The Classical 'High Season' Approaches its Zenith

By Stephen DanknerSpecial to iBerkshires
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The Classical Beat 

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Stephen Danker

The Classical 'High Season' Approaches its Zenith

Classical and Contemporary Festivals at Tanglewood and Bach at Sevenars showcase musical excellence

During late-July, the classical music festival "high season," anchored by concerts at Tanglewood in Lenox and at the Sevenars Festival in South Worthington approaches its zenith, with both sure-fire and innovative programming. Offerings this week include revelatory chamber and orchestral works in Ozawa Hall and in the Shed. Boston Symphony performances include both classic and rarely heard works by Sibelius and Copland as well as masterpieces by Russian masters Tchaikovsky, Scriabin, Khachaturian, and Stravinsky. Celebrating the great and historic BSO Russian/American maestro Serge Koussevitsky's 150th birthday, double bass virtuoso Edwin Barker, Principal double bass with the Boston Symphony, will perform the great conductor/composer's landmark Concerto for Double Bass, Op. 3, composed in 1904.   

For a similarly musically rewarding change of pace, be sure to check out the performance of three of the Bach solo cello Suites by the phenomenal Israeli cellist Inbal Segev, on Sunday, July 28, located in the historic and intimate Academy at the Sevenars Music Festival in bucolic South Worthington, MA.

As always, the place to be for great classical and stimulating new music is right here in our own intimate corner of the world - the Berkshires - a so-designated "cultural capital," where artistic boundaries are nonexistent.

Read on for concert details for all of the above, covering the week from July 24-30:

Tanglewood

This is the week for celebration at Tanglewood. Here are the highlights:

• Wednesday, July 24, Ozawa Hall, at 8:00 p.m. The Boston Symphony Chamber Players, with special guest artist pianist Paul Lewis, will perform  a RECITAL SERIES program of Mozart (a masterpiece: the Quintet in E flat for piano and winds, K. 452), Brahms (the String Sextet, Op. 36) and a work for solo flute, "Homeland," by contemporary composer Allison Loggins.

• Friday, July 26, Shed, at 8:00 p.m. - KOUSSEVITSKY 150 Celebration: BSO Maestro Andris Nelsons conducts the Orchestra and guest artists the Tanglewood Festival Chorus and powerhouse pianist Yefim Bronfman in a program of Steven Mackey, ("Urban Ocean") Sibelius ("The Origin of Fire") and Alexander Scriabin ("Prometheus, Poem of Fire") for piano, chorus and Orchestra).

• Saturday, July 27, Shed, at 8:00 p.m.: Andris Nelsons returns to lead the Boston Symphony, with the thrilling piano soloist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, performing the scintillating Khachaturian Piano Concerto, and concludes with Tchaikovsky's impassioned Symphony No. 6 ("Pathétique"). The program opens with the supercharged curtain-raiser "Stride," by resident composer Tania León.

• Sunday, July 28, Shed, at 2:30 p.m.- KOUSSEVITSKY 150 Celebration: Focusing on Maestro Serge Koussevitsky's commissions to composers and premiere performances, Music Director Andris Nelsons leads the BSO in a program of Copland (his 1926 jazz-tinged Piano Concerto), Randall Thompson's beloved choral masterwork, "Alleluia," and Stravinsky's eloquently inspired neoclassical magnum opus, "Symphony of Psalms," composed for the BSO to celebrate the Orchestra's 50th  anniversary in 1930. The concert opens with James Lee's "Freedom's Genuine Dawn."

SPECIAL EVENT: The five-day 'Festival of Contemporary Music'

Tanglewood's 2024 Festival of Contemporary Music, Thursday, July 25-Monday, July 29, will be jointly curated by composers Tania León and Steven Mackey, and will feature several of these major composers' works, as well as compositions by others, with a special focus on showcasing up-and-coming, path-finding, and groundbreaking new composers whose works may well define the evolution of classical music.

As the Festival of Contemporary Music (FCM) is one of the world's most prominent showcases for works from the current musical landscape, landmark pieces from the new music vanguard of the 21st century will be performed during the five-day Festival.

