PREVIEW #2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH, AT THE SEASCAPE
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PREVIEW #2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH, AT THE SEASCAPE
SLSCC 2013-2014 Season Number 2 League Info:[email protected] • slscc.org November 3, 2013 PREVIEW #2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH, AT THE SEASCAPE GOLF CLUB’S MONARCH ROOM 610 CLUBHOUSE DRIVE, APTOS, CA. 95003 GATHER AT 11:30—CASH BAR IN THE ROOM LUNCH 12-1:00 PRESENTATIONS BY MAESTRO DANNY STEWART AND CELLO SOLOIST, AUSTIN HUNTINGTON CHOOSE FROM THREE HOT PLATED LUNCHES all including green salad, fresh sautéed seasonal vegetables, rolls and butter, coffee, tea or iced tea, and chef’s choice dessert CHOICES: #1. Roasted turkey with gravy, garlic mashed potatoes #2. Grilled pork loin with apple and onion relish, garlic mashed potatoes #3. Vegetarian roasted butternut squash risotto with fresh sage PREPAID RESERVATIONS AT $30 PER PERSON ARE DUE BY NOVEMBER 6TH Checks may be made out to SLSCC, including luncheon choice, and sent to Cheryl Hammond 1505 42nd Ave, #30 Capitola, Ca 95010 Reservations may be made online at www.slscc.org with payment through PayPal Questions may be directed to Gail Mowatt, Event Chair at [email protected]. PRESIDENT ROGER KNACKE’S COLUMN The big news is, of course, the spectacular inaugural concert conducted by Daniel Stewart. Everyone I spoke with was enthralled by the glorious sounds of our Symphony in the Civic Center and the Mello. The future of classical music in Santa Cruz County looks great! By the time you read this, we will have had the Broomstick Ball, our gala event of the year. Thanks very much to everyone for working, contributing, and participating, and special thanks to the three event co-chairs, Angela Clark, Mary Ann Hobbs, and Mary Ann Orr. Now we can look forward to the Preview on November 15th, and the Home Tour on December 7th and 8th. The Preview will be a really nice luncheon at the Seascape Golf Club in Aptos with, of course, the Music Director and the Soloist describing and demonstrating the music. The Home Tour has become a Santa Cruz tradition, and this year will feature house decorations celebrating the season. It will be a great way to start off the Holidays. This is one of our “outreach” events, which appeals to the general community, in addition to League members. Talk it up among your friends and neighbors, and if you can help, contact the co-chairs, Kate Sutherland and Mary Ann Orr. Many businesses and individuals support our fund-raising through donations of merchandise, gift certificates, travel vouchers, advertising, and cash. We rely on their generosity, often year after year, to make our events possible. Please make a note of the contributors to the events, as well as of the advertisers in Musical Notes and the Symphony Program Book. Thank them when you can and support their businesses. With over 200 League members and more than 2500 people attending the Symphony concerts, the Symphony community has some economic muscle. Let’s take advantage of it to support our Symphony. We’re all anticipating the concerts on November 16th and 17th, with a strikingly gifted young cellist, and probably the most famous symphony of all, Beethoven’s Fifth. The Symphony League gives us the opportunity to join in bringing this great music to our community. Thanks to everyone, and best wishes for the Holidays to all of you. Roger Knacke President, Symphony League of Santa Cruz County BUY THIS SPACE FOR YOUR BUSINESS CARD SIZED AD $50/SEASON OR $10/ISSUE CONTACT:CONNIE ADAMS (831) 335-7882 SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 2 2013 SYMPHONY LEAGUE HOME TOUR Mark your calendars for the 2013 Home Tour SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7 & SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8 “HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS!” Visit five unique homes at the 28th annual Symphony League Home Tour. This year browse through the League’s holiday gift boutique. There will be gift baskets, homemade jams and relishes, and an array of other choices just right for holiday gifts. Enjoy complimentary refreshments and experience beautiful gardens and breathtaking ocean views! The opportunity drawing will include a Maria-Theresa white classic pearl necklace, a four foot live evergreen tree decorated with miniature ornaments, and a decorated Christmas wreath. Opportunity Tickets will be $6.00 each or six for $30.00. The drawing will be on December 8th, 2013 and you do not have to be present to win. Tickets will be mailed to League members the first week in November. For more information, please contact Kate Sutherland at 831-688-0768 or by email at [email protected]. Also you may contact Mary Ann Orr at 831-427-0760 or by email at [email protected]. HOME TOUR TICKETS $30 Purchase online at www.slscc.org, call 831 427-0760, or visit these fine retail stores: Annieglass (Santa Cruz and Watsonville) Palace Arts (Santa Cruz and Watsonville) Symphony Office (Civic Auditorium) Zinnia’s (Scotts Valley) Alladin Nursery (Corralitos) SCSLL 