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March 26 — Imani Winds Concert Program

Program | Season Listing | Visit Imani Winds site for Bios

Scherzo from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” — Felix MENDELSSOHN
Arr. F. GABLER

Quintet for Winds op. 43 — Carl NIELSEN
i. Allegro ben Moderato
ii. Menuett
iii. Praladium. Tema con variazioni

Contrabasjissimo — Astor PIAZZOLLA
Arr. Jeff SCOTT

INTERMISSION

“Bruyetes” from Preludes for piano, II no. 5 — Claude DEBUSSY
Arr. J. KOWALEWSKI

The Rite of Spring — Igor STRAVINSKY
Arr. Jonathan RUSSELL

Klezmer Dances — Traditional
i. Khosidl arr. Gene KAVADLO
ii. Freylekh

Message from the Wisconsin Arts Board

Dear friends and partners,

The Wisconsin Arts Board decided at its meeting last Friday to actively contest Governor Walker’s proposal to cut state funding for the arts by 73%, eliminate the Wisconsin Arts Board as a state agency, transfer its four remaining staff members to staff a program within the Department of Tourism, and count the remaining funds associated with the arts under the column of Marketing.  More details can be found in the attached document, which outlines why the WAB finds his proposal in direct conflict with the goal to create jobs and economic recovery and growth for our state.

The Arts Board has enjoyed an increasingly productive and mutually supportive relationship with the Department of Tourism over our 38 year history, each agency focused on its unique mission but lending expertise and leveraging strength for the other.  Our work is not redundant.  Wisconsin, now more than ever, needs a state agency specifically focused on the arts and cultural infrastructure of its communities large and small, an agency that also provides a point of investment for that infrastructure.  The state actually needs to invest in the arts to ensure the context and conditions that will make our economy robust and prosperous.

The Arts Board will lead non-partisan advocacy for restoration of the agency in the budget.  We ask you to share these talking points with your Board of Directors, those on your mailing lists, and to expand your lists with every opportunity that a new audience or group is gathered.  Your communications with Assembly and State Senate representatives in your district should include vivid narratives about what it would mean to lose both the grants and the counsel of WAB, your measure of the deep public value of this agency.  If your legislators do not serve on the Joint Finance Committee (JFC), then we suggest that you ask both legislators to communicate with members on that committee on your behalf, asking that they restore the Wisconsin Arts Board with funding that reflects an appropriate 10% cut.  And of course it would be helpful for you to also contact JFC members yourselves, as they serve on that committee as representatives of us all.

I also invite your suggestions for increased advocacy or for ways we can partner with you and support successfully casting a wide net across the state to harness shared determination to restore the possibility of a sturdy, inclusive economy.

With my gratitude for your hard work,
Barbara Lawton
Chair, Wisconsin Arts Board


It’s tradition! – The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra

The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Edo de Waart, Music Director, will close Civic Music’s 84th season on Sunday, May 1st. This is a perfect opportunity to acquaint friends & colleagues with the excitement of CM’s outstanding performances and the incredibly affordable cost of membership. A tradition since 1927, the final concert of the season is a bonus concert for new members. That’s right, a free concert for those who purchase a 2011-12 membership. Read More

Press-Gazette: Imani Winds to play for Brown County Civic Music Association

greenbaypressgazette.com • March 18, 2011

Imani Winds, a New York-based wind quintet, will make its first appearance before a Brown County Civic Music Association audience March 26 at Green Bay West High School.

Imani means “faith” in Swahili.

The Grammy-nominated group will present repertoire spanning European, American, African and Latin American traditions along with wind arrangements of music composed by Felix Mendelssohn, Claude Debussy and Igor Stravinsky.

Speaking from the stage, members will introduce their program, their personnel and their projects.

Read the complete article at:
www.greenbaypressgazette.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201103190407/GPG04/103190680

March E-Notes…

Imani Winds – Saturday, March 26th
The Grammy-nominated chamber ensemble features flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and French horn. The name Imani means “faith” in Swahili, and reflects the African-American and Latin American roots of this New York-based wind quintet. For photos and biographical information you can visit their website.

You may review the program to be performed.

Program book notes:

  • Remember to support the advertisers in our program book. When you visit their businesses, let them know you appreciate their support for Civic Music. Our website, www.bccivicmusic.org has a link to each of our advertisers.
  • Our 2011-12 concert series will be announced in Saturday’s program book.

Imani Winds

Program | Season Listing | Visit Imani Winds site for Bios

Imani Winds group photo
Imani Winds

This polished, Grammy-nominated quintet features four woodwinds — flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon — and that most subtle of brass instruments, a French horn.  Their music spans classics by Ravel and Hindemith to transcriptions of Mozart, Beethoven, and Poulenc to newly commissioned works. The name Imani means “faith” in Swahili, and subtly reflects the African-American and Latin American roots of this New York-based ensemble.

Additional Information

http://www.imaniwinds.com/

2008 Civic Music Performer is 2011 Grammy Winner

Paul Jacobs, Grammy-winning organist
Paul Jacobs, Grammy-winning organist

Paul Jacobs, an organist, who played for the Saturday, April 26, 2008 concert in the Civic Music series a few years ago was awarded a 2011 Grammy Award for “Best Instrumental Soloist Performance (without Orchestra),” the first Grammy ever to a solo organist!

Civic Music is proud to have presented this history-making musician.

See the video interview with Paul Jacobs about his grammy award found on YouTube.

May 1—Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Program Notes

Program | Program Notes | Season Listing

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975)

Festive Overture, Opus 96

Following a period from 1948 to 1953 when Shostakovich was almost exclusively involved with the creation of film scores and chamber music, he suddenly returned to orchestral composition with Symphony No. 10 and, in 1954, his brilliant Festive Overture. Allegedly written under great pressure of time, the overture was given its first performance on November 7, 1954 at a Moscow concert commemorating the thirty-seventh anniversary of the October Revolution (Soviet celebrations often went on for a long time). Read More

May 1—Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Program

Program | Program Notes | Season Listing

Dmitri Shostakovich

Festive Overture, Opus 96

Dmitri Shostakovich

Symphony No. 9 in E-flat major, Opus 70

Allegro
Moderato
Presto
Largo
Allegretto

—-Intermission —-

Mikhail Glinka

Overture to Russlan and Ludmilla

Sergei Prokofiev

March and Scherzo from Love for Three Oranges, Opus 33bis

Reinhold Gliere

“Russian Sailor’s Dance” from The Red Poppy

Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Waltz from the Suite from The Sleeping Beauty

Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Capriccio italien, Opus 45