What is Tanglewood?
Tanglewood is the venue in Lenox and Stockbridge, Massachusetts, which is the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the host of the Tanglewood Jazz Festival and Tanglewood Music Festival. The history of the website returns to 1936, when Mrs. Gorham Brooks and Miss Mary Aspinwall Tappan gave Mr. Serge Koussevitzky, the leader of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Tappan family estate. Since then, as the website hosted festivals from its premises. The venue includes 526 hectares (212.86 hectares) and organizes around 350,000 people annually. The inhabitants introduced the second summer festival and then again in 1936, when the Boston Symphony Orchestra was included in the repertoire and the venue was moved to Holmwood. About 15,000 people were attended by the 1936 festival, which was introduced under Giant. Tent. In the end, in 1937, the festival moved to the Tanglewood place and took over the music festival Tanglewood, which is still used to this day. In 1941 the music center was completedM. Tanglewood Music Center, Theater-Concert Hall, Chamber Music and many smaller studies. This expansion meant that the venue could then welcome approximately 100,000 visitors per year.
The complex underwent an extension in 1986, which saw that the size of the original 210 hectares (85 hectares) was almost doubled. The acquisition of a new property meant that the committee could move the place of its concert hall to its current location. This new concert hall was named Seiji Ozawa Hall and was inaugurated on July 7, 1994. The new hall enabled the tanning Group concerts to admit more visitors and expanded its many performances. This site also organizes two music schools, Boston University Tanglewood Institute (Buti) and Tanglewood Music Center, where music luminaires like Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein and Lukas Foss instructed the beginning musicians of the school.
venueShe names from the collection of short stories written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Tanglewood Tales . In 1850, Hawthorne rented a cottage by William Aspinwall Tappana in Berkshires, where he rewrote a number of Greek myths. In memory of the author's success, Tappan renamed Tanglewood, a name that would eventually carry the entire Tappan property.