Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Celebrate Beethoven's 250th Birthday Year with Great Music


Update
The Orchestra would like to reassure patrons that the State Mandate does not affect the Orchestra of Southern Utah's Event this Thursday, November 12, 7:30pm. We encourage you to come prepared with your masks for a wonderful evening of music.
The Heritage Theatre and Orchestra of Southern Utah have complied with all state requirements and mandates.
We are so excited to share this concert with you.
Your ticket also gives a streaming access code: In-person and streaming tickets


Special Guests from the Zion: Trio Dr. Paul Abegg, Dr. Ka-Wai Yu, and Dr. Christian Bohnenstengel will perform Beethoven’s famous Triple Concerto
on Nov. 12 with the Orchestra of Southern Utah.

Orchestra of Southern Utah Celebrates the 250th Birthday Anniversary of Beethoven

Written by Mary Furse


The Orchestra of Southern Utah pays homage to the pioneer of romanticism in concert music, the man who has influenced generations of composers and elevated music as an expression of the human spirit: Ludwig Van Beethoven. This celebratory concert will be conducted by Xun Sun and feature guest soloists Paul Abegg, Ka-Wai Yu, and Christian Bohnenstengel. The performance will take place live on November 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the Heritage Theater and also be streamed online on November 14 through 21. Anyone who purchases tickets will be given an access code. Ticket link


Opening quietly, with a hint of swells of joy to come, Beethoven’s Triple Concerto in C Major for Violin, Cello, and Piano takes us on a journey through the avenues and open scenes of nature, where Romantic Era artists of all mediums were often drawn to wander. The music is reminiscent of long walks the composer would take, notebook in hand, to seek inspiration. The three solo instruments carry on a conversation, often mimicking sounds one can pick out in nature, while the orchestra casts a moving backdrop of land, water, and sky.


The three soloists, Dr. Paul Abegg, Dr. Ka-Wai Yu, and Dr. Christian Bohnenstengel, have all performed extensively on the international stage. Violinist Dr. Paul Abegg has served as an adjudicator and presented master classes across the nation. He has performed as a recording artist for film and television scores, and recently performed the Brahms Violin Concerto with OSU. He serves as Director of Strings at DSU and conducts the Dixie State Symphony Orchestra. Dr. Ka-Wai Yu teaches cello and string chamber music at DSU. He serves on the board of Utah’s American String Teachers Association and as President of the Cello Society of Southern Utah. Dr. Bohnenstengel, on the piano, is proficient in a variety of genres and was recently the featured soloist in the OSU performance of Rachmaninov's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. He serves as Director of Keyboard Studies at SUU.


Next on the program, with quick and surprising turns in mood, the scherzo movement of Quartet No. 7: in F Major, Op. 59, No. 1, rambles and leaps through patches of light and shadow and in-betweens. As a scherzo, it is meant to be a musical joke. It doesn’t linger in the darker moods for long, and even within them, it doesn’t take them too seriously. This is, however, enough of a contrast to make the brighter moments pleasing.


The single first chord of Egmont Overture carries weight and depth of expression, a sufficient introduction for this stormy and passionate program finale. But this description is too ambiguous. This is one of the pieces where Beethoven takes classical music farther than it had previously dared to go into the dark night of the soul, which he proved that only music could express. But it ultimately climbs out into a shining and deeply personal triumph.


Join OSU to celebrate the music of Beethoven on Thursday, November 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the Heritage Theater or stream it online November 14-21. Tickets will be required to attend either in person or online. An access code for streaming will be provided with ticket purchase. Ticket prices are as follows: $12 for adults, $6 for children, and $6 for students. Tickets are now available online at www.myosu.org.


Click here to Preview the music and an article tracing the cities of Beethoven's life.


###


Date: November 12, 2020, at 7:30 p.m., Masterful Romance

Heritage Theater: 105 N 100 E Cedar City, UT 84720

Tickets: $12 Adults, $6 Children, and $6 Students Link to purchase tickets

More information: www.myosu.org




Monday, October 12, 2020

Review by Bryce Christensen for October OSU Concert

How Orchestral Music Survives—Even Prevails!--in a Pandemic

By Bryce Christensen 

Lamenting the numerous symphony concerts cancelled due to COVID-19, Anthony McGill of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra remarked, “It is tough for any musician who is used to [making] music in a group. We communicate with each other and we communicate with the audience. When you take that away, it’s very hard to know how to proceed.” With October 10th’s opening concert of a new season, the Orchestra of Southern Utah assured Cedar City’s music-lovers that even in the midst of a pandemic, its directors and musicians know “how to proceed.” Because of the risk that bringing an audience into the Heritage Center would pose, OSU prudently chose to do its first concert as an online transmission. But listeners who accessed that concert quickly realized that even in a cyber performance, OSU creates music alive with energy, filled with fire!

