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  • October 2000 BCSO Newsletter

    BEACH CITIES SYMPHONY NEWSLETTER

    VOLUME VIII, NO. 1

    October 2000

    BEETHOVEN TIMES THREE

    MAHLER 2000

    MEMBERS' PARTY HIGHLIGHTS

    INTRODUCING MARY ANN KEATING

    CONCERT DATES FOR 2000-01

    NEW MEMBERS

    TIME TO RENEW FOR 2001

    AND MORE!

    OUR FIRST CONCERT: NOVEMBER 10 8:15 P.M.

    PRE-CONCERT LECTURE: 7:30 P.M. MARSEE AUDITORIUM, EL CAMINO COLLEGE

    Information: (310)-379-9725 (310)-539-4649

     

    BEETHOVEN TIMES THREE:

    TRIPLE CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN, CELLO & PIANO IN C

    Although composed in 1803-4, the Triple Concerto was not publicly

    performed until 1808. The work represents Beethoven's only sinfonia

    concertante, a type of composition in which a small group of solo strings

    is heard in alternation and combination with a larger orchestral body.

    Beethoven's innovation within this form already explored by Mozart and

    Haydn was to add a piano part suitable for one of his illustrious

    Viennese pupils, the Archduke Rudolf, brother of the Emperor. Often

    throughout the concerto the composition sounds like chamber music for

    piano trio; however, the orchestral passages contribute an operatic chorus

    to the arias and combined voices of the featured players. Their

    interchanges remind us that Beethoven completed his only opera, Fidelio,

    shortly after presenting the Triple Concerto to the Archduke.

    VIOLINIST MARK ROBERTSON received his Bachelor's Degree from Boston

    University and his Master's Degree from Juilliard. He served as

    concertmaster of the Juilliard Orchestra many times, including their tour

    of Japan in 1995, and made his New York recital debut at Carnegie Hall's

    Weill Recital Hall. Now a Los Angeles resident, he is currently

    concertmaster of the Culver City Chamber Orchestra and assistant

    concertmaster of the Chamber Orchestra of the South Bay. In addition to

    live concerts, he is active in the Hollywood film and television recording

    industry. His first chamber music CD is available on the MMC label.

    PIANIST BRYAN PEZZONE is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music, where

    he was awarded the Performers Certificate and won the concerto competition.

    As a soloist, he has performed with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra,

    Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, Pasadena Pops, Santa

    Monica Symphony, San Antonio Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute

    Orchestra, Eastman Philharmonic, and the Pacific Symphony. A consummate

    crossover pianist, he excels in classical, contemporary, jazz, and

    experimental genres. He has been on the piano faculty of the California

    Institute of the Arts since 1987, where he created their multi-focused

    keyboard program.

    CELLIST ARMEN KSAJIKIAN, born in the former Soviet Union, made his solo

    debut at the age of twelve with the Abkhazian State Philharmonic. Since

    arriving in the United States in 1976, he has served as principal cellist

    with the Pasadena, Pacific, Long Beach, Glendale, Hollywood Bowl,

    New West, Opus, and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestras. He is a studio

    musician, a member of the Armadillo String Quartet, and has appeared as

    soloist with a number of symphony orchestras, including our own. In

    January we heard his rendition of the Shostakovich First Cello Concerto,

    Opus 107.

     

    MAHLER 2000: HIS TIME IS COMING NOVEMBER 10

    Gustav Mahler's musical reputation as we approach the true millennium

    is a solid one. Once seldom found on orchestral schedules, the composer

    has become an eminent presence who lends weight and respectability to any

    concert year. To cite two local examples, the Los Angeles Philharmonic has

    scheduled three Mahler symphonies during its upcoming season, and Joanne

    Falletta will conduct the Resurrection Symphony for her farewell to Long

    Beach next June. In keeping with its goal of community enrichment, the

    Beach Cities Symphony will be presenting Mahler's First Symphony,

    "The Titan," at its last concert of the year 2000 in tribute to this

    complex, groundbreaking composer.

    The label "Late Romantic" is frequently attached to Mahler. What does

    the term mean? It sounds faintly pejorative, as though the composer and his

    contemporaries just missed the train that carried Brahms, Mendelssohn,

    Schumann, Liszt, and Wagner to immortality. In the best sense of the word,

    Romanticism represents the rise of the individual against tyranny,

    resulting in the freedom to express one's inner emotions in external forms

    such as poetry, painting, and music. Late Romanticism encourages this same

    self-expression but carries with it the disillusionment and decadence which

    often result from unchecked self-expression and self-indulgence. In English

    literature the nineteenth century is bracketed by the transcendent

    compositions of William Wordsworth and Thomas Hardy, in German music by the

    transcendent symphonies of Beethoven and Mahler. Just as Hardy foreshadowed

    the Age of Anxiety, so too Mahler foreshadowed the soul-searching we think

    of as typically "modern." In his own words, he was composing not just

    symphonies but rather "symphonic universes."

