2 minute read

SCHUBERT MASS IN G MAJOR

OVERTURE TO WILLIAM TELL (1831)

Scored for: pairs of woodwinds plus piccolo and English horn, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, percussion, and strings Performance time: 12 minutes First Grant Park Orchestra performance: August 1, 1936, Gladys Welge, conductor

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Gioachino Rossini was one of the most celebrated Italian composers of the 19th century and consequently enjoyed widespread success, prestige, and wealth during his life. As one of the most prolific opera composers, William Tell was his thirty-ninth and final opera. The four-act opera is based on a play (Wilhelm Tell) by Friedrich Schiller that tells the story of William Tell, an archer and Swiss hero that helps to liberate Switzerland from Austrian occupation. Though the opera is rarely performed, the overture (the introduction to the opera), remains a concert-hall favorite.

Though William Tell may not be Rossini’s most well-known opera, melodies from the overture have become pop culture mainstays. The overture is divided into four distinct sections, and while the English Horn solo in the third section found its way into cartoons, it is the last section (The March of the Swiss Soldiers) that has cemented itself into widespread cultural recognition. In addition to being used in early Mickey Mouse cartoons, the melody from the Finale rode into radio and TV history as the opening credits to the radio and TV versions of The Lone Ranger, and has since made its way into cartoons, commercials, and movies alike.

©2021 Danielle Taylor

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Carlos Kalmar Artistic Director and Principal Conductor Christopher Bell Chorus Director

Friday, July 9, 2021 at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, July 10, 2021 at 6:30 p.m. Jay Pritzker Pavilion

BRAHMS SYMPHONY NO. 3

Grant Park Orchestra and Chorus

Carlos Kalmar Conductor Christopher Bell Chorus director Susan Nelson Soprano Sarah Ponder Soprano Corinne Wallace-Crane Mezzo-soprano

Antonio Vivaldi

Gloria in D Major, RV 589 Gloria in excelsis Deo Et in terra pax hominibus Laudamus te Gratias agimus tibi Domine Deus, Rex coelestis Domine Fili unigenite

SUSAN NELSON SARAH PONDER CORINNE WALLACE-CRANE

Samuel Barber

Adagio for Strings, op. 11

Johannes Brahms

Symphony No. 3 in F Major, op.90 Allegro con brio Andante Poco allegretto Allegro Domine Deus; Agnus Dei Qui tollis peccata mundi Qui sedes ad dexteram Quoniam tu solus sanctus Cum Sancto Spiritu

Major support for this concert is generously provided by William Blair, our 2021 Diverse American Voices Series Sponsor. Special support for this concert and the appearance of the Project Inclusion fellows is contributed by Lori Julian.

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