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One World Symphony
Sung Jin Hong, Sorcerer
Gregory Eaton,
Phantom Organist
Frightful Favorites Chosen By Our Audience:
Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain (original
version)*
Danny Elfman: from Batman (1989)
J. S. Bach: Toccata and Fugue D Minor for organ
Berlioz: "March of the Scaffold" and "Witches
Sabbath Dance" from Symphonie Fantastique
Plus a few surprises…
*Brooklyn premiere
One Night Only! Benefitting St. Ann’s
Roof Restoration Fund
Friday, October 31, 2008
St. Ann and the Holy Trinity
Brooklyn Heights
Experience One World Symphony's family concert
on Halloween to help "Raise the Roof" at St. Ann's! Proceeds will go towards St. Ann's Roof Restoration Fund. There's
no trick -- the treat is for you!
Our fans have voted for their frightful favorites.
Our Halloween concert will include Berlioz's obsession confessed
in the haunting Symphonie Fantastique, Danny Elfman's acclaimed gothic
score to the film Batman (1989), and from the landmark
film Fantasia (1940) J. S. Bach's
stirring "Toccata and Fugue in D minor" and Mussorgsky's
famous celebration of ghoulish revelry and
sorcery: St. John's Night on the Bare Mountain (1867).
Better known as Night on Bald Mountain, One
World Symphony will be presenting the Brooklyn premiere of
Mussorgsky's
original version of the frenzied classic, not the more
common orchestration
Rimsky-Korsakov wrote after the composer's death. Mussorgsky
wrote his hypnotic masterpiece in only twelve days, pulling
from Russian folk idioms to spin the spells of a witches'
black Sabbath. With an ending unfamiliar to fans of the Fantasia version, One World Symphony continues its trend of
presenting
classical music as you've never heard it before. |