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Friday, November
27

Dallas Symphony Orchestra - Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture

May 22 , 2009

8 PM

Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center

2301 Flora Street, Dallas

Age Limit

All ages

$37 - $115

Dallas Symphony Orchestra - Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture

The 2008-2009 season finale will be one for the ages as the DSO performs Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto and his 1812 Overture with the DSO Chorus directed by David R. Davidson. This is one concert you will not want to miss. Jaap van Zweden conducts.

Brahms: Schicksalslied (Song of Fate) (Dallas Symphony Chorus) Tchaikovsky: Concerto in D Major for Violin and Orchestra (soloist Simone Lamsma) Intermission Tchaikovsky: Capriccio italien Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture (Dallas Symphony Chorus)

Simone Lamsma, violin Dallas Symphony Chorus David R. Davidson, chorus director Jaap van Zweden, conductor

About the piece: Tchaikovsky 1812, Ouverture solennelle, Op. 49 (Approximate duration 16 minutes)

Few works need less introduction than the 1812 Overture, a perennial favorite on pops concerts, especially around the Fourth of July. Its explosive fireworks conclusion, including scoring for military cannons, elicits delirious cheers from non-specialists and occasional sheepish grins from the highbrows who are enjoying its bombast in spite of themselves. Tchaikovsky composed the overture to fulfill a commission from the conductor Nikolai Rubinstein in 1880. Rubinstein was in charge of an Exhibition in Moscow that coincided with Tsar Alexander II's silver jubilee and with the opening of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, which was being constructed to commemorate the historic events of 1812.

Tchaikovsky Concerto in D Major for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 35 (Approximate duration 34 minutes) Allegro moderato Canzonetta: Andante Finale: Allegro vivacissimo

In mid-May, 1877, Tchaikovsky received a letter from a young woman named Antonina Milyukova, who declared that she had loved the composer since several years earlier, when she was a student at the Conservatory. Tchaikovsky replied kindly but cautiously, intimating that she had poured her heart out with excessive emotion. Two more letters from Antonina followed within days, making clear that her infatuation with him remained unaltered. She threatened suicide in the third letter. Tchaikovsky was torn. He was a homosexual man in a society that disapproved of homosexuality. One of his close friends had married early that year, and Tchaikovsky was considering marriage - but to whom? Antonina's appearance in his life solved that conundrum, but ultimately presented many more problems.

Information from the DSO's website

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