Rarely performed Mozart Mass in C Minor will be heard in Boulder, Greeley

Boulder Chamber Chorale and Chamber Orchestra join forces Friday

By Peter Alexander Oct. 4 at 12:10 p.m.

Conductor Bahman Saless and the Boulder Chamber Orchestra (BCO) will join together with Vicki Burrichter and the Boulder Chamber Chorale to perform one of the least known of Mozart’s major works Friday (7:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church; details below).

The C Minor Mass is, alongside the Requiem, one of two major choral works that Mozart left unfinished. Probably because it was never finished, and also because it is a difficult piece to put together, it is not performed very often. 

Bahman Saless with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra

Mozart began this very large-scale setting of the Ordinary of the Mass—those portions that are performed year-round as opposed to texts that are specific to individual days of the year—in 1782, soon after his marriage to Constanze Weber. Mozart said he started the Mass in honor of his marriage, but he never finished the work. 

Mozart

The opening Kyrie movement and the Gloria were completed, as were two sections of the Credo, as well as the Sanctus and Benedictus. The remainder of the Credo and the Agnus Dei text were never written. On the basis of the completed movements, a full Mass would have been an extensive work.

Mozart and Constanze visited the composer’s father Leopold in Salzburg in October of 1782, with the completed portions of the Mass in hand. At least some portions of Mozart’s score were performed as part of a service in Salzburg, including Constanze singing Et incarnatus est, a beautiful and difficult soprano solo. What else was performed is unknown, and Mozart never wrote another note of the Mass after the visit to Salzburg.

Constanze Mozart. Portrait by Joseph Lange

One theory is that Mozart had started the mass as a gesture to his very religious father, who had not approved of the marriage with Constanze. Having mollified the testy Leopold during his visit, he had no reason to write more, as there were no performance possibilities for a large-scale Mass setting in Vienna, due to the policies of the Austrian Emperor Joseph II.

In any case, the Mass in C minor falls at a transition point in Mozart’s life, at the time not only of his marriage but of his move to Vienna and his emergence as an independent composer. It also represents a new development in his musical style, which came about from his study of the Baroque masterpieces of Bach and Handel. The Mass contains several large-scale fugues and a few movements for double-chorus, which add to the complexity and difficulty of the choral parts.

“Every movement has a different challenge,” Burrichter, who rehearsed the chorus, says. “The double choruses certainly are challenging, in terms of listening to each other, and the fugues are extremely difficult and long. But in spite of the difficulties, we’ve all been thrilled with learning it. As Mozart is, it’s so beautifully melodic, it’s so emotionally powerful, and it’s a treat.”

Boulder Chamber Chorale with Burrichter (far right)

Saless, who will conduct the performance, shares Burrichter’s appreciation for Mozart’s music. “It’s a beautiful piece, and it has incredibly gorgeous arias,” he says. 

Among the arias, Burrichter points specifically to the one that Mozart wrote for Constanze. “The Et incarnatus est, one of the great soprano solos, is just one of the best things he ever wrote,” she says. “It’s really stunning!”

To sum up the Mass, Burrichter particularly likes to quote Patrick Mackie, who wrote in his book Mozart in Motion that “The C-Minor mass is . . . a sort of total statement on everything music could be . . . (It) has a surging monumentality and a giddy, athletic zip.”

The concert will open with the Colorado premiere of Summation, a brief piece for chorus and orchestra by composers Jim Klein and Ian Jamison. The performance by the BCO was commissioned by Klein, a successful businessman and entrepreneur who works as a visual artist in a studio outside Greeley and owns an art gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona. 

“We’re really delighted to showcase music by local Colorado composers,” Saless says. “It’s obvious this piece was inspired by a spiritual experience.”

Klein explains that source of inspiration in his program notes, where he writes “On my daily early morning walk down our farm lane over the decades, I have often asked the question, ‘Who am I?’” One day, while walking with his dog, he writes that the answer came to him in a text that begins “God is in me.” 

WIth that thought in mind, he worked with Jamison to express the text in music. “Hopefully,” he writes, “this internal investment will pass on for future generations.”

In addition to the Boulder performance Friday, the program will be presented at the University of Northern Colorado Commons in Greeley at 3 p.m. Sunday. Links for the purchase of tickets are listed below.

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“Mozart Mass and More”
Boulder Chamber Orchestra with Boulder Chamber Chorale
Bahman Saless, conductor, with sopranos Szilvia Schranz and Moira Murphy; tenor Thomas Bocchu; and baritone Tyler Padgett

  • Jim Klein and Ian Jamison: Summation
  • Mozart: Mass in C Minor

7:30 p.m. Friday Oct. 6
First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St, Boulder

TICKETS

3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 8
University of Northern Colorado Commons
Beethoven in the Rockies Concert Series

TICKETS

Boulder Chamber Orchestra opens 2023-24 season Saturday

Both violin and piano soloists featured Sept. 16

By Peter Alexander Sept. 12 at 4 p.m.

The Boulder Chamber Orchestra is first out of the gate of the city’s five orchestras that present a season every year.

Bahman Saless with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra. Photo by Keith Bobo.

Their opening concert for the fall of 2023–24, featuring music by Mozart, Beethoven and Dvořák, will be the coming Saturday (Sept. 16 at 8 p.m. at the Boulder Adventist Church; program below) and will feature solo appearances by violinist Jubal Fulks and pianist Petar Klasan. Music director Bahman Saless will conduct.

This is ahead of all other local orchestras—the Boulder Philharmonic, the Boulder Symphony, the Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra and the University Symphony—by two weeks or more.

If there is a theme to the season, it might be the presentation of three different piano concertos by Beethoven by three different soloists: Concerto No. 3 played by Petar Klasan Sept. 16; Concerto No. 2 played by Adam Zukiewicz Oct. 21; and the “Emperor” Concerto played by Jennifer Hayghe in 2024. There is also the usual mixture of very familiar composers (Beethoven! Mozart!) with quirky, unfamiliar composers (Jim Klein and Ian Jamison! Maxim Goulet!) that reflect Saless’ eclectic tastes.

