Join us for the annual Sunday Pops in Riverview Park concert! Enjoy a variety of music from light classical, Broadway, film, and television music. It is a free concert, open to the public and you are invited to bring along your whole family, friends and neighbors for this once-a-year festival of music. Activities provided by the Felix Adler Discovery Center will begin at 5:30pm, music at 6:30pm.
Pianist Lorraine Min returns following her exciting performance with Clinton Symphony Orchestra in 2019. This time she will perform the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1. A native of Victoria, Canada, she has dazzled audiences internationally with her poetic artistry and brilliant virtuosity. She has caught the attention of a local patron of the arts, who for the second time underwrites her performance with us. Conductor Brian Dollinger has also chosen the overture to Haydn’s opera L’isola disabitata (The Uninhabited Island), and the Brahms Variations on a Theme of Joseph Haydn to complete the program.
Steinway Artist and critically acclaimed pianist, LORRAINE MIN has dazzled audiences internationally with her poetic artistry and brilliant virtuosity.
Cited by the New York Times for her “impeccable phrase-shaping (and) crystalline sound,” and by the Washington Post for her “admirable playing,” Min has performed extensively throughout Canada and USA, in Germany, France, the UK, Italy, Switzerland, Australia, India, and in South America. She has performed solo recitals and has made concerto appearances in some of the world’s most important concert halls such as New York’s Avery Fisher Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Town Hall, Carnegie Hall, Merkin Hall, the Kennedy Center’s Concert Hall, Vancouver’s Orpheum Theatre, and the Chan Centre, to name only a few.
A dynamic chamber musician, Min has performed in prestigious North American venues including at the Ravinia and Tanglewood Festivals, in Europe, Asia, Australia, notably in Perth’s Western Australia Symphony Orchestra’s Amberley Mozart Day concerts where she was a featured guest artist. She can regularly be heard on CBC and ABC (Australian) radio.
Min’s success in prestigious international competitions include top prizes and special awards of distinction in the Washington International, D’Angelo, Frina Awerbuch, and the William Kapell Competitions. She was the top ranking Canadian pianist at nineteen years old in the Harveys Leeds and Busoni International Competitions, and laureate in the Van Cliburn Competition.
Min’s discography includes her solo CD of Schubert and Liszt and a CD featuring chamber music of Beethoven and Brahms for Canada’s esteemed Eine Kleine Music Festival. In 2013, Min released two CD’s, her subsequent solo CD, “In Recital” which features works by Chopin, Liszt, and Bartok, as well as a CD of Violin and Piano Sonatas by Franck, Debussy, and Prokofiev.
Born in Victoria and raised in Vancouver, Canada, Min studied on full scholarship at the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University and earned her Bachelor degree, Pi Kappa Lambda. On generous scholarships and numerous grants from the Canada Council for the Arts, Min received her Masters and Doctoral degrees from the Juilliard School.
Franz Josef Haydn 1732-1809
Composer Franz Josef Haydn was born in Austria in 1732 and is known as one of the greatest masters of classical music. His capacity for both musical wit and depth of feeling, as well as his sheer productivity have won him the title of “father” to both the string quartet and the symphony. His compositions include 104 symphonies, 50 concertos, 84 string quartets, 24 stage works, and 12 masses, among numerous other works. Given great scope for composition, Haydn became musical director for the Esterhazy family for whom most of his musical output was produced during 29 years of service. In the 1780s, Haydn received commissions from London and Paris and honors from all over Europe. He formed a close friendship with Mozart, an association that influenced the music of both. Hayden’s works were known for his originality, liveliness, optimism and instrumental brilliance, and became the model and inspiration not only for Mozart, but also for Beethoven, who studied under him. Two great oratorios, The Creation, based on Milton’s Paradise Lost, and The Seasons were written later in life, planned on the grand scale for solo voices, chorus and orchestra. Haydn’s output was so large that at the end of his life, he could not be sure how many works he had written. He died in Vienna on May 32, 1809.
