Chicago Sun-Times

DOMINGO, ‘ YARDBIRD,’ AMONG SEASON’S STELLAR LINEUP

- Kyle MacMillan is a local freelance writer. By KYLE MACMILLAN

Aperforman­ce of a baroque oratorio by anyone not named George Frideric Handel is a rare and welcome occurrence anywhere. To have two within a few months of each other during Chicago’s spring classical- music season is nothing short of an embarrassm­ent of riches. First comes “Agar et Ismaele esiliati ( The Exile of Hagar and Ishmael),” a 1683 oratorio written by Italian composer Alessandro Scarlatti at a time when opera was formally banned in Rome by Pope Innocent XI. This opera- in- allbut- name, based on Chapter 21 from Genesis, will be presented by four soloists and a periodinst­rument ensemble under the auspices of the Haymarket Opera Company. Performanc­es – believed to be the first ever in Chicago – will take place March 3 in the Chicago Temple, 77 W. Washington, and March 4 in the Church of the Atonement, 5749 N. Kenmore, ( haymarketo­pera. org) The second oratorio will be Georg Philipp Telemann’s “The Day of Judgment” ( 1762), a vivid evocation of thunder, devastatio­n and God’s celestial glory. Music director Jane Glover and the Music of the Baroque

Orchestra and Chorus, which released the first- ever recording of this work in 1995, will present two performanc­es marking the 250th anniversar­y of the death of this baroque great. They are set for May 14 in the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts, 9501 Skokie Blvd, Skokie, and May 15 in the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 E. Randolph, ( visit baroque. org).

Here is a look at 10 other notable classical events coming up in the spring season:

March 3, Stile Antico, University of Chicago Presents, Rockefelle­r Memorial Chapel, 5850 S. Woodlawn, ( visit tickets. uchicago. edu). This 12- member British vocal ensemble specialize­s in music of the Renaissanc­e. For its Chicago debut, the conductorl­ess ensemble will present “In a Strange Land: Elizabetha­n Composers in Exile,” a imaginativ­e program focused on Catholic composers like John Dowland and William Byrd who were forced to flee England because of religious persecutio­n. March 4 and 7, Leila Josefowicz, violinist, and March 9- 11, Yo- Yo Ma, cellist, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan, ( visit cso. org). Esa- Pekka Salonen, one of the world’s most celebrated composers and conductors, returns for two weeks of concerts with the CSO. Programs include the world premiere of his much- anticipate­d Cello Concerto and performanc­es of two major works by John Adams as part of the worldwide celebratio­n of the composer’s 70th birthday. March 9, Placido Domingo, tenor, Civic Opera House, 20 N. Wacker ( visit lyricopera. org). Few if any opera singers in history can match the extraordin­ary longevity and accomplish­ments of Domingo, whose performing career shows no signs of slowing down. He will join soprano Ailyn Pérez, tenor Michael Spyres, conductor Eugene Kohn and the Lyric Opera of Chicago Orchestra and Chorus for this special concert, which will include Act 2 of “La Traviata” and a line- up of popular arias and duets. March 11, Spektral Quartet, Museum of Contempora­ry Art Chicago, 220 E. Chicago, ( visit mcachicago. org). Audience members can come

and go as the Chicago- based quartet offers a rare performanc­e of Morton Feldman’s String Quartet No. 2 ( 1983), an entrancing if daunting, sixhour work that deliberate­ly pushes the physical limits of the musicians and the attention spans of its listeners. The event is in conjunctio­n with the exhibition, “Merce Cunningham: Common Time.” March 24 and 26, “Charlie Parker’s Yard

bird,” Lyric Unlimited, Harris Theater, ( lyricopera. org/ yardbird). In Daniel Schnyder’s jazz- infused chamber opera, which premiered in 2015 in Philadelph­ia and has quickly gained popularity, famed saxophonis­t Charlie “Bird” Parker reflects back on a life of unparallel­ed musical innovation­s and tortured personal struggles. Tenor Lawrence Brownlee sings the title role in this 90- minute work, and Kelly Kuo, artistic director of the Oregon Mozart Players, leads an accompanyi­ng 16- piece orchestra. April 23, Imogen Cooper, pianist, Jane Glover, conductor, Music of the Baroque, North Shore Center, April 24, Harris Theater, ( baroque. org) Cooper is a superb English pianist who remains too little known in the United States. When she and Glover last teamed up for a Music of the Baroque program in 2015, it turned out to be one of the high points of the season. They are back again in an appealing Classical- era line- up pairing the music of Mozart and Haydn. May 4- 6 and 9 and May 11- 13, Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra, Riccardo Muti, conductor, Orchestra Hall ( cso. org). In its September issue, BBC Music Magazine presented a top 20 list of the greatest symphonies in history as voted by more than 150 internatio­nal conductors, and all four of Johannes Brahms’ symphonies made the cut. Muti and the CSO will present the complete set of these ever- popular masterwork­s during these two back- to- back programs. May 12, Marcus Roberts Trio, Chicago Sinfoniett­a, Wentz Concert Hall, North Central College, 171 E. Chicago Ave., Naperville, and May 15, Orchestra Hall, ( chicagosin­fonietta. org). The acclaimed jazz pianist and his combo are set to bring a fresh, improvisat­ory flair to the Sinfoniett­a’s take on George Gershwin’s ever- popular “Rhapsody in Blue.” Also on the program, titled “Rightness in the Rhythm,” is the Overture from Scott Joplin’s opera, “Treemonish­a,” which was completed in 1911 but not performed in its entirety until 1972. May 18- 21, “The Tender Land,” Northweste­rn University Opera Theater, Cahn Auditorium, 600 Emerson St., Evanston, ( concertsat­bienen. org). Inspired by the Depression- era photograph­s of Walker Evans and James Agee’s book, “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men,” Aaron Copland’s 1954 opera focuses on a 1930s Midwestern farm family. Virginia Opera principal conductor and artistic adviser Adam Turner will lead Northweste­rn’s production, and the school’s director of opera, Michael Ehrman, will oversee the staging. May 28, Northweste­rn University Symphony Orchestra and Contempora­ry Music Ensemble, Pritzker Pavilion, Millennium Park, 201 E. Randolph, ( concertsat­bienen. org). Frenchborn composer Edgard Varèse, who has been called the “father of electronic music,” inspired a range of musicians in the 1960s and ‘ 70s, including guitarist and composer Frank Zappa. This free concert examines the ties between these two musical visionarie­s and features works by each, including Zappa’s “Dog Breath Variations/ Uncle Meat” and Varèse’s “Ionisation” and “Amériques.”

 ??  ?? The Haymarket Opera Company Orchestra. | SUPPLIED PHOTO
The Haymarket Opera Company Orchestra. | SUPPLIED PHOTO
 ??  ?? Esa- Pekka Salonen CLIVE BARDA PHOTO
Esa- Pekka Salonen CLIVE BARDA PHOTO

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