Chamber Symphony: Slatkin Leads Dvorák’s New World
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Klein Music Tent
[map]
960 North 3rd Street
Aspen, CO 81611
Aspen, CO 81611
Welcome the return of one of the greatest conductors of our time and hear the symphony that Neil Armstrong brought with him on the way to the moon in 1969!
Multiple Grammy Award–winning conductor and AMFS alumnus Leonard Slatkin begins this concert with his own Schubertiade: An Orchestral Fantasy—a 21st-century reimagining of the musical soirees that Schubert hosted during his brief life. You’ll hear familiar snippets from Schubert’s works along with mashups influenced by more recent composers.
Joan Tower’s Love Returns began as a simple piano piece she wrote in memory of her husband of 50 years. The current piece is a saxophone concerto which expands one of the themes from that original work. Co-commissioned by the Aspen Music Festival and School, it features the incomparable Steven Banks.
Long before “world music” became popular, Dvořák composed his ever-popular “New World” Symphony, which Leonard Bernstein described as “truly multinational in its foundations.” Drawing on rhythms from his native Bohemia and inspired by the indigenous melodies and wide-open spaces of the United States, Dvořák created an enduring masterpiece which was an immediate triumph at its 1893 Carnegie Hall premiere.
LEONARD SLATKIN: Schubertiade: An Orchestral Fantasy
JOAN TOWER: Love Returns (AMFS Co-Commission)
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DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 9 in E minor, op. 95, “From the New World”
Multiple Grammy Award–winning conductor and AMFS alumnus Leonard Slatkin begins this concert with his own Schubertiade: An Orchestral Fantasy—a 21st-century reimagining of the musical soirees that Schubert hosted during his brief life. You’ll hear familiar snippets from Schubert’s works along with mashups influenced by more recent composers.
Joan Tower’s Love Returns began as a simple piano piece she wrote in memory of her husband of 50 years. The current piece is a saxophone concerto which expands one of the themes from that original work. Co-commissioned by the Aspen Music Festival and School, it features the incomparable Steven Banks.
Long before “world music” became popular, Dvořák composed his ever-popular “New World” Symphony, which Leonard Bernstein described as “truly multinational in its foundations.” Drawing on rhythms from his native Bohemia and inspired by the indigenous melodies and wide-open spaces of the United States, Dvořák created an enduring masterpiece which was an immediate triumph at its 1893 Carnegie Hall premiere.
LEONARD SLATKIN: Schubertiade: An Orchestral Fantasy
JOAN TOWER: Love Returns (AMFS Co-Commission)
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DVOŘÁK: Symphony No. 9 in E minor, op. 95, “From the New World”

