Jean-Marie Zeitouni is looking forward to his return to Boulder and the CMF orchestra
By Peter Alexander

Jean-Marie Zeitouni. Photo by David Curleigh.
Boulder’s Colorado Music Festival (CMF) opens its 2016 season Thursday (7:30 p.m. June 30, Chautauqua Auditorium), and no one is more excited than music director Jean-Marie Zeitouni.
“I’ve been looking forward to this for more than 10 months,” he says. “It’s the occasion for me to connect again with the orchestra.”
Titled “Narratives of Heroism,” the concert will open with Beethoven’s Overture to Egmont and close with Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique. In between, violinist Jennifer Koh will perform a heroic feat of her own, playing the wildly virtuosic Violin Concerto of Finnish composer/conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen.
Koh was scheduled to appear at CMF in 2014, when Zeitouni first appeared at Chautauqua as a candidate for music director. An accident forced her to cancel, so she is happy to finally get to Boulder.
“I love (the Salonen Concerto),” she says. “I think it’s a great piece. I’m so excited about playing it in Boulder!”

Jennifer Koh. Photo by Jürgen Frank.
Koh is known as an adventurous violinist who commissions and plays a lot of new music—32 premieres in seven days earlier this year!—but also gives stunning performances of the standard repertoire. “I get to experience different worlds through different composers,” she says.
“It could be Tchaikovsky, it could be Bach, it could be Brahms. Or it could be Salonen! I love that about my life as a musician.”
Salonen wrote the concerto in 2009 as a farewell gift to the Los Angeles Philharmonic, where he had been conductor for 17 years. A piece that borrows from diverse traditions, the concerto opens with a propulsive movement that reconfigures Bach’s solo violin music in a contemporary idiom. Another movement features rock drumming, and the final movement, “Adieux,” is a tender farewell.
“If you love classical music, you’re going to love this piece,” Koh says. “If you love music in general, you’re going to love this piece! It’s a great ride. It’s familiar and contemporary at the same time.”

Members of the CMF Festival Orchestra
The same might be said of the Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique: it is a familiar part of the orchestral repertoire, and yet it was a very daring, contemporary piece when it premiered in 1830—only three years after Beethoven’s death.
The story behind the work is part of its appeal. It was written for an Irish actress Berlioz had seen on stage but never met. The music describes his fantasies, ending with a fevered “Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath” after the anti-hero’s execution for murder.

Harriet Smithson. Portrait by Claude-Marie Debufe
Understandably, the actress, Harriet Smithson, was somewhat alarmed by the composer’s obsession with her. Eventually they met, and she and Berlioz married in 1833, but they were never truly happy together.
That story is “very well known, but there’s much more than that,” Zeitouni says. “For the time it was written, the technique of composition and orchestration and form and poetic content—it’s an immense piece. I am looking forward to seeing what the CMF orchestra and I are able to draw out of this piece.
“I feel personally very close to it because of the French tradition.”
Other than Berlioz, there is very little of the French tradition on the summer’s orchestra programs—only the Debussy Nocturnes on one concert. There are works from the standard Viennese tradition: a Brahms symphony cycle and works by Mozart and Beethoven. There will be newer pieces and an all-Russian program. (See the whole season schedule here.)

Music Director Laureate Michael Christie
CMF Music Director Laureate Michael Christie returns for a concert July 14 (7:30 p.m., Chautauqua) with pianist Orion Weiss. Zeitouni offers his first Mahler at CMF, Das Lied von der Erde (7:30 p.m. Aug. 4 at Chautauqua) with soloists Kelly O’Connor, mezzo, and Richard Cox, tenor.
Adventurous listeners will relish The Tragedy of Carmen, a reconfiguration of Bizet’s opera for chamber orchestra and a small cast that was created by theater director Peter Brook (7:30 p.m. July 10, Chautauqua). Brook’s version “is the pure essence of Carmen,” Zeitouni says
In addition to the events listed here, there’s a wide range of chamber programs and a contemporary music series at the Dairy Center. That’s a lot of variety, but don’t ask Zeitouni to pick his favorites. “That’s like choosing one of my children!” he laughs.
“I’m excited about everything!”
NOTE: A slightly longer version of this article will be published in Boulder Weekly July 30.
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Colorado Music Festival

Chautauqua Auditorium home of the Colorado Music Festival
Opening Night: Narratives of Heroism
Jean-Marie Zeitouni, conductor
Jenifer Koh, violin
7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 30
Chautauqua Auditorium