In July, the Visual Listening Guide returned to Verbier, Switzerland, where, by invitation of the Verbier Festival Academy and UNLTD, I was the Verbier Festival’s Musicologist-in-Residence. For the 2022 edition, and through the generosity of an anonymous donor, the Festival commissioned me to create a new Visual Listening Guide to Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9.
The Guide was revealed on July 18, at a special afternoon talk I gave about the piece at Club Taratata.
Later that evening, the symphony was performed by the Verbier Festival Chamber Orchestra, with soprano Iulia Maria Dan, mezzo-soprano Ema Nikolovska, tenor AJ Gluekert, and bass Mikhail Petrenko, conducted by Gabor Takács-Nagy.
Copies of the Guide were made available to the audience if they wished to follow along and keep as a souvenir of what was an exhilarating concert.
During my time there, I also gave workshop presentations to the Verbier Festival Junior Orchestra using the Visual Listening Guide to Felix Mendelssohn’s “Reformation” Symphony, as they prepared to perform the work with conductor Kent Nagano. Originally commissioned by the Verbier Festival UNLTD in 2018, this Guide, which has since received a design update, was the basis of my public talk before their concert on July 24, and was distributed in print to attendees.
After watching them in rehearsal, it was wonderful to see these young musicians, aged 15 to 18, perform this symphony with great confidence and musical finesse.
Thank you to VF UNLTD for including the Visual Listening Guide in the Verbier Festival experience!
I had a wonderful time and hope to be back again soon!
Now Available!
The Beethoven Symphony No. 9 and the updated Mendelssohn Symphony No. 5 “Reformation” Visual Listening Guides are now available in the shop to purchase for personal use and for licensing by orchestras and educators.