L’isola Disabitata Overture While working for Prince Esterhazy, Haydn composed 14 operas, 9 in Italian and 5 in German. Since the Prince loved opera, Haydn had a ready audience, and as he was contracted to write an opera a year, he had many opportunities to experiment with the form. Said to be his favorite, L’isola was number 10 and composed in 1789 during a season that premiered 3 of his own operas. The overture, sometimes likened to a miniature symphony, is an example of Haydn’s Storm and Drang style. Manifested primarily between the late 1760s and early 1780s, Sturm and Drang refers to the practice of releasing sudden, wild emotion in contrast to the enlightenment values of rationalism and control. Evident in literature and music, its purpose was to counter polite control with sudden shock, exuberance and energy. Haydn embraced this element in highly emotional music with sudden fits and starts, agitation and loud dynamics. In this piece, the Largo begins with 6 unisons before a tiny theme is introduced quietly by the strings, ending with 3 repeated eighth notes, a final sustained tone and unexpected silence. Then a sudden explosion bursts from the entire orchestra, strings leading with racing notes and accents. A soft, gasping second theme adds a contrast before being swept away in the full sturm and Drang conflagration. A small minuet dances with poise and elegance until the orchestra again explodes in a furious conclusion with 3 firm chords.
Johannes Brahms 1833-1897 Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Germany in 1833 and died in Vienna, Austria in 1897. He was the great master of symphonic and sonata style, writing symphonies, concerti, chamber music, piano works, choral compositions and over 200 songs. He championed the Classical tradition of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven at a time when the standards of this tradition were being questioned by the Romantics. Although considered a traditionalist by his contemporaries, his music also embeds innovative and deeply romantic motifs. Enshrined as one of the “Three B’s” along with Bach and Beethoven, his works have become staples of the modern concert repertoire. Brahms learned piano by age 8, improvised a piano sonata at 11, and made his public concert debut conducting a choir at age 14. Young Johannes was even able to supplement his family’s income playing piano in Hamburg’s rough dock area. In 1850 he met Hungarian violinist Eduard Remenyi, who introduced him to Roma music, which was to become one of his strongest influences. His first big break came in 1853 when he met violin virtuoso Joseph Joachim who recognized his talent and recommended him to Robert Schumann. Schumann’s enthusiastic support introduced him to the public with the prophetic words, “This is the chosen one!” From 1857 to 1860, posts teaching piano and conducting gave him time to compose 2 serenades, a string sextet and his turbulent Piano Concerto No. 1. He eventually settled in Vienna directing a choral society. As his reputation grew, so did rivalry between his supporters and those of the New Romantic school, such as Wagner and Bruckner, who deemed him too old-fashioned. By 1872 he was directing the Vienna Philharmonic. His composing skills flourished during this period, including his most famous choral work, his German Requiem, based on the Bible story of Good Friday, still seen today as one of the most significant works of 19th century choral music. Light works from this period included his Hungarian Dances for piano duet, a brilliant arrangement of Roma tunes which enjoyed phenomenal success. He also published his Liebeslieder (love songs) for vocal quartet, using Viennese waltzes with sparkling humor. By the 1870s he was moving to purely orchestral works, including Variations on a Theme by Haydn, which gave him the confidence to continue work on his tempestuous 1st Symphony completed in 1876. His 2nd Symphony followed in a more serene, idyllic mood. Six years later he finished his 3rd Symphony which begins calmly, but ends in a gigantic conflict of elemental forces. His 4th Symphony was inspired by Sophocles’ Greek tragedies. Further demonstrating his creative genius, he also took a simple theme from a Bach cantata, spinning it into 30 intricate variations. Brahms’ fame spread and he was able to tour to great acclaim all over Europe. He composed his Academic Festival Overture in 1881 as a thank you to Poland. He never married, and some credited his “immense reserve” to an inability to express emotion except through his music. Brahms dedicated his later years to composing and died in Vienna in 1897.
Variations on a Theme of Joseph Haydn When Brahms turned 40 he began composing a set of variations based on a Wind Divertimento by Haydn. An irregular structure based on five rather than the usual four measures in length became the basic theme for his eight variations with a concluding passacaglia and finale. Credited as the first set of independent variations for orchestra ever composed, the success of his composition gave Brahms the confidence to move forward with orchestral works. Although the simple theme was likely not from Haydn, the name lives on in a series of meditations and rhapsodic developments, unlike common variations which merely embellish the central melody. The finale wonderfully illustrates Brahms’ mastery of traditional composition, a veritable textbook of counterpoint, canons, double counterpoint and more. Beginning with a hymn-like statement, the chorale grows in powerful elaboration, bursting into a roaring climax.
