Wednesday, March 24, 2021

R.L. Halversen Young Artist Concert on April 8, 2021

We are looking forward to hearing these wonderful young soloists with the Orchestra of Southern Utah. Tickets now available at https://www.myosu.org/tickets 

Preview the music at Music videos

Poster design by Rollan Fell, Print Shoppe


Orchestra of Southern Utah Season Finale Features Young Artists


For the final performance of the season, the Orchestra of Southern Utah presents the R. L. Halversen Young Artists Concert, conducted by Xun Sun. Once every two years, young musicians are given an opportunity to perform with the orchestra after being selected through two rounds of auditions. So many talented performers participated this year that the entire program will be dedicated to the young artists.


Irene Hu will present the energetic, bright opening movement of Dimitri Kabalevsky’s Violin Concerto in C Major



David Sun will give us Franz Liszt’s Totentanz, a dramatic, varied, and somewhat macabre picture for piano and orchestra.



Ruth Howe and Will Zeller will feature in Antonio Vivaldi’s Concerto for Two Trumpets, a delight to the ear.



Chase Radmall will play for us the passionate and melancholy first movement of Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E minor.



Jennifer Holstead will perform Alexander Glazunov’s Concerto in E flat Major for Alto Saxophone, taking an instrument usually associated with jazz and pop music to the classical realm and proving its versatility with melodious brilliance. 



Vocalist Meredith Draper will bring us “Porgi Amor”, a song of youthful love from Mozart’s opera, The Marriage of Figaro



Hannah Bradshaw will play Musette and Galop, from Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Suite for Viola and Orchestra, Group III, bringing us the gentle wonder of an English countryside and a fast-paced dance.



Join the Orchestra of Southern Utah in celebrating these young artists and a wide array of concert music Thursday, April 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Heritage Theater. Ticket prices are as follows: $12 for adults, $6 for children, and $6 for students. Children over six welcome with adult supervision. No babies please as the concert is recorded. Tickets are now available online at www.myosu.org.


Thursday, March 4, 2021

Conjuring Cinema Sensations


Concert Review

By Bryce Christensen



     Cinema music, explained the composer Patrick Doyle, should “be able to, away from the picture, conjure up the same sort of feelings and images that it was meant to on a screen.” Conjuring up a range of potent cinema feelings, an array of stunning cinema images, the Orchestra of Southern Utah (OSU) devoted its February 25th Concert to “Romantic Film Classics,” so extending the season’s theme of Romanza by connecting it to a distinctively modern artistic form. Under the passionate baton of OSU assistant conductor Carylee Zwang, the OSU musicians indeed kindled in the pandemic limited audience of music lovers who gathered in Cedar City’s Heritage Center such vivid movie sensations that many felt they’d been magically transported to a celluloid-screen theater. 


     A few elitists might sniff at the idea of a symphony orchestra playing movie music, supposing that such music lies outside of the realm of high culture appropriate for such an orchestra. These misguided souls forget that in premodern times, some of the greatest of composers have written music inspired by the popular entertainment of their day: consider, for instance, Georg Benda’s Romeo und Julie, based on Shakespeare’s play about star-crossed lovers or Hector Berlioz’s King Lear Overture, inspired by the Bard’s tragedy about the rashest of kings. Of course, great composers have long woven unforgettable instrumental music into entertainments based largely on non-instrumental music--on drama and dance, for instance. Such artistic fusions have given music lovers not just the high art of opera and ballet (Mozart’s Magic Flute and Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake) but also the more popular art inspired by folk songs and folk dances (as in Rimsky-Korsakov’s Capriccio Espagnol and Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies). In moving into the world of movie music, the Orchestra of Southern Utah was not deviating from its proper musical mission

but rather was laudably extending some of the most fruitful of musical traditions.


     The first of the evening’s musical numbers came from James Horner’s poignant theme forTitanic. Appropriately, this number fused instrumental and vocal music. Vocalist Tamara Reber carried the solo, with the Cedar High School Madrigals and Gateway Preparatory Academy Concert Choir providing background harmonies, at some points joined by the orchestra, at some

points singing a capella. Performing wordlessly, the vocal performers under Zwang’s baton rendered a deeply moving kind of keening, conveying aurally the theme the movie dramatized: even when cruelly separated from a beloved by catastrophe, the heart goes on in the spirit of love remembered. The effect of this orchestral-vocal number could only be called haunting. Though many in the live and cyber audiences no doubt remembered James Cameron’s movie, others may actually doubtlessly appreciated a chance to focus fully on the music that Horner composed, performed with rare vocal and instrumental power.


