Exactly 30 years after the ballet was staged in Zurich, the Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano offers the first performance in concert form of this piece that puts music and architecture in dialogue. The best way to celebrate in style the 100th anniversary of Luciano Berio's birth, with a "Florentine" delegation of musicians of enormous depth (from the city that Berio loves so much, which hosts the Study Center dedicated to him and the Temporeale Festival, founded by the composer in 1987): Andrea Lucchesini at the piano and Diego Ceretta on the podium, with which the Orchestra weaves a program that brings together Ravel's Valses nobles et sentimentales and Respighi's Fontane di Roma.