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CHICAGO — Strains of classical music echoed Sunday — not inside an august concert hall — but in a bleak Chicago jail where the mostly teenage boys await trial on charges ranging from dope dealing to murder.

The concert was part of a unique outreach that’s the brainchild of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s musical director, the Italian-born Riccardo Muti, who attended the event at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center.

The concert included half a dozen of the orchestra’s members. But the center-stage performers were some 10 inmates who participated in a week-long musical workshop at the lockup. It culminated in the Sunday concert.

“This is a wonderful beginning for you and for us,” Muti, 71, told the group after the 45-minute performance ended. “You will join society with the sense of harmony you learned here.”

One composition began with a double bass playing a Bach cello suite. It changed direction jarringly a minute later as the teen inmates joined in rapping.

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