Arts

Juno welcomes summer with Marlboro concert

MARLBORO-It's "Juno in June!" on Sunday, June 2, as the Brattleboro Music Center's Juno Orchestra takes the stage with a program for the coming of summer.

The concert is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. at Persons Auditorium in Marlboro.

The program includes J. Mark Scearce's "Endymion's Sleep," commissioned in 1998 by the Nashville Chamber Orchestra; Haydn's Symphony 96 in D major, "The Miracle," first performed in London in 1791; and Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 in C major, which debuted in Vienna in 1801.

"Endymion's Sleep," an elegy of love and loss, is an impressionistic account of Selene, goddess of the moon, and her fascination with the mortal, Endymion.

As Juno Orchestra Director Zon Eastes said in a news release, "We performed 'Endymion's Sleep' at our inaugural concert in 2017, and it's worth hearing this elegy again today, as so many near and far are dealing with loss - perhaps of a dear beloved, of natural beauty, of a homeland."

Eastes says, "By juxtaposing works appearing only 10 years apart, we hope to highlight some of the undeniable similarities between Haydn and Beethoven, and also reveal the remarkable sense of departure Beethoven brings to the symphony, still a nascent form."

As he neared 60, Haydn was a prolific master of the symphony. This work was the first or second of Haydn's final 12 symphonies, commissioned specifically for presentation in London, where, on repeated visits, he met with abiding fame.

Only 10 years later, in Vienna, Beethoven was achieving his own version of fame. Surely inspired by Haydn, Eastes says, Beethoven's first symphony "crackles with energy and anticipation." He continues, "Using the developing orchestral and formal structures much like Haydn or Mozart, Beethoven brings a striking efficiency and clarity to the symphony, while additionally revealing a flair for inventiveness and command."

Tickets for the June concert are $20 for advance general admission, $25 at the door, $10 for youth admission. and free for those 12 and under.

Tickets are available on the Brattleboro Music Center website at bmcvt.org, or by calling 802-257-4523 or emailing [email protected].


This Arts item was submitted to The Commons.

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