MSO – Program Notes

Program | Season Listing

MSO: Green Bay, 5/19/12
Notes by Roger Ruggeri © 2012

Felix Mendelssoh (1809-1847)
Overture, “The Hebrides” (“Fingal’s Cave”), Opus 26

The Romantic era’s fascination with Nature and natural subjects is embodied in Mendelssohn’s celebrated concert overture, The Hebrides. The overture is a product of the same trip to Scotland in 1829 that inspired the composition of the Scottish Symphony (No. 3). Mendelssohn and his friend, Karl Klingemann, took a boat to view the famed Fingal’s Cave, located on the island of Staffa in the Inner Hebrides. In a letter, Klingemann recalled: “We were put out into boats and clambered past the hissing sea on stumps of columns up the odiously celebrated Fingal’s Cave. I must say, never did such green and roaring waves pound in a stranger cave. The many pillars make the inside resemble a monstrous organ. Black, resounding, and utterly without any purpose at all, it lies there, the broad gray sea inside it and in front of it.” Mendelssohn, however, was so moved by the grandeur of the cave that he allegedly sketched the first twenty-one measures of the overture while sitting in the bobbing boat. Like the Scottish Symphony, the overture was completed more than a year later while the composer was in Rome.

The overture begins with an immediate presentation of the one-measure main motive in the low strings and bassoons. This melody is woven into a texture of changing harmonies. A second melody –one that had an enormous influence upon 19th-century European music– rises and falls simply in the cellos, clarinets and bassoons. There is development of the materials and an exciting coda that brings to a close a work Wagner declared to be “one of the most beautiful pieces we possess.”

 

Antonin Dvorák (1841-1904)
Silent Woods (Klid) for Cello and Orchestra, Opus 68, No. 5

Soon after accepting a two-year appointment as Director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York City, Dvorák agreed to a sort of farewell concert tour in the early months of 1892. Scheduled to perform concerts of his own music in thirty-nine cities in Bohemia and Moravia, Dvorák planned to tour as a pianist with two of his longtime friends and colleagues, violinist Ferdinand Lachner and cellist Hanus Wihan. While working out the actual programs, Dvorák suddenly realized that he had no music to feature Wihan as soloist.

Immediately after Christmas 1891, Dvorák spent two days making arrangements for cello and piano of his Slavonic Dance No. 8 and the fifth movement, Silent Woods, from his evocative suite of piano four-hand pieces entitled From the Bohemian Forest. Wihan and Dvorák gave the first performance of this musical woodland scene in Prague on March 24, 1892.

 

Antonin Dvorák
Rondo for Cello and Orchestra in G minor, Opus 94

On Christmas Day 1891, Dvorák composed a concise piece that he referred to as the “Rondo for Professor Wihan.” The work’s folk-flavored rondo theme returns between virtuosic and melodic episodes before subsiding to a hushed conclusion. Wihan and Dvorák premiered the Rondo at Kladno on January 6, 1892.

In October of 1893, midway in his American sojourn, Dvorák created orchestral accompaniments to both the Rondo and Silent Woods. (Two years later, Dvorák wrote his epic Cello Concerto for Wihan.)

 

Serge Prokofiev (1891-1953)
Symphony No. 1 in D major (“Classical”), Op. 25

A compelling answer to the rhetorical question: “What would Mozart or Haydn be writing if they were alive today,” Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony is one of the earliest examples of the neo-classicism that attracted a number of early-20th-century composers.  A marvelous blend of economy, clarity, wit and whimsy, the Classical Symphony remains a fresh- sounding favorite of concert audiences throughout the world.

In his autobiography, Prokofiev recalled:

“I spent the summer of 1917 in the country near Petrograd all alone, reading Kant and working a great deal.  I deliberately did not take my piano with me, for I wished to try composing without it. …I had learned a great deal about Haydn’s technique from Tcherepnine and hence felt myself on sufficiently familiar ground to venture forth on this difficult journey without a piano…It seemed to me that had Haydn lived in our day he would have retained his own style while accepting something of the new at the same time.  That was the kind of symphony I wanted to write: a symphony in the classical style.  And when I saw that my idea was beginning to work, I called it the Classical Symphony…I composed the symphony in my head during my walks in the country.”

