"It will be terrifying, I warn you," wrote Camille Saint-Saëns ahead of the premiere of his famed Symphony No. 3, which breaks from genre conventions by featuring prominent parts for organ and piano. But it was worth the risk, as the innovative work became one of Saint-Saëns's most admired and regularly performed more than a century after his death—and there's nothing to fear when you're in the capable hands of the indomitable Dallas Symphony Orchestra, who take on this repertoire monument under the expert baton of music director Fabio Luisi, with their resident organist Bradley Hunter Welch in the spotlight.
Read moreDallas Symphony Orchestra