December offers the world premiere of a flute concerto written for the BCO and principal flutist Cobus DuToit by Czech composer Sylvie Bodorova. Compiled from previous works, the concerto was suggested to Saless this past summer when he met Bodorova in a conducting workshop.

Jubal Fulks

The “Romance” in the title of Saturday’s opening concert comes from Dvořák’s Romance in F minor for violin and orchestra. A gently enchanting piece, it was derived from the slow movement of the composer’s String Quartet no. 5 in F minor. The soloist, Jubal Fulks, teachers violin and heads the string area at the University of Northern Colorado.

Mozart’s Symphony No. 35 has a somewhat complicated backstory, having been preceded by two different serenades Mozart wrote for the Haffner family of Salzburg. The first, written for a wedding in 1776, is known today as the “Haffner Serenade.” Portions of the second, commissioned for the ennoblement of Siegmund Haffner in 1782, became Symphony No. 35, first performed in Vienna in 1783.

Beethoven composed his Third Piano Concerto in or around 1800—the exact date is disputed—and gave the first performance on a concert in April 1803 on which he also presented first performances of his Symphony No. 2 in D major and his oratorio Christ on the Mount of Olives. Although the concerto was complete, at least in the composer’s head, he had not yet written it all down. Ignaz von Seyfried, a friend who turned pages at the performance, later reported that almost all the pages were blank! 

Petar Klasan

“He played nearly all the solo part from memory since, as was so often the case, he had not had time to set it all down on paper,” Seyfried wrote.

With BCO, the soloist will be Croatian pianist Petar Klasan, who fortunately has studied Beethoven’s completed score. A prize winner in several European competitions, Klasan, 21, is a fellow of the International Music Academy in the Principality of Liechtenstein. He currently lives in Vienna, where he continues his studies and performs with “Con Brio,” a concert series that he founded in 2018.

A full listing of the BCO’s 2023–24 season, and access to ticket purchases, can be found on the orchestra’s Web page.

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Boulder Chamber Orchestra
2023 Fall Concert Schedule

“Romance and Intrigue”
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With Petar Klasan, piano, and Jubal Fulks, violin

  • Dvořák: Romance in F minor for violin and orchestra
  • Mozart: Symphony No. 35 in D major (“Hefner”)
  • Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor

8 pm. Saturday, Sep. 16
Boulder Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave.

“Mozart Mass and  More”
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
Boulder Chamber Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, conductor

  • Jim Klein and Ian Jamison: Summation  for choir and orchestra
  • Mozart: Mass in C minor

7:30 p.m. Friday Oct. 6
First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce, St. Boulder

“Capturing the Folk Spirit”
Mini-Chamber Concert 1
Hsing-sa Hsu, piano, with members of the orchestra

  • Bartók: Romanian Folk Songs for violin and piano
  • Dvořák: Quintet for piano and strings in A major
  • Brahms: Klavietstücke, op. 118 no. 3

7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21
Boulder Adventist Church

Holidays Celebration
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
Nadia Artman, guest conductor
With Adam Zukiewicz, piano, and Cobus DuToit, flute

  • Mozart: Overture to Marriage of Figaro
  • Maxime Goulet: Chocolats Symphonique
  • Sylvie Bodorova: Concerto for Flute and Orchestra (2023; world premiere)
  • Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat, op. 19

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16
Boulder Adventist Church

TICKETS for all concerts available at the Boulder Chamber Orchestra Web site.

NOTE: Correction of spell-corrector errors, 9/12: paragraph 2, the violin soloists name is Jubal Fulks, not Forks; paragraph 4 and penultimate paragraph, the soloists name for the Third Concerto is Petar Klasan, not Peter.

Grace Notes: Sonic Alchemy at Boulder Bach; piano quintets with winds

Mozart, Pärt and Vasks at the Dairy; Mozart and Rimsky-Korsakov chamber music

By Peter Alexander April 5 at 11:45 p.m.

The Boulder Bach Festival continues to explore musical connections across time, as their upcoming concert (4 p.m. Saturday, April 8; details below) brings together works by Mozart with contemporary works by Arvo Pärt and Pēteris Vasks.

A composer from the Baltic nation of Estonia, Pärt is known for his development of a style he calls “tintinnabulation,” in which fragments of sound recur to suggest the ringing of bells. His music is deeply influenced by the mysticism of Byzantine Christianity, and in this concert will be contrasted with the rationality of the European Enlightenment, as reflected in the music of Mozart.

The two are conflated in Pärt’s Mozart-Adagio, a work for violin and piano that balances Mozart’s style and Pärt’s “tintunnabuli” and brings their two centuries—the 18th and the 20th—into close conjunction.

Vasks hails from another Baltic country, Latvia, where he was trained as a violinist and double-bass player. His highly original style has been described as “spiritual,” “powerfully evocative” and “imagematic”—i.e., creating a strong visual impression. Apart from his musical works, he is known primarily for his devotion to environmental causes, which often appear as the subjects of his works.

The performance, which includes two of Mozart’s keyboard fantasies, will be recorded for later release. That will be the second CD release from the Boulder Bach Festival, which has already issued a joint CD and Blu-ray recordings of music from the 2022 Boulder Bach Festival. That recording, “Boulder Bach Festival” on the Sono Lumnus label, can be purchased from the recording studio

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“Sonic Alchemy”
Boulder Bach Festival: Mina Gajić, piano; YuEun Ki, violin; Coleman Itzkoff, cello

  • Mozart: Fantasia in C minor, K475
  • Arvo Pärt: Fratres for cello and piano
  • Pēteris Vasks: The White Scenery for piano solo
    Interior Castle for violin and cello
  • Pärt: Spiegel im Spiegel for violin and piano
  • Mozart: Fantasia in D minor, K397Pärt: Mozart-Adagio for piano trio

4 p.m. Saturday, April 8
The Gordon Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center

TICKETS   

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The Boulder Chamber Orchestra (BCO) will present the last of its 2022-23 Mini-Chamber concerts Saturday (7:30 p.m. April 8; details below), featuring the music of Rimsky-Korsakov and Mozart.

Pianist David Korevaar, who has been the featured artist for the mini-chamber concerts this season, returns to play two quintets for piano and winds with members of the BCO. It is notable that both works feature the wind players as much as the piano.

