Home V: Grieg and Sibelius

Home V: Grieg and Sibelius

Friday March 6th, 2020 7:30PM

Grieg’s 6 Lieder betray the influence of Schumann and Mendelsohn, and his song cycle Haugtussa is a landmark in Norwegian music, capturing the country’s natural beauty and folksy spirit. Sibelius’s songs elevate Finnish folklore with psychological depth and emotional weight.

Home IV: Bartók, Kodaly, and Janáček

Home IV: Bartók, Kodaly, and Janáček

Friday February 7th, 2020 7:30PM

Bartók and Kodaly were pioneers in ethnomusicology, traveling the countryside in Central and Eastern Europe to preserve Folk Music on early wax records, incorporating what they heard into their musical language. Janáček’s Diary of One Who Disappeared tells a passionate semi-autobiographical love story through the prism of rural Czech life.

Home III: Chopin and Szymanowski

Home III: Chopin and Szymanowski

Friday January 3rd, 2020 7:30PM

Chopin’s Mazurkas and songs took traditional Polish forms and imbued them with kaleidoscopic emotional breadth. Szymanowski brought Polish music into the 20th century with bold harmonies influenced by Debussy and Stravinsky, qualities on full display in two of his most virtuosic works, Métopes for solo piano and Songs of a Fairy Tale Princess for coloratura soprano.

Home Bonus Concert: Benjamin Britten

Home Bonus Concert: Benjamin Britten

Friday December 6, 2019 7:30PM

Benjamin Britten’s beloved Folk Song Arrangements on British, Irish, Welsh, and Scottish melodies are some of his most popular works. This concert is free for all Premium and Flex Pass Holders and a limited number of individual tickets will be available for non-subscribers.

Home II: Chants d’Auvergne

Home II: Chants d’Auvergne

Friday November 1, 2019 7:30PM

In his magnum opus, Chant’s d’Auvergne, Joseph Canteloube collected the folk melodies of the Auvergne region and imbued these whimsical, earthy tunes with emotional depth and a rich Straussian harmonic palette.

Home I: Roma

Home I: Roma

Friday October 4th, 2019 7:30PM

In the 19th-century Roma or “Gypsy” culture became a phenomenon. A people of unknown origin living on the fringes of society became a symbol for the outsider, unbound by polite European society and emotional restraint. Roma presents iconic “Zigeunerlieder” by Brahms, Dvorak, and Liszt, as well as virtuosic violin showpieces by Ravel and Sarasate.