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The seasons are a popular theme in literature, painting, and music. For good reason: they shape our daily lives and can be vividly depicted - quite descriptively so by music. Probably the most famous setting of the seasons comes from Antonio Vivaldi. Around 300 years ago, the Italian Baroque composer published four immortal violin concertos, one for each season. And there is quite a lot to hear in these works in terms of weather and other natural phenomena. In Spring, the birds chirp, while violent thunderstorms threaten the countryside in Summer. Fall reminds us that this is the time for the grape harvest as well as hunting, and in Winter - as Vivaldi’s contemporaries still experienced it - snow gently drifts. Croaking frogs, barking dogs, and buzzing flies also make an appearance. Under the direction of its two concertmasters, the Lucerne Festival Orchestra will perform this evergreen as a Sunday musical treat for all generations. Short and sweet and simultaneously entertaining and touching, this is the ideal concert for an introduction to the world of classical music.