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Beethoven, a Bass and a Bell

The granddaddy of grand summer music festivals in the Berkshires, Tanglewood, celebrates its 75th anniversary this year. The summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra was put on the map by Serge Koussevitzky and has been going strong ever since. The season opens on Friday, July 6, with an all-Beethoven concert led by Christoph von Dohnanyi, himself a renowned conductor who spent 20 years as director of the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra. Here is a chance to understand how Beethoven revolutionized music, particularly the symphony, in his lifetime. The Symphony No. 5, surely the most quoted piece in classical music, is on the program. With this work, Beethoven achieved a kind of economical, emotive form from the famous four-note opening to the end. Also on the program is Symphony No. 6, the “Pastoral,” which departs markedly from its predecessor. It is expansive and evocative, incorporating sounds of nature, folk-like tunes, and radical dissonances, particularly in the multilayered chords that crown the great storm section. Rounding out the program is the “Leonore” Overture No. 3. Saturday, July 7, the superb violinist Joshua Bell will join the BSO (conducted by Michael Stern) for Samuel Barber’s overture to “The School for Scandal,” Ravel’s “Tzigane” for violin and orchestra, Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4, and the world premiere of Edgar Meyer’s Double Concerto for violin, double bass, and orchestra. The composer, a former MacArthur “genius,” performs on the double bass. The season runs through the end of August.Tanglewood is in Lenox, MA. Start times and ticket prices vary. For tickets and information, go to www.tanglewood.org, or call 888-266-1200.

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