Its nature belying the fact that it was composed amid the unrest of the Bolshevist Revolution, the Classical Symphony served as one of Prokofiev’s calling cards on his American concert tour during the autumn of 1917.

 

Antonin Dvorák
Symphony No. 9 in E minor (“From the New World”), Opus 95

By the early 1890s Dvorák had achieved international recognition as a composer; among the fruits of his success was an offer to assume the directorship of the newly founded National Conservatory of Music in New York City. After some negotiation, an offer of a sum nearly thirty times his current salary prompted Dvorák to accept the post.

With his wife and two of their children, the composer set sail for America. They arrived in September of 1892 and moved into a New York brownstone; within three months of his arrival, Dvorák began sketching a new work that was to be his last and most famous symphony, a work that gained the subtitle “From the New World.” He began to work on January 10 and completed the scoring on May 24, 1893. Many romantic myths have swirled around this piece, including the idea that it was a sort of rhapsody on American Black and Indian motives. These concepts were strongly rebuffed by Dvorák, who wrote: “Omit the nonsense about my having made use of ‘Indian’ and ‘American’ motives. That is a lie. I tried to write only in the spirit of those national American melodies.”

While composing this symphony, Dvorák was being true to his own Czech muse; it is undeniable, however, that the work was generally influenced by his life in this country. In a letter to Bohemia written during the composition of the symphony, Dvorák said: “I should never have written the symphony like I have, if I hadn’t seen America.”

 

May E-Notes

The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Assistant Conductor Francesco Lecce-Chong, will close Civic Music’s 85th anniversay season on Saturday, May 19th, in the historic Ralph Holter Auditorium at Green Bay West High. The concert begins at 7:30 pm; auditorium doors open at 7 pm.

Mr. Lecce-Chong was appointed assistant conductor of the MSO beginning in the 2011-12 season. In addition to assisting Music Director Edo de Waart and guest conductors, he plays an active role in the orchestra’s community and educational programs. He holds degrees in both piano and orchestral conducting.

Scott Tisdel, soloist for the pair of Dvorak pieces for Cello & Orchestra, has served as Associate Principal Cellist of the MSO and Principal Cellist of the Milwaukee Chamber Orchestra since his arrival in Milwaukee in 1987.

The MSO program will give the audience a glimpse of their invitational performance at the Spring for Music Festival at Carnegie Hall in New York City on May 11th. [See the complete program notes.] The program:

FELIX MENDELSSOHN… The Hebrides Overture, Opus 26, “Fingal’s Cave”
ANTONIN DVORÁK… Silent Woods for Cello and Orchestra
ANTONIN DVORÁK… Rondo in G minor for Cello and Orchestra, Opus 94
SERGEI PROKOFIEV… Classical Symphony, Opus 25 [Symphony No. 1]
ANTONIN DVORÁK… Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Opus 95, [old No. 5] “From the New World

Tradition since Civic Music’s first season 85 years ago, the final concert is a free bonus concert for next season’s new members. New members will receive six concerts for the price of five, including the MSO concerts which conclude this year’s and next year’s concert series. Call the Civic Music office if you know someone who might be interested in becoming a member for next season–we’ll send a brochure. Share the excitement!

Ticket prices remain unchanged for the 7th consecutive year:
$80, adult season tickets; $25 student season tickets
$35, MSO concert only; $10 student, MSO concert only

Season Finale Reception:

Titletown Brewing Company following the concert. Y’all come!

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In Memoriam…

The MSO concert will be dedicated to the life of Noreen Remmel who died on April 27, 2012. Noreen and her husband Lee were members of Brown County Civic Music since the 1950s. A member of the Board of Directors since 1977, Noreen served as secretary, a member of the talent selection committee and an usher. Noreen & Lee were honored in 2008 by both the Civic Music and Packers organizations for their many years of service to Brown County Civic Music.

