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Tanglewood 2022 reviews

  • Ringo puts wraps on Tanglewood, 2022
  • Van Morrison at Tanglewood, Aug. 4, 2022
  • Judy Collins at Tanglewod, Aug. 3, 2022
  • Richard Thompson at Tanglewood, Sept. 3, 2022
  • BSO Tanglewood season has glorious finale, Aug. 28, 2022
  • Itzhak Perlman at Tanglewood, Aug. 21, 2022
  • Yo-yo Ma plays Elgar Cello Concerto, Tanglewood, Aug. 14, 2022
  • Ades, Mozart, and Holst at Tanglewood, Aug. 7, 2022
  • Tip Top Tanglewood on Parade, Aug. 2, 2022
  • Paul Lewis wraps Beethoven pentad, July 31, 2022
  • Silkroad Ensemble at Ozawa Hall, July 28, 2022
  • Tanglewood 2022 season opens, July 12, 2022
  • Tanglewood Music Center opening exercises, July 7, 2022
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2022
  • Mavericks at Tanglewood, June 26, 2022

Tanglewood Music Center opening exercises, July 7, 2022

For more than twenty years, we have been meaning to attend the public opening exercises of the Tanglewood Music Center, and on July 7, 2022, finally did. Thus, we’ve witnessed an almost sacred ritual, instituted in 1940 by Maestro Serge Koussevitsky, the high priest of musical culture in the Berkshires.

Tanglewood Music Center, 2022 opening exercises; Dave Read photo.
Piano view at the Tanglewood Music Center’s 2022 opening exercises; Dave Read photo.

Since it also marks the formal (not the actual) start of an academic semester of the utmost importance to the student body, there is a little speechifying involved – but quieter and briefer than anywhere else in academe!

Tanglewood Music Center, 2022 opening exercises; Dave Read photo
Tanglewood Music Center, 2022 opening exercises; Dave Read photo

Three lovely recital pieces serve as preludes to the ultimate event in the exercise – the six minute choral piece Allelulia, which Koussevitsky commissioned Randall Thompson to compose for this purpose, sung by all the TMC Fellows, with Andris Nelsons conducting, while arrayed amid the audience in Ozawa Hall. It was breathtaking.

No need to take my word for it, listen here:

Go ahead, you’re worth it – spend five minutes, fifty-one seconds of your precious time on this:

Sung at Ozawa’s Farewell

Souvenir copies of the score were distributed to the audience at Seiji Ozawa’s Farewell performance, July 14, 2002; here is the inscription: “To the Berkshire Music Center, Serge Koussevitsky, Director. Alleluia – for four-part chorus of unaccompanied mixed voices.” It was first performed July 8, 1940 under the direction of Professor G. Wallace Woodworth.

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