Friday, February 18, 2022

Derek Wood, OSU Musician, Performs at Carnegie Hall

OSU violinist Derek Wood played at Carnegie Hall as part of an international high school honors orchestra. There were 47 states represented plus Australia, Guam, China, Bermuda, and South Korea.He also plays in the Cedar High Orchestra and was part of the recent orchestra for Marie Osmond's concert at Southern Utah University.

Photo by Derek's mother JaNell Wood from trip to New York for Carnegie Hall performance.


Derek Wood at Carnegie Hall in international Honors Orchestra, Feb. 2022.

Derek at rehearsal with orchestra director Jason Seber.






Derek recognized during the OSU concert on Feb. 10, 2022

Derek as concertmaster for SUU Honors Orchestra under the direction of Xun Sun, Feb. 12.

Article in Cedar City News

15-year-old violinist from Cedar City to play at Carnegie Hall

CEDAR CITY — A 15-year-old violinist from Cedar City is one of an elite group of students selected for the 2022 High School Honors Performance Series and will perform at the world-famous Carnegie Hall.

Undated promotional photo of Derek Wood, 15, of Cedar City, Utah, autumn 2021 | Photo courtesy of Oh Snap Photography, St. George News / Cedar City News

Derek Wood, who is a student at both Cedar High School and Southern Utah University, will perform as a member of the honors string orchestra, one of the five honors ensembles selected to perform at the prestigious venue in New York City the first week of February.

Cedar City News recently caught up with Wood during a short break in his busy schedule.

“I get to go play with other teenagers and some younger adults, and we’ll play as an orchestra,” Wood said. “We’ll play some really cool music. There’s one called ‘Perseus,’ and we have to learn some new pieces for it.”

Wood said he was one of 10,000 young music students who submitted audition recordings earlier in 2021 as part of the application process. Of those, just 500 musicians from around the United States and a few other countries were selected, including Australia, Bermuda, China, Guam and South Korea. 

The string orchestra group in which Wood will play comprises approximately 100 members.

Derek Wood, 15, warms up before Orchestra of Southern Utah’s performance of Handel’s “Messiah,” Cedar City, Utah, Dec. 12, 2021 | Photo by Jeff Richards, St. George News / Cedar City News

Wood said as far as he knows, he is the only performer from Utah who was chosen this year. 

Wood, who started playing violin at the age of 4, has studied music for the past 11 years under the direction of instructors Sara Penny, who is a member of the Orchestra of Southern Utah and vice president of the Cedar City Arts Council, and Dr. Xun Sun, director of orchestral activities at SUU. 

Wood previously performed with the Missouri Youth Conservatory and also had the opportunity to perform with The Piano Guys when he was 10 years old. 

More recently, Wood performed with Marie Osmond during her Dec. 1 concert at SUU. The following week, he performed in Orchestra of Southern Utah’s two-night production of Handel’s “Messiah.”

When he’s not busy with music or schoolwork, Wood said he enjoys spending time outdoors. This past fall, he competed as a member of the Iron Giants high school mountain biking team.

“I like to ride,” he said. “I get to go out into nature, and that helps me in my music a little bit because I can express some of that in my playing.”

“It’s really good for me to be able to do that, because if you focus on just one thing, like the violin, you get so focused on that subject that you don’t learn about other aspects that can add cool, new ideas to what you are learning.”

Wood said he also enjoys playing board games and making 3D art designs on the computer.

Derek Wood, 15, practices his violin at home, Cedar City, Utah, Dec. 31, 2021 | Photo by Jeff Richards, St. George News / Cedar City News

Wood says he’s on track to get his associate’s degree from SUU next year before he even finishes his junior year at Cedar High. He plans to continue studying at SUU and get his bachelor’s degree in music.

Wood said he’s excited about his upcoming trip to New York and has already started practicing the music he and his fellow orchestra members will be performing.

Wood said it typically takes him about one month to master a new piece.

