Pops Concert: The Music of John Williams, Conducted by StĆ©phane DenĆØve

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

StĆ©phane DenĆØve is Music Director of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and the recently appointed Artistic Director of the New World Symphony. Heā€™s thrilled to join the Festival Orchestra for an evening of greatest hits from John Williamsā€™s vast catalog of film music.

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Yefim Bronfman, An Homage to Sibelius, and Post-Concert Lawn Party

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

Bronfman, a ā€œmarvel of digital dexterity, warmly romantic sentiment, and jaw-dropping bravuraā€ (Chicago Tribune), returns to Sun Valley to perform Schumannā€™s only piano concerto. After a wildly successful premiere by his wife, Clara, the piece immediately became known, and loved, for the exquisitely delicate way in which Schumann weaves together equal roles for the pianist and the orchestra. The concert opens with Finlandia, which Jean Sibelius wrote as a patriotic celebration of his homeland in 1900, followed by Threnody (In Memory of Jean Sibelius), which was written in 1965 by U.S. composer William Grant Still in honor of the great composerā€™s birth 100 years prior. The annual dance party on the lawn will follow this concert.

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Stravinsky’s The Rite Of Spring

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

Itā€™s hard to imagine a piece of classical music causing a riot, but thatā€™s the word often applied to the audienceā€™s reaction when Stravinskyā€™s ballet The Rite of Spring debuted in Paris in 1913. The music (and dancing) broke with tradition so dramatically that itā€™s often called the first example of modernism in music. As a young man, Stravinskyā€™s first inspiration to write music for dance came from seeing Tchaikovskyā€™s Sleeping Beauty, so itā€™s fitting that the Festival Orchestra plays some excerpts from that ballet to open this concert.

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Debussy’s La Mer

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

Debussy loved the sea, especially its unpredictable and ever-changing motion. His most performed work, La Mer, capturesā€”in music, as only Debussy couldā€”the play of light on the water and the seaā€™s place in the natural world. Also on the program, the Festivalā€™s exploration of Mozartā€™s wind concertos continues with Principal Bassoon Andrew Cuneo performing Mozartā€™s concerto for the bassoon, a piece that shows off the instrumentā€™s remarkable agility and range. Opening the program, Maestro Neale leads the orchestra in Agnegram, a short piece composed by his friend and mentor, the great conductor Michael Tilson Thomas.

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