David Korevaar. Photo by Matthew Dine.

In 1876, Rimsky-Korsakov wrote a String Sextet for a competition sponsored by the Russian Musical Society. After completing the Sextet, he decided to write a separate piece for piano and winds. The composer described the work in his autobiography as follows:

“The First movement, Allegro con brio, (is) in the classic style of Beethoven. The Second Movement, Andante, contained a good fugue for the wind instruments with a very free accompaniment in the piano. In the finale, Allegretto vivace, I wrote in rondo form. Of interest is the middle section where I wrote cadenzas for the flute, the clarinet and the horn to be played in turns. Each was in the character of the instrument and each was interrupted by the bassoon entering by octave leaps.”

Mozart’s Quintet was written for a concert the composer presented in 1784, when he was at the height of his success in Vienna. In came right after thee piano concertos, K449, K450 and K451, and can thus be considered virtually a chamber concerto for piano, although the winds each have their own solo moments as well. After finishing the quintet, Mozart wrote to his father, “I consider it the best work I have ever written.”

The Quintet has the same three-movement structure as a concerto. The first has a slow introduction followed by an allegro where each instrument has its own theme. That is followed by a gentle slow movement and a rondo that, like the central section of Rimsky-Korsakov’s finale, leads to cadenzas for all five players. 

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Mini-Chamber Concert 3
David Korevaar, piano, with members of the Boulder Chamber Orchestra

  • Rimsky-Korsakov: Quintet for piano and winds in B-flat major
  • Mozart: Quintet for piano and winds in E-flat major, K452

7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 8
Boulder Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave.

TICKETS

Rarely heard, major work by Beethoven Saturday

Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Boulder Chamber Chorale: Mass in C

By Peter Alexander March 30 at 5:45 p.m.

“What are the chances to go to a Beethoven concert and hear something you never heard before?”

Bahman Saless with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra.

Bahman Saless is talking about the next concert he will conduct with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday (April 1; details below). The orchestra, with the Boulder Chamber Chorale and soloists, will present Beethoven’s Mass in C major, written at the height of the composer’s fame and accomplishment but rarely performed today. The performance will be introduced by Beethoven’s very dramatic Overture to Coriolanus.

“This is your chance to imagine yourself, having lived in Beethoven’s time, and the master has just announced a new piece of music and you’re going to go hear it,” Saless says. “To me that’s really cool!”

Vicki Burrichter, who leads the Boulder Chamber Chorale and prepared the singers for the performance, thinks the Mass in C should be better known and appreciated. “I don’t really understand why its not more popular,” she says. “I think it’s one of the best choral pieces there is. I absolutely love it.”

When Beethoven wrote his Mass in C in 1807, he was an accomplished composer who already had many of his greatest works to his credit. He had completed his first four symphonies, his first four piano concertos, nine string quartets including the “Razumovksy” quartets Op. 59, and his Violin Concerto, among other works. He would soon complete his Fifth and Sixth symphonies.

Nonetheless, he is believed to have been less secure undertaking the Mass in C. It was his first setting of what had been one of the most important musical forms of the 18th century and before. Furthermore, the Mass was commissioned by Prince Nikolaus Esterhazy, which meant that Beethoven was following in the footsteps of his teacher Joseph Haydn, who had written six highly successful mass settings for the Esterhazy court.

The finished Mass is considered a major work, if somewhat unorthodox for the times—like many of the pieces Beethoven wrote. The musicians didn’t particularly like it and the rehearsals were chaotic, with only one of five altos in the chorus present, leaving the others to sightread the premiere. 

Vicki Burrichter with the Boulder Chamber Chorale

The first performance was not a success. The Prince disliked the Mass, and the work was seldom performed afterwards. Beethoven did only portions of the Mass once in December 1808, on a famous concert that included premieres of the Fifth and Sixth symphonies, the Fourth Piano Concerto and the Fantasy for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra.

Performances remain rare, but contemporary judgment of the Mass is more positive. Burrichter summed it up, saying “It’s been overshadowed by (Beethoven’s) Missa Solemnis and the Ninth (Symphony). It’s very dramatic, as only Beethoven can be, it’s immediately emotional from the first bar, and it continues that way the entire time. What Beethoven does with it is the kind of thing that only Beethoven can do.

“It’s not the Ninth in terms of overwhelming power, but I think it comes mighty close.”

The mass lasts less than an hour. To open the concert, Saless selected another work by Beethoven, his Overture to Coriolanus. “To me, that is the most perfect piece of dramatic music,” he says. “There is just nothing like it, because it’s eight minutes long, it carries emotions and content that could be a Mahler Symphony!”

Saless also discovered another reason that Coriolanus makes an ideal opener for the Mass. The overture is written in C minor, and after all of its drama it ends very softly with three unison Cs. This sets up the beginning of the Mass, which begins with the basses singing a unison C. That is followed by a move to C major, which will have immediate impact in performance.

Saless thought, “what kind of effect would that have on the audience?” And he decided it would be “a very Beethoven-esque approach to affecting the audience mentally and emotionally! And the connection from the C minor to just C and then C major makes a lot of sense.”

For audience members hearing the Mass for the first time—which will probably be most—Burrichter has some advice. “The Kyrie that starts (the first movement of the Mass) is just melodically so beautiful. People should listen for the beauty of that melody and then listen for its return at the end. And listen for the way that the soloists intertwine with the orchestra and the chorus.

“I think people will absolutely love it.”

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Beethoven: Mass in C
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With the Boulder Chamber Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, artistic director
Cristin Colvin, soprano; Gabrielle Razafinjatovo, mezzo-soprano; Paul Wolf, tenor; Brandon Tyler Padgett, bass

7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 1
Boulder Seventh-Day Adventist Church
345 Mapleton, Boulder

TICKETS

Takács Quartet’s Dusinberre appears as soloist in Brahms Concerto

Concert with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra will be Saturday

By Peter Alexander Feb. 9 at 2:10 p.m.

“You know you’re going to want more later,” Bahman Saless says about the Brahms Violin Concerto.