201-21014 Season Number 2 3 A PREVIEW OF OUR GUEST CELLIST AUSTIN HUNTINGTON by Ann Haley Enter “Austin Huntington, Cellist” into the Google search field and you will receive over nine million hits. Everyone in the music world knows him, and he’s only nineteen years old! Since his debut at the age of ten, Austin has received many national and international prizes and awards: at sixteen he received the Stulberg International String Competition Gold Medal, which made him most proud, but that was when he was sixteen. At that time he said, “I was so honored to even be able to come here and compete, but this, this is the biggest accomplishment I’ve ever had.” Before this award, Austin and his older brother Thomas, who plays the violin, had occasionally toured together and soloed at Carnegie Hall. They aren’t the only musicians in their family. Their older sisters are also musicians. Their parents have always encouraged music at home, taking their children to many concerts from early childhood. More recently, Austin won the Irving M. Klein International String competition, of which his former teacher, Richard Hirschl, had this to say: “We have loved having Austin here for cello lessons over the last eight years not only because he is a great musician and a superb cellist, but because he is funny, modest, well-rounded and thoughtful. He has always had a wisdom and discipline far beyond his years, but with the recognition of the Klein Competition I believe he has established himself as an artist of the highest caliber.” Austin has just returned from this summer’s Aspen Music Festival and School, which he has attended in years past. He has also attended the prestigious Perlman Music Program on Shelter Island, New York, and the Perlman Music Program Winter Residency in Sarasota, Florida, the Quartet Program in Fredonia, New York; the Academie Internationale de Musique de Montpellier, France; the Meadowmount School of Music, New York; Indiana University String Academy in Bloomington, Indiana; Credo Chamber Music Festival in Oberlin, Ohio; and the U.S. Eastern Music School in Colgate, New York. Austin’s previous teachers are Richard Hirschl, Hans Jorgen Jensen, and Emilie Grondin. In his hometown of South Bend, Austin’s family is a source of pride and good news, and will probably continue to be. Austin is currently studying with Ronald Leonard at the Colburn School Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles. He plays a 17th Century cello made by Francesco Ruggieri of Cremona, using a fine cello bow made by Eugene Sartory, c. 1930. We are so very fortunate to be able to hear him at our second concert of the season, where he will play Shostakovich’s very dramatic cello concerto. An example of Austin’s humor might be that when asked about the strangest comment anyone has made to him following a performance, he replied, “Once someone said I looked like a turtle.” SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 4 2013-14 SYMPHONY LEAGUE EVENTS MARK YOUR CALENDAR HOME TOUR & BOUTIQUE: Saturday and Sunday, DECEMBER 7 & 8, 2013 . . . See PAGE 3 KENTUCKY DERBY DAY: Saturday, May 3, 2014 Mint Juleps, Southern food, and a chance to cheer the ponies. Location TBA. ROUND ROBIN BRIDGE: Gather with friends to support the Symphony League by playing bridge. Contact Jan Davis-Hadley, 438-4494. PREVIEWS: League members and season ticket holders are invited to Previews led by the music director and soloists, and to meet with the artists afterwards. Previews are usually held the Friday before the concerts and require reservations. 20–20 Events: A series of small, informal events including barbecues, recitals, live and televised sporting events, theater, etc. For information about League activities and events, membership, and news, visit www.slscc.org . 20-20 WRAPS UP 2013 WITH TWO EVENTS On Saturday, September 14th at the Kaiser Permanente Arena, 26 Symphony League members and friends watched the Santa Cruz Derby Girls’ Boardwalk Bombers roll over the Silicon Valley Roller Girls. League members enjoyed an exciting yet deafening experience, and the Derby Girls donated a percentage of the ticket sales to the Symphony. We supported a local event, and the Symphony was recognized over the PA system. The second Bocce Ball BBQ was well attended, and Bill Mowatt barbequed Baby Back ribs for thirty-two attendees. Sheila Vaughn supplemented the ribs with her famous BBQ baked beans, and participants added scrumptious appetizers. The October 13th afternoon event was generously hosted by Sharon and Bob Bailey whose Bocce Ball court was used by willing Bocce Ball initiates as well as experienced Chef Bill Mowatt Kathy Parisi, Betty Ranney, Beatrice Barbakow, Reg Howard players. Jack Cheney, Wayne at the Bocce BBQ #2 Shada, and Bob Bailey offered informal lessons and tips to willing participants. However, no coaching was needed when it was time to eat. Clyde Vaughn and Joe Parisie assisted with the parking, and Gail Mowatt ensured guests’ needs were met. Everyone appeared to enjoy the beautiful sunny afternoon as Billy Packard and his colleague entertained us with delightful