Additionally, the FCM affords Tanglewood Music Center Fellow performers the opportunity to explore and learn unfamiliar repertoire and to experience the value of direct collaboration with individual living composers - performing their music composed across a wide stylistic spectrum.

Concerts and related events will occur in Ozawa Hall and at Studio E, the Linde Center for Music and Learning. For tickets to all Tanglewood events, call (888) 266-1200, or go online at tanglewood.org.

Sevenars Music Festival

• Sunday, July 28, at 4:00 p.m.: Sevenars is extremely proud to present Israeli-American musician Inbal Segev, one of the leading cellists of our time. Ms. Inbal will perform three of the six solo Bach Cello Suites. Hailed as "a cellist with something to say" (Gramophone) she combines "thrillingly projected, vibrato-rich playing" (Washington Post) with "complete dedication and high intelligence" (San Francisco Classical Voice). She comes to us from a season that has included concerto engagements with the London Philharmonic, Dallas Symphony, and Colorado Symphony orchestras; she has recorded for Nonesuch Records, which includes world premieres of her own compositions.

Founded in 1968, Sevenars Concerts, Inc., is celebrating its 56th season of six summer concerts, held at the Academy in the historic village of South Worthington, MA, located at 15 Ireland Street, just off MA Route 112.

Concerts are presented on consecutive Sundays at 4:00 p.m. until August 18. Phone: (413) 238-5854 (please leave a message for a return call). Online: www.sevenars.org. Email: Sevenars@aol.com. Admission is by donation at the door (suggested $20). Refreshments will be available.


Tags: Tanglewood,   The Classical Beat,   

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Ventfort Hall: Baseball in the Berkshires

LENOX, Mass. — Larry Moore, Director of the nonprofit Baseball in the Berkshires, and a retired Physical Education Specialist, will tell about the history of baseball in the Berkshires at Ventfort Hall on Tuesday, July 16 at 4 pm. 
 
A tea will be served after the presentation.
 
According to a press release:
 
The game of baseball has a long and storied history in the Berkshires. From the broken window by-law of 1791 and the first college game ever played in 1859, there were 60 years of minor league teams calling the Berkshires their home. There are 40 major league players coming from the Berkshires and two of them are in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Over 220 minor league players were born, raised or settled in the Berkshires. Just when you think you have a grasp on those stories someone asks about women's baseball and black baseball in the Berkshires. Going back to the late 1800's both the history of women and people of color have strong roots here. The long list of famous baseball visitors that left parts of their stories here contains the names of "Say-Hey Kid," "Joltin' Joe," "The Iron Horse" and of course, "The Babe."
 
Larry Moore worked as a Physical Education Specialist in the Central Berkshire Regional School District for 37 years. He taught a popular yearlong unit about the history of baseball for 25 years, along with his regular Physical Education program, to his fifth graders culminating with a trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame. He now volunteers at the National Baseball Hall of Fame as an Outreach Educator. Nine years ago he, along with Tom Daly, Jim Overmyer and Kevin Larkin, established a group of baseball enthusiasts who established the nonprofit organization, Baseball in the Berkshires. Its mission is to tell the fascinating stories of baseball in the Berkshires through exhibits and educational programming.
 
As director of this group he, and his fellow volunteers, have created numerous exhibits and educational programs throughout the Berkshires. He co-authored the book "Baseball in the Berkshires: A County's Common Bond." 
 
He is a resident of Lenox and has spent many years working with the young people of the Berkshires, as an educator, coach, official, and business owner.
 
Tickets are $40 for members and with advance reservation; $45 day of; $22 for students 22 and under. Ticket pricing includes access to the mansion throughout the day of this event from 10 am to 4 pm. Reservations are strongly encouraged as seats are limited. Walk-ins accommodated as space allows. For reservations visit https://gildedage.org/pages/calendar or call at (413) 637-3206. Please note that all tickets are nonrefundable and non-exchangeable. The historical mansion is located at 104 Walker Street in Lenox.
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