“It’s like German chocolate cake. It’s heavy, it’s sweet, it’s filling—I love the entire piece!”

Edward Dusinberre

Saless will conduct this tasty concerto with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra on Saturday (7:30 p.m., Feb. 11; details below) with violinist Edward Dusinberre of the Takács Quartet as soloist. Other works on the program will be Beethoven’s Overture to Egmont and Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 4 in A major (“Italian”).

Dusinberre has especially warm feelings for the concerto, which he learned as a student at the Royal College of Music in London. “I first performed the piece with an amateur orchestra in northwest England,” he wrote in an email communication. “My grandfather was playing in the viola section. 

“What I remember more than the actual concert was my Dad driving from many miles away, both to hear the concert and so that he could drive me south afterwards. I was . . . a bit insecure about how I had played. I cherish that memory of his reassuring presence as we drove late at night through the countryside.”

Dusinberre cherishes the concerto not only because of that memory, but also for its musical qualities. “I love the balance of drama and lyricism,” he wrote. “The first solo entrance and other sections are propulsive and intense, but the movement has moments of ethereal wonderment—those are some of my favorite passages in all music.”

Both Saless and Dusinberre singled out the slow movement for comment. “The slow movement is one of the greatest slow movements of any violin concerto,” the conductor says, while the soloist wrote that “after the serenity of the slow movement, the high-spirited, at times joking mood of the finale is a necessary foil and satisfying conclusion.”

Saless hopes that as they listen to the concerto, the audience will pay attention to how the violin and orchestra relate and interact. “Brahms wrote it as a piece of music where it isn’t necessarily always the orchestra that’s going to accompany the violin,” he explains.

“A lot of the melodic line is in the orchestra, which is fascinating. There are some incredible parts that require the listener to really listen to the orchestra.”

Bahman Saless with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra

Saless chose to open the concert with Beethoven’s Egmont Overture because it is such an ideal program opener. “It’s so powerful and captivating that it’s like Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony in eight minutes,” he says. And “it’s a great piece, not only because of the quality of it, but as far as marketing is concerned there are a lot of people that know it.”

Following the drama of Beethoven and the deep beauty of the Brahms, the program switches gears for the final piece, Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 4. Known as the “Italian” Symphony, it was begun when Mendelssohn was visiting Italy as a young man and is full of the cheery liveliness so often associated with that country. “It will be the jolliest piece I have ever done,” Mendelssohn wrote to his sister.

“To me it definitely does show that joy and brightness of Italy, and the energy and life of Italian culture,” Saless says. “It’s one of these pieces that as soon as I start listening to it or singing it, it doesn’t stop. It’s a very fun piece that I thought would be good compliment to a relatively heavy Brahms and Beethoven half (of the concert). It’s kind of a lighter, brighter piece, and also we’ve got such a great string section I thought it would be a really good showcase for them.”

Once again Saless wants to draw attention to the slow movement. “It’s simplicity at it best, short, very simple,” he says. “It also has a tiny bit of Bach. Mendelssohn was a huge fan of Johann Sebastian Bach, and it’s almost like an homage to him with the way that the basses have this little walking bass part that reminds you of a lot of Bach pieces.”

Saless and Dusinberre are both pleased to have the opportunity to work together. “I’m honored to have Ed perform with us,” Saless says. “I’m really, really looking forward to this.”

As for Dusinberre, in addition to his busy world-wide concert schedule with the Takács Quartet, he is happy to play a favorite concerto with the local musicians of the BCO. “Every now and again it’s great to return to works that I played before I joined the Takács,” he wrote. “It’s a joy to perform with Bahman and the BCO, many of whose players are friends or former students. There’s an inspiring spirit of community in the orchestra.

“I feel grateful to be part of that.”

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Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With Edward Dusinberre, violin

  • Beethoven: Overture to Egmont
  • Brahms: Violin Concerto in D major
  • Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4 in A major (“Italian”)

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11
Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave., Boulder

TICKETS  

Grace Notes: The familiar and unfamiliar from Boulder orchestras

World premiere from Boulder Symphony, chamber music from BCO

By Peter Alexander Jan. 12 at 3:10 p.m.

The Boulder Symphony and conductor Devin Patrick Hughes will start the new year with a new piece—the world premiere of the Oboe Concerto by CU graduate John Clay Allen.

John Clay Allen

The premiere will be included on concerts at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday (Jan. 13 and 14) in the Gordon Gamm Theater of the Dairy Arts Center. Other works on the same program are the much loved “New World” Symphony of Dvořák, the Overture to The Song of Hiawatha by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, and music from the film Jurassic Park by John Williams.

Allen, who received his DMA in composition in 2019, has been active as a pianist and conductor in addition to his work as a composer. The soloist for the concerto will be the Boulder Symphony’s principal oboist, Ingrid Anderson.

One of the most familiar works in the symphony repertoire, the “New World” Symphony includes music inspired by Longfellow’s epic poem The Song of Hiawatha. The poem was familiar to Dvořák, who once planned an opera on the subject. That connection is highlighted by the inclusion of Coleridge-Taylor’s Overture to his trio of cantatas, The Song of Hiawatha.

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Boulder Symphony, Devin Patrick Hughes, conductor
With Ingrid Anderson, oboe

  • John Clay Allen: Oboe Concert (World premiere)
  • John Williams: Themes from Jurassic Park
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Overture to The Song of Hiawatha
  • Dvořák: Symphony No. 9 in E minor (“From the New World”)

7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Jan. 13 and 14
Gordon Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center

TICKETS

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David Korevaar. Photo by Matthew Dine

Pianist David Korevaar returns for the second of two chamber music concerts with members of the Boulder Chamber Orchestra (BCO) at 7:30 p.m. Saturday (Jan. 14) at the Seventh Day Adventist Church in Boulder.

The program comprises two sextets for piano and woodwind quintet, one by the obscure composer Ludwig Thuille and one by the much more familiar Francis Poulenc. The third and final concert of Korevaar’s chamber series with the BCO, comprising quintets for piano with winds, will be April 8.

Thuille “is even more obscure than (his teacher) Rheinberger, which is saying something,” Korevaar says. Apart from the Sextet, his music is very rarely performed.