Piano Concerto No. 1 in D Minor, op. 15 Brahms spent his life struggling to emerge from Beethoven’s shadow, so intimidated by his master that more than half his career would pass before writing his first symphony. Beginning in 1854, the young Brahms wrestled for four years with the form and his own uncertainty. It began as a symphony, then turned into a massive sonata for two pianos which he played with his dear friend Clara Schumann. Finally, it emerged as a piano concerto, but not the traditional solo with orchestral accompaniment. Instead, it became a work on symphonic scale in which piano and orchestra are equals. As with many monumental new works, when it debuted in Leipzig, the audience hissed, not yet ready for its stormy, ferocious intensity. It would only begin to be accepted years later. The ominous opening theme returns throughout the first movement, rising like some awesome supernatural power. When the piano enters, it is in a different world of quiet, restless melancholy. A second theme of passionate warmth is echoed in a distant horn call. The Adagio begins in quiet majesty, weaving in lines of the bassoon, strings and oboe. The piano’s elaborate trills introduce the final statements of the orchestra and a distant drumbeat. The final Rondo alternates a principal theme, surging forward with spirited momentum as the soloist begins with a furious, Bach-inspired melody. The movement continues with rhythmic vigor including a string fugue, and comes to a transcendent close filled with warmth and grand drama.
The Clinton Symphony Orchestra will present “Stories in Music” as their family concert on Sunday, February 19 at 2 p.m. at the Morrison High School Auditorium. The popularity of the afternoon time trialed at last year’s family concert has brought it back this year, this time on Sunday. Imagine the giants of the past with Bryant’s Dinosaurs: A Primeval Symphony, and meet the instruments of the orchestra through Aesop’s Fables by Richard Maltz. We’ll enjoy Mozart’s Concerto for Flute presented by our 2023 Young Artist, Akshar Barot. The concert will conclude with Mozart’s Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550. The music program honors the excellent opportunities for music education offered by area schools and music teachers. Many musicians of the symphony are teachers.
Students always attend free, Adult tickets are $20. A student may bring their favorite adult who will enjoy a 50% discount on their ticket, please ask about this offer at the ticket table.
Program:
Curtis Bryant – Dinosaurs; A Primeval Symphony I. Ultimate Tangle II. Plated March III. Pterrible Flight IV. Duckbilled Ragtime V. Tyrannical Tarantelle
W.A. Mozart – Concerto in G for Flute, K313 Allegro Maestoso Akshar Barot, 2023 Young Artist
Richard Maltz – Aesop’s Fables
I. Prelude II. The Hare and the Tortoise III. The Fox and the Grapes IV. The Ant and the Grasshopper V. The Oak and the Reeds VI. The Milkmaid and her Pail VII. Finale
W. A. Mozart – Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K550 Allegro Molto Andante Menuetto – Allegretto Allegro Assai
Akshar Barot, the winner of the Clinton Symphony’s 2023 Young Artist Auditions, is a junior at Rock Falls High School, his music teachers are Patrick Anderson and Ramiro Martinez. He is a flute student of Julie McCord. In school, he is an active member of Scholastic Bowl, Speech Team, Knights Alumni Drumline, and of Sterling Municipal Band and Jazz Band. In addition to flute he plays Marimba, Xylophone, Electric Guitar, Bass Guitar, Indian Bamboo Flute, and Tabla. He plans to study aerospace engineering in the future, while continuing his passion for music. He will perform Mozart’s Concerto in G for Flute as part of the Symphony’s February concert, “Stories in Music” at 2:00pm on Sunday, February 19, in Morrison High School Auditorium.
