This Wednesday night Symphony Center will host the world premiere of the silent film Louis, a collaboration by Chicago native David Pritzker and Academy Award-winning cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond (Close Encounters of the Third Kind), with music performed live by Wynton Marsalis and his band.
See This: Silent Film, Live Jazz
Conducting Through the Pain
Daniel Barenboim has left Chicago, but he hasn’t stopped thinking big. Conducting his multicultural, multi-faith West-Eastern Divan Orchestra across Europe this week, Barenboim is taking a stand against war in the Middle East and, since 1998, has provided an example of how Israelis, Palestinians, and Arabs from across the region can work together. But the commendable project isn’t exactly a musical utopia. The tours have been outside the Middle East and certain musicians won’t develop friendships across the divide, afraid of how that will look back home. Prior to this week’s European tour, Barenboim drafted a statement condemning the violence in Israel and Lebanon. After intense debate, the ensemble accepted it without amendment and the orchestra played to rave reviews.

