Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...

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Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
Alabama Symphony Orchestra
     Appalachian Spring
      Thursday, June 10, 2021
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
the jay and susie gogue performing arts center
              at auburn university
                            presents

 Alabama Symphony Orchestra
      Appalachian Spring

                  Thursday, June 10, 2021
                        7:30 p.m.

     Walter Stanley and Virginia Katharyne Evans
                  Woltosz Theatre

               Presented as part of our
           Orchestra & Chamber Music Series

 Our thanks to the Auburn Chamber Music Society for their decades
  of commitment to chamber music and their collaborative support.

                     click here for a list of
                    2020–21 season sponsors
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
PROGRAM

Symphony No. 44 in E minor (“Trauer”) (1772) ............................ Franz Joseph Haydn
  I. Allegro con brio                                                              (1732–1809)
  II. Menuetto: Allegretto, canon in diapason
  III. Adagio
  IV. Presto

Appalachian Spring (1944) . . ............................................................... Aaron Copland
                                                                                                  (1900–90)

                              PROGRAM NOTES

Symphony No. 44 in E minor (“Trauer”)
  Franz Joseph Haydn
Haydn wrote most of his 104 symphonies for the musicians at the court of
the Esterhàzy princes in what is now Hungary. Haydn had been their court
composer since 1761, writing music for family occasions and private functions.
The Esterhàzy family was incredibly rich. In addition to rooms for a private
orchestra, the Esterhàzy palace had a theatre for operas and one for puppets.
The puppets may not have cared about opera. Although his position was
handsomely paid, Haydn was still a servant. He composed and performed
on command; he was also not permitted to travel without permission.
Consequently, Haydn developed as a composer almost in isolation from other
composers but with an orchestra consisting of some of the finest musicians that
money could literally buy. In his many symphonies, Haydn featured different
members of his orchestra, writing specifically for their talents to showcase in
performance before their princely master. In doing so, Haydn explored the
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
symphony as a genre of expression rather than merely a pleasing work played
between acts of an opera. The aesthetic standard for musical composition in
the eighteenth-century was that music should be pleasing. Haydn’s Symphony
No. 44 challenges this notion. Musicologists identify this symphony as coming
from Haydn’s Sturm und Drang (“storm and drive”) period. These pieces were
characterized by intense emotion and frenetic energy as opposed to the
ordinarily restrained manner of eighteenth-century music. The 44th symphony
begins with a four-note motif that prefigures the energy of Beethoven. The
second and third movements switch their normal order with the slow movement
coming third and the minuet coming second. The final movement repeats the
intensity of the first. This symphony, one of many with nicknames, is known
as the “Trauer” (mourning) because it was said that Haydn wanted the slow
movement to be played at his funeral. Whether this belief is true or not, the
slow movement was played at a memorial concert in Berlin after his death
in 1809.

Appalachian Spring
  Aaron Copland
Copland wrote the ballet, Appalachian Spring, on a commission from the
eminent dance choreographer Martha Graham in 1942 for a ballet on an
“American theme.” Two years later, Graham danced the lead role in the ballet’s
premiere in Washington, D. C. The original scoring was for a 13-member
chamber orchestra. When Copland was approached in 1945 for the music to be
rearranged into a suite for full symphony orchestra, the composer produced
the form of the work that most people know today as Appalachian Spring. The
irony is that Copland did not give this name to the piece. In fact, for much of
the time he was composing it, he referred to the music only as “a ballet for
Martha.” Graham suggested the title, which she took from a poem by Hart
Crane called “The Dance.” In the poem, though, Crane’s reference to the
Appalachian spring was to water rather than the season. Graham and Copland
capture instead the season of spring in the ballet, which focuses on a newly
married couple starting their lives together on the Pennsylvania frontier. The
suite is in eight movements, usually played without a break. These movements
describe: 1. An introduction to each of the four characters in the ballet (Bride,
Groom, Pioneer Woman, Revivalist Preacher) at dawn; 2. Beginning of the
action; 3. Dance of the Bride and Groom; 4. Dance of the Revivalist Preacher
and his flock; 5. Bride’s solo dance; 6. Transition; 7. Theme and five variations on
“Simple Gifts”; 8. Coda. The penultimate movement, the theme and variations
on “Simple Gifts” or on the “Shaker Melody,” is the most familiar music of the
ballet. In this movement, Copland takes a simple melody (based on a hymn
which opens, “It’s a gift to be simple”) first expressed by a solo clarinet and
provides different lyrical moods for the melody culminating in a full orchestral
summation of this melody. The music and the dancers come together in a
harmonic expression that, while the couple may be starting their lives together,
they are still an inseparable part of a community. For them and us, at the end of
the piece, hope and joy rise—one may even say they “spring.”
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
ABOUT THE ALABAMA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

The formation of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra (ASO) began with the
first performance by a group of volunteer musicians in 1921. That group would
evolve from a volunteer ensemble to the state’s only full-time professional
orchestra. Today, the ASO is continuing to make music and provide vital
services to the residents of the state, serving nearly 100,000 individuals per
year through concert series, youth programs and educational and community
engagement efforts to fulfill our mission to change lives through music.
The Alabama Symphony Orchestra has entertained and enriched audiences
for almost 100 years, playing a variety of classical and popular music and
hosting performances by some of the finest guest artists in the world. The 53
talented musicians of the ASO bring to life some of the world’s most treasured
musical masterpieces and introduce listeners to exciting new works and
composers, performing 100 concerts annually.

