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Vivaldi! The Four Seasons!
Church

Vivaldi! The Four Seasons!

UWS

Sat, May 2, at 7:30 PM, EDT

Reserve a spot $5 to reserve, $30+ at event
Wheelchair access
Wheelchair Accessible
Kids
Kid-friendly event

This is a groupmuse

A live concert in a living room, backyard, or another intimate space. They're casual and friendly, hosted by community members.

Host

Sandro S. (he/him)

Cello Beyond Borders & Hahnsol Music Group present

The most electrifying masterpiece ever written in classical music.

On May 2, inside the beautiful Gothic sanctuary of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament in NYC, four internationally acclaimed soloists unleash this iconic work!

Orchestra for People unites some of New York’s most distinguished young virtuosi for a single performance of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, an encounter that will not be repeated.

One night.
One masterpiece.
Seats are limited.

What's the music?

Orchestra For People String ensemble & 4 solo violins

Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons is the most electrifying masterpiece ever written for violin. Nearly 300 years later, it still feels immediate, dramatic, and alive.

This performance brings together four soloists who each take one season, transforming the piece into a vivid musical dialogue rather than a single solo voice. Spring blossoms with energy, Summer erupts in thunder, Autumn dances with rustic joy, and Winter freezes the air with crystalline intensity.

What makes this work extraordinary is how cinematic it feels. Vivaldi didn’t just compose music he composed storms, birds, wind, fire, and ice. Every movement tells a story.

In the soaring Gothic sanctuary of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, the architecture becomes part of the sound. The resonance of the space amplifies the drama, turning this concert into a fully immersive experience.

Where does this music come from?

Written in 1725 as part of Il cimento dell’armonia e dell’inventione, The Four Seasons was revolutionary for its time. Vivaldi included descriptive sonnets with the music effectively creating one of the earliest examples of programmatic storytelling in Western classical music.

Each concerto depicts specific scenes: birds singing, peasants dancing, thunderstorms breaking, icy winds cutting through winter air. The piece pushed the violin to new technical extremes and permanently changed what instrumental music could express.

Nearly three centuries later, it remains one of the most recognizable and powerful works ever composed.

Location

Exact address sent to approved attendees via email.

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Attendees

+4
Maria Luisa G.
Alan P.
Karen H.
+1
Lani A.
Sharla R.
Sue S.
+1
Ulrike V.
Robin L.
+1
Kim K.
David C.
+2
Catherine H.
Martha R.
+4
Rob C.
+1
Naoko O.
+1
Jonathan Z.