ORCHESTRA OF ST. LUKE’S at Temple Emanu-El (July 30, 7 p.m.). The free Naumburg Orchestral Concerts are always worth a visit, and this one is particularly so for a performance of songs by Florence Price, whose music is starting to receive a welcome renaissance. Jasmine Muhammad is the soloist. Also on the bill are Anna Clyne’s “Prince of Clouds,” Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” and Barber’s “Adagio for Strings.”

naumburgconcerts.org

[Read about the events that our other critics have chosen for the week ahead.]

‘DIE WALKÜRE’ at Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass. (July 27, 8 p.m.; July 28, 2:30 and 6:30 p.m.). Exiled from the Bayreuth Festival, Andris Nelsons seems to be consoling himself by embarking on Wagner’s “Ring” in the Berkshires, with this “Walküre” following on from “Das Rheingold” two years ago. Oddly he will be at the helm not of the Boston Symphony, but of its young relative, the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra. Christine Goerke, one of today’s Brünnhildes of choice, leads the cast, with James Rutherford as Wotan, Simon O’Neill as Siegmund, Amber Wagner as Sieglinde, Franz-Josef Selig as Hunding and Stephanie Blythe as Fricka. Act I will be performed on Saturday night; Acts II and III will follow on Sunday.

617-266-1200, bso.org

‘DAS WUNDER DER HELIANE’ at the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y. (July 26, 7:30 p.m.; July 28, 2 p.m.; through Aug. 4). Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s ultraluxurious scores are heard all too rarely outside of Central Europe, and to hear anything other than “Die Tote Stadt” anywhere is almost impossibly so. Credit, as ever, to Leon Botstein and his insatiable appetite for the exotic, then, for these performances at Bard College’s SummerScape of the opera that followed “Die Tote Stadt” in 1927. Botstein conducts the American Symphony Orchestra in a production directed by Christian Räth, with a cast including Ausrine Stundyte, Alfred Walker and Daniel Brenna.

845-758-7900, fishercenter.bard.edu