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Tickets now on sale for Cleveland Orchestra performances at Blossom Music Center

The performances will take place between July 3 - September 5.

CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio — Editor's note: The video in the player above is from a story published on April 12, 2021.

Individual tickets for the Cleveland Orchestra's 2021 Blossom Music Festival season are now on sale!

The festival, which runs from July 3 through September 5, will include a total of 12 concerts at the iconic Cuyahoga Valley concert venue.

Pavilion tickets start at $25 for adults and $15 for children. Lawn tickets can be purchased for $25. Two under 18 lawn tickets are free with the purchase of one valid adult lawn ticket. Tickets can be found here

RELATED: Cleveland Orchestra announces 2021 Blossom Music Festival: See the concert schedule

Ticket subscriptions for the summer series will also be available at a later date. 

“This Blossom Music Festival season celebrates our community, with music that we know our fans have been eager to hear again,” said Ilya Gidalevich, artistic administrator of The Cleveland Orchestra. “For this long-awaited return to the Blossom stage, audiences will experience some of their favorite classical music — like the works of Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, Elgar, and Dvořák. As always, expect to see a mix of rising, international music stars and fan favorite conductors and soloists along with the unmatched musicians of ‘America’s finest Orchestra.’”

You can find a full list of the concerts includes in the eight-week run below:

AN AMERICAN CELEBRATION

Saturday, July 3, 2021 at 8 p.m.
With fireworks
The Cleveland Orchestra
Brett Mitchell, conductor

Program to include:
COPLAND Suite from Appalachian Spring
TCHAIKOVSKY 1812 Overture
SOUSA Stars and Stripes Forever

A Blockbuster opening weekend! Celebrate the start of the Blossom season and enjoy a night under the stars with great music, fireworks, and fun for the whole family! Join The Cleveland Orchestra for its first public performances in more than a year, featuring Copland’s iconic Appalachian Spring, Tchaikovsky’s 1812 overture — with cannons! — a march by Sousa and more.

MOZART IN THE MEADOWS

Sunday, July 11, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Dame Jane Glover, conductor (Blossom Music Festival debut)

Program to include:
MOZART Symphony No. 40

Come enjoy the natural beauty of Blossom and a splendid night of Mozart! Highlighting the evening is his Symphony No. 40, sometimes called his “Great G minor” and arguably his most popular symphony, striking for its originality and shadowy intensity — influencing generations of musicians to follow.

THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK: Gershwin and Ellington

Sunday, July 18, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Lucas Waldin, conductor
Capathia Jenkins, vocalist

Program to include:
GERSHWIN Fascinating Rhythm
ELLINGTON Satin Doll
KERN All the Things You Are
GERSHWIN The Man I Love
GERSWHIN Summertime

A treasure trove of American songs overflowing with the very best of George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, and Oscar Hammerstein. “Sweet, smart, and sassy” (Chicago Tribune), Broadway star and audience favorite Capathia Jenkins returns to sing these classics and more.

FROM THE NEW WORLD 

Sunday, July 25, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Rafael Payare, conductor (Cleveland Orchestra debut)

Program to include:
DVOŘÁK Symphony No. 9 (“From the New World”)

An outsider’s perspective on the beauty of America. Dvořák came to the U.S. in the 1890s — and was thrilled by the sounds and sights of this wild new country. He admired the beauty of African American spirituals, and was fascinated by Native American traditions. When describing his New World symphony, he said “I tried to write only in the spirit of those national American melodies.” Yet, in the end, his Ninth is a glowing expression of both the Old World and the New.

BEETHOVEN’S SEVENTH SYMPHONY

Sunday, Aug. 1, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Herbert Blomstedt, conductor

Program to include:
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 7

One of Beethoven’s greatest and most admired symphonies, the Seventh is loved by audiences for its energy and beauty, and its lilting dance rhythms are some of the stormy composer’s most delightful moments. The somber and dignified second movement of this symphony brings magic to the soundtrack for the film The King’s Speech.

CLASSICAL MYSTERY TOUR: A TRIBUTE TO THE BEATLES 

Sunday, Aug. 8, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Martin Herman, conductor (Cleveland Orchestra debut)
with Classical Mystery Tour

The Best of the Beatles like you’ve never heard them: totally live with symphony orchestra. Sensational tribute band Classical Mystery Tour joins the Orchestra, performing all of The Beatles’ greatest hits from their early music to the solo years in original orchestrations. “Penny Lane,” “Yesterday,” “A Day in the Life,” and so much more!

TCHAIKOVSKY’S FOURTH 

Sunday, Aug. 15, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Karina Canellakis, conductor (Cleveland Orchestra debut)

Program to include:
TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 4

He sought refuge in music when his life was in ruins. Tchaikovsky’s life was in disarray; he entered into a marriage that only lasted six weeks. Nearly mad with passion, he poured out his feelings into his Fourth Symphony, and the act of writing the music itself helped to rebalance his sanity — saying of the finale “rejoice in the happiness of others and you can still live.”

ROMANTIC BRAHMS

Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Jahja Ling, conductor

Program to include:
BRAHMS Symphony No. 3

Enjoy a romantic evening with Brahms’s gorgeous Third Symphony. Filled with passion and longing, it has directly inspired artists today — the third movement was “borrowed” for the 1951 pop song “Take My Love,” recorded and co-written by Frank Sinatra, and is a favorite of Carlos Santana who used it as inspiration for “Love of My Life.”

ENIGMA VARIATIONS

Saturday, Aug. 28, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Elim Chan, conductor (Cleveland Orchestra debut)

Program to include:
ELGAR Enigma Variations

A lovely tribute — and a musical riddle. Elgar’s Enigma Variations was, in effect, his version of a mixtape: each movement was gifted as a tender portrait of a personal friend. These powerful and emotional tokens of friendship have become extraordinarily popular — the “Nimrod” variation is often used as a song of national mourning and was played at Princess Diana’s funeral. Not content with writing a beautiful piece, Elgar claimed that there was a musical mystery hidden deep in this work. Many claimed to have solved it but no one knows for certain.

HOLLYWOOD UNDER THE STARS

Saturday, Sept. 4, 2021 at 7 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021 at 7 p.m.
The Cleveland Orchestra
Richard Kaufman, conductor

From tender love stories to blind obsessions, serene tranquility to pulse-pounding excitement, movie scores are essential for transforming images to powerful stories and emotions. Now, Richard Kaufman, one of Hollywood’s most sought-after film score conductors, leads the Orchestra in a program filled with blockbuster favorites, including works by John Williams from films like Superman, Harry Potter, Star Wars, E.T. and much more.

RELATED: City of Akron announces schedule for 'Rock the Lock' concert series, other summer events

COVID-19 safety protocols:

  • Limited capacity
  • Required face masks except for when eating or drinking
  • Physical distancing should be maintained with those outside of your household. Lawn monitors will assist in maintaining appropriate distancing, encouraging households to set up chairs 6 feet from other groups. Seating in the Pavilion will provide appropriate distance between all households.
  • Guests are asked not to visit Blossom Music Center if they are feeling sick, experiencing Covid-19 symptoms or have been potentially exposed to COVID-19 until cleared by a medical professional. If guests develop symptoms while visiting Blossom, please return home immediately and contact your primary care physician.
  • Parking, entrance and exit procedures will be posted to help direct guests on site, check for symptoms of COVID-19 and maintain social distancing.
  • Cleveland Orchestra and Blossom Music Center staff, musicians and volunteers will wear masks, submit to daily temperature scans, frequently wash and sanitize hands and disinfect high touch surfaces regularly.

 Editor's note: The video in the player below is from a story published on March 5, 2021.

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