When I was
planning a trip to the mountains of Colorado with my son, my one request was
that we choose a place that had live music available to us in the evening. I was aware that Aspen has a famous music and
arts school with many concerts but I didn’t know about Vail.
To my
surprise this ski resort, an hour southwest of Denver, is the home of
Bravo!Vail a full throated music festival with a full array of concerts, and
events. During the month of July, the festival played host to four major
orchestras, one week for each ensemble. The lineup was Academy of St. Martin in
Fields with Joshua Bell, the Dallas Symphony, The Philadelphia Orchestra, and
the New York Philharmonic.
I was there
for the NY Phil’s week which made me feel I had hit the mother lode. I found the experience to be nearly perfect:
hiking through the stunning 8-10,000 ft. mountains during the day (no humidity,
no mosquitoes), and listening to a world class orchestra in the evening.
Throughout the country, the arts have become a great draw for well healed tourists.
Owen Hutchinson,
who heads up the lovely Vilar Performing Arts Center in Beaver Creek, CO (20
minutes from Vail) told me, “We have many wealthy people from places like
Chicago, Dallas, and Phoenix who have second houses in this area. When they
come here, they want to have the same kind of arts opportunities as they do at
home, and they support our offerings.”
Although the
Vilar only holds 530 seats, the patrons get to watch ballet, Broadway shows,
and artists like Yo-Yo Ma. The concert hall is acoustically brilliant and
beautiful to look at, but the auditorium is buried totally into the mountain
below Beaver Creek’s ice-skating rink. From the outside, one cannot see the
performing arts center at all.Very bizarre, but it works.
Vacation hot
spots are now realizing that music and the arts in general are a huge draw to
upgrade summer business.
Bringing
music out amongst the trees, mountains and flowers gives the listening
experience an added value of visual beauty to the sonic beauty.
Most major symphony
orchestras have had summer homes for several decades: Chicago has its Ravinia, Boston
its Tanglewood, Cleveland its Blossom and many others. Also, Interlochen,
Stratford (Ontario), Ashland, Oregon, Chautauqua and other venues present a
cornucopia of events – lectures, plays, concerts, musicals.
No doubt,
summer arts is big business.
One complaint
that was heard several years ago, was that summer classical concerts pandered
to a lower brow classical audience. The
concerts were pops oriented and light classical.
I have not
found that to be true lately. The two
concerts I heard in Vail, a good example, were the real thing and the orchestra
brought out their exciting new musical director rather than the assistant and
all the section leaders were on board – probably enjoying the semi-vacation of
being in the mountains.
Hearing the concerts
in July was a medicinal balm for me. Without hearing live music for 18 months,
these concerts washed over me like a sensuous cloud. Also, it was a preview of how audiences will
likely throng back to the concert halls in the fall.
The first
concert was the NY Phil string quartet. Everyone seemed so eager to hear (and
play) music again that the entire evening was a love fest. The audience was totally
quiet, emersed in the emotion of the music, soaking up the first beautiful
sounds they had heard in a long time.
The
musicians were on the edge of their seats communicating with each other with
every twinge of an eye or nod of a head. These were all orchestral players,
born ensemble players.
The only
flaw in the program was Anne-Marie McDermott whose piano was added to the
string quartet to perform the Shuman Piano Quintet. She was far louder than the ensemble required,
often covering the delicate musical lines of her fellow musicians. Her chamber music
skills did not compare with that of the string players.
The next
night’s concert took place in Vail at the Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater – a beautiful
facility with permanent seating under a roof, with lawn seating behind. Total
occupancy is 2245 and all seats were taken for the NY Phil’s opening night.
The
orchestra’s music director, Jaap van Sweden, was on the podium. Piano soloist
in the Beethoven Concerto No. 4 was Russian sensation, Daniil Trifonov. The
concert only featured two works, but they were both powerhouses – the Beethoven
concerto and the Mozart Symphony no. 40.
Van Zweden
was intense and his classical version of the philharmonic was totally responsive
to his every musical desire. Pianist Trifonov
seems to have replaced Evgeny Kissen as the reigning Russian piano superstar.
His playing was lyrical, creative, and technically powerful. Piano and orchestra played as one unit. This
is one virtuoso we must pay attention to.
A visit to
Vail confirmed the fact that great symphonic music is a genius pairing with the adventures
and beauty of a mountain hiking vacation.
3 comments:
Sounds amazing Ken. I'm so happy that you were able to experience this and share it. This week is also IHS53 -- all virtual! Check it out.
What a wonderfully joyous vacation, Ken. Thanks for sharing!
Melissa
The two boys out on a lark. I'm picturing it and love every minute of it.
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