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It was a sensation when, at the Lucerne Summer Festival 2022, the Chineke! Orchestra and the Chineke! Junior Orchestra performed for the first time: two orchestras whose members are mainly People of Color. The image of classical music as the domain of white people was in the process thoroughly challenged. All the more so, since the artistic result was so inspiring: “Concentrated excellence,” wrote Die Zeit about the Chineke! Orchestra, calling it “one of the most musically interesting ensembles currently touring the globe.” The success story will be carried forward in 2024, and this time three Black composers are on the program. The concert begins with the sparkling Ballade, Op. 33, by the British composer Samuel Coleridge- Taylor, a work of late Romanticism that immediately catches the ear. It might be reminiscent of Tchaikovsky or Dvořák. The latter undoubtedly influenced the symphonic music of the African American composer Florence Price. In 2022, Yannick Nézet-Séguin introduced Price’s First Symphony to Lucerne, and now we can hear her Third. In between, things get jazzy with the Violin Concerto by the legendary trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis.