Aspen Music Festival 2017 Festival Focus Week 4

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FESTIVALFOCUS YOUR WEEKLY CLASSICAL MUSIC GUIDE

SUPPLEMENT TO THE ASPEN TIMES

MONDAY, JULY 17, 2017

VOL 28, NO. 4

Season centerpiece: L’enfant et les sortilèges

The Concerto: Why is it so Irresistible? FREE seminar: 1-4 pm on Thursday, July 20, in Paepcke Auditorium The 2017 AMFS season celebrates “The Year of the Concerto,” a major exploration of the concerto form, pivoting around no fewer than four brand new or modern concertos. As part of this exploration, AMFS President and CEO Alan Fletcher chairs this free 1-4 pm seminar with august and accomplished composers on why this form still endures and enchants centuries after its rise. Participating composers include Stephen Hartke, Anders Hillborg, Jonathan Leshnoff, Andrew Norman, Christopher Theofanidis, and AMFS Music Director Robert Spano. Visit www.aspenmusicfestival.com or call the Box Office at 970-925-9042 for more information.

AMFS / ELLE LOGAN

AMFS Music Director Robert Spano leads the Aspen Chamber Symphony at 6 pm on Friday, July 21, in the Benedict Music Tent. Violinist Gil Shaham will perform Jonathan Leshnoff’s Chamber Concerto for Violin and Orchestra. Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite and L’enfant et les sortilèges are also on the program. CAITLIN CAUSEY

Festival Focus Writer

Whimsy, magic, and childhood reveries are the stuff of summertime delight. Add a few talking household items, singing animals, and a whirling score of fanciful music, and you’ve got an overthe-top treat worthy of the Aspen

Music Festival and School (AMFS) season theme Enchantment: Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges, or The Child and the Enchantment. On July 21, AMFS Music Director Robert Spano and the Aspen Chamber Symphony will take the audience through a program of three fantastical pieces, includ-

ing Jonathan Leshnoff’s Chamber Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, performed by Gil Shaham, and L’enfant et les sortilèges, a oneact opera featuring singers from the Aspen Opera Center. Written between 1917 and 1925, its libretto was penned in just over a week by beautiful French

actress and Nobel Prize-nominated writer Colette. Colette desired the highly respected and celebrated Maurice Ravel to write music to accompany her words, as he was at the time considered to be France’s greatest living comSee L’enfant, Festival Focus page 3

Koh performs Clyne’s striking, elegant The Seamstress CAITLIN CAUSEY

Festival Focus Writer

COURTESY PHOTO

Violinist Jennifer Koh will perfom Anna Clyne’s hauntingly beautiful concerto The Seamstress with the Aspen Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor George Manahan at 6 pm on Wednesday, July 19, at the Benedict Music Tent.

Championing new music has become a part of the Aspen Music Festival and School’s identity, and this Wednesday, July 19, the Aspen Philharmonic Orchestra and violinist Jennifer Koh will perform the violin concerto The Seamstress, a hauntingly beautiful, elegant work by living composer Anna Clyne, as part of this philosophy of celebrating new works. Asadour Santourian, AMFS vice president for artistic administration and artistic advisor, sums up the Festival’s commitment to promoting new music by noting that “at some point, Beethoven’s Third, Brahms’s First, Stravinsky’s Violin Concerto—all these works were world premieres, and they had their contemporary reactions to them. Yet through time, history, and repeat

performances, they have become part of the canon. In order for the canon to widen and to interest us and to include other imaginations, it’s important to program works by living composers.” Koh notes that The Seamstress, which she premiered with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2015 while Clyne was serving as composer-in-residence, is “an elegant piece, striking, with a distinct sensitivity. There is a haunting beauty to it, and it’s not your typical heroicromantic-protagonist form but something very unique.” Koh and Clyne collaborated on the piece, but not quite as intensively as they had with previous work. For Clyne, creating The Seamstress was a personal journey of emotional and musical exploration in the six-year peSee Koh, Festival Focus page 3

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