In his opening remarks for the concert, OSU President Harold Shirley acknowledged the strangeness of an orchestra performing “in an empty theater digitally streaming to an audience we cannot see.” Yet with a firm commitment to the unseen listeners who constitute “our real reason for playing,” Shirley rejoiced in the launching of a new season, dedicated to the theme Romanza: “ a celebration of music that refuses to remain silent, especially in a world of uncertainty, where it can provide . . . an anchor for the soul suffering under lockdown.”

Those “suffering under lockdown” knew they had found relief at the sound of the first measures of the evening’s opening number: Vivaldi’s Concerto in D Major for Lute. Its first movement brimming with the irrepressible Allegro energy that listeners recognize as Vivaldi’s signature, this number instantly transported listeners into the radiant heat of a concert devoted to “Fiery Romance.”

In his opening remarks, Shirley had suggested that “the chemistry of a live audience would help us play better.” However, OSU director and conductor Xun Sun wrought such alchemy with his baton on this cyber-mediated evening that magical sparks flew, kindling a blaze that flared up among the OSU strings (the only part of the orchestra playing in this opening number) from the very first notes of the Vivaldi composition.

Flickering with genial warmth, the musical flames generated during the Vivaldi number rose with enchanting intensity from the fingers of guest soloist Jon Yerby, who generated from his dulcet-voiced guitar all the musical heat Vivaldi originally called forth from the strings of the 17th-century lute. Swiftly but surely, Yerby’s fingers flew during the highly kinetic first movement, drawing from his instrument’s taut strings a luminous stream of Allegro musical fire. Repeatedly, the fulgor of Yerby’s guitar dazzled listeners with its brilliance, gave way to an answering flare of zestful sound from the orchestral strings, then flared into solo prominence again. When the second movement slowed into a reflective and meditative Largo, the musical fire subsided to the white coals of intense thought, reflected by the nuanced and mellow strains rising alternately from Yerby and from the orchestra’s string section. But the heat in the coals of the Largo second movement burst forth into the rapid crackling of a third movement matching the first movement in its Allegro intensity, building to joyous pyrotechnics.

The evening’s musical fire lost none of its heat but burned with a sinister cast when OSU Assistant Conductor Carylee Zwang took the podium to lead the entire orchestra--now including the brass, wind, and percussion sections--in Manuel de Falla’s Ritual de Fuego. A movement from the ballet El Amor Brujo, this unearthly number carried mesmerized listeners into a frenetic dance of exorcism, as a desperate gypsy beauty whirls sound the campfire with the ghost of her dead husband until he’s consumed by the flames. With Zwang’s potent wand casting an early Halloween spell, OSU’s musicians-magicians together conjured up all the dark sorcery of this eerie number. Zwang and all the instrumentalists under her direction deserve praise for conveying the black necromancy of De Falla’s composition. But special plaudits go to soloists Heather Wilhelm and Lindsay Szczesny on the violin and Sunny Chen. These three soloists evinced outstanding skill in weaving their musical enchantment.

Remaining on the podium for the concert’s final number, Zwang left behind Andalusia’s dark fires of incantation as she skillfully guided the orchestra into the vibrant and lively heat of the Mexican dance hall that Aaron Copland depicts in his tone poem El Salon Mexico. The fiery heat of this Latin dance-floor number rises from many sources, as befits music from the spirited land of Mariachi bands and salsa rhythms. Listeners indeed detect in Copland’s variegated composition the refined cadence of Mexico’s well-heeled elite brushing against the bare-foot vitality of its peasants. But it is clearly the peasants whose raw verve provides the fire in this selection’s simmering beat. Given how much Latin diversity that beat carries, it is not surprising that sustaining it required a remarkable parade of soloists. The exceptional level of musical artistry manifested in the solo by clarinetist Kortne Bradshaw was maintained in praiseworthy fashion in solos by trumpeters Gary Player and Will Zeller, oboists Ashley Davis and Patrice Ramsay, flutist Sunni Jackson, English horn Drew Holland, and pianist Sunny Chen. Together, these soloists provide convincing evidence that OSU has attracted a level of musical talent exceptional in a regional orchestra. Such talent helps explain how in this final number, Zwang and the musicians under her could bring all the calor of a Mexican dance floor to a concert performed more than six hundred miles north of the border.

No doubt, it took some time on this October evening for cyber listeners to adjust to seeing an orchestra’s director, instrumentalists, and even soloists in masks. But before long they recognized a commitment to music that could not be masked, could not be hidden. Even in a time of COVID restrictions, this is an orchestra that--despite all the obstacles--is showing its appreciative listeners that they know “how to proceed.” This is an orchestra that knows not only how to proceed but even how to do so with a musical fire that warms the hearts and illuminates the spirits of all who feel it. Those who allocate Cedar City’s Recreation-Arts-Parks revenue—along will all of OSU’s other sponsors--deserve praise for providing fuel for the heartening blaze of this pandemic-defying concert.

###

The concert is online at myosu.org until October 17, 2020

Photos of the Orchestra of Southern Utah at the recording for the concert: 







Rehearsals



Recording link with soloist Jon Yerby