mandolin and guitar music. Thanks to all for helping with the set-up and clean–up. The 20-20 group took in $900 on this event. SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 5 JIM HOBB’S PHOTOS OF THE BROOMSTICK BALL SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 6 HELLO TO NEW MEMBER RENEE SHEPHERD If Renee’s name sounds familiar, it’s probably because of her successful seed business that keeps so many of our gardens blooming and producing vegetables. But Renee has another side that is longing for more music in her life. She recalls playing in the backyard in Cleveland, Ohio, to background music from her father’s string quartet…something she took for granted at the time, thinking as children do, that most fathers must play music like hers did. Now she appreciates the unique memory of her businessman father playing cello with his friends, an engineer, a policeman, and a doctor… just for their own enjoyment. She has made a good start at bringing more music into her life by attending the San Francisco Symphony regularly, and she paid attention when her friend Shirley Greenwood suggested she was missing an opportunity to hear classical music locally and brought her to a concert last season. She’s convinced, and added our Symphony to her playlist which includes a Gilbert and Sullivan group, The Lamplighters and most recently a tuba concert. She is a fan of woodwinds, so especially liked the first concert this season. Welcome, Renee. INTRODUCING LEE DI GERONIMO What brought Lee back to our group….she had been a member previously but didn’t quite connect… was the excitement and promise of our young and enthusiastic music director. She especially liked his mention in a Sentinel interview of the need for a new concert venue. Lee comes from a rich musical background starting with her grandfather who sang, played violin and taught music. She sang in the church choir and in college groups, and made sure all her children played instruments. Because of her late Italian husband, she came to appreciate Rossini and Pavarotti. She is also a fan of musical theatre and attends the San Jose and Smuin ballet with her daughter. And she is no stranger to volunteering; she and her husband volunteered for many years serving meals at the Live Oak Senior Center. We welcome the enthusiasm and positive energy of this new 90 year old member! SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 MEET NEW MEMBERS JUDITH AND LEWIS FEINMAN It was our member Donna Large who drew the Feinmans’ attention to the Symphony, and after attending the first preview, Judith decided that the League is a “wonderful organization.” If they don’t have a musical background, it isn’t because they didn’t try. Judith took piano lessons from the age of 10-13, when she and the instructor agreed that she had no ear for it. Lewis tried to play guitar with similar disappointing results. But what the Feinmans are good at is listening to and appreciating music! Lewis likes jazz and Judith enjoys Beethoven, Strauss, Mozart and Chopin. And they are open to new music, recalling a Phillip Glass score for a silent movie that challenged but interested them. They look forward to the next previews to further their learning about music. And we look forward to getting to know them better and bringing them into our League family! HELLO TO NEW MEMBER JUDITH NIELSON Judith’s involvement with classical music goes back to Copenhagen, Denmark, when she was growing up. Each Thursday she attended the Copenhagen Symphony with her classmates. With such an outstanding background, it is not surprising that she is an enthusiastic supporter of our season and our music director. Indeed, she reserved for the preview luncheon in November before it was even announced because she didn’t want to miss an opportunity to hear from Danny and the cello soloist. Judith has lived all around the world, Europe, South America, and Australia, travelling with her husband’s work. And she ended up here in her husband’s home town and made a friend, Gitta Ryle, who connected her to the League. She is open to modern music as well as classical, and we welcome her to the season and the League. 7 THANKS FOR THE REFRESHMENTS “THANK YOU” League Members for providing refreshments to the orchestra during their rehearsal prior to the first concert of the season. Thanks to Marie Tomasi, Ann Haley, John Dickinson and Nancy Van Natta, Connie Adams, Norma DelGaudio, Ola Monaghan, Danene Forman, Irene deHaydu, Roger Knacke, Nancy Bley, Millie DiBona, and Peggy Minier for your contributions of food and preparation support. Since the NEXT CONCERT is so close to Thanksgiving we plan is to add a Holiday touch to the November event. For those of you who have volunteered to provide refreshments, we’ll be in touch with some of you prior to the next concert, asking for your support to this much-appreciated program. We hope you will respond with a rousing “Yes, I can provide food” when asked. If you are curious about what we do to prepare to feed the orchestra on Saturday afternoon, please feel free to drop by the Civic Auditorium around 2:00 the day of the concert. We