Pianist
Sergio Tiempo and the Quad City Symphony Orchestra will perform
Beethoven's third piano concerto as Beethoven never could - on a
modern piano. But when the composer wrote the piece in 1800, that's
certainly how he intended it to be played.
His Mozart-era piano couldn't sustain the heavy style of playing Beethoven envisioned; it actually snapped the strings.
"In a way, it is the first Romantic concerto which only found its true vehicle through later instruments," Tiempo said in an e-mail interview from Belgium.
The 34-year-old pianist has played the concerto for years, but he has yet to tire of the work. "It is one of those pieces that keeps growing inside of you throughout your life," Tiempo said.
When
Chee-Yun takes the stage this weekend with the Quad City Symphony
Orchestra, she'll be performing a Saint-Saëns violin concerto
she first picked up 24 years ago - when she was just nine years
old.
Following
last year's lament for Hurricane Katrina victims, this year's
Chicago Jazz Festival - which ran from August 31 to September 3 -
honored the birthplace of jazz, featuring performers from New Orleans
and celebrating the impact of that city in the creation and evolution
of jazz music.
Now
in its second year, the River Roots Live lineup has grown by half -
from 12 bands in 2005 to 18 this year. And it's also a stronger
group of artists.