Program Notes:
Dinosaurs: A Primeval Symphony
Curtis Bryant
An Atlanta native, Curtis Bryant earned his Master of Music Theory from Georgia State University. His music has been heard across multiple continents, as well as on radio and television broadcasts. He has composed for virtually all concert media including chamber, choral, opera, art song and orchestra, as well as a variety of ethnic and folk styles. Although classically trained, his diverse and unique style is influenced by blues and jazz and exhibits a strong sense of melody. Bryant has also composed music for numerous television series and specials, including the award- winning Portrait of America series produced by Georgia Public Television. He has won seven Southern Regional Emmy Award nominations for original music and numerous ASCAP Awards. Inspired by his eight-year-old son’s love of dinosaurs, His Primeval Symphony is an orchestral fantasy based on favorite fossils of prehistoric North America in five movements from the Jurassic to the late Cretaceous. Some of these legendary giants are depicted in a series of dance-inspired musical episodes in the manner of a classical suite. I. Ultimate Tangle. A primeval forest with a herd of giant ultrasound, their necks entwined as they feast on the surrounding trees. It takes on the form of a fugue transformed into a habanero, a tango of long necks. II. Plated March. A dramatic stalemate between an herbivore (stegosaurus) and a carnivore (allosaurus) of the Jurassic period. III. Pterrible Flight. The heightened depiction of a dramatic encounter between the Pteranodon with a twenty- foot wingspan and the sturdy three-horned triceratops. IV. Duckbilled Ragtime. Depicts a clan of hadrosaurs found throughout North America in the Cretaceous era. V. Tyrannical Tarantelle. The favorite monster of the Cretaceous, Tyrannosaurus Rex in a dark and ominous setting as he waits in ambush and then lunges forward after his prey.
Flute Concerto in G Major, (Allegro)
W. A. Mozart
In 1777 Mozart was commissioned by a wealthy Dutch flutist, Ferdinand De Jean, to write 3 concertos and several quartets. Mozart, who has been rumored to dislike the flute, found it an “unpleasant commission” and procrastinated, missed his deadlines and was only partially paid. Despite complaining to his father that “you know that I become quite powerless where I am obliged to write for an instrument that I cannot bear,” the concerto has become one of the most significant pieces in the flute repertoire. The comments probably reveal more about the volatile relationship between an overbearing father and his rebellious son, as Mozart managed to write particularly effectively and sensitively for the instrument, and one of his favorite musicians and close friends was principal flutist in Mannheim. Tonight our Young Artist performs the first movement, which brilliantly integrates stately, lyrical and virtuosic elements. Written in the “gallant style”, the bright, energetic Allegro in sonata form exudes elegance and a delectable melody.
Aesop’s Fables Richard Maltz
Raised in Massachusetts, prolific composer Richard Maltz has earned degrees from North Texas and the University of South Carolina where he is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus. His music has been performed nationally and internationally and includes symphonies, concertos, operas, ballets, chamber music, percussion ensembles and children’s pieces. Some of his commissions include the Charleston Symphony, the Pennsylvania Sinfonia and the South Carolina Philharmonic. He describes his musical style as primarily neoclassical, favoring lyrical melody, tonal harmony and energetic rhythms cast in traditional forms. The descriptive and colorful character of Aesop’s Fables is composed of light musical vignettes designed to introduce the instruments of the orchestra and teach elements of music to young students.
I. Prelude II. The Hare and the Tortoise III. The Fox and the Grapes IV. The Ant and the Grasshopper V. The Oak and the Reeds VI. The Milkmaid and her Pail VII. Finale
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Likely the best-known of all composers, Mozart created music in nearly every major genre, leaving behind compositions that serve as archetypes of the Classical period. A true child prodigy, he wrote his first piece of music at the age of five, published his first composition by the age of seven, and had written his first opera by his twelfth birthday. One of the most prolific and influential composers of all time, he composed over 600 works in his short lifetime and almost single-handed developed the piano concerto. Born in Salzburg, Austria, Wolfgang was the youngest of seven and one of only two siblings to survive to adulthood. His father Leopold, one of Europe’s leading music teachers, conductors and composers, gave up his own career to become his son’s only teacher when Wolfgang’s musical genius was discovered by his third birthday. An older sister, Maria Anna, was also musically talented and their father traveled the two all over Europe to show off their precocious ability, allowing them to meet many musicians. When the touring ended, Wolfgang was hired as a court musician, performing and composing for Salzburg’s Prince. Popular and beloved in Salzburg, he composed in many genres; symphonies, sonatas, string quartets, serenades and operas. Eventually growing discontented with his low salary and few opportunities to work on his favorite form, the opera, he searched for jobs, settling in Paris only to fail to find success. He grudgingly returned to Salzburg where he continued to feel unappreciated and was finally fired by the Prince. Finally it was in Vienna where his career took off, and he established himself as the finest pianist in the city while continuing to compose, including a hugely successful opera, Abduction from the Seraglio. His reputation established, he married, fathered 6 children and began studying the works of Bach, Handel and Haydn, all of whom influenced his work. Mozart put on a very popular concert series as a piano soloist, writing three of four concertos each season. Finally attaining some wealth, the Mozart’s lived lavishly, leading to financial problems later. Shifting back to opera, he premiered The Marriage of Figaro to acclaim followed by Don Giovanni. By 1787 he had obtained steady work under the patronage of Emperor Joseph II who appointed him court composer. Unfortunately, Austria was at war a year later leading to a career decline. Moving to cheaper lodgings, he still was forced to send notes to friends begging for money. 1791 was his last year of great productivity, resulting in The Magic Flute, his final piano concertos, a clarinet concerto, his last great string quintets, the revision of his Symphony No. 40 and his unfinished Requiem. His finances began to improve, but he fell ill in September and died in December 1791.
