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Time Out
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Time Out
See classical music concerts at Lincoln Center for only $5—here's how
New York City has a glorious history of offering high-quality art and culture for rock-bottom prices. 'Rock bottom' may not be what it once was, but at least the culture remains at the same high standard. And this summer, you can confirm that for yourself when Lincoln Center hosts concerts for as little as $5 from Saturday, July 19 through Saturday, August 9. Or rather, $5 is the minimum amount for the 'Choose-What-You-Pay' fee structure — perhaps a better name would be 'Choose-what-You-Pay-Within-These-Parameters'. The concerts comprise the Festival Orchestra of Lincoln Center series, part of Lincoln Center's Summer for the City. Highlighting musicians from across the world who routinely perform with Lincoln Center, you might better know the Festival Orchestra from its previous iteration as the Mostly Mozart Festival. Among those scheduled to perform this year are Lincoln Center's Renée and Robert Belfer Music Director Jonathon Heyward (responsible for the series' programming) conducting Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, Karen Kamensek conducting Bizet's Symphony in C, Joana Carneiro conducting Ravel and Prokofiev, and Dame Jane Glover conducting Michael Abels's "More Seasons," Tchaikovsky, and Mozart. Even better, that low entrance fee also provides you access to the theaters in David Geffen Hall, where most of the concerts will be held. A concert and powerful AC for under $10? The movies could never in 2025. Other works scheduled to be performed include Brahms' contemporary Emilie Mayer's Faust Overture, the New York premiere of Anna Clyne's Glasslands, and the popular Symphony of Choice. That's right: Using text-to-vote technology, audiences can choose the evening's selections from a list of the festival's upcoming performances for the opening night, simultaneously creating a democratic concert experience and previewing what the upcoming weeks hold in store for the orchestra. Heyward will also conduct that evening, which will be simulcast for free in the lobby of David Geffen Hall. The fourth annual Summer for the City is already running. Among the other series are BAAND Together Dance Festival, Comedy Underground, Concerts at Damrosch Park, Run AMOC* Festival, and Silent Disco, featuring DJs Heather Flock and Laura Jeffers, DJ Mina, Daiel Costta, and DJ Mari Mac Dowell.


New York Times
15-04-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Lincoln Center Summer Festival to Bring Back Some Classical Music
Lincoln Center's summer festival will highlight the city's diverse cultural traditions, the center announced on Tuesday, including performances by an experimental collective; a celebration of Brazilian culture; and the staging of a Sanskrit epic. The collective, American Modern Opera Company, which is made up of musicians and dancers, will present a dozen productions, making its Lincoln Center debut. The festival, Summer for the City, will run June 11 through Aug. 9, and it will also include a six-performance engagement by the string quartet Brooklyn Rider to celebrate the group's 20th anniversary. Since the festival began, in 2022, it has scaled back the classical music and opera programming that used to define summer events like the Lincoln Center Festival and the Mostly Mozart Festival. This edition is a restoration of some of those types of offerings. 'This is a constantly evolving city and artist community and audience, and it's our job to be in that conversation,' Shanta Thake, Lincoln Center's chief artistic officer, said in an interview. 'You will never see a summer that looks like the summer before.' Summer for the City is part of the center's efforts to appeal to new audiences by promoting an array of genres, including classical music, comedy, pop and social dance. Last year, the festival attracted 442,000 people, up from 380,000 in 2023, the center said. In June, members of the American Modern Opera Company will perform the New York premiere of 'The Comet/Poppea,' which pairs George Lewis's adaptation of W.E.B. Du Bois's story 'The Comet' and Monteverdi's 'L'Incoronazione di Poppea.' Additional programming by the collective includes a staging of Messiaen's song cycle 'Harawi,' sung by the soprano Julia Bullock, and the staged premiere of Matthew Aucoin's 'Music for New Bodies,' directed by Peter Sellars. The lineup also features 'Rome Is Falling,' written by the bass player Doug Balliett, and described as a 'zany lesson on the absurdity of what can happen when influential people lose power.' Lincoln Center said it hoped this year's festival would help shine a light on the city's vibrant cultural communities. The lineup includes 'Mahabharata,' a large-scale retelling of a Sanskrit epic by Why Not Theater, a Canadian group, and a weeklong celebration of Brazilian culture featuring the singer-songwriter Lenine and the rock band Os Mutantes. The Festival Orchestra of Lincoln Center, under the baton of its music and artistic director Jonathon Heyward, will perform a mix of new and old. Each of its programs will feature at least one living composer. But the ensemble will also perform Robert Schumann's Fourth Symphony, Clara Schumann's Konzertsatz in F minor, Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and other classic works. The giant disco ball that has become a staple of the festival will once again hang over a dance floor built on Lincoln Center's main plaza. Clint Ramos, the Broadway costume and set designer, will return to decorate the center's outdoor spaces, this year based on the theme of birds.