetuo (Toccata, Op. 155) Lisa Bielawa: Synopsis #10: I Know This Room So Well Vivian Fung: Ominous Machine Sage Shurman: composure Zhou Tian: Majestic Bells A musical conversation around motion, with World Premieres by Ursula Kwong-Brown, Darian Donovan Thomas, and Mary Bianco, plus Perpetuo mobile movements by Benjamin Britten and York Bowen and music by Lisa Bielawa, Vivian Fung, Sage Shurman, and Zhou Tian |
17 November 2024 | |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $125, $95, $65, $32, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season: All British program featuring Britten, Elgar & Holst Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductoruy Braunstein, violin Alexander Baillie, cello Radcliffe Choral Society Purcell: arranged Benjamin Britten: Chacony in G Minor Elgar: Cello Concerto Holst: The Planets Boston Philharmonic Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's second concert of the 2024-25 season features an all-British program, a nod to Conductor Benjamin Zander's native England and his personal connections to the concert's composers (he studied with both Benjamin Britten and Imogen Holst, Gustav’s daughter). For the first time ever, the Orchestra performs Benjamin Britten's exquisite realization of Purcell’s Chacony in G Minor, which pays homage to the Baroque master while infusing it with modern sensibilities. Acclaimed British cellist Alexander Baillie, who has performed with the Orchestra eight times previously over the course of 30 years, performs next on Elgar's Cello Concerto, a poignant exploration of loss and longing. The concert culminates in Holst's popular The Planets (which heavily influenced the music of John Williams) featuring the Radcliffe Choral Society, a woman’s chorus that will sound as if it is singing from the farthest reaches of the solar system. |
3.00pm Symphony Hall 301 Mass. Avenue MA 02115 Details: Web site +1 617 236 0999 $125, $95, $65, $32, and $12 for students | Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra 2024-25 Season: All British program featuring Britten, Elgar & Holst Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra Benjamin Zander, conductoruy Braunstein, violin Alexander Baillie, cello Radcliffe Choral Society Purcell: arranged Benjamin Britten: Chacony in G Minor Elgar: Cello Concerto Holst: The Planets Boston Philharmonic Orchestra 2024-25 Season event 1 The Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's second concert of the 2024-25 season features an all-British program, a nod to Conductor Benjamin Zander's native England and his personal connections to the concert's composers (he studied with both Benjamin Britten and Imogen Holst, Gustav’s daughter). For the first time ever, the Orchestra performs Benjamin Britten's exquisite realization of Purcell’s Chacony in G Minor, which pays homage to the Baroque master while infusing it with modern sensibilities. Acclaimed British cellist Alexander Baillie, who has performed with the Orchestra eight times previously over the course of 30 years, performs next on Elgar's Cello Concerto, a poignant exploration of loss and longing. The concert culminates in Holst's popular The Planets (which heavily influenced the music of John Williams) featuring the Radcliffe Choral Society, a woman’s chorus that will sound as if it is singing from the farthest reaches of the solar system. |
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