The last time Tucson Symphony Orchestra performed Mozartโ€™s Piano Concerto 21, George Hanson was at the podium and the keyboard.

Hanson, a classically trained pianist, had soloed on Mozart concertos two other times earlier in his tenure, but the 2010 performance to open his 15th season as TSO music director was his biggest challenge.

The 21st is arguably more technically demanding than works by Liszt and Rachmaninoff, composers whose careers were largely made on their piano works. Some pianists and musicologists will point to the 21stโ€™s ornamentation that demands the pianistโ€™s complete attention to detail, and while the work might not match the finger acrobatics required from Liszt and Rachmaninoff, the concertoโ€™s fast runs and intricate passages demand precision and clarity.

This weekend, the TSO revisits the concerto with French pianist David Fray making his Tucson debut in the season-opening โ€œMozart and Tchaikovsky.โ€ The orchestra, under Music Director Josรฉ Luis Gomez, performs the concert on Friday, Sept. 27, and Sunday, Sept. 29, at Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, 260 S. Church Ave.

Tucson is the third and last city on Frayโ€™s fall U.S. tour with Mozartโ€™s concerto: he played it with the Louisville Orchestra in Kentucky early this month and with Savannah (Georgia) Philharmonic last weekend under the baton of University of Arizona alumnus and occasional TSO guest conductor Keitaro Harada.

โ€œMozart and Tchaikovskyโ€ is bookended by British composer Anna Clyneโ€™s 2015 work โ€œThis Midnight Hour,โ€ inspired by poems by Juan Ramรณn Jimรฉnez and Charles Baudelaire; and Tchaikovskyโ€™s Symphony No. 6 โ€œPathรฉtique,โ€ the Russian composerโ€™s final musical utterance before his death in November 1893, three months after the workโ€™s premiere.

Tucson Symphony Orchestra Music Director Josรฉ Luis Gomez opens the 2024 season with guest pianist David Fray and Mozartโ€™s Piano Concerto 21.

This is the first time the TSO has performed the Tchaikovsky since spring 2017.

Fridayโ€™s concert begins at 7:30 p.m.; Sundayโ€™s begins at 2 p.m. Tickets are $14-$95 through tucsonsymphony.org or by calling 520-882-8585.

Keitaro Harada rehearses with the Tucson Symphony as guest conductor for โ€œRavel and Dvorakโ€ on Nov. 10 and 12. It was his TSO Classic series debut.


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Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com. On Twitter @Starburch