“The piece is wonderful, but it sounds very much of its time and place. (It represents) a nice late-Romantic idiom, with some occasional adventurous harmonies, (but) it doesn’t push boundaries in any way.

Poulenc’s Sextet is very popular with players and audiences alike. “It’s a classic,” Korevaar says. “If you think of one piece for piano and wind quintet, this is the piece you’ll think of. it’s very popular for good reason, filled with good infectious Poulenc-ey tunes, and the writing is brilliant for all the instruments. It’s just a marvelous, successful piece.”

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David Korevaar, piano, with members of the Boulder Chamber Orchestra

  • Ludwig Thuille: Sextet in B-flat major for piano and wind quintet, op 6
  • Francis Poulenc: Sextet for piano and wind quintet

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14
Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave., Boulder

TICKETS

From Nutcracker to a sing-along Messiah

A listing of Holiday performances by area musical organizations

By Peter Alexander

‘Tis the season, and the halls are alive with the sounds of Christmas.

The 2013 Holiday Festival by the College of Music in Macky Auditorium (Photo by Casey A. Cass/University of Colorado)

In the coming weeks, area musical organizations will offer performances ranging from The Nutcracker to Messiah, from Gregorian chant to Judy Collins, and from the Bach Christmas Oratorio to A Charlie Brown Christmas

In fact, the first Nutcrackers have already been completed, with more performances coming this weekend in Longmont (Dec. 3–4 with the Longmont Symphony and Boulder Ballet; see below for details, including links for tickets for all performances mentioned in this article). The Longmont performances include a “gentle Nutcracker,” an abridged, “sensory friendly” performance that welcomes neurodiverse audience members, their families and caregivers.

Boulder Ballet Nutcracker. Image by Amanda Tipton Photography

Other dance companies in the area offer The Nutcracker well into December and can easily be found on the Web; here I am listing the many musical groups in our area. This weekend the very popular CU Holiday Festival, with CU orchestras, bands and choirs starts the festivities on Friday at 7:30 in Macky Auditorium, with additional performances Saturday and Sunday (Dec 2–4). Check the Web page soon; some performances are close to selling out.

If you get enough “Rudolph” and “White Christmas” in the mall, several organizations offer alternative Holiday fare. Seicento Baroque Ensemble will present ”Noel: Christmas in the late Renaissance and early Baroque” over the coming weekend, Friday through Sunday (Dec. 2–4), in Denver, Boulder and Longmont. Ars Nova Singers will present their usual eclectic fare in the same cities over the following week (Dec. 9 & 11, 15 & 16). Their program, titled “Solstice,” includes Gregorian chant, Renaissance music based on chant, contemporary works for the time of solstice, and the premiere of director Tom Morgan’s own arrangement of the French carol “Un Flambeau, Jeanette, Isabella” (“Bring a torch, Jeanette, Isabella”).

The most wide-ranging program is surely that of The Boulder Bach Festival’s CORE (COmpass REsonance) Chamber Choir. Their “Christmas Across the Ages” program (Dec. 16 in the Broomfield Auditorium) offers exactly that, with selections from J.S. Bach’s Christmas Oratorio and Vince Guaraldi’s Charlie Brown Christmas, music by early American composer William Billings and songs by John Denver and Judy Collins. 

With their familiar penchant for embracing musical cultures around the world, the Boulder Chorale and conductor Vicki Burrichter will present “A Celtic Winter,” a program of traditional music performed with a Celtic ensemble led by Jessie Burns. The Boulder Chamber Orchestra offers “The Gift of Music” Dec. 17 (Boulder’s Seventh Day Adventist Church), including Handel arias sung by soprano Szilvia Schranz. Instrumental pieces will include Bach’s “Double” Violin Concerto in D minor, and Holiday selections.

If you wanted to hear Handel’s Messiah in Longmont, you will have to bring a score and sing along. The Longmont Symphony’s performance Dec. 17 is already sold out, but the Sing-Along Messiah Dec. 18 still has tickets available. The Boulder Philharmonic Brass will perform traditional songs of Christmas and Hanukkah at Mountain View Methodist Dec. 18. And with that, the musicians that I know about will pack up their cases and likely enjoy some eggnog. There are surely other events out there that have not come to my attention. With a little enterprise you can find those performances online, too.

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CU Holiday Festival
CU College of Music orchestras, bands and choirs

  • Traditional music of the Holiday season

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2
1 and 4 p.m. Saturday, Dev. 3
4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4
Macky Auditorium

TICKETS

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“Noel: Christmas in the late Renaissance an early Baroque”
Seicento Baroque Ensemble, Evanne Browne, artistic director
With Wesley Leffingwell, organ; and Joseph Howe, Baroque cello

  • Program includes music by Palestrina, Victoria, Sweelinck and Rossi.

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, St. Paul, Lutheran Church, Denver
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3. First United Methodist Church, Boulder
3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4, First Congregational Church, Longmont

TICKETS

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The Nutcracker ballet
Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor
With the Boulder Ballet

  • Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker

1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3 (“Gentle” Nutcracker: abridged, “sensory friendly” performance))
4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3
2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4

TICKETS

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“Solstice”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director
With John Gunther, saxophone

Program includes:

  • Gregorian Chant, Vox clara Ecce Intonat
  • Gabriel Jackson: Vox clara Ecce Intonat
  • Tomás Luis de Victoria: Ave regina caelorum
  • Bob Chilcott: The Shepherd’s Carol
  • Tom Morgan, arr: Un Flambeau, Jeanette, Isabella (premiere)

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9, First Congregational Church, Longmont
4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11, St. Paul Lutheran Church, Denver
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15, Mountain View Methodist Church, Boulder
7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 16, First United Methodist Church, Boulder
LIVESTREAM: 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11

TICKETS

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Christmas Across the Ages”
Boulder Bach Festival CORE Chamber Choir
With Claire McCahan, mezzo-soprano, and Jeremy Reger, keyboards

Program includes:

