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Sarasota Music Festival 2024

Arts and Entertainment

May 21, 2024

From: Sarasota Music Festival

This summer, the 60th Anniversary Festival breaks musical boundaries, drawing from sounds of jazz and bluegrass and showcasing performers skilled in improvisation.

New delights, fresh insights, and a bounty of noteworthy classics.

This is a musical journey unlike any you’ve taken before.

Sunday, June 2 at 4:00 pm

60th Anniversary Concert

The 60th Anniversary Festival begins with a program that unites the past, present, and future. With Music Director Jeffrey Kahane on harpsichord, SMF alum Marianne Gedigian shimmers in a work from the archives—Francois Couperin’s elegant Le Rossignol en amour (The Nightingale in Love). Bohuslav Martin?’s mid-20th-century Sonata, written on Cape Cod, offers a thought-provoking contrast with its jazz infused rhythms. Festival alum and gifted improviser Sæunn Thorsteinsdóttir steps into the spotlight with Jane Antonia Cornish’s enthralling Portrait for solo cello, written in 2015 yet imbued with a sense of timeless wonder. Arensky’s gorgeous Piano Trio No. 1, a quintessential example of glorious Romanticism, anchors this anniversary celebration.

Program

COUPERIN Le Rossignol en Amour
MARTIN?    Flute Sonata
JANE ANTONIA CORNISH    Portrait
ARENSKY    Piano Trio No. 1

Location: Holley Hall

Thursday, June 6 at 4:30 pm

Two, Three, Four

Combine these 20th-century works for two, three, and four musicians, and the result is an intriguing concert that expands horizons. Written in 1994, Jean Françaix’s lighthearted Trio for Oboe, Bassoon, and Piano is charming and witty. Folk and classical idioms intertwine in Erwin Schulhoff’s 1925 Duo for Violin and Cello, while Maurice Ravel’s revolutionary encounter with jazz reverberates throughout his electrifying second Sonata for Violin and Piano. The Borromeo String Quartet, heralded for their “edge-of-the-seat performances” (Boston Globe), takes on the intelligent intensity of the String Quartet No. 6 by Polish composer Gra?yna Bacewicz.

Program

FRANÇAIX    Trio for Oboe, Bassoon, and Piano
SCHULHOFF    Duo for Violin and Cello
RAVEL    Violin Sonata No. 2
BACEWICZ    String Quartet No. 6

Location: Holley Hall

Friday, June 7 at 7:30 pm

Bach and Beyond

Festival faculty, fellows, and the Borromeo String Quartet join forces for music separated by time yet linked by raw emotion, startling innovation, and inspiring creativity. Festival faculty Jeff Scott’s Passion for Bach and Coltrane proceeds from the opening of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Goldberg Variations and ventures boldly down unexpected avenues. Jeffrey Kahane plays the role of keyboard maverick in Bach’s thrilling Brandenburg Concerto No. 5. The Borromeo String Quartet interprets a piece from Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier, the “Old Testament” of keyboard music, transformed by the ensemble’s violist Nicholas Kitchen. Returning SMF faculty Paul Neubauer joins the Borromeo String Quartet for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s unparalleled String Quintet No. 4—one of the greatest chamber works ever composed.

Program

JEFF SCOTT (composer/arranger)    Movements from Passion for Bach and Coltrane
J.S. BACH  Brandenburg Concerto No. 5
J.S. BACH  (arr. NIcholas Kitchen)  Prelude and Fugue in E-flat Minor/D-sharp Minor from The Well-Tempered Clavier
MOZART    String Quintet No. 4

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Saturday, June 8 at 7:30 pm

Beethoven and Mendelssohn

Beethoven and Mendelssohn are icons of classical music.Don’t miss the chance to hear two of the most popular composers of all time. The not-to-be missed concert also features the Festival debut of two spectacular artists. Conductor Stephanie Childress makes her Festival debut with the music of Indian-American composer Reena Esmail, who weaves Hindustani ragas and Western classical techniques in the captivating, tuneful 11-minute Teen Murti ( Three Statues ). SMF Alumna Rachel Breen takes time out from her thriving European career to make her Festival solo debut with Ludwig van Beethoven’s bold Piano Concerto No. 1. The program concludes with a final first—Felix Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 1, composed when he was just 15 and bursting with youthful vigor.

