Ravinia's 2014 season, dubbed "Summer of Love/Season of Stars," was announced today by Ravinia President and CEO Welz Kauffman. Brimming with talent and romance, the festival's 2014 schedule brings some the biggest names in the world of music as well as repertoire that explores the theme of great love in its various manifestations. No fewer than three musical incarnations of the most famous love story of all time, Romeo and Juliet, will be featured, with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra performing Tchaikovsky's Overture-Fantasy (July 27), a suite from Prokofiev's ballet setting of the story (July 16) and the score of West Side Story as the classic film is shown (July 17-18). In other examples of love, soprano Deborah Voigt describes it as "Something Wonderful" on a Broadway evening (July 13), the legendary Broadway team of Lerner and Loewe will be celebrated (July 20), and Chanticleer even jabs at the battle of the sexes in an evening titled "She Said/He Said" (July 6). In fact, love lurks, longs and lingers across genres in most of the more than 130 events that Ravinia will present in 2014, its 110th year and its 78th as the summer residence of the CSO.
Most Pavilion tickets to all CSO concerts are only $25. Lawn tickets for most classical concerts are only $10. Children and students through college are admitted free to all classical performances. Tickets to all events go on sale to Ravinia donors on March 5 and to the general public on April 24, exclusively at Ravinia.org.
"Over the centuries love and music have always been intertwined, with that indefinable subject matter center stage in grand opera, symphonic classics, movie scores, Broadway standards and top-40 radio hits," Kauffman said. "So whether a piece has Wagner serenading his wife on her birthday or Carrie Underwood seeking revenge against a cheater's car, what's not to love?"
SEASON OF STARS
Whether in the heavens or on stage, Ravinia has a close association with stars, and this summer continues that tradition. Among the classical superstars appearing this summer are:
THE 150TH BIRTHDAY OF R. STRAUSS/SALOME
Love is perhaps at its darkest in the opera Salome, which quakes with Herod's misbegotten infatuation with his daughter, and her unquenchable passion for John the Baptist. Ravinia will celebrate the sesquicentennial of its composer, R. Strauss, with its first complete presentation of Salome. Patricia Racette (who thrilled Ravinia audiences in Puccini's Madama Butterfly and Tosca) stars for the first time in the title role with James Conlon leading the CSO (Aug. 2). Other Strauss evenings sample the tone poems, chamber music and opera from daring to the beautiful. The CSO performs the opening of what is perhaps the composer's most famous piece, Also sprach Zarathustra (July 11), and Der Rosenkavalier Suite (Aug. 10). The inventive orchestra The Knights re-teams with Yo-Yo Ma on a program that includes Don Quixote (Aug. 21). Ravinia favorites The Lincoln Trio pays tribute with an All-Strauss evening (Aug. 21). RSMI artists will perform the Capriccio Sextet (July 14) and various songs as coached by one of the great Strauss singers of all time, Kiri Te Kanawa (Aug. 11).
MOZART OPERAS IN THE MARTIN
Strauss himself lionized Mozart, and he handpicked Don Giovanni to conduct in the work's first Salzburg Festival performance. The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni round out this year's trio of operas at Ravinia. These Mozart masterpieces will be performed in repertory in the 850-seat Martin Theatre, the size of hall in which Mozart would have led them. Conlon conducts the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in one evening and one matine?e performance of each (Aug. 14-17) with a company that features John Relyea, Tamara Wilson, Christopher Maltman, Lisette Oropesa, Kristinn Sigmundsson and other top singers.
RAVINIA GOES TO THE MOVIES
Ravinia goes to the movies this summer with four nights of the giant LED screen on the lawn and in the Pavilion. The CSO will perform Leonard Bernstein's score to West Side Story, conducted by David Newman, during two screenings of the Academy Award-winning film with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by Arthur Laurents and choreography by Jerome Robbins (July 17-18). Ravinia will also conclude its popular presentations of the Lord of the Rings trilogy with the CSO playing the score live as The Return of the King is shown on video screens in the Pavilion and on the lawn (Aug. 7-8). The Return of the King is this year's One Score, One Chicago selection, and additional resources will be available at Ravinia.org.
On July 11 conductor Robert Moody leads the CSO in classical pieces that over the years have doubled as film scores, such as Barber's Adagio for Strings (as heard in The Elephant Man) and the opening to R. Strauss's Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001), selections from Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini (Somewhere in Time), along with Gershwin's An American in Paris. Acclaimed guitarist Milos? Karadaglic makes his Ravinia debut with Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez. (Note: no film will be shown at this concert.)
