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Curious listeners take note. The Munich Philharmonic and its designated chief conductor Lahav Shani have four exciting discoveries in store for you! For example, do you know the Jewish composer Paul Ben-Haim, born Paul Frankenburger in Munich in 1897? After a promising start to his career in Germany, he emigrated to Palestine in 1933 after the National Socialists came to power and became a founding father of Israeli musical life. His First Symphony was composed in 1939/40, and the horrors of the incipient world war have left unmistakable traces in this stirring, confessional work, whose centerpiece is a moving “Psalm.” Or are you familiar with Henri Dutilleux’s Violin Concerto L’arbre des songes, a dreamy, delicately tinged piece that star violinist Renaud Capuçon will play? In contrast, the flashy opener, Unsuk Chin’s subito con forza, is an homage to Beethoven that focuses on stark contrasts, as the title suggests: “from volcanic eruptions to extreme serenity,” according to the composer.