Hornucopia

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

What happens when 16 of the finest horn players in North America get together and try to one-up each other in arrangements of songs ranging from classical to jazz to rock and roll? ā€œIt will be the Mother of All Horn Concerts,ā€ says Bill VerMeulen, the Festivalā€™s Principal Horn. Backed by a rhythm section, the masters of horn will deliver a rollicking good time in the Pavilionā€”donā€™t miss it!

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An Alpine Symphony

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

Richard Straussā€™ epic tone poem depicts a day spent hiking in the Alps, from daybreak until nightfall. Through 22 episodes, the audience will experience Straussā€™ musical depictions of forests, brooks, a waterfall, meadows, pastures, a glacier, and this Summer Seasonā€™s second big stormā€”recall Beethovenā€™s ā€œPastoral.ā€ To produce these sounds, in addition to 16 horns, the orchestra will include an organ, a wind machine, a heckelphone, and a thunder sheet. Where else can you hear this piece in the very setting it describes? Only in Sun Valley!

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Opening Night: Orli Shaham and Delights & Dances

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

For opening night, ā€œbrilliant pianistā€ Orli Shaham (The New York Times) returns to Sun Valley to perform Ravelā€™s beautiful and jazz-influenced Piano Concerto in G Major. Continuing the jazzy theme, the program also includes Delights & Dances, a rhythmic and soulful composition by Academy Award-nominated American composer Michael Abels. The Season opens with The Star-Spangled Banner, of course, followed by Rossiniā€™s Overture to The Barber of Seville.

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Beethoven’s Second Symphony

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

Beethovenā€™s Symphony No. 2 stands out for its upbeat enthusiasm, a quality it offers in abundance despite the composerā€™s advancing deafness when he wrote it. Brimming with extremes and surprises, the piece exhibits an exuberance and cheerfulness not heard again untilā€”perhapsā€”his Ode to Joy in the ninth symphony. The concert opens with Wagnerā€™s Siegfried Idyll, a piece he wrote for his wife, Cosima. Wagner hired a small group of musicians to play the piece in the front hallway of his house to awaken her on her birthday morning.

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