    Music Director Barry Brisk attributes Mahler's neglect in the earlier

    part of the twentieth century to his being banned in Reich-dominated

    countries because of his Jewish ancestry and the "degenerate" nature of his

    music. In 1960, Brisk notes, Leonard Bernstein highlighted the Mahler

    symphonies to celebrate the composer's centenary and thus "almost

    single handedly made the world pay attention" to one of Bernstein's personal

    heroes. And Tim Smith of the Baltimore Sun agrees that Bernstein's

    recordings in the 1960s "became the epicenter of the Mahler revival, the

    first compelling evidence that Mahler's famous prediction, 'My time will

    come,' had been realized."

    However, biographer Jonathan Carr disputes Bernstein's claim to credit

    for Mahler's resurgence as a "myth fostered in part by the conductor."

    Mahler had many disciples in Europe after his death, principally Willem

    Mengelberg in Holland, and a long list of well-known conductors in America

    including Serge Koussevitsky, Bruno Walter, Otto Klemperer, George Szell,

    and William Steinberg. "The real reasons holding Mahler back from the

    widest acceptance early on are so obvious they tend to be overlooked,"

    continues Carr. "His music is very long . . . and it is very complicated."

    Mahler's First Symphony is neither very long nor overly complicated.

    Yet like his later compositions, it pulsates with the energy and wit of a

    composer testing the limits of his society's expectations and tolerance.

    Its premiere in January of 1889, as described by conductor Sir Georg Solti,

    was "a disaster": the orchestra found it too difficult, the critics hated

    it, the audience was baffled. Afterwards Mahler described how he walked

    for days through the streets of Budapest with everybody avoiding him and

    thinking him a madman. More than a century later we are neither offended

    nor surprised by its juxtaposition of cuckoo calls, hunting horns, military

    marches, peasant dances, and a familiar children's nursery canon ("Frere

    Jacques") which becomes a sad little dirge played in a minor key. The full

    brass fanfare of the final movement is exhilarating and life-affirming,

    leading us into the year 2001.

     

    MEMBER'S PARTY

    Every year our Members' Party reaches new heights, so it came as no

    surprise that this year's event took place on the second floor of a

    clubhouse in Torrance. The surprise came when guests went out on the

    balcony and looked down on several tennis matches in progress.

    Entertainment indoors was provided by the Freeman Valley Wind Quintet,

    which includes orchestra members Bob Peterson and Bill Malcolm. The food,

    delicious as ever, was presided over by Margaret McWilliams, who provided

    a steady stream of hot hors d'oeuvres to supplement the tempting table

    spread. Host and hostess duties were handled gracefully by Don Lapedes,

    Martin Wood, Yong Reuter, Eileen Lapedes, Mary Ann Keating, Genevieve

    Kiser, AdaBelle Peterson, Ruth MacFarlane, and Donna Clarke. JoAnn Kamada

    did an outstanding job of organizing the silent auction, which netted

    $1,300 for the Symphony's general fund. Many thanks to those who

    contributed and solicited items for the auction, and who worked so hard

    to make this annual get-together a happy memory. Thanks also to the

    West End Racquet Club for providing our most unusual venue to date.

     

     

    WE WELCOME NEW BCSA MEMBERS

    Anne Lee Antletz

    Bruce & Karen Beatty

    Hakimeh Kadivar

    Mr. & Mrs. H. L. Keating

    Charles V. Lockhart

    Robert S. Ramsay

    George & Jeanie Pelzman

    Michael & Sandra Sandor

    Mr. & Mrs. R. D. Smith

    Shirley Sommer

    Paul Spinner

    Barbara B. Stringer

    Ellen & Chris Velline

     

    THANKS TO ALL who filled out the survey sheets at our April

    concert. Your opinions are very important to us in planning and

    publicizing our concerts. We will be reporting on results in a

    future issue of the newsletter.

     

    DATING GAME

    You've probably noticed that our concerts are frequently scheduled

    just before holiday weekends (Memorial Day), at the ends of holiday

    weeks (Good Friday during the Easter season), or on the actual

    holiday (Halloween, Veterans Day). We don t usually ask for these

    dates; rather, we are offered a limited number of choices--and

    sometimes no choice at all--after the South Bay Center for the Arts

    schedules paid events in Marsee Auditorium. We hope you understand

    and share our gratitude to El Camino for offering us the opportunity

    to offer free concerts in this very desirable venue.

