Cal Performances’ new season will range from queer rock opera to the American railroad

The presenter’s 2023-24 season includes collaborations with Taylor Mac, Joffrey Ballet, pianist Mitsuko Uchida and more.

Flutist and composer Nathalie Joachim.

Photo: Erin Patrice O'Brien

New and recent work by theater artistsTaylor Macand Matt Ray, composer Nathalie Joachim, theSilkroad Ensembleand the dance-theater company Urban Bush Women are scheduled to contribute to a thematic focus on “Individual and Community” during Cal Performances’ 2023-24 season.

The UC Berkeley presenter’s lineup of music, dance, theater and spoken word events, announced Tuesday, April 18, by Executive and Artistic Director Jeremy Geffen, also includes a gala honoring Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, a residency by the Japanese-British pianist Mitsuko Uchida and the renewal of a multi-season residency by the Chicago-based Joffrey Ballet.

Pianist Mitsuko Uchida.

Photo: Justin Pumfrey

The season is set to open Oct. 1 with the Bay Area debut recital of Israeli pianist Tom Borrow, and continue through May 4, 2024, when Icelandic pianistVíkingur Ólafssonis slated to perform Bach’s “Goldberg Variations.”

“Bark of Millions,” by Mac and Ray, is billed as a four-hour rock opera meditation on queerness and is scheduled for its West Coast premiere.

Musician Rhiannon Giddens.

Photo: Ebru Yildiz

Other works feeding into the “Individual and Community” theme include “Baldwin and Buckley at Cambridge,” a dramatization by the New York theater troupe Elevator Repair Service of the famous 1965 debate between American writers James Baldwin and William F. Buckley about racial justice and politics.

The Los Angeles new music ensemble Wild Up is expected to present “Femenine” by the visionary composer Julius Eastman, and Grammy- and MacArthur Fellowship-winning folk musician Rhiannon Giddens plans to lead the Silkroad Ensemble in “American Railroad,” an exploration of the creation of the Transcontinental Railroad.

Musical events include recitals by sopranos Renée Fleming andChristine Goerke, the return of countertenorJakub Józef Orlinski, a pair of appearances including both jazz and classical strains by pianist Brad Mehldau, and an evening by Berkeley’s Eco Ensemble devoted to the music of UC Berkeley composer Cindy Cox.

Pianist Brad Mehldau.

Photo: Elena Olivo

Complete season details are atwww.calperformances.org.

Reach Joshua Kosman:jkosman@sfchronicle.com; Twitter:@JoshuaKosman

  • Joshua Kosman
    Joshua Kosman

    Joshua Kosman has covered classical music for the San Francisco Chronicle since 1988, reviewing and reporting on the wealth of orchestral, operatic, chamber and contemporary music throughout the Bay Area.

    He is the co-constructor of the weekly cryptic crossword puzzle"Out of Left Field,"and has repeatedly placed among the top 20 contestants at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.