NON-CLASSICAL CONCERTS
Ravinia's non-classical acts include an array of festival favorites, debuts, classic rockers and today's chart-toppers. The lineup, chronologically, features John Legend's acoustic "All of Me" Tour, June 16; OneRepublic and The Script, June 18-19; Garrison Keillor with a live broadcast of his national radio phenomenon A Prairie Home Companion, June 21; Daryl Hall & John Oates, June 22; Ravinia's Artistic Director of Jazz Ramsey Lewis "In Performance and Conversation, June 24; Rufus Wainwright and Cat Power, June 25; James Taylor and His All-Star Band, June 26-27; 2013 country Grammy-winner Darius Rucker and Friends, June 28; Earth, Wind & Fire, July 3; Dave Koz and Friends covering big, brassy hits, July 4; Sarah McLachlan, July 5; Willie Nelson & Family and Alison Krauss & Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas, July 12; Counting Crows performing their greatest hits, July 14; Crosby, Stills & Nash, July 19; Gavin DeGraw and Matt Nathanson, July 21; Umphrey's McGee, July 25; Bebel Gilberto and Chucho Valde?s in a Latin night, July 30; Lyle Lovett and Jake Shimabukuro, Aug. 1; Heart, Aug. 3; Tony Bennett, Aug.16; the music of ABBA performed by Arrival from Sweden, Aug. 17; Buddy Guy, Aug. 19; Train, Aug. 22-23; The Beach Boys and The Temptations, Aug. 26; Summer '80s New Wave Tour featuring Tom Bailey from the Thompson Twins and Howard Jones, Aug. 27; Jeff Beck and ZZ Top, Aug. 28; Toto and Michael McDonald, Aug. 29; Bob Weir and RatDog and Dwight Yoakam, Aug. 31; The Moody Blues, Sept. 4-5; Carrie Underwood with the Ravinia Festival Orchestra, Sept. 6-7; Poi Dog Pondering, Sept. 12, Classic Albums Live performing The Beatles' Abbey Road, Sept. 13; and Five for Fighting with the Ravinia Festival Orchestra, Sept. 14.
FOOD NETWORK IN CONCERT AT RAVINIA
Seven-time Grammy-winner John Mayer makes his Ravinia debut as the headliner for the special Food Network in Concert at Ravinia event (Sept. 20). The daylong festival of food and music features dining packages, demonstrations by Chicago's greatest chefs, wine tastings and sessions with Food Network personalities Anne Burrell, Alex Guarnaschelli, Jeff Mauro, Marc Murphy, Geoffrey Zakarian and more. (Note: This event is hosted by Food Network Magazine, and Ravinia donor benefits do not apply.)
RECITALS AND CHAMBER MUSIC
Ravinia regularly presents the most extensive chamber music and recital series in the United States in its historic and beautifully restored 850-seat Martin Theatre and state-of-the-art 450-seat Bennett Gordon Hall, including these events (in chronological order):
Ravinia has just introduced the "BGH Big Deal" 10-punch pass that offers a 20 percent discount off the 23 concerts in the BGH $10 Classics series, which means reserved seats are just $8 each. The series also A Tribute to Oscar Brown Jr. by his daughter, vocalist Maggie Brown; Concert Dance, Inc.; cellist Nicolas Altstaedt; saxophonist Ashu; pianists David Fung, Andrew von Oeyen and Zhang Zuo; and many more.
CHORAL MASTERWORKS AT TRINITY CHURCH
When the music calls for it, Ravinia presents concerts at other venues, and this year will deliver an evening of choral masterworks at Trinity Episcopal Church in Highland Park, site of last year's acclaimed performance of Rachmaninoff's "Vespers." The Singers, conducted by Matthew Cullton, return for two performances, June 18-19, that features Poulenc's Mass in G Minor, Durufle's Four Motets on Gregorian Themes, Taverner's Village Wedding and Funeral Ikos, and Morten Lauridsen's Les Chansons de Roses and O Magnum Mysterium.
RAVINIA'S STEANS MUSIC INSTITUTE (RSMI)
Each year Ravinia awards the best young professionals from around the world fully paid fellowships to study at its on-campus summer conservatory with a faculty led by Miriam Fried (piano and strings), Kevin Murphy (singers) and David Baker (jazz). These artists give free preview concerts and participate in public master classes with such artists as Midori and Kiri Te Kanawa. They also headline five concerts on the $10 BGH Series: Jazz Grandstand, June 20; a strings celebration of R. Strauss and the work of RSMI resident composer Shulamit Ran, July 14; Bernard Rands's String Quartet No. 3 in celebration of the 80th birthday of the composer, who will coach the work, July 21; songs by R. Strauss and friends, Aug. 11; and Music Theater, Aug. 18.
RAVINIA ASSOCIATES BOARD ANNIVERSARY AND EVENTS
The season also marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Ravinia Associates Board, an organization of young business leaders from the Chicago area that supports the not-for-profit festival and its REACH*TEACH*PLAY education programs. To celebrate, the Associates Board is seeking new members born in 1989, the year of its founding. The group will also host three concert events (lawn party and concert ticket) to help introduce their peers to the CSO: "Classical Strings and Chicken Wings" for the July 11 performance of classical themes that have a second life as spectacular film scores, featuring Spanish guitarist Milos? Karadaglic; "Beer, Brats and Beethoven" for the July 24 all-Beethoven evening featuring Jonathan Biss performing the Piano Concerto No. 4; and "A Hobbit Happening" for the Aug. 7 finale of The Lord of the Rings-The Return of the King.
All programs and artists are subject to change. For more information, visit Ravinia.org.
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