promise not to put you to work (unless you want to!). Please contact Dan or Vickie Rutan (475-4939) if you’d like more information or would like to volunteer. (It’s fun, too!) CELEBRATION! SYMPHONY PERFORMANCE OF OCTOBER 5TH AND 6TH 2013 by Ann Haley This season’s first spectacular concert under the commanding baton of Daniel Stewart began with the very celebratory work by Viennese Waltz King Johann Strauss II, “Die Fledermaus” Overture – an appropriate choice for the approaching Halloween season. It was sharp and lively, full of energy, and contained at least three of Strauss’s very famous waltzes interwoven with various polkas. The orchestra and conductor provided perfect energy and skill to this excellent piece to open our first concert. Jeffrey Kahane had described Mozart’s 25th Piano Concerto in C Major as reflective of his earlier successful themes, which I’ll mention where they occur. The piece included Kahane’s own cadenzas, which balanced perfectly with Mozart’s very complete first movement. Kahane and Stewart partnered extremely well throughout the concerto, perhaps due in part to the fact that Stewart as a teenager spent part of his professional career under Kahane’s baton, both artists expressing true pleasure at this collaboration. The first movement, in rondo form, began with a long orchestral opening. This part is quite formal and very floating as in Mozart’s earlier works. The piano enters very independently alone, playing its own motif, which it repeats tentatively. The orchestra repeats its own theme insistently, as though to thwart the solo. The piano then joins the orchestra, before taking off with its own ascending and descending runs. Then the piano initiates its own theme, is soon supported softly by the orchestra, which eventually defers to the piano theme, and capitulates to the piano when it advances through a circle of keys in typical Mozart runs. This work demonstrates the alternate combative-coalescing roles of the soloist and orchestra in Mozart’s concertos. Twice in the second movement Mozart used a very popular technique from his 21st Piano Concerto, in which the piano briefly takes up the melody in the bass clef-- a real spine chiller, if you caught it. Fortunately, both entities did come together in the finale of the 3rd movement! The audience appreciatively rose to applaud its absolute approval of this first wonderful performance. While Mozart’s work demonstrated our orchestra’s beautiful string sections, Tchaikovsky’s 4th Symphony in F Minor gave the wind section its chance to excel. This entire work seems to contradict the unhappiness Tchaikovsky endured in his personal life. It is filled with mood changes, but has such great romantic sonorities that seem to deny the diary Tchaikovsky kept while composing this symphony. He used ballet themes throughout, quoting from others of his concurrent works. The entire work is filled with tuneful ideas: Russian folk tunes, grand emotional swings, waltzes in the first movement, and a sustained pizzicato in the 3rd scherzo movement. All orchestral instruments excelled-- really showed well--to the end. Daniel Stewart’s interpretation of this glorious work is the best we will ever hear, according to at least one expert in the audience, and it must be in part due to his deep exploration into the composer’s own letters and diary he left for us to read. Stewart has found the truth in the music. SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 8 MEMBER DIRECTORIES As a member in good standing of the Symphony League, you should have your 2013-2014 Member Directory. If you did not receive your copy at Preview on Friday or at Concert on Saturday or Sunday, one was mailed to you. If you have not received your Member Directory, please contact Dan Rutan at 831-475-4939 or rutandan@ comcast.net. “My sincere ‘Thank You’ to Sheila Vaughn for her great skill and effort in formatting and assembling this year’s directory. Her invaluable assistance and support made this project a reality. Much appreciation also goes to Cheryl Hammond for her awesome proofreading skills and help in quality-control of membership information to ensure accuracy”. Thank You to Donna Large, Joan Osborne, Kate Miller, Jan Davis-Hadley, and Gail Mowatt for handing out Member Directories at the recent concerts. Great team work! MEMBERSHIP GUIDE UPDATES Please add the following to your Guide. Di Geronimo, Lela (“Lee”) 800 Brommer St. Sp.47 Santa Cruz, CA 95062 831-475-5547 [email protected] Nielsen, Judy 316 Columbia St. Santa Cruz, CA 95062 458-0508 [email protected] Noren, Lynn [email protected] Francine Thomas 850 Park Ave #12C Capitola, CA 95010 978-621-9539 (cell) (no home #) [email protected] Shepherd, Renee 7389 W. Zayante Felton, CA 95018 831-335-5912 [email protected] SCSLL 2013-2014 Season Number 2 CONCERT DATES AND NEWSLETTER DEADLINES CONCERT NEWSLETTER No. Date Deadline* Mail on 2 11/16-17 10/21 11/3 3 1/25-26 12/30 1/13 4 3/22-23 2/24 3/10 5 5/17-18 4/21 5/5 *Submit items to [email protected] 9 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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