  • John Tavener: “A Christmas Round”
  • William Billings: “A Virgin Unspotted”
  • —“Bethlehem” (While shepherd watched their flocks by night)
  • Jamaican folk tune: “An’ She Rock de Baby”
  • John Denver: “Aspenglow”
  • Judy Collins: “The Blizzard”
  • J.S. Bach: Selections from Christmas Oratorio
  • Vince Guaraldi: “Christmastime is Here” (From A Charlie Brown Christmas)

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 16
Broomfield Auditorium

TICKETS

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Longmont Symphony
Elliot Moore, conductor, with chorus and soloists

  • G.F. Handel: Messiah

4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 17
Westview Presbyterian Church, Longmont

SOLD OUT

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“The Gift of Music”
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With Szilvia Schranz, soprano, and Kevin Sylves, double bass

  • G.F. Handel: Selected arias
  • Henry Eccles: Sonata in G minor for double bass and strings
  • J.S. Bach: Concerto in D minor for two violins and orchestra
  • Holiday selections

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 17
Seventh-Day Adventist Church, Boulder

TICKETS

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“Singalong Messiah
Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor
With vocal soloists

  • G.F. Handel: Selections from Messiah

4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18
Westview Presbyterian Church, Longmont

TICKETS

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“Holiday Brass”
Boulder Philharmonic brass and percussion
Brian Buerkle, conductor

  • Program includes traditional songs of Christmas and Hanukkah.

4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18
Mountain View Methodist Church, Boulder

TICKETS

Weekend Concerts Feature Mozart

Boulder Chamber Orchestra Oct. 29; Takács Quartet Oct. 30–31

By Peter Alexander Oct. 25 at 10:20 p.m.

Guest conductor Giancarlo De Lorenzo and violinist Loreto Gismundi, both from Italy, will launch the 2022–23 season of the Boulder Chamber Orchestra (BCO) Saturday, Oct. 29, in a program titled, unoriginally, “Mostly Mozart” (see concert details below).

In this case, however, the name definitely fits: the program features a violin concerto (No. 4 in D major, K218) and a symphony (No. 29 in A major, K201) by a youthful Mozart, and just one short intro to the concert, Handel’s “Arrival of the Queen of Sheba” from the oratorio Solomon.

This concert is part of an exchange between De Lorenzo and BCO director Bahman Saless, who previously conducted the Italian orchestra with which De Lorenzo is affiliated.

Mozart

The two Mozart works were both written in Salzburg, between the young Mozart’s three trips to Italy as a teenaged opera composer (1769–71, 1771–72 and 1772–73) and his disastrous trip to Paris (1777–79) during which he failed to find a permanent job and lost his mother. He was not particularly happy in Salzburg, but this was a fairly stable period of his life, and these are some his first important, mature compositions. 

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“Mostly Mozart”
Boulder Chamber Orchestra with guest conductor Giancarlo De Lorenzo and Loreto Gismundi, violin

  • Handel: “Arrival of Queen of Sheba” from Solomon
  • Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K218
  • Mozart: Symphony No. 29 in A major, K201

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29
Seventh-day Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave

TICKETS  

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The English composer Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) comes from a later generation then the Hungarian Bélá Bartók (1881–1945), but in their next CU campus concert the Takács Quartet scrambles the chronology just a little bit by playing the very first quartet by Britten, followed by the last quartet by Bartók, written four year later (1941 and 1945). 

That program, which also features Mozart’s String Quartet in D major, K499, will be presented at 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 30, and 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 31, in Grusin Hall on the CU campus. The performance is also available by live stream (see ticket information here).

Benjamin Britten

Due to World War II, both the Britten and Bartók quartets were written in the United States. A pacifist and conscientious objector, Britten left England in 1939, although he returned to his native country before the war was out. He wrote several works in the US, including the String Quartet No. 1 and his first opera, Paul Bunyan. He wrote his popular Ceremony of Carols on a dangerous and stressful return voyage across the U-boat infested North Atlantic in 1942.

Bérla Batók

Bartók came to the US a year later out of his opposition to nazism, and eventually became a US citizen shortly before his death from leukemia in 1945. In addition to the Sixth String Quartet, other works written in the US include his Third Piano Concerto, his unfinished Viola Concerto, and the Concerto for Orchestra.

The Takács, which started in 1975 as quartet of four music students in Budapest, has long been associated with the music of fellow-Hungarian Bartók. Only one of the original four—cellist András Fejér—remains, but from long history and tradition, the quartet retains its reputation as performers of music by the Hungarian composer, alongside an unparalleled recognition for excellence across the quartet repertoire. 

Although the exact CU program is not duplicated elsewhere, all three works do appear on upcoming concerts by the Takács Quartet while on tour in England.

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Takács Quartet

  • Benjamin Britten: String Quartet No. 1 (1941)
  • Bartók: String Quartet No. 6 (1945)
  • Mozart: String Quartet in D major, K499

4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 30
7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 31
Grusin Hall, Imig Music Building
In person and live-stream tickets HERE

Grace Notes: Boulder’s Choral Groups’ 2022–23 Seasons

Ars Nova Singers, Boulder Chorale and Seicento lay out plans for 2022-23

By Peter Alexander Oct. 12 at 2:52 p.m.

The Ars Nova Singers, the Boulder Chorale and Seicento Baroque Ensemble—three of Boulder’s leading choral groups—have distinct qualities, in terms of repertoire and performance style. All three groups have now announced their concert schedules for the 2022–23 season:

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Under director Tom Morgan, Ars Nova generally avoids the historical middle of standard repertoire, preferring music either side of the 18th and 19th centuries—the Renaissance or the 20th and 21st centuries. Their concerts are challenging to the singers, and can be equally so to audiences, but they are always interesting as well.

On Nov. 4 they will be the first of the three to present a concert this season (see time and place below). Their opening program is devoted to one of the most fascinating figures of the late Renaissance. Carlo Gesualdo, the Prince of Venosa and Count of Conza, was the composer of harmonically advanced, highly chromatic madrigals unlike anything else of their time. He was also known for having murdered his first wife and her lover when he found them together in bed, a fact that has not gone unnoticed in appreciation of his extreme music.

Performances of Gesualdo’s music are rare, as is often the case with Ars Nova programming, so this performance is worth noting.

