Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Colorado Music Festival 2010




The Colorado Music Festival starts June 27th and concludes on August 6th.  The web site is here and is an unattractive mess.   

This year we get: Pictures at an Exhibition, The Grand Canyon Suite, a “New Year’s Style Night in Vienna,” “A Symphonic Tribute to Great American Pops Composers,” a tango concert and five evenings of “world music.”

In the middle, there’s a “Brahms Festival.”  Over eight days you can hear all four symphonies, two of the serenades and all of the concertos, including the Double Concerto.    

The soloist in the D-minor concerto will be Peter Serkin, a major international artist --  absolutely worth hearing, although we did just have an outstanding performance of the work by Christopher Taylor with the Boulder Philharmonic.  Valentina Listisa is playing the B-flat concerto, and she seems to be a rising star.

On July 29th and 30th, Jane Eaglen will sing the Liebestod  followed by Loren Maazel’s Wagner arrangement “The Ring Without Words.”  Jane Eaglen has had vocal problems lately, but hopefully she’s doing well now.   If so, why fly her out to sing for ten minutes?

On August 1st, we can hear Golijov’s  klezmer-flavored Dreams of Issac the Blind and the Bruckner D minor Requiem  -- which might not be as incongruous as it sounds.  

It all winds up on August 5th and 6th with Mahler’s Fifth, prefaced by something involving didgeridoo and electric guitar.  (I would have programmed the klezmer with the Mahler, naturally.)

So it’s another strange season for the CMF: ADHD programming, probably 50% pops or straight out pop.  Apparently this works for them in terms of ticket sales. 

2008’s Beethoven festival drew well, although the performances were inconsistent and inconsistently prepared.  So this year, we get a five all Brahms concerts in a row.

This is of course the bicentenary for both Schuman and Chopin.  Schumann is represented on the Vienna New Year’s program with the “Konzertstuck for Four Horns and Orchestra”, but that’s because it was Michael Christie’s premier piece with the CMF.  Otherwise, nothing from either.  Given the close relationship between Brahms and Schumann, perhaps an evening representing both of them would have been in order.

In the early days of the CMF, Tuesday nights were given over to chamber performances featuring members of the orchestra and occasional guest artists. This has been completely eliminated, although there are two Wednesday “Chamber Music at the Yard” programs.  No details available.

You can view schedule of this puzzling season  here.