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The annual Civic Music Membership Meeting will be held Wednesday, June 13th, at the First United Presbyterian Church in De Pere (corner of Webster Ave. & George St.) at 7 pm. All Civic Music members are welcome and encouraged to attend. On the agenda are the election of officers & board members and other board matters. If you are interested in serving on the Board of Directors, or if you would like to nominate someone to serve, please submit the name & qualifications/experience by email to BCcivicmusic@gmail.com prior to May 30th. Board members meet several times a year, and all members volunteer for the various committees that keep this non-profit, volunteer organization running smoothly & successfully.

Renew your membership at the MSO concert. Please put your membership form and a check in an envelope and drop it in the box on the table in the lobby. See next season’s lineup.

Reminder: Your season membership tickets will be mailed in September.

Thank you for your support and your dedication to outstanding classical music from around the world brought to you by the Brown County Civic Music Association.

Post-Concert Reception – Oct. 5, 2012

reception at Titletown Brewing Company
Join us for a reception at Titletown Brewing Company following the concert…

Meet and greet the performers and your concert-going friends after the Oct. 5 Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band concert at the Titletown Brewing Company and nibble on complimentary hors d’oeuvres. A big thanks to the Titletown Brewing Company for supplying the space and the snacks.

Location: Titletown Brewing Company, 200 Dousman St, Green Bay, WI (Map)

CAR – ‘Catch a ride’

CAR - "Catch A Ride"

CAR—“Catch a ride” is a new program designed to connect drivers and riders. Persons who would like to attend our concerts but have no transportation will be connected with volunteer drivers from their area. If you know of someone who needs a ride, call the Civic Music office, 338-1801.

 

Season tickets to be mailed

Tickets for the 2012-13 Season will be mailed on Monday, September 17, 2012. Tickets are held until this date to include as many envelopes as possible in the bulk mail rate, helping to keep membership affordable. Tickets are available online, by mail, or at the door. Tickets purchased less than two weeks prior to the first concert will be held at “Will call” in the lobby.

Biographies – Oct. 5, 2012

Program | Season Listing | Biographies

Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band

Keith Brion

Keith Brion, Music Director of his own New Sousa Band, has appeared as a frequent guest conductor with the nearly all of America’s major symphony orchestras and professional bands. His New Sousa Band, begun in 1979, is a realization of Mr. Brion’s dream to reincarnate the Sousa Band and once again tour America’s towns and cities.

 

Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band have toured extensively in the Eastern, Midwestern and the Southeastern United States. The band made their first overseas tour to Japan in August 1996. In November 1993, the band played its first theatrical engagement with a one week appearance at the Christie Lane Theatre in Branson, MO. They have appeared regularly in every section of the United States. In 2000 they were presented by the Minnesota Orchestra and in May 2002 appeared for an entire week on the Seattle Symphony pops series. The band performed in 2009 for the Midwest Band and Orchestra Clinic and in Dec./Jan. 2010-11 toured six major cities in China.


The musicians of the New Sousa Band are chosen for their ability to transmit the original excitement, style, spirit and ensemble sound of the Sousa’s Band. They are selected nationally from major orchestras, military bands, university faculties and freelance musicians. The band wears authentic replicas of the original Sousa Band uniforms. They assemble several times each year to concertize.

The band uses the early 20th century performance style, and inflections of and the special march orchestrations of Sousa’s original band. They have also adopted many of the original period instruments including saxophones from the 1920s, cornets, smaller trombones and baritone horns, the unique upright bell sousaphones used by Sousa’s Band and a period snare drum.

Mr. Brion and his band appeared in a 1986 PBS TV special The New Sousa Band On Stage at Wolftrap, now released as a video and as a laserdisc by Proscenium Entertainment. Excerpts from this show appear from time to time on the Classic Arts Channel. Mr. Brion has also been seen in the PBS-TV special on the American Experience “If You Knew Sousa” and has been seen on BBC TV London in a new show called “Sousa in New York.”

