Yes, it's that time again! As in the past, Ravinia
has generously supplied us with a limited number of
tickets for our patrons. These are lawn tickets to classical music
concerts (so no Demi Lovato or Diana Krall tickets), and a great opportunity
to listen to first-rate classical performers in a beautiful setting.
Tickets
will be available on a first come, first served basis on Saturday, June
16th from 9 am to 11 am on the 1st floor. Any tickets available
after that will be distributed at the 3rd floor Readers' Services desk.
The ticket limit is 2 tickets per person.
Ravinia is the summer home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the magnificence of which I've posted about previously. Among the CSO concerts we have tickets for are the "Brahms Bonanza" on Friday, July 13th and "La Mer and More," on Tuesday, August 7th, featuring pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet.
Want
to know the additional concerts we have tickets we for? Stop by the 3rd floor
desk to view a list of available concerts. The third floor is also
where you'll find classical music CDs--and all other music CDs--to check
out.
Happy listening and concert-going!
bc-list
Showing posts with label Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Friday, August 19, 2011
The Magnificence of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra

"The Chicago Symphony's considered the greatest orchestra in the country."
"No. Really?"
"Yes."
"Huh."
I wondered if perhaps, as a longtime Chicago area resident and CSO attendee, she was biased. I wondered if this was an attempt to sell me on the merits of Chicago when I was intent on moving to NYC. In my defense, I was young, more knowledgeable about pianists than orchestras, biased in favor of all things New York, and, well, I was young.
Now, I haven't undertaken a comparative study of symphony orchestras--and I'm certainly not qualified to judge. Nor is there a World Series for orchestras. But after attending a number of CSO concerts over the years and listening to a lot of CDs, I do think my mother was right. And Gramophone Magazine, among others, is on her side. In 2008, the classical music magazine ranked the Chicago Symphony Orchestra number 5 on its list of Top 20 Orchestras, the highest ranked of any U.S. orchestra. (The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam was named number 1.)
But enough with the rankings; this isn't baseball. Just check out some of our Chicago Symphony Orchestra recordings and listen for yourself. And be grateful that you can listen to great music for free courtesy of your local library, and that you live in the vicinity of the greatness that is the CSO. Here are two CDs to start with.
The library owns the complete Beethoven Symphonies conducted by the late Sir Georg Solti. My favorite is the 3rd Symphony, with its soaring first movement. And there's a reason the 5th symphony is a classical music hit. Listen to all four movements--not just the famous first--to hear why. To experience the joy that is the 9th symphony, turn the volume up to 11 (but not in the library, seriously).
The CSO now has its own label, and in 2010 released Verdi's Messa da Requiem conducted by Riccardo Muti, the new music director of the CSO. According the interview with Muti that accompanies the CD, Muti feels that: "Verdi, like Mozart, was a composer who expressed the most essential feelings of mankind: love, hate, friendship, jealousy--everything that reflects our life, our way of being human. His music is the mirror of who we are." The composition begins so quietly you may think the CD isn't working. But listen carefully and stay tuned for an otherworldly listening experience.
Labels:
Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
Classical CDs,
Classical Music,
CSO,
Greatest Orchestras,
Laura Adler
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