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Summerfest Concerts 2023

Arts and Entertainment

July 6, 2023

From: Summerfest Concerts

Join us this July for our 31st season of concerts

Schedule of Events:

Week One: Rhapsodies

Saturday, July 8 - 7:30pm - White Recital Hall, UMKC
?Sunday, July 9 - 3:00pm - St. Mary's Episcopal Church, KCMO

The first week we’re focusing on that rhapsodic feeling you get hearing expressive music played passionately. While you might know Giacchino Rossini for his operas, he also wrote Six String Sonatas when he was learning to compose, works that display youthful passions in a delightfully mature musical setting. Charles Loeffler might not be as familiar a name, but his Two Rhapsodies will have you searching out the songs he used as the basis for these aching and contemplative works. Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara’s String Quartet #1 “Quartettino” said composition was like gardening, with sounds growing organically in a wild display of color. Finally, Jessie Montgomery’s Strum brings American folk dances into the concert hall, ending the week with a glorious celebration.

Week Two: Atmospheres

Saturday, July 15 - 7:30pm - White Recital Hall, UMKC
?Sunday, July 16 - 3:00pm - St. Mary's Episcopal Church, KCMO

Our second week moves outside the individual experience of attending a concert to explore the different music that swirls in the air around us every day.  Henriëtte Bosmans grew up in a musical family, and her compact String Quartet demonstrates how much she was influenced by the music she encountered in Europe between the world wars. Stacy Garrop has always been open to the music around her, and in Bohemian Café, she imagines the music of Prague’s buskers floating through the city’s plentiful outdoor cafés. The Light is Same, Reena Esmail’s attempt to make sense of the world in late 2016, joins two Hindustani r?gas that share similar notes but seem worlds apart. And Swedish composer Franz Berwald likely heard Beethoven’s incredibly popular Septet in Stockholm and wrote his own Grand Septet in Bb Major in response, a work meant to be shared and treasured in a group setting.

Week Three: Musical Influencers

Saturday, July 22 - 7:30pm - White Recital Hall, UMKC
?Sunday, July 23 - 3:00pm - St. Mary's Episcopal Church, KCMO

You’ve certainly heard of social media influencers, people who sway opinions based on their reputations and expertise on different topics. But what about musical influencers? Certainly, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart would rank as one, taking genres meant as disposable entertainment and turning them into concert-worthy works others would emulate like in his Divertimento in B flat major, K. 439b, No. 1. For many years Mozart’s contemporary Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, was forgotten, but in the past few years, he has regained his rightful place and young composers are learning from his exquisite pieces like his String Quartet opus 1 no. 6 in D major. Franz Schubert’s vocal writing has inspired generations of composers, but even his own instrumental writing was shaped by those songs. His Piano Quintet in A major, D. 667 is subtitled the “Trout” because it uses a Schubert melody of the same name which in turn became the basis of the second movement of Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s Quintet which she called “The Moody Trout.” Karol Beffa’s Blow Up brings the influence of the movies, jazz, and popular music into the concert hall. Finally, perhaps no composer is more of an influencer than J.S. Bach, and his Well-Tempered Clavier was passed around and studied by composers even when his other pieces were forgotten. You’ll hear those keyboard works anew in an arrangement of his Prelude in D Major from the Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II, BWV 873 for flute, clarinet, and bassoon.

Week Four: Angels and Demons

Saturday, July 29 - 7:30pm - White Recital Hall, UMKC
?Sunday, July 30 - 3:00pm - St. Mary's Episcopal Church, KCMO

Summerfest’s final week balances the angels of our better nature with the desire to dance with the devil. Canadian composer Marjan Mozetich first became known for the more devilish Dance of the Blind, but this summer he’ll present our musicians in dialogue with Angels in Flight. Instead, Dana Wilson will take us Dancing with the Devil in a driving work that suitably never lets you know where you are going. You may not know the name Nora Popescu, as she is a young pianist just beginning as a composer, but with The Angel, she is giving us a beautiful and lush portrait of an angelic messenger while making us eager to see what she produces yet. And the familiar name of Astor Piazzolla rounds out our final week, combining the angelic with the devilish through a selection of his works including the delightfully danceable La Muerte del Angel.

Date: July 8 - 30, 2023.

Location:
White Recital Hall, UMKC - 4949 Cherry St, Kansas City, MO 64110
St. Mary's Episcopal Church, KCMO -  1307 Holmes St, Kansas City, MO 64106

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