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IN A LANDSCAPE: Classical Music in the Wild
IN A LANDSCAPE: Gas Works Park
Gas Works Park
2101 N Northlake Way
Seattle, WA 98103

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For the 10th season, IN A LANDSCAPE: Classical Music in the Wild tours the American West. Mountain tops, old-growth forests, and sunny meadows replace the traditional concert hall in the series featuring pianist Hunter Noack on a 9-foot Steinway concert grand piano. Listen through wireless headphones and wander afield with the music as a soundtrack to your experience in the wild.
IN A LANDSCAPE returns to Gas Works Park in partnership with Trust for Public Land. Former site of the Seattle Gas Light Company, the 20-acre park at the water's edge was developed to reimagine inustrial structures as playgrounds set against iconic views of the Seattle skyline and Lake Union.
With the goal of connecting everyone to the outdoors, Trust for Public Land (TPL) is
working with Washington communities to create parks and protect public land where
they are needed most. From Olympic Sculpture Park to Rattlesnake Ridge, TPL is
working to ensure generations of Washingtonians can connect to the benefits and joys
of the outdoors.
Lake Union was known for centuries as Lushootseed (small lake), part of the ancestral territory of the Coastal Salish people. Its larger network of waters running from nearby Lake Washington and west to the Puget Sound were shared with tribes of the Duwamish, Suquamish, Tulalip, Puyallup, and Muckleshoot nations.
Photo by Arthur Hitchcock
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IN A LANDSCAPE: Classical Music in the Wild Biography
Founded in 2016 by classical pianist Hunter Noack, IN A LANDSCAPE: Classical Music in the Wild is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit outdoor concert series where America’s most stunning landscapes replace the traditional concert hall. A 9-foot Steinway grand piano travels on a flatbed trailer to State and National Parks, urban greenspaces, working ranches, farms, and historical sites for classical music concerts that connect people with each landscape.
To meet the acoustical challenges of performing in the wild, music is transmitted to concert-goers via wireless headphones. No longer confined to seats, audiences explore the landscape, wander through secret glens, lie in sunny meadows, and roam old growth forests.
In the spirit of the Works Progress Administration’s (WPA) Federal Music and Theatre Projects, which presented thousands of free concerts and plays in theaters, public spaces and parks across the country during the Depression, IN A LANDSCAPE events are offered primarily in rural communities for free or on a subsidized basis. For upcoming performances, click here.
Since 2016, IN A LANDSCAPE has presented 275 concerts in Oregon, Washington, Montana, Idaho, New York, Utah, Wyoming, and California to over 55,000 people. Guest artists have included poets, visual artists, dancers, and musicians playing everything from banjos to pianos. Folks travel from near and far. Local ranchers, loggers, and farmers gather with visiting city dwellers and tourists from beyond.
Read MoreTo meet the acoustical challenges of performing in the wild, music is transmitted to concert-goers via wireless headphones. No longer confined to seats, audiences explore the landscape, wander through secret glens, lie in sunny meadows, and roam old growth forests.
In the spirit of the Works Progress Administration’s (WPA) Federal Music and Theatre Projects, which presented thousands of free concerts and plays in theaters, public spaces and parks across the country during the Depression, IN A LANDSCAPE events are offered primarily in rural communities for free or on a subsidized basis. For upcoming performances, click here.
Since 2016, IN A LANDSCAPE has presented 275 concerts in Oregon, Washington, Montana, Idaho, New York, Utah, Wyoming, and California to over 55,000 people. Guest artists have included poets, visual artists, dancers, and musicians playing everything from banjos to pianos. Folks travel from near and far. Local ranchers, loggers, and farmers gather with visiting city dwellers and tourists from beyond.
Classical
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