     With the evening’s second number, the audience left behind Hollywood’s evocation of oceanic disaster and moved to a world of Sherwood Forest derring-do in Michael Kamen’s soundtrack for Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. In this number, as in other compositions performed this evening, the audience shared in the heart-pounding pulse of high adventure, but also felt the hints of tender love. Listeners relished the musical energy OSU delivered as a tribute to the boldest of noble outlaws but also detected the hints of that marvelous outlaw’s passion for Maid Marian.


     Not a nefariously corrupt Sheriff but rather the seemingly implacable barrier of time stands between the lovers in Somewhere in Time. But that barrier seems less daunting to anyone who has felt the sublime magic of John Barry’s soundtrack for this film (enriched by inspired borrowings from Rachmaninoff). The soul-melting notes of this film’s music dissolve all doubts about the power of love to surmount even the barrier of many decades. With praiseworthy sensitivity of expression, Zwang and the instrumentalists under her direction drew listeners into the time-defying enchantment that ultimately unites Elise McKenna and Richard Collier. 


      The challenge to romantic love is not chronological but ethnic in Arthur Laurents—Stephen Sondheim’s West Side Story, Shakespeare’s tragic story of intense but doomed love relocated in New York City. Capturing the variegated episodes of this popular Broadway play converted into a blockbuster movie, Bernstein’s West Side Story Suite brings together the buoyant hope of “Something’s Coming,” the sunny optimism of “America,” the disturbing tensions of “The Rumble,” and the piercing love of “There’s a Place for Us.” The range of tempos and emotions traversed by this suite challenges the musical versatility of both director and instrumentalists: listeners marveled at the poise with which Zwang and the orchestra met this challenge, compellingly capturing the cadence and tone of each segment.


     Carrying listeners from all-too-real ethnic conflict to the exhilarating realm of fantasy, Superman: Man of Steel pits the beyond-human strength of Kal-El (renamed Clark Kent) against threatening alien powers, while also entangling him in the very human emotion of love for a charming woman (Lois Lane). Listeners thrilled to both the fantasy strength and the amorous vulnerability of the quintessential superhero, both pulsing in the beguiling soundtrack composed by Hans Zimmer and rendered by a conductor and an orchestra fully alive to all of the cinema excitement of this box-office hit. 


     Laden with the sobering weight of real bloody history, the older movie Spartacus challenged theater-goers with the violence of a valiant but ultimately futile slave-revolt. In his Spartacus Adagio, composer Aram Khachaturian invites listeners to share in the brave resolve of a determined gladiator, while also stirring in listeners an intense empathy for this courageous fighter’s love for Varinia, a serving woman who wins the heart of an unconquerable rebel.  Though the ending of the film is dark, Khachaturian’s plangent measures offer hope--the hope embodied in the son who will survive the brutal suppression of the revolt Spartacus leads. Though Hollywood naturally embellished the events, listeners to OSU’s version of this Adagio could intuit in the stirring cadences of the soundtrack OSU the profound ancient human realities beneath the film embellishments. 


     Dispelling all dark historical realities, Zwang and the orchestra leaped in the concert’s final number to the feel-good melodrama of Star Wars. In the martial strivings of John Williams’s delightful soundtrack, listeners heard the irresistible promise of a happy ending, as plucky Resistance Fighters overcome the Empire’s evil storm troopers, a happy ending even more satisfying because of the budding love affair between Princess Leia and that wise-cracking rogue

Han Solo. No need for deep historical reflections here--just pass the popcorn and enjoy the movieland ride that OSU offers its listeners. 


     And what a ride the evening this evening’s performance provided--soundtracks from seven movies in slightly over an hour of utter transport! Zwang, the vocalists, and the instrumentalists all deserve high praise for giving fresh substance to Patrick Doyle’s insights into the power of movie music to deliver all of the feeling, all of the images, of the films those soundtracks originally accompanied. And though this was not a free concert, the cost of admission was greatly reduced through the generosity of the concert sponsors: the Sorenson Legacy Foundation and the Rocky Mountain Power Foundation. Whether they were among the listeners who enjoyed the privilege of physical attendance on the 25th or among those who later shared the experience of the cyber-recording, music lovers had reason to give thanks for the artistic skill of the evening’s performers and for the philanthropic magnanimity of the sponsors, who together made seven movies into one irresistible yet affordable musical adventure.

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Film Classics online this week, concert photos, and program

 

Carylee Zwang conducting the Feb. 25, 2021 Romantic Film Classics


Online access available to March 6. Tickets $5 at myosu.org After you receive your access code go to the Useful Links at the bottom of the home page and click on Orchestra Performance to start enjoying favorite movie themes. Program available on the Live Note link. 








Thanks to the Cedar High School Madrigals, Gateway Preparatory Academy Concert Choir, and guest soloists Tamara Reber. 


Beginning of the West Side Story symphonic dances


A few more program pages: