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Friday, July 7, 2006 11:54 PM
Opening of Tanglewood season also marks return of BSO conductor
(Lenox, MASS - AP) Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor James Levine for the first time since shoulder surgery. The BSO opened its summer season at Tanglewood. Levine tore his rotator cuff when he fell while leaving the stage at Boston's Symphony Hall on March first. His performance tonight was greeted with a standing ovations by concertgoers. The maestro healed from the right rotator cuff surgery that sidelined him in March acknowledged his fans by waving his right hand. The baton in his right hand dipped, flowed and sliced the air as it led his musicians through the 20-minute opening piece Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony Number One. Levine got another standing ovation after ending the progam with Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
(Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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