Symphony No. 40 in G Minor
At no time was the gulf between Mozart’s personal life and his transcendent music more apparent than in the summer of 1788,
when at the age of 33 he had only three years to live. His wife was ill, his own health was beginning to fail, his six-month old daughter died, he had small prospects of participating in any important concerts, and he was in such debt he would not answer a knock on the door for fear of creditors. Yet, amidst all these difficulties he produced in less than two months the three crowning jewels of his orchestral output, the Symphonies No. 39, 40 and 41. The G Minor may reflect the composer’s distressed emotional state at the time. It is through these great works that epitomize the structural elegance of the waning classical era while looking forward to the passionately charged music of 19th century Romanticism. French Musicologist F. J. Fetid defines the G Minor with “the accents of passion and energy that pervade and the melancholy color that dominates it result in one of the most beautiful manifestations of the human spirit.” The tragic restlessness of the first movement begins with a brooding murmur in the lower strings before the main theme is introduced. Masterful contrasts of dynamics, rhythm and pacing underscore Mozart’s mastery of orchestral color. The gentle, relaxed second movement’s Andante moves away from the turmoil of the first with imaginative contrasts of color with rich chromatic harmonies and melodic half-steps The third movement, conventionally a minuet, but this time in name only as it moves back to a minor mode with irregular phrasing and dense texture. An energetic finale begins with a rapid ascending of over an octave, then moving to a more lyrical pace. A final relentless tempo blazes to a dramatic ending like a tragic opera.
Akshar Barot, the winner of the Clinton Symphony’s 2023 Young Artist Auditions, is a junior at Rock Falls High School, his music teachers are Patrick Anderson and Ramiro Martinez. He is a flute student of Julie McCord. In school, he is an active member of Scholastic Bowl, Speech Team, Knights Alumni Drumline, and of Sterling Municipal Band and Jazz Band. In addition to flute he plays Marimba, Xylophone, Electric Guitar, Bass Guitar, Indian Bamboo Flute, and Tabla. He plans to study aerospace engineering in the future, while continuing his passion for music. He will perform Mozart’s Concerto in G for Flute as part of the Symphony’s February concert, “Stories in Music” at 2:00pm on Sunday, February 19, in Morrison High School Auditorium.Learn more about the concert here.
Join us on Sunday, January 15 at 2:00pm at Zion Lutheran Church, 439 3rd Ave S in Clinton, to enjoy chamber music featuring members of the Clinton Symphony Orchestra. Tickets are available online or at the door. Learn more about the musicians and the music in the following program notes:
Gabriel Fauré……………………..“Pie Jesu” from the Requiem arranged for Violas by Tracey Rush
Elaine Fine……………………..Three Dances for Five Violas
Habanera Saltarello Rigadoon
Jotham Polashek • Ann Duchow • Natalie Delcorps • Hana Velde • Tracey Rush
Vasyl Barvinsky……………………..Piano Trio in A Minor Second Movement – Andante
The quintet of violists on today’s program are all residents of Dubuque and active musicians in the area. Jotham Polashek is from Ames, and attended University of Northern Iowa. He teaches strings in the Dubuque Schools.
