PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMER FESTIVAL 2016 AT IRVINE MEADOWS AMPHITHEATRE. presents. Tchaikovsky Spectacular. The concert begins at 8 p.m.

Similar documents

2019 MARCH 40 th season

DVOŘ ÁK S NEW WORLD SYMPHONY

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents POPS SERIES. The performance begins at 8 p.m.

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMERFEST 2018 AT PACIFIC AMPHITHEATRE OC FAIR & EVENT CENTER. presents. July 4 Spectacular: Music of Chicago

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

presents Symphony in the Cities Concert begins at 7 p.m. II. Largo PACIFIC SYMPHONY PROUDLY THANKS ITS SPONSORS AND PARTNERS

From the music director

CARL ST.CLAIR, CONDUCTOR ARNALDO COHEN, PIANO RAY CHEN, VIOLIN

THE WONDERFUL MUSIC OF OZ

Segerstrom center for the arts Renée and henry segerstrom concert hall. presents

Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor for Piano and Orchestra, op. 23 (1875)

PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMERFEST 2018 AT PACIFIC AMPHITHEATRE OC FAIR & EVENT CENTER. presents. The concert begins at 8 p.m. RICHARD KAUFMAN CONDUCTOR

WELCOME. from the board chair

HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES. Ticheli. Intermission. Mozart. Ravel

Misty Copeland and Daniil Simkin lead opening night cast of American Ballet Theatre's The Nutcracker at Segerstrom Center for the Arts

The purpose of the Pacific Symphony League when it was established in 1990:

CARL ST.CLAIR, CONDUCTOR ARNALDO COHEN, PIANO

PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMERFEST 2017 AT PACIFIC AMPHITHEATRE OC FAIR & EVENT CENTER. presents A STEVEN SPIELBERG FILM

Welcome! Thank you for joining us as we celebrate the

HOLIDAY CLASSICS: NUTCRACKER SWEET

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents RENÉE FLEMING. Performance begins at 8 p.m.

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

presents PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMER FESTIVAL 2014 at VERIZON WIRELESS AMPHITHEATER Kenny G The concert begins at 8 p.m. Victor Vanacore Jeff Tyzik

2019 FEBRUARY 40 TH SEASON

CHOPIN S PIANO CONCERTO

Segerstrom center for the arts Renée and henry segerstrom concert hall. presents. The concerts begin at 8 p.m. Supplica (west coast premiere)

Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concert begins at 8 p.m.; Preview talk with Alan Chapman at 7 p.m. presents

CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR AMERICAN BALLET THEATRE'S THE NUTCRACKER AT SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

MEI-ANN CHEN, CONDUCTOR KIRILL GERSTEIN, PIANO

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents SUNDAY CASUAL CONNECTIONS

Fall Concert Preview

JAMES GAFFIGAN, CONDUCTOR ORION WEISS, PIANO

presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES (b. 1951) ( ) INTERMISSION ( ) ( )

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

ofmusic the GUEST ARTIST RECITAL GUSTAVO ROMERO, Piano Friday, September 26, and Sunday, September 28, :00 p.m. Lillian H. Duncan Recital Hall

CHARLIE ALBRIGHT, piano

Argus Quartet Jason Issokson and Clara Kim, violins Dana Kelley, viola Joann Whang, cello

INTERPLAY CHAMBER MUSIC AT THE. October 07, p.m. presented by:

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

All Strings: Any movement from a standard concerto or a movement, other than the first, of a Bach sonata or suite, PLUS

as one of the experts in the Classical and pre-romantic repertory, pianist Melvyn Tan will return

NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC STRING QUARTET TO MAKE NEW YORK RECITAL DEBUT AT 92ND STREET Y Co-Presented by New York Philharmonic and 92nd Street Y

PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMER FESTIVAL 2015 AT IRVINE MEADOWS AMPHITHEATRE. presents

Sunday, April 22, :00 p.m. Stephen Balderston. Faculty Artist Series. DePaul Recital Hall 804 West Belden Avenue Chicago

PERUSAL. for Wind Ensemble Score

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

CELEBRATED MASTER CONDUCTOR GERARD SCHWARZ RETURNS TO LOS ANGELES TO CONDUCT THE USC THORNTON SYMPHONY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2012 AT 7:30PM

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall Concerts begin at 8 p.m. Preview talk with Alan Chapman begins at 7 p.m.

