Overture Magazine 2013-2014 May-June 2014 | Page 10

Season Preview TheSpirit Season of the In 2014–2015, Marin Alsop will conduct music that embraces spirituality, while exploring some old favorites. T he Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 2014 –2015 season opens with friends — old and not-so-old. Native daughter Hilary Hahn, who made her debut with the BSO when she was 12 years old, will return to play Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, written some 173 years before her birth. For the first program of the new season, BSO Music Director Marin Alsop will also conduct Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 (Sept. 19 & 21). One of two works by the composer scheduled in 2014–2015, Mahler’s Fourth is a telling taste of what the season holds. The fourth movement opens with a childlike soprano voice singing “Das himmlische Leben” (The Heavenly Life), a child’s view of heaven. “The overarching theme of the season is spirituality,” says Alsop. Jennifer Higdon’s blue cathedral, in its BSO premiere, along with John Williams’ Theme from Schindler’s List (Sept. 26 & 28), is a modern take on that theme. Higdon describes her piece as “a story that commemorates living and passing through places of knowledge and of sharing and of that song called life.” Rapture, by another contemporary composer, Baltimore native Christopher Rouse, will share the bill with Alexander Scriabin’s Symphonic early 20th century Poem of Ecstasy and Richard Strauss’s 8 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org Ein Heldenleben, “A Hero’s Life,” for an evening that explores heroism as it transcends mortal limitations. Both Higdon and Rouse are familiar to BSO audiences. “The BSO has a longstanding comm ]Y[