     

    MARY ANN KEATING

    Our newest Board member, Mary Ann Keating, is already familiar to

    Association members who attended our annual party on June 4. She is

    also familiar to community members who read the local papers. Recently

    retired from El Camino College, she served as Director of Public

    Information for twenty-three years and as such was the official quoted

    source for all news stories involving that institution.

    Mary Ann joined the Symphony Association Board in April at the invitation

    of Dr. Robert Haag, whom she met and worked with at El Camino. A music

    lover, especially of opera, she attended her first Beach Cities Symphony

    performance at Mira Costa High in the late '60s. She later rediscovered

    the orchestra after it began appearing at El Camino's Marsee Auditorium.

    As an audience member, she has always noticed how "The enthusiasm of the

    [Beach Cities Symphony] musicians comes across. They are there because

    they want to be, because of the love of music, not the paycheck." She also

    finds the wide-ranging backgrounds of the Symphony and Board members to

    be a positive factor: "It brings together people from all different walks

    of life: teachers, engineers, designers, and so on, with the common

    denominator of music."

    Mary Ann, a native of Colorado Springs and a graduate of the University

    of Missouri's School of Journalism, came to California in 1967 and has

    lived in Redondo Beach ever since. She worked first for the Daily Breeze

    and then for the Los Angeles Times after her husband-to-be, Hal, offered her a

    job there. Her impressive background in journalism made her a natural mentor

    for El Camino students interested in exploring the communications field

    outside the newsroom. Mary Ann took a no-nonsense, hands-on approach in

    indoctrinating her student helpers: "I would have them scrub out the floor

    of the darkroom. That way I weeded out the serious ones." She still keeps

    in touch with many former students who have gone on to careers with the

    Times, the Breeze, and other papers.

    "Active retirement" is a good way to describe Mary Ann's life at this

    point. She and her husband will be traveling more; most recently they

    went on a ten-day train excursion from Vancouver to Toronto, which she

    will be describing for one of the several travel publications she writes

    for. She recently became a docent at the Banning Residence Museum in

    Wilmington and has applied for a post on the Redondo Beach Historical

    Commission. It's our good fortune that she will be giving us some of

    her time also. Her local newspaper contacts will be of great benefit as

    she assists our Publicity Chair, JoAnn Kamada. Especially helpful to us

    is her experience in working at El Camino and her knowledge of the way

    the South Bay Center of the Arts functions. Mary Ann expresses pleasure

    in being part of the Beach Cities Symphony and its community, noting that

    "It fills a need for the fine arts that schools recently have not been

    able to provide." The pleasure is ours as well.

     

    Our 2000-2001 Concert Season:

    November 10, 2000: Beethoven Triple Concerto, Mahler Symphony #1

    January 19, 2001: Raikovich Happy Overture, Mozart Piano Concerto in G,

    K. 453 , Brahms Symphony #2

    April 13, 2001: Rimsky-Korsakov Russian Easter Overture, Wagner Good

    Friday Spell, Dvorak Violin Concerto in A Minor

    May 25, 2001: Copland An Outdoor Overture, Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody #2,

    MTAC Artists of the Future Concerto Soloists

     

    Please forward newsletter inquiries to: Beach Cities Symphony Assn.

    Post Office Box 248 Redondo Beach CA 90277-0248

    Concert/Member information line: 310-379-9725 or 310-539-4649

    www.netword.com/bcso

    Text: Toni Empringham

    Graphics: Ralph Dame

    Editor/Advisor: Margaret McWilliams

     

    HELP US CARRY ON

    by renewing your membership in the Beach Cities Symphony Association

    for the 2000-2001 concert season. The date above your name on the mailing

    label now reflects the EXPIRATION of your current subscription. To keep

    receiving the benefits of membership, which include this newsletter,

    eligibility for prize drawings at our concerts, and an invitation to the

    annual members party at the end of the concert year, use the enclosed

    envelope to renew now. If you have already subscribed for the current

    season--we thank you!

    ........................................................................

    CAN T FIND YOUR ENVELOPE? USE THE COUPON BELOW

    Angel $1,000 or more***Conductor's Circle $500***Sponsor $250

    ***Benefactor $150***Patron $100***Associate $50***Contributor $30

    Enclosed find my check for $_______________to cover my membership in the

    Beach Cities Symphony Association, Inc. for the 2000-01 season.

    Please send me advance notice of concerts and receptions.

    Name___________________________________________________________________

    Phone_________________

    Address______________________________________________________

    _________________________________

    City, State, Zip Code_________________________________________________

    E-mail address (to receive reminders before each concert)_______________

    Employer (for matching funds)___________________________________________

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR DONATION

    Mail to Beach Cities Symphony Assn., P. O. Box 248. Redondo Beach, CA 90277-0248.

    For information call (310) 379-9725 or (310) 539-4649.

    Visit our web page at http://www.netword.com/*bcso

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