Ann Duchow has a teaching studio and teaches strings in the Dubuque area colleges. She serves as principal second violin with Clinton Symphony.
Natalie Delcorps is from the Chicago area, and attended Luther College. She teaches strings in Dubuque Schools, and is a regular member of Clinton Symphony’s viola section.
Hana Velde is a native of Seattle, and regular in the Symphony’s violin section. She holds a degree from Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, and teaches mathematics at University of Dubuque
Tracey Rush is founder of the Northeast Iowa School of Music and the Dubuque Community String Orchestra, has taught in the public schools, and is presently conductor of the University of Dubuque String Ensemble. She is a widely recognized composer.
Piano Trio and Quartet
Pianist Nadia Wirchnianski has been an enthusiastic contributor to our chamber music programs, and is pianist for Clinton Symphony. She is a native of Chicago with degrees from DePaul University and Northwestern University. She lives in Lanark and teaches in Dixon Schools and Highland Community College in Freeport.
Violinist Asa Church is a member of Clinton Symphony’s violin section, and a native of Normal, Illinois, where he graduated from Illinois State University. He is an orchestra teacher in the Sterling Public Schools.
Violist Julie Marston is an orchestra teacher in the Clinton Schools and a graduate of Eastern Michigan University. She is a violinist with Clinton Symphony and performs with other area orchestras and ensembles as well.
Cellist Avery Kerley is new to Clinton Symphony, a resident of Dixon, Illinois, and teaches music classes in the Amboy, Illinois schools. He is a graduate of Southern Illinois University and a native of Vienna, Illinois.
“Pie Jesu” from REQUIEM by Gabriel Fauré arranged for Violas by Tracey Rush
Gabriel Fauré was a French composer, renowned organist and teacher, one of the most influential composers of his generation. This much-loved movement from Fauré’s magnificent Requiem is known for its profound feelings of hope and loss depicted with simplicity. Fauré eliminated the traditional movements of a requiem which depicted hell and damnation in favor of an emphasis on the hope of eternal peace for the loved one. The Pie Jesu is arranged here for violas by Dubuque comoser/arranger Tracey Rush.
THREE DANCES for Five Violas by Elaine Fine
Playing violin and flute, Elaine Fine graduated from Julliard, playing and teaching in Austria before eventually relocating to Eastern Illinois University where she found a vibrant artistic community in the small collegiate town. She made a career in music performance and instruction, volunteering for benefit concerts to ensure public music accessibility. Performing with the LeVeck String Quartet from 1994 to 2005, she began composing over 70 pieces of chamber music, 3 operas and many arrangements, which she has made available in the public domain to help other musicians.
“Andante” from PIANO TRIO in A Minor by Vasyl Barvinsky
Composed in 1910 when Barvinsky was only 21, the Piano Trio illustrates the composer’s late romantic and impressionistic style underscored with local folklore, marking him one of Ukraine’s first composers to receive worldwide recognition. Referred to as “the composer without notes” he was brutally imprisoned for 10 years by the Soviets who burned his scores in public in 1948. Now known for his music of resilience despite repression, he was able to reconstruct some of his lost works, and many others were rediscovered after his death in 1963.
PIANO QUARTET in G Minor by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Mozart himself loved to play viola with small chamber groups, and added this instrument to the usual piano trio of his time. Filled with complexity, drama and operatic conversations between the instruments, his composition was initially deemed too difficult for most casual musicians. The stormy G minor key, his famous “key of fate”, was one Mozart reserved for his most turbulent music. The work consists of 3 movements, beginning with a large sonata form as the instruments play in unison. A melodious slow movement follows with an exuberant rondo finale.
It’s the most wonderful time of the year! Join us for a night of holiday favorites this coming Saturday, December 10, as we gather at 7:30pm in CHS’s Vernon Cook Theater. We’ll be ringing in 100 years since the “Carol of the Bells” was introduced to America by a choral group from Ukraine. For Charles Schulz 100th birthday, we will enjoy the music written by Vince Guaraldi for the beloved Charlie Brown Christmas Special. Many other favorites, including a carol sing-along are on this year’s program, detailed below.