His recordings with his New Sousa Band include The Original, All-American, SOUSA! on Delos Records and the Sousa Legacy for Bainbridge Records, recorded with the Rochester Philharmonic and the New Sousa Band. He has recorded Percy Grainger-To the Fore! with the Michigan State Band for Delos Records and the Wind Music of Alan Hovhaness for Mace with trumpeter Gerard Schwarz. Mr. Brion recorded a second all-Hovhaness recording, “Star Dawn,” with the Ohio State Band and trombonist Christian Lindberg and a third for Naxos with trumpeter John Wallace. A fourth recording with the Trinity College of Music Wind Orchestra on Naxos will appear in 2011 for the Hovhaness centennial year. He has also three volumes of Sousa orchestral music as well as CD’s of the music of Percy Grainger and Victor Herbert. Mr. Brion is currently recording the complete band music of Sousa with London’s Royal Artillery Band, and the Royal Norwegian Navy Band, also for Naxos. Ten volumes of the sixteen volume series have already been recorded.

In addition to leading the New Sousa Band, Mr. Brion maintains an active career as an orchestra conductor. He is actively presenting his popular Sousa revival concerts with orchestras such as the Boston Pops, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the St. Louis, Dallas, Houston, Utah, Minnesota and Milwaukee symphonies, his overseas orchestral engagements have included the London Concert Orchestra, New Zealand Symphony, and the Gothenburg Symphony.

Mr. Brion has been a frequent guest conductor of professional bands among which are the Stockholm Symphonic Wind Orchestra, Royal Swedish Naval Band, Royal Norwegian Naval Band, New York City’s Goldman Band, and the Allentown Band. He has also appeared with most of the major service bands, including the U.S. Marine Band, Army Band, Army Field Band, West Point Band, Coast Guard Band, the U.S. Army Band of Europe in Heidelberg, Germany, etc. University and school band appearances have included Florida State, Michigan State, University of Texas, Ohio State, and the University of Iowa, plus the National Music Camp at Interlochen.

Keith Brion is a former Director of Bands at Yale University, where he led the Yale Band in concerts at the Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, and in an all-Ives program at Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw. Prior to coming to Yale, he was the founder and music director of the North Jersey Wind Symphony and a longtime band educator and music supervisor in the New Jersey public schools.

He has published over thirty editions for band, including the music of Charles Ives, Percy Grainger, John Philip Sousa and D.W. Reeves, and is the author of numerous articles. This includes a series of twenty two Sousa publications collaboration with Loras Schissel, curator of the Sousa collection at the Library of Congress and a current series of New Sousa Band Editions.

Mr. Brion’s library and offices are located at Erector Square in New Haven, CT. To contact via e-mail write to WillowBlos@aol.com. The web address for the New Sousa Band is newsousaband.com

Soprano Maribeth Crawford

Photo: Maribeth Crawford
Maribeth Crawford

Maribeth Crawford received her Bachelors in Vocal Performance at Mississippi College in Clinton, Mississippi. While at Mississippi College, Mrs. Crawford sang the roles of Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, and Alice Ford in The Merry Wives of Windsor. Mrs. Crawford holds a Masters Degree in Vocal Performance from the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. At the conservatory, she sang the Sandman in Hansel and Gretel and Virginia Poe in the collegiate premiere of Argento’s The Voyage of Edgar Allen Poe. She is currently working on her DMA in Vocal Performance at the College Conservatory of Music

As a young artist, Maribeth has worked with Opera in the Ozarks at Inspiration Point where she sang the roles of Musetta in La Boheme, Echo in Ariadne auf Naxos, and the Princess and the Nightingale in L’Enfant et les Sortileges. She has performed with the Lebanon Symphony Orchestra as the soprano soloist in Handel’s Messiah and with the Bowling Green Symphony Orchestra as Rosalia in Westside Story. She was also a young artist with the Natchez Festival of Music. Most recently, Mrs. Crawford sang the role of Peaches in Jerry Spring the Opera and Mrs. Nordstrom in A Little Night Music with Cincinnati’s New Stage Collective. In addition to being an active performer, Mrs. Crawford is a music educator. She is currently a faculty member of Central State University and Cincinnati State Community College. She has worked with Cincinnati Opera’s Educational outreach and is an active member of the National Association of Teachers of Singing. Mrs. Crawford resides in downtown Cincinnati with her husband.

More information at www.maribethcrawford.com

Program – Oct. 5, 2012

Program | Season Listing | Biographies

Keith Brion and His New Sousa Band

Mr. Mark Ponzo, Cornet
Mrs. Maribeth Crawford, Soprano
Miss Tacy Edwards, Piccolo
Mr. Willie Clark, Tuba

West High School, Ralph Holter Auditorium, Green Bay, WI
Friday October 5, 2012 7:30 p.m.