Program

REENA ESMAIL    Teen Murti
BEETHOVEN    Piano Concerto No. 1
FELIX MENDELSSOHN    Symphony No. 1

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Sunday, June 9 at 2:30 pm

Rising Stars 1

Festival fellows perform movements from their favorite chamber works. This concert includes music by Brahms, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, and more.

Location: Holley Hall

Thursday, June 13 at 4:30 pm

Artist Showcase
Something Old, Something New

Treasured masterpieces and novel experiences highlight the unique talents of this year’s Festival artists. The consummate perfectionist, Maurice Duruflé allowed only a few of his compositions—like his famous Requiem—to be published. Written for the unusual combination of flute, violin, and piano, his breathtaking Trio is among the few chamber works he composed. Modeled after Mozart and written early in his career, Ludwig van Beethoven’s Quintet in E-flat Major is almost symphonic in scope. Harnessing the magic of spontaneous live performance, two exciting young Festival faculty—Tessa Lark and Mike Block—join Jeffrey Kahane for an impromptu take on the famous theme from Dvo?ák’s “New World” Symphony. Dvo?ák’s emotionally charged Piano Trio No. 4 unfolds in a series of vividly colorful dumka, or poetic elegies.

Program

DURUFLÉ    Prelude, Recitative and Variations
BEETHOVEN  Quintet in E-flat Major, Op. 16
DVO?ÁK    Improvisations on Largo from the “New World” Symphony
DVO?ÁK    Piano Trio No. 4 (Dumky)

Location: Holley Hall

Friday, June 14 at 7:30 pm

Tales and Tributes

Tales and tributes come to life in vibrant musical colors. The teenage Richard Strauss pays homage to Mozart and Mendelssohn in his strikingly original E-flat Serenade for Winds. Subtitled “A Romance,” Ralph Vaughan Williams’s bittersweet The Lark Ascending brings pastoral innocence to life through rhapsodic solos that sound deceptively simple. Jeff Scott’s Trail of Tears tells the story of his great-great-grandfather, of Cherokee descent, who was among the 60,000 Native Americans forcibly ejected from their homes in the 19th century. Written in 1876 and bearing the dedication “For My Nation,” Antonín Dvo?ák’s Quintet in G Major adds double bass to the traditional string quartet, opening leagues of musical depth to the work that helped launch his international career.

Program

R. STRAUSS  Serenade
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS  The Lark Ascending
JEFF SCOTT  Trail of Tears
DVO?ÁK    String Quintet in G Major, Op. 77

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Saturday, June 15 at 7:30 pm

American Soundscapes

This one-night-only musical event sums up the spirit of the 2024 Festival—unbound, uninhibited, and genuinely transformative. Hailstork’s beautifully evocative Sonata da Chiesa—“church sonata” in the Baroque era—reflects his personal fascination with cathedrals. Written for Benny Goodman, Copland’s dynamic Clarinet Concerto is the only conductor-led piece on the program. Tessa Lark, Mike Block, and Jeffrey Kahane improvise on beloved American songs, while Lark and Block duet with traditional fiddle tunes. The perfumed world of 18th-century France collides with 21st-century jazz in Block’s arrangement of Dieupart’s Sarabande, then Block leads Festival fellows in an exhilarating, spur-of-the-moment jam. Lark puts her distinctive stamp on bluegrass legend Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” and the experience culminates with Iniche Cosebe, Block’s quasi-improvised work inspired by “thank you very much” in the language of the Mandinka people.

