Antonio Vivaldi was ahead of his time when he composed his monumental “Four Seasons,” a series of four violin concertos meant to evoke winter, spring, summer and fall.

OK, so he probably wasn’t thinking so much about Mother Nature and climate control and humanity’s impact on Earth’s very survival when he wrote “The Four Seasons” nearly 300 years ago.

But this weekend, True Concord Voices & Orchestra is connecting those dots with a new work the professional ensemble commissioned that tackles climate change head on.

True Concord, in its first concert of 2022 after postponing for a year its 2022 Tucson Desert Song Festival events in January, is performing the world premiere of Jake Runestad’s Earth Symphony (“Choral”) that it commissioned through the Dorothy Dyer Vanek Fund for Excellence. Vanek, a longtime benefactor for the choir who died in 2020, established the fund with a $500,000 donation in 2017 to cover the cost of commissioning new works and recordings.

In addition to commissioning Runestad, True Concord also brought in poet Todd Boss, who has worked with Runestad, to write texts that trace the origins and dangers of climate change.

Ellen Chamberlain

Freya Creech

Ben Nisbet

“What’s unique about the texts is that Todd wrote it from the perspective of Mother Earth,” said True Concord Music Director Eric Holtan. “This is Mother Earth talking and she is talking to us.”

And she is not happy that humanity has taken her gift of the land and the seas and the stars and the moon and destroyed it.

Almost.

Earth Symphony goes from Mother Earth before mankind to the mankind's impact, weaving in cautionary tales including Icarus flying too close to the sun with his wax wings and the dangers of water and air pollution before circling back to the hopefulness of the final movement, “Recover.”

The movement closes with the brass players putting down their horns and picking up wine glasses to create a sweet high pitch when they rub the rims.

“It’s going to be a really cool sound affect at the end,” Holtan said.

True Concord will have more than 70 artists on stage — 32 vocalists and 40 instrumentalists — for the concert, which they will perform three times this weekend.

The ensemble starts the concert with Vivaldi's orignal climate change masterpiece "Four Seasons," featuring three violin soloists instead of the one Vivaldi intended.“It’s going to be like an olympic relay race where one violinist plays a season then hands off to the next,” he added.

The trio of soloists — True Concord’s concertmasters Ben Nisbet and Ellen Chamberlain and Freya Creech — will take turns with the final season, Holtan said.


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