Appearing in this evening’s performance:

CONDUCTOR                   CELLO                        CLARINET
Carlos Izcaray              Warren Samples               Kathleen Costello
Music Director and          Principal                    Principal and Symphony
Elton B. Stephens Chair     Xi Yang                      Volunteer Council Chair
                            Peter Garrett
FIRST VIOLIN                                             BASSOON
Mayumi Masri                BASS                         Tariq Masri
Acting Associate                                         Principal
                            Alexander Horton
Concertmaster
                            Principal
Sarah Nordlund Dennis
                            Richard Cassarino            HORN
Viktor Dulguerov            Assistant Principal          Adam Pandolfi*
Ai-Yi Bao                                                Kevin Kozak
                            FLUTE
SECOND VIOLIN               Lisa Wienhold                PIANO
Tara Mueller                Principal                    Smith Williams*
Assistant Principal
Sodam Lim                   OBOE
Serghei Tanas               Machiko Ogawa Schlaffer
Hilarie Rivas*              Assistant Principal
                            Erica Howard*
VIOLA
Rene Reder
Meredith Treaster
Lucina Horner

*Extra musician

For a full listing of Alabama Symphony Orchestra musicians,
please visit alsymphony.org/orchestra.
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
Carlos Izcaray
ASO Music Director

Carlos Izcaray is music director of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra and the
American Youth Symphony. Praised by the international press as inspiring,
spirited and conducting with nuanced sensitivity, he has appeared with
numerous ensembles across five continents and is now firmly established as
one of the leading conductors of his generation. Throughout his career, Izcaray
has shown special interest and prowess in tackling some of the most complex
scores in the symphonic repertoire, while also championing a historically
informed approach.
On the symphonic platform, he leads ensembles such as the Pacific, St. Louis,
North Carolina, Grand Rapids and Kitchener-Waterloo Symphonies, Los Angeles
Chamber Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra of San Antonio, Fort Worth Symphony
Orchestra, Orchester der Komischen Oper Berlin, Malmö Symfoniorkester,
Filarmonica Arturo Toscanini, Orquestra Sinfónica do Porto Casa da Música,
Orquesta Filarmónica de Bogotá, Orchestra Regionale dell’Emilia-Romagna,
Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, Macedonian Philharmonic, Orquestra
Sinfônica da Bahia, Kwazulu-Natal Philharmonic, National Symphony Orchestra
of Colombia, Venezuela Symphony Orchestra, and Orquesta Sinfónica
Municipal de Caracas, among others. Izcaray’s latest recording, Through the
Lens of Time, featuring Max Richter’s Recomposed: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons with
the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and violinist Francisco Fullana,
was released in March 2018 on the Orchid Classics label and has garnered
widespread attention and praise.
Izcaray is equally at home with opera repertoire, receiving rave reviews for his
performances at the Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, Utah Opera, Opera Omaha,
International Opera Festival Alejandro Granda in Peru, and in particular at the
Wexford Festival Opera, where he has led many productions since the opening
of Ireland’s National Opera House. His 2010 performances of Virginia by
Mercadante won the Best Opera prize at the Irish Theatre Awards.
A strong believer of supporting the younger generations, Izcaray has worked
extensively with the world’s top talents and leading music institutions, including
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
his country’s own El Sistema. In 2014 he led a tour of the Filarmónica Joven de
Colombia, and he has additionally worked with the Fundación Batuta, Neojiba
in Brazil, London Schools Symphony Orchestra, and Cambridge University
Music Society, where he has also taught conducting workshops. Following a
project at the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Summer 2015, he returned for
a performance with the World Youth Symphony Orchestra in 2017. Building on
his passion for music education, he became the music director of the American
Youth Symphony in Fall 2016.
Himself a distinguished instrumentalist, Izcaray has featured as concert soloist
and chamber musician worldwide and served as principal cello and artistic
president of the Venezuela Symphony Orchestra prior to dedicating his career
fully to the podium. Increasingly active as a composer, Izcaray’s orchestral work
Cota Mil was premiered by the Orquesta Sinfónica Municipal de Caracas. April
2018 saw the premiere of his Strike Fugaz by the American Youth Symphony,
commissioned in association with the Human Rights Watch to commemorate,
and celebrate, the campaign for worldwide social justice, equality and
freedom—a cause for which Izcaray is a proud and committed advocate.
Izcaray’s Cello Concerto receives its world premiere in January 2020 and is
performed by Santiago Cañón Valencia and the Alabama Symphony Orchestra
under the baton of the composer.
Izcaray was born into a family of several artistic generations in Caracas. At
age 3, he was enrolled in Venezuela’s public system of youth orchestras,
continuing at the Emil Friedman Conservatory, where he was a boy chorister
as well as an instrumentalist. He studied conducting with his father since he
was a teenager, and went on to become a distinguished fellow at the American
Academy of Conducting at Aspen. Izcaray is an alumnus of the Interlochen
Arts Academy, New World School of the Arts, and Jacobs School of Music
 at Indiana University, and won top prizes at the 2007 Aspen Music Festival
and later at the 2008 Toscanini International Conducting Competition. He is
a dual citizen of Spain and Venezuela and divides his time between Birmingham
and Los Angeles.
To learn more about Izcaray’s activities, please visit carlosizcaray.com or his
social media profiles on Facebook and Instagram.
Alabama Symphony Orchestra - Appalachian Spring Thursday, June 10, 2021 - Gogue ...
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