This is a wonderful concert to introduce people to symphonic music, so round up your friends and family! Students always enjoy free admission, and one adult brought by the student may enjoy a 50% discount on their ticket….ask at the ticket table!
Program:
Bells of Christmas Skater’s Waltz Sleigh Ride Charlie Brown Christmas A Christmas Festival Carol of the Bells Parade of the Wooden Soldiers The Nutcracker Polar Express
Please enjoy the following program notes:
The Bells of Christmas, arranged by Bob Kronstadt A collection of traditional holiday favorites, this creative mix of styles and treatments includes Ding Dong Merrily on High, The Carol of the Bells, Silver Bells, I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day and Jingle bells.
Les Patineurs (“Skater’s Waltz”) by Emille Waldteufel
One of the most famous wintery pieces in classical music, The Skaters’ Waltz was written in 1882 and inspired by the sight of Parisians skating on the frozen Seine river. Waldteufel wrote over 200 works, but this is the piece he is best remembered for.
Waldteufel set out to capture the atmosphere of a winter day in Paris, with ice-skaters venturing onto the frozen Seine River. In the manner of his older rival Johann Strauss, Waldteufel’s piece offers a sequence of contrasting serene and exuberant waltz themes, rather than just a single melody. A slow opening passage for solo horn is followed by graceful rising and falling lines in the strings and woodwinds that lead to the first waltz theme. There, again, the horn takes the central role. The wintry ambience of the piece is enhanced by the use of sleigh bells in the percussion section.
Sleigh Ride and A Christmas Festival By Leroy Anderson Famously beloved as the “voice of the Boston Pops” and composer of light concert music, Leroy Anderson displayed his musical talent early to his Swedish immigrant parents. His first composition at the age of 12 led him to study piano at the New England Conservatory of Music and later, Harvard. Also adept at languages, he became fluent in at least 9, making the practical decision for a regular salary by becoming a language teacher. Conducting and composing for popular orchestras on the side soon spread his musical reputation until he was discovered by Arthur Fiedler of the Boston Pops. Many of his clever, inventive compositions have been used as themes for radio and TV shows. Deemed an American original, he earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He has been widely lauded as the “Norman Rockwell” of American music for his ability to capture the familiar and turn it into art.” Composed on a hot summer day in July, Sleigh Ride remains the most popular of holiday music. With its cheerful melody and the sounds of sleigh bells, horse whinnies and a whip, it has been recorded over 8000 times. Any musician will insist they can play it without a conductor, and the horse whinny has become a must-learn skill for every fledgling trumpet player. For A Christmas Festival, Anderson chose 8 popular Christmas songs to represent the spirit of the holidays. Composed for the Boston Pops, it has become a Christmas staple, inviting audiences to sing along to familiar melodies.
A Charlie Brown Christmas, by Vince Guaraldi and Lee Mendelson, arranged by David Pugh On December 9, 1965, nearly half the TV sets in America tuned into a Christmas special based on a popular comic strip that CBS executives predicted to flop. But by
1966 A Charlie Brown Christmas would go on to earn a Peabody and an Emmy for outstanding children’s programming. It then ran annually on CBS for 35 years and became the first of more than 45 animated Charlie Brown television specials featuring the hapless little round-headed boy. The popular cartoon strip Peanuts had been a staple of American newspapers since 1950, its characters giving readers the chance to relive childhood angst through the antics and quips of Charlie Brown and his gang for the next 50 years. Peanuts creator Charles Schulz called on pianist Vince Guaraldi and his trio to compose and perform music that would reflect the humor, charm and innocence of the gang. Guaraldi strung together elegant, enticing arrangements that reflect the spirit of Schultz’s work while introducing graceful contemporary jazz to youngsters. Simple drawings and a meandering storyline tell of Charlie Brown discovering the true meaning of Christmas, the image of his forlorn but endearing tree cleverly paralleling his character. As that sad fir is brought to life, Charlie’s melancholy lifts with a timeless message of holiday spirit. Songs include Lucy and Linus with its fresh, energetic feel and tantalizing meter changes. Christmas Time is Here, the album’s most endearing moment, is a soft lullaby with percussive flavors. The romantic gem Skating blends musical references to falling snowflakes with a dashing feel of swing. Christmas is Coming brings the listener into the joyous light of the Christmas spirit.