One major event of the Ars Nova season will be the presentation in March of the world-touring British a cappella group Voces 8. Their two performances under Ars Nova’s auspices will be Wednesday March 1, 2023 in Macky Auditorium (7:30 p.m., details below) and Thursday, March 2, at St. John’s Cathedral in Denver (7:30 p.m.; tickets on sale Oct. 15). Please note that these are two separate programs. (details below).

Here is a full listing of the Ars Nova 2022–23 season:

“Wonder”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director
With Sandra Wong, violin and nyckelharpa, and Ann Marie Morgan, viola da gamba
Carlo Gesualdo: Madrigals from Books 5 and 6

  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4
    St. John Episcopal Church, 1419 Pine St., Boulder
  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov5
    Stewart Auditorium of the Longmont Museum
  • 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6
    St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 1600 Grant St., Denver 

“Solstice”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director
With John Gunther, woodwinds
Music for the Winter Solstice and Christmas

  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9
    First Congregational Church, 1500 9th Ave., Longmont
  • 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11
    St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 1600 Grant St., Denver

“Stardust”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director

  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb 10, 2023
    First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St, Boulder
  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11, 2023
    Central Presbyterian Church, 1660 Sherman St., Denver

“Choral Dances”
Voces 8
Music by Byrd, Bach, Britten and Berlin

  • 7:30 pm. Wednesday, March 1
    Macky Auditorium

TICKETS 

“Lux Aeterna”
Voces 8
Music by Mendelssohn, Rachmaninoff and Monteverdi

  • 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 2
    St. John’s Cathedral, 1350 n. Washington St., Denver

TICKETS available Oct. 15

“Reflections”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director
Music by Mahler, Thomas Jennefelt and Caroline Shaw

  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 21
    First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St., Boulder
  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 22
    Bethany Lutheran Church, 400 E. Hampden Ave. Cherry Hills Village
  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 3
    TANK Center for Sonic Arts, 233 County Rd. 46, Rangely, Colo

(This program will also be performed on tour in Colorado and New Mexico.)

See more information on the Ars Nova Web page

CORRECTION: The two programs by Voices 8 March 1 and March 2 were originally listed incorrectly. The correct information is “Choral Dances” on March 1 and “Lux Aeterna” on March 2, as now shown above.

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The Boulder Chorale is actually three different groups, and serves a role in music education as well as performance—in the words of the Web page, “for singers aged 5 to 85.” The Concert Chorale, the Chamber Chorale and the Children’s Chorale—the last divided by age into four different ensembles—perform separately as well as together. Under director Vicki Burrichter, the repertoire of the adult groups is eclectic, notably including world music, traditional styles from both European and non-European sources, and new works. As in the current season, their repertoire has often included work for chorus and orchestra.

Boulder Chorale opens their season Nov. 5, one day later than Ars Nova. Their opening weekends overlap, but you can easily plan to attend both. The chorale’s program is an example of their pursuit of world music. Titled “Origins: The Fertile Crescent,” the program highlights music from the Middle East and North Africa, including the Chorale’s own arrangements by Adam Waite of music from Israel, Afghanistan, Spain, Morocco and Syria.

Later in the year, the Chorale partners with the Longmont Symphony for performances of Handel’s Messiah (Dec. 17) and a Messiah  singalong (Dec. 18; details below); and with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra for performances of Beethoven’s Mass in C.

Here is the full listing of the Boulder Chorale 2022–23 season through April 2023:

“Origins: The Fertile Crescent”
Boulder Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, conductor, with Catrene Payan, vocalist, and Middle Eastern instrumental ensemble, David Hinojosa,leader

  • 4 pm. Saturday, Nov. 5, and Sunday, Nov. 6
    First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce Street, Boulder, CO

“A Celtic Winter”
Boulder Chamber Chorale and Concert Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, director, and Boulder Children’s Chorale, Nathan Wubbena, director

  • 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, and Sunday, Dec. 11
    First United Methodist Church, Boulder 1421 Spruce Street, Boulder, CO

Handel’s Messiah
Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor
With the Boulder Chamber Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, director

  • 4 p.m. Dec. 17
    Westview Presbyterian Church, 1500 Hover St., Longmont

“Hallelujah! A Messiah singalong”
Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor
With the Boulder Chamber Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, director

  • 4 p.m. Dec. 18
    Westview Presbyterian Church, 1500 Hover St., Longmont

“A Nation of Immigrants
Boulder Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, conductor

  • 4 p.m. Saturday, March 18, and Sunday, March 19
    First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce Street, Boulder, CO

Beethoven Mass in C
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With the Boulder Chamber Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, director

  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 1
    Boulder Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave., Boulder

For more information on these and other concerts, visit the Boulder Chorale Web page.  

CORRECTION: The concert “Story of My life,“ previously listed here, was included by error. That is a performance by the Boulder Children’s Chorales, and has been removed from this listing. Also, clarification has been added as to which of the three chorales is performing in each of the concerts.

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Seicento specializes in Baroque music of the 17th (“Seicento” in Italian) and 18th centuries performed with, to use the currently accepted language, “historically informed” performance practice, including period instruments. Today they are directed by the group’s founder, Evanne Browne.

Founded in 2011, Seicento launches its second decade in December with “Nöel: Christmas in the late Renaissance and Early Baroque” (December 2–4), a program that includes carols still familiar today as well as little known choral works. The major event of the season will take place in May, when Seicento will be joined by an orchestra of historical instrument performers to present Colorado’s first historically informed performance of J.S. Bach’s St. John Passion.

Here is the full listing of Seicento’s season:

“Nöel: Christmas in the late Renaissance and Early Baroque”
Seicento Baroque Ensemble, Evanne Browne, conductor

  • 7:30 p.m. Friday Dec. 2
    St. Paul Lutheran Church, 1600 Grant St., Denver
  • 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3
    First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St., Boulder
  • 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4
    First Congregational United Church of Christ, 1500 9th Ave., Longmont

J.S. Bach’s St. John Passion (BWV 245)
Seicento Baroque Ensemble and historical instrument orchestra, Evanne Browne, conductor

  • 7 p.m. Friday, May 5
    Arvada United Methodist Church, 6750 Carr St., Arvada
  • 7 p.m. Saturday, May 6
    St. Paul Lutheran Church, 1600 Grant St., Denver
  • 3 p.m. Sunday, May 7
    Mountain View United Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder 

For more information, see Seicento’s Web page.  