Program

HAILSTORK Sonata da Chiesa
COPLAND    Clarinet Concerto
Improvisations on Beloved American Songs
Traditional Fiddle Tunes
DIEUPART (arr. Mike Block)  Sarabande
Arr. Mike Block with SMF fellows  Global Music Collaboration
MONROE (arr. Teddy Abrams)  Blue Moon of Kentucky
MIKE BLOCK  Iniche Cosebe

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Sunday, June 16 at 2:30 pm

Rising Stars 2

Festival fellows perform movements from their favorite chamber works. This concert includes music by Beethoven, Dvo?ák, Schubert, and more.

Location: Holley Hall

Wednesday, June 19 at 1:00 pm

Levin Lecture

Robert Levin discusses the art of improvisation. Come prepared with a list of tunes, as Levin will improvise upon melodies the audience suggests.

Location: Holley Hall

Thursday, June 20 at 4:30 pm

Artist Showcase
Lustrous Sounds

The final Artist Showcase of the 2024 Festival presents virtuosity in many guises. New SMF faculty member Benjamin Beilman, hailed for his “dreamy lyricism” and “heated intensity” (The New York Times), performs Johann Sebastian Bach’s unaccompanied Partita No. 3, incorporating improvised ornamentation Bach would have expected, but which is highly unusual today. SMF faculty revel in the jazzy Sextet Francis Poulenc wrote in 1932 as “an homage to the wind instruments I have loved from the moment I began composing.” Finnish American composer Ilari Kaila’s entrancing Hum and Drum (2017), performed by Karen Ouzounian and Jean Schneider, fuses romantic lyricism and mesmerizing drones. Ernst von Dohnányi’s Serenade possesses drama belied by its seemingly lighthearted title.

Program

J.S. BACH  Violin Partita No. 3
POULENC    Sextet
ILARI KAILA  Hum and Drum
DOHNÁNYI  Serenade

Location: Holley Hall

Friday, June 21 at 2:30 pm

Rising Stars 3

Festival fellows perform movements from their favorite chamber works. This concert includes music by Mendelssohn, Françaix, Brahms, and more.

Location: Holley Hall

Friday, June 21 at 7:30 pm

Romantic Reveries

Delight in the richness of 19th-century Romanticism. The journey starts before the era begins with Ludwig van Beethoven’s 1793 Octet, written when the composer was a student of Classical master Joseph Haydn. Almost a century later, Tchaikovsky penned his lush Souvenir de Florence after a trip to Italy. As Tchaikovsky wrote to a patron, “I wrote it with the greatest enthusiasm and the least exertion.” Possibly born of his infatuation with a student, Franck’s late 19th-century Piano Quintet bursts with yearning melodies, its passionate extremes vaulted by Festival fellows side-by-side with faculty artists Sheryl Staples, Brinton Smith, and Robert Levin.

Program

BEETHOVEN   Octet
TCHAIKOVSKY  Souvenir de Florence
FRANCK   Piano Quintet

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Saturday, June 22 at 7:30 pm

Passion and Pride

Jeffrey Kahane’s cross-genre, cross-disciplinary talents are on full display as he both performs and conducts Ravel’s playful, virtuosic Piano Concerto. On a quest to write enjoyable music, Ravel combines his enthusiasm for jazz with a slow movement so exquisite that it led him to exclaim, “That flowing phrase! How I worked over it, bar by bar! It nearly killed me!” Tolstoy’s comment, “Music is the shorthand of emotion,” sparked Anna Clyne’s miniconcerto for cello. Having given the world premiere of Shorthand in 2022, Festival alumna Karen Ouzounian presides over the Sarasota premiere of this elegiac, mercurial work. The Festival concludes with Brahms’ magnificent Symphony No. 1, a perfect balance of passion and structure that took its composer decades to create.

Program

RAVEL  Piano Concerto in G Major
ANNA CLYNE  Shorthand
BRAHMS Symphony No. 1

Location: Sarasota Opera House

Date: June 2 - 22, 2024

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