National Anthem — The Star Spangled Banner (Arr. Sousa/Damrosch)

  1. Overture — Prelude to the Comic Opera “Katherine” (Sousa)
  2. Cornet Solo (Mr. Ponzo)
    From the Shores of the Mighty Pacific (H.L. Clarke)
  3. Two Selections
    A) Morris Dance: Country Gardens Grainger
    B) Folk Tune: A Sheepshearing Song Goosens-Grainger
  4. Vocal Solo (Mrs. Crawford)
    Quel Guardo Il Caviliere from “Don Pasquale” (Donizetti)
  5. Characteristic — The Chariot Race (Sousa)
  6. I    N    T    E    R    V   A    L

  7. Spanish Dance
    The Flashing Eyes of Andalusia from the “Camera Studies Suite” (Sousa)
  8. Two Selections
    A) Vocal Solo (Mrs. Crawford) — All the Things You Are (Kern)
    B) Patrol — Marching Through Georgia (Work/Sousa)
  9. Sacred SelectionO Man Now Weep for Thy Great Sin (J.S.Bach/Grainger)
  10. Piccolo/Tuba Duet (Miss Edwards and Mr. Clark)
    The Elephant and the Fly (Kling)
  11. Patriotic Salute
    George M. Cohan Sing Along (Cohan)
    Parade of the Services (Various)

September e-Notes

John Philip Sousa
John Philip Sousa (1854-1932)

Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band, will open the 86th season of the Brown County Civic Music Association on Friday, October 5, with a concert commemorating the life and times of John Philip Sousa (1854-1932), the composer and conductor known as the March King. In the tradition of Sousa’s band concerts, the program will include a mixture of light classics, novelties, and instrumental and vocal solos along with well-known Sousa marches. A note here: Sousa concerts were never all marches!

The musicians of the New Sousa Band are chosen for their ability to transmit the original excitement, style, spirit and ensemble sound of Sousa’s Band. They are selected nationally from major orchestras, military bands, university faculties and freelance musicians. The band wears authentic replicas of the original Sousa Band uniforms. The New Sousa Band has adopted many of the original period instruments including saxophones from the 1920’s, cornets, smaller trombones and baritone horns, the upright bell sousaphones (designed for Sousa) and a period snare drum.

Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band
Keith Brion and his New Sousa Band

Keith Brion, former Director of Bands at Yale University, maintains an active career as an orchestra conductor and is currently recording the complete band music of Sousa. Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever, composed in 1896, is the official National March. [Sousa’s band performed in Green Bay six times between 1898 and 1928.]

Concert Information

Concerts begin at 7:30 pm in the Ralph Holter Auditorium at Green Bay West High. Auditorium doors open at 7:00. All concerts are open seating. Tickets are available for this concert as well as for the five-concert season online, by mail, or at the door. Tickets for the Sousa concert: $25 adults, $10 students (kindergarten through college). Tickets for the 5-concert series: $80 adults, $25 students. All tickets purchased less than two weeks prior to the first concert will be held at “Will call” in the lobby. For more info, call the Civic Music office at 338-1801.

The complete bio of Keith Brion, the vocal soloist, and the entire program to be performed can be found on the Brown County Civic Music website. Visit www.newsousaband.com for more information about the New Sousa Band and about John Philip Sousa.

Civic Music at Artstreet 2012

Thanks go to the following volunteers who greeted visitors to the Civic Music booth at Artstreet: Dick Huiting, chr., Marge & Mike Bork, Joyce Calderon, Brooks Dodson, Les Heckman, Charlotte Hoffman, Lois Kania, Marilyn Knuth, Judy Lindbom, Christopher Sampson, Jackie and Tony Staley, Jean Watson.

Winners of the drawing for a pair of season tickets are Jordan Schroeder and Sarah Kubiak. Winners of a pair of tickets to the concert of their choice are Michele Utrie, Frank and Sherry Moon, Kevin McCann, Lisa Osen, Janice Burkel and Tammy Brock. Congratulations and thanks for stopping at our booth!