• Elgar Symphony No. 1

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

    Unlike many great symphonies, Elgar’s first achieved fame nearly instantly—it was performed over 80 times in Europe and North America in its first year. Its popularity has endured, with over 10 recordings released in the first decade of the 21st century. It’s easy to see why. As the Evening Standard wrote in 1908: “The composer has written a work of rare beauty, sensibility, and humanity, a work understandable by all.”

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  • Josefowicz Plays Stravinsky

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

    Violinist Leila Josefowicz is a passionate advocate of contemporary music, with several living composers having written concertos for her. In this concert she plays Stravinsky’s Violin Concerto, a rhythmic, pulsing piece with Baroque overtones. Stravinsky basically invented his own format for this concerto, and the two “arias” in the middle offer some gorgeous violin-playing, including a rare (for Stravinsky) bit of reflective melancholy in Aria II. The program opens with Lili Boulanger’s Of a Spring Morning, a vibrant and delicate piece, and closes with Tchaikovsky’s Capriccio Italien, inspired by catchy tunes the composer heard on the streets Rome.

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  • Bronfman Quartet Plays Brahms and Haydn

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

    For their chamber music concert this year, the Festival’s resident string quartet takes on Brahms’s earnest, yet lovely, String Quartet No. 2. The piece is full of canons, or imitative melodies (a nod to Bach), and Hungarian themes (perhaps a nod to violinist Joseph Joachim, who played the premiere). Following, the Quartet will play Haydn’s Quartet Op. 76 No. 2, another formally serious but lively and gracious work, also with nods to Bach (note the canon in the 3rd movement) and Hungarian flourishes in the finale.

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  • Frank, Puts, and Time For Three

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

    Sun Valley favorites Time for Three return to the Pavilion stage for the first time since August 2017. They’ll perform a new work titled Contact, which was co-commissioned by the Festival and written for them by the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Kevin Puts. Puts wrote Hymn to the Sun for the Sun Valley Pavilion’s opening concert. The program begins with Three Latin American Dances for Orchestra, by Gabriela Lena Frank. Frank is a Grammy-nominated composer and pianist, who was named one of the top 35 female composers in classical music by The Washington Post.

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