Grace Notes: Three classical organizations announce 2022–23 seasons

Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Pro Musica Colorado and Boulder Opera

By Peter Alexander Oct. 3 at 5:15 p.m.

With the 2022–23 concert season getting underway, Boulder’s many classical music organizations are getting their season schedules up on the Web. Here are three of the planned seasons for the coming year, from the Boulder Chamber Orchestra, starting Oct. 29; Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra, starting Nov. 19; and Boulder Opera., starting Dec. 9.

While the seasons include some pretty standard repertoire, including Beethoven and Mendelssohn symphonies and two different renderings of Mozart’s early Symphony in A major, K201, it will also offer pieces that are not standard. These include Beethoven’s Mass in C by the Boulder Chamber Orchestra and Boulder Chamber Chorale, and music by Florence Price and Caroline Shaw by the Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra.

Here are the respective seasons:

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The Boulder Chamber Orchestra opens its season Oct. 29 without conductor Bahman Saless. Guest conductor Giancarlo De Lorenzo and violinist Loreto Gismondi, both from Italy, will perform a mostly Mozart concert featuring that composer’s Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K218, and Symphony No. 29 in A major, K201. Opening the concert will be Handel’s “Arrival of the Queen of Sheba” from the oratorio Solomon. 

This concert is part of an exchange between De Lorenzo and Saless, who previously conducted the Italian orchestra with which De Lorenzo is affiliated.

Other orchestral concerts during the year will be “A Gift of Music” on Saturday, December 17, with soprano Szilvia Shrantz, BCO bassist Kevin Sylves and holiday selections; and a performance of music by Beethoven, Brahms and Mendlessohn with violinist Edward Dusinberre on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2023. The season concludes with a performance of Beethoven’s Mass in C with the Boulder Chamber Chorale on Saturday, April 1. Saless will lead these performances.

Concerts by the Boulder Chamber Orchestra will take pace in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Ave. Here is the full season schedule:

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29
Boulder Chamber Orchestra with guest conductor Giancarlo De Lorenzo and Loreto Gismondi, violin

  • Handel: “Arrival of Queen of Sheba” from Solomon
  • Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K218
  • Mozart: Symphony No. 29 in A major, K201

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 17
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor, with Szilvia Shrantz, soprano, and Kevin Sylves, double bass

  • Handel: Selected arias
  • Henry Eccles: Sonata in G minor for double bass and strings
  • J.S. Bach: Concerto in D minor for two violins and orchestra 

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb.11
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor, with Edward Dusinberre, violin

  • Beethoven: Overture to Egmont
  • Brahms: Violin Concerto
  • Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4 in A major (“Italian”)

7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 1
Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor, with the Boulder Chamber Choir

Beethoven: Mass in C

TICKETS  

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The Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra will celebrate its “Sweet 16th” concert season with three programs, presented Nov. 19, Jan. 28, and April 29.

The programs feature several works by women composers, including a woman of color and two living composers, in addition to classic works by Mozart and Beethoven, and a major work of the early 20th century by Arnold Schoenberg. All three performances will be at 7:30 p.m. in Pro Musica’s musical home, Mountain View United Methodist Church at 355 Ponca Place Boulder.

Performances by Pro Musica Colorado will be under the direction of their music director, Cynthia Katsarelis. 

The opening concert will feature pianist Jennifer Hayghe, the chair of the Roser Piano and Keyboard Program at CU-Boulder, playing the Piano Concerto in One Movement by Florence Price. The first female African American composer to have a symphony performed by a major orchestra, Price was well known in the 1930s and 1940s/ After fading from prominence, her name has recently been returning to concert programs.

Other soloists during the season will be cellist Meta Weiss, chamber music coordinator at CU-Boulder, and Takács Quartet members Harumi Rhodes, violin, and Richard O’Neiill, viola. Each concert will be preceded by a pre-concert talk at 6:30 p.m. Here is the full season’s schedule:

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 19
“Apotheosis of the Dance”
Pro Musical Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor, with Jennifer Hayghe, piano

  • Ben Morris: The Hill of Three Wishes
  • Florence Price: Piano Concerto in One Movement
  • Beethoven: Symphony No. 7 in A major, op. 92

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, 2023
“Through the Looking Glass”
Pro Musical Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor, with Meta Weiss, cello

  • Caroline Shaw: Entr’acte
  • Haydn: Cello Concerto in C major
  • Mozart: Symphony No. 29 in A major, K201

7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 29
“Transfigured Night”
Pro Musical Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor, with Harumi Rhodes, violin, and Richard O’Neill, viola

  • Jessie Lausé: World premiere
  • Mozart: Sinfonia Concertante for violin and viola in E-flat major, K364
  • Arnold Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht

TICKETS  

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Boulder Opera has announced their 11th season, featuring a family-themed production for the holiday season and a French Grand Opera early in 2023.

The first production of the season will be Engelbert Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel, which is a perennial holiday event for families with children in Germany and Austria. The Boulder opera production, scheduled for Dec. 9 through 18 at the Dairy Arts Center, will be presented in an abridged English version with narrator. 

Designed as an ideal introduction to opera, the performances will last only one hour, and include a Q&A session after each performance. The performance is suitable for children age three and up.

After the new year, Boulder Opera will present two performances of Manon by Jules Massenet, one of the classics of the French Grand Opera tradition. Performances will be Feb. 18 and 19 in the Dairy Arts Center. Here is the full schedule:

Engelbert Humperdinck: Hansel and Gretel
Boulder Opera, stage directed by Michael Travis Risner
Aric Vihmeisterr, piano, and Mathieu D’Ordine, cello

7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 9
2 and 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11 and Saturday, Dec. 17
2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 18
Grace Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center

TICKETS  

Jules Massenet: Manon
Boulder Opera, Steven Aguiló-Arbues, conductor, and Gene Roberts, stage director

7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 18
3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 19
Gordon Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center

TICKETS