Carol of the Bells, by M. Leontovich and P. Wilhousky Arranged by Richard Hayman
Carol of the Bells has its roots in old Ukrainian folk songs, a way of blessing one’s neighbors or worshiping ancient gods before the advent of Christianity. In 1899, Mykolaiv Leontovych was supposed to become a priest, but when the choir director of his seminary died, he was put in charge and eventually became a music teacher, composer and arranger of his country’s ancient songs. One of these was a simple, four- note melody called “Shchedryk”, what we know today as Carol of the Bells. Ukrainian conductor Oleksander Koshyts liked it enough to make it his choir’s signature piece for its first international tour. The driving, dancing energy of the arrangement found its way to the United States, eventually making its way to a performance at Carnegie Hall. Peter J. Wilhousky, a popular American composer of the time among Ukrainian ethnicities, wrote English lyrics for the song in 1936. Renaming it into Carol of the Bells for American audiences, it quickly became associated with Christmas in widespread performances all through the 1940s recorded by well- known groups such as Fred Waring and the Roger Wagner Chorale. This year, on December 4, Carnegie Hall hosted a holiday celebration to benefit Ukraine as choral groups from North America and Europe honored the 100th anniversary of Carol of the Bells.
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers, by Leon Jessel, Arranged by Morton Gould This sprightly march was originally written as a solo piano piece in 1897 by the German composer Leon Jessel, then titled Parade of the Tin Soldiers. In 1905, Jessel orchestrated it, and it became a popular favorite worldwide. John Phillip Sousa’s band played it with the name changed to Wooden Soldiers, and it was published in many different arrangements used in vaudeville routines, Broadway shows, films and cartoons. Since 1933 the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes have marched to this tune in their Christmas Spectacular. Renowned American composer and pops orchestrator Morton Gould worked as a pianist at Radio City Music Hall and later made his own colorful arrangement. The charming fantasy-like quality of the music has become a beloved children’s Christmas tradition.
The Nutcracker by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
In his last years, Tchaikovsky earned his greatest successes matched only by his growing depression. He was to die less than a year after The Nutcracker ballet debuted in 1891 at the height of his career. Arguably the best known Russian composer of all time, his works include 7 symphonies, 11 operas, 3 ballets, 3 piano concertos, a violin concerto, 4 cantatas, 20 choral works and over 100 songs and piano pieces. Although his operas had limited success, he was able to transform ballet into staged musical drama, revolutionizing the genre. He took ballet seriously, seeing it as an art form equal to all others when detractors were writing it off. Nutcracker is based on the romantic writer E.T.A. Hoffman’s tale of Clara and the nutcracker she receives as a Christmas gift. After Clara saves the nutcracker in a fight with the mouse king, he transforms into a handsome Prince and sweeps her off to the magical Kingdom of Sweets. Coming off his tremendous success with Swan Lake, a weary Tschaikovsky found the structure difficult and limiting and even asked to be removed from the project. Instead, he was given an extension and was able to create another masterpiece. It has become a ritual for the Christmas season among children and adults alike.
The Polar Express, by Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard, arranged by Jerry Brubaker The soundtrack for this 2004 film based on the book by the same name, was written by prolific American composer- arranger Alan Silvestri. Nominated 4 times for a Grammy Award, Silvestri also wrote music for Back to the Future, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Forrest Gump, Cast Away, the Avenger series, and many more films. The book’s author, Chris Van Allsburg, won the Caldecott Medal in 1985 for his haunting tale showing it’s never too late to dream. The storyline involves a young boy who sees a mysterious train outside his bedroom window on Christmas Eve. Other children also embark on the train’s journey to the North Pole to visit Santa as he prepares for Christmas. The first all-digital capture film, it features human characters animated using live- action and motion-capture CGI animation. Although underperforming initially at the box office, later re-releases helped propel the film’s gross to $324 million worldwide. The soundtrack is the best-selling soundtrack/holiday album in history. Songs in this arrangement include Believe, which won a Grammy in 2006, The Polar Express, When Christmas Comes to Town, and Spirit of the Season.