Clear Lake Symphony Newsletter Vol. 6 Issue 7 wwww.clearlakesymphony.org

CONTACT: Christina Kellogg Joe Yang

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 29, GRANT COMMUNICATIONS Massachusetts - New York

Thursday, May 18, :00 p.m. Sean Lee. Junior Recital. DePaul Recital Hall 804 West Belden Avenue Chicago

YEFIM BRONFMAN. Pianist

XM RADIO TO BROADCAST NEW SERIES OF BALTIMORE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERTS IN SEASON

PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMER FESTIVAL 2016 AT IRVINE MEADOWS AMPHITHEATRE. presents. The Spy Who Loved Me: The Music of James Bond

Grant Park Music Festival

Philadelphia Orchestra Master Class Series brings together world-class artists and young musicians

Concert takes place at USC Thornton School of Music, Alfred Newman Recital Hall, Tuesday, April 2, 2013 at 7:30 p.m.

prince george s Philharmonic th season

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

Romantic Era Practice Test

Christoph Eschenbach and The Philadelphia Orchestra tour Florida and Puerto Rico

STUDENT SECTION Created by:

Segerstrom Center for the Arts Announces International Dance Series

The Boise Philharmonic will launch its 46 th Concert Season in September

For Immediate Release

Pasek and Paul: Up Close and Personal with Special Guests

Lawrence University Performing Arts Series Filled with Music Legends, Rising Stars

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RINGS IN THE HOLIDAYS WITH A FESTIVE ARRAY OF PROGRAMMING

For Immediate Release Thursday, July 13, 2017

Virginia resident Adolphus Hailstork received his doctorate in composition from

San Diego Symphony. Young People's Concerts America, America! February 21 and 24, Jacobs Music Center/Copley Symphony Hall

FANTASIES I-XII. Sidney Forrest. For Solo Clarinet in Bb or A. G.P. Telemann TRANSCRIBED BY

THE CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER DAVID FINCKEL AND WU HAN, ARTISTIC DIRECTORS PRESENTS LONG ISLAND DEBUT OF THE CMS YOUNG MUSICIANS CONCERT

Contents: Biography Repertoire. Jack Price Founding Partner / Managing Director. Marc Parella Partner / Director of Operations

Included are program notes, information about the various orchestra instrument families and concert etiquette information.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 25, 2013 CONTACT: Wayne Wilkins, Director of Marketing & Communications /

SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA THE OPUS 2015 GALA CONCERT. October 10, AN-LUN HUANG Saibei Dance from Saibei Suite No. 2, Op.

Texas Music Festival Opens Cool & Classical 2015 Summer Season with. Celebrated Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow

LISZT: Totentanz and Fantasy on Hungarian Folk Tunes for Piano and Orchestra: in Full Score. 96pp. 9 x 12. (Worldwide). $14.95.

Record-Breaking Advance Subscription Results to Welcome the HKPO s New Music Director Jaap van Zweden. The Van Zweden Era Begins with

Symphony in C Igor Stravinksy

COLLEGE OF MUSIC MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. music.msu.edu. Exceptional. Early Bird Discounts by July 15. New World-class. Performance.

Audition Requirements for SEASON 2018

The Australian Youth Orchestra National Music Camp 2012

Desirée Ruhstrat David Cunliffe Marta Aznavoorian Desirée Ruhstrat David Cunliffe Marta Aznavoorian

Joshua Salvatore Dema Graduate Recital

4TH-OF-JULY CELEBRATION A JOHN DENVER TRIBUTE

The VSO presents Victoria-born violin prodigy Timothy Chooi playing Bruch Featuring the debut of young American conductor, James Feddeck

RACHMANINOFF and CAPRICCIO ESPAGNOL

Celebrate Your Holidays With the Clear Lake Symphony

GERSHWIN S CUBAN OVERTURE and DVOŘÁK S NEW WORLD *

CONTENTS: Peter and the Wolf 3. Sergey Prokofiev 5. Consider This: Class Activities 6. Musical Terms 7. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra 8

OKLAHOMA CITY UNIVERSITY DISTINGUISHED ARTISTS SERIES

SEGERSTROM CENTER FOR THE ARTS RENÉE AND HENRY SEGERSTROM CONCERT HALL. presents HAL & JEANETTE SEGERSTROM FAMILY FOUNDATION CLASSICAL SERIES

Transcription:

SEP. 3 summer festival 2016 PACIFIC SYMPHONY S SUMMER FESTIVAL 2016 AT IRVINE MEADOWS AMPHITHEATRE presents Tchaikovsky Spectacular The concert begins at 8 p.m. CARL ST.CLAIR CONDUCTOR PAUL HUANG VIOLIN NATASHA PAREMSKI PIANO HUNTINGTON BEACH CONCERT BAND Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Selections from Swan Lake, Op. 20 Prelude Danse Espagnole Hungarian Dance Waltz INTERMISSION Concerto in D Major for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 35, TH 59 Allegro moderato Canzonetta: Andante Finale: Allegro vivacissimo Paul Huang Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Waltz of the Flowers from The Nutcracker, Op. 71 Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 23, TH 55 Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso Andantino semplice Allegro con fuoco Natasha Paremski 1812 Overture, Op. 49, TH 49 Huntington Beach Concert Band This concert is generously sponsored by Michelle and David Horowitz. PACIFIC SYMPHONY PROUDLY RECOGNIZES ITS OFFICIAL PARTNERS Official Hotel Official Classical Radio Station Official Pops Radio Station Official Media Sponsor Official Television Station PacificSymphony.org (714) 755-5799

NOTES by michael clive pi otr ilyich tc haikovsky ( 1840-1893) PIOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) The Ballets: Background on Selections from Swan Lake and The Nutcracker On the strength of his three great ballet scores Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker Tchaikovsky takes his place at the forefront of major composers who wrote great original compositions for the ballet. Today, choreographers are just as likely to mine existing repertory for their dance music as to collaborate with composers on new ones. But it was Tchaikovsky, with his seemingly inexhaustible gifts for melodic and narrative invention, who proved the potential of the original ballet score. In receiving the commission for Swan Lake in 1875, Tchaikovsky was hemmed in by commercial demands and creative constraints. His rhythms and tempos had to conform to the demands of choreographic convention, and his seemingly inexhaustible gift for melodic invention was tailored to fit dance steps. But in listening to selections from Swan Lake, we are not aware of these constraints; it is all pure music and pure Tchaikovsky, endlessly tuneful and thrillingly danceable. It took him about a year and a half to complete the score, and dance rehearsals which began before he was finished took 11 months. Like many 19th-century story ballets, Swan Lake takes place in a world of enchanted forests and palaces; it is populated by nobly born humans, half-human spirits and villains with magical powers, all caught between two worlds that are far removed from everyday reality. For Tchaikovsky, the challenge was to create music that combines with decor and stage action to transform this realm of airy fantasy into a theatrical experience of authentic human emotion and conflict. Most of all, he had to frame dancers' movements with music that would be dramatically compelling yet worthy of performance on its own. His ballet scores met this challenge as none had before them, redefining the possibilities of dance as theater. In the concert hall, the Suite from Swan Lake suggests not just dance movements, but a deeply atmospheric musical narrative of magic, menace, sacrifice and transfiguration. The Nutcracker, by contrast, transports us to a world that is far more familiar, but no less magical: the child's imagination during an enchanted Christmas. Though all three of Tchaikovsky s ballet scores are familiar to us in suite form, The Nutcracker suite is the only one that Tchaikovsky himself arranged. We can easily hear one reason he did so: the sparkling, otherworldly texture of the celesta, which was new to Russia when the music was premiered in 1892. Tchaikovsky had heard the celesta in Paris the previous year. Developed by the father-and-son team Victor and Auguste Mustel, the celesta, named for its heavenly sound, intrigued Tchaikovsky, who first tried it in the score of a tone poem, then realized it was the answer to the absolute impossibility of depicting the Sugarplum Fairy in music. More so than the symphonies, concertos or tone poems, the ballets are a spectacular showcase for Tchaikovsky the melodist. In them we hear a succession of contrasting melodies, each one a selfcontained solo dance, or variation in this case, a reference to the showy choreography rather than the music. In love stories such as The Sleeping Beauty and Swan Lake, most variations are performed by suitors; in The Nutcracker, they are performed by a succession of fabulous, imported toys brought to enchanted life by Clara s mysterious uncle Drosselmeyer. The Concertos: Background on the Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35, and the Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor, Op. 23 Concertos existed for centuries before Tchaikovsky, but he was born into the great age of the virtuosic concerto composition: the Romantic era in classical music. It was Beethoven, born in 1770, who had raised the stakes; by 1875, when Tchaikovsky was 35, he was composing his Piano Concerto No. 1. The Romantic juxtaposition of the solo player pitted against the arrayed forces of the orchestra suited Tchaikovsky, as did the grandeur of virtuosic display. Like Beethoven, Tchaikovsky was an excellent pianist who fully expected to play his own piano compositions. He was inexperienced in violin composition and sought technical help with it; but then again, Beethoven himself no violinist had famously boasted that he expected his own violin concerto to be remembered and played 50 years after its premiere. Yet despite Tchaikovsky's pains, both these concertos were initially condemned as unplayable. He had begun the violin concerto in the glow of inspiration after hearing a number of continental examples, especially Edouard Lalo's five-movement Symphonie Espagnol. In an enthusiastic letter to his patron, Madame von Meck, he effusively praised Lalo's "lightness, freshness and piquant rhythms" and expressed rare optimism about his own composition. But his manuscript was rejected by violinist Josif Kotek, a friend and composition student of Tchaikovsky's, after the composer chose the great Leopold Auer as dedicatee and to play its premiere. Auer had misgivings about the work and was widely quoted as calling it "unplayable," forcing the concerto's first public performance to be postponed until still another violinist, Adolph Brodsky, could be found. Brodsky introduced the concerto in Vienna on December 4, 1881. More than three decades later, Auer recounted his early involvement with the concerto to a New York publication, the Musical Courier, in what amounted to a bit of self-justifying revisionist history. Typical! The concerto literature is rife with works that are now popular, their greatness undisputed, that were condemned by critics and soloists back in the day. Most often, they were described Summer Festival 2016

NOTES as having been written against the instrument or as technically unplayable. Were soloists hedging their bets? It s hard to know; playing the unplayable was right on their calling card. Tchaikovsky s Piano Concerto No. 1 and the Violin Concerto in D both outlasted this characterization, and are now among the most beloved concertos in the standard repertory. We might have expected a different history for the great Piano Concerto No. 1. Though Tchaikovsky lacked the encyclopedic technique of Russia s foremost soloists, he could be confident of his knowledge of the instrument and how to write for it, and the concerto displays towering grandeur and poetic utterance that are abundant and unmistakable earmarks of a hit concerto. The melodies are gorgeously lyrical and take advantage of the instrument s expressive capabilities. So why did Tchaikovsky s friend and intended dedicatee for the score, the great pianist Nikolai Rubinstein, dis it as artistically crude and, yes, unplayable? Musicologists are still speculating about the reasons. Ah, well when it comes to malicious fun, it's hard to beat celebrating the stupidity of critics. The world of classical music is filled with poorly judged writing about masterpieces that have earned a cherished place in our hearts and in the standard repertory, but were viciously panned by critics when they were introduced. The initial assessments of these concertos followed a well-worn pattern that has afflicted many others before and since: first, a key instrumentalist declares the work poorly written for the instrument, perhaps even unplayable; next an early critic derides it as crude or tasteless; then the clamorous public embraces it, demanding more performances; and finally, early detractors reconsider or forget their reservations. Background on the 1812 Overture, Op. 49 No, not the War of 1812. The subject of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture is not American, but Russian: Napoleon's catastrophic march toward Moscow and Russia s successful defense at the Battle of Borodino. As Napoleon marched to consolidate his power in Europe during the opening years of the 19th century, his campaign called all the fundamentals of European politics and Enlightenment ideas into question. Half a century later, when Tchaikovsky wrote music to celebrate the preservation of Russian autonomy in the face of Napoleon's army, this history was still burning in the Russian soul. What makes it sound so American? Its textures are distinctly brassy and martial, with narrative tension that builds to a thrillingly victorious climax. Aural spectacle gets no more spectacular than this; it is surely the most popular piece of music ever scored for full orchestra with optional tubular bells, pipe organ and cannon. As musical storytelling, the 1812 Overture is so vivid that we can smell the gunpowder as it limns the progress of contending forces. The dynamics are full of exciting contrasts, building tension with long crescendos. Melodic themes entwine and shift balance as if battling for control. New elements introduce themselves softly as if they were distant, then grow louder as if drawing near. As the overture opens, a plaintive choir of cellos and violas represents the people of Russia in their homes and churches as the invasion and their suffering escalate. One critical element is the brass-borne strains of the French national anthem, La Marseillaise, which has the characteristic sound of the cavalry riding to the rescue. But remember, France represents the Napoleonic menace; in other words, they are the bad guys. Victory comes when they are countered by louder strains of the Russian anthem God Save the Czar. And, of course, by the Imperial Army and its cannons sixteen shots in all. After the battling and the cannon fire, the initial hymn tune returns to the whole orchestra and triumphant church bells ring out. They remind us that it is not the army or the czar