“If I really work hard at it, though, it takes two weeks, and then I can keep working on it,” he said. “It just keeps getting better and better the longer I work at it.”

In a recent news release about the upcoming Honors Performance Series, program director Marion Gomez noted that working with the performance series conductors and performing at Carnegie Hall is a “once-in-a-lifetime experience that these musicians will never forget.”


Friday, February 11, 2022

Celebration Concert Photos and More, Feb. 10, 2022


Thanks to everyone who participated in the Celebration concert.

Here are a few photos. We appreciate everyone involved in keeping live symphony orchestra music a part of Cedar City's culture. Thank you to Rebekah Hughes, OSU Manager, for the photos.

Tuning as seen from the balcony.

Dr. Xun Sun directing as seen from backstage.


Sara Penny provided the concert introductions

A few musician closeups:

Violinist Derek Wood was recognized for his participation in an international honors orchestra at Carnegie Hall in New York City the Saturday before the concert.








Soloists for the Vaughn Williams piece:

Heather Wilhelm, OSU concertmaster

Nina Hansen, cello section leader


Concert program: 


OSU Donors who help make it possible for Cedar City to have a symphony orchestra:


 For programs to to the website and click  Livenote, then Past or click red type and then Past: Access concert programs on this link

Next concert, April 7, featuring two new compositions from the Hal Campbell Composition Contest plus music by Haydn and Sibelius.

Monday, February 7, 2022

Celebrating Great Masterworks

Orchestra of Southern Utah to Celebrate the Gift of Music

Written by Mary Furse

    Great masterworks are on the Orchestra of Southern Utah concert, conducted by Dr. Xun

Sun, OSU offers a festivity of music in a rich variety of orchestral voices and textures on

Thursday, February 10th, at 7:30 p.m. 

    The evening will open with Gioachino Rossini’s Overture

to La Gazza Ladra, known in English as The Thieving Magpie. It is said that the

composer had to be locked up the day before the opera’s premier, under the guard of four

stage hands, to finish writing the overture on time. He might have been short on time, but

the result of his hurried efforts has lasted to this day as a delightfully comedic piece full

of rising and falling action, with a near-constant rush and flurry under the surface or

blasting with excitement.

    In Five Variants of ‘Dives and Lazarus’, Ralph Vaughn Williams transforms a folk tune

into an orchestral reverie and flight. Beginning with warm swells, it rises like a gentle

wind running over the grassy hills of a verdant countryside. At times, it soars higher than

that, perhaps even to the glorious fires of an empyrean plane. Both violin and cello

soloists tie the melody back to the earth and its skies. Concertmaster Heather Wilhelm is

the violin soloist and section leader Nina Hansen plays the cello solo in this otherworldly

piece.

    Mozart’s Symphony No. 40 opens with a mysterious night flight, something different

from the mood of celebration, perhaps. But it isn’t long before the atmosphere changes –

effortlessly in the hands of Mozart’s genius – making the initial motif a song of

celebration. The music continues along avenues of sun and shade, then through a rain and

thunder shower. The second movement is more serene, but wakes up to moments of

moving feeling. The third movement takes on a serious and stately tone, leading to the

finale’s stormy, broody action. Yet, a sense of Mozart’s joy in music stirs throughout,

resonating with our own.

    Come celebrate with OSU on Thursday, February 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the Heritage Theater.

Concert ticket prices are as follows: $12 for adults, $6 for students over six years. $40

for a group of six individuals. Children over six years are welcome. No babies, please, as

concerts are recorded. Tickets are now available online at www.myosu.org.

###

For Calendars:

WHAT: Orchestra of Southern Utah Concert

Dates: February 10, 2022 at 7:30 p.m.

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

OSU Celebration Concert Tickets: $12 Adults, $6 Students over 6 years. $40 group

of six.

More information: myosu.org


Poster design by Rollan Fell, Print Shoppe

Preview the concert music: https://osulistening.blogspot.com/2022/01/a-celebration-of-great-classics.html