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the orchestra world

what I would have been playing this week – 2/1/21 edition

Sit back and enjoy the exhilarating emotional journey and melodic brilliance of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth. Thomas Adès’ new concerto – described as a successor to Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue by The Boston Globe â€“ will be delectable in the hands of his longtime friend Kirill Gerstein. Lithuanian composer Raminta Å erkÅ¡nyt? opens the program with her blazing evocation of the power of fire.

Program

Raminta Å erkÅ¡nyt?: Fires
Thomas Adès: Piano Concerto
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 5

Artists

Carlos Kalmarconductor
Kirill Gerstein, piano
Oregon Symphony

This one hurts! First of all, it’s been quite a long time since I’ve played Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony on a subscription concert (we did a big chunk of it on one of our [classical composer] vs. [non-classical composer/artist] a while ago1, but I really do have a soft spot in my heart for this piece. And with our phenomenal new principal horn Jeff Garza, it would be a magical slow movement horn solo for sure. There would have been a work by a female composer – I’m not at all familiar with her output, I’m going to have to explore that – and that’s a really good thing, too. To top it all off, a new piano concerto by Thomas Adés, which would have been fiendishly difficult for all involved (as I remember his violin concerto Concentric Paths to be!), played by the inimitable Kirill Gernstein. Yep, this would have been an enjoyable week. Damn pandemic!

1My favorite concert note ever: Note: Neither Tchaikovsky nor Drake will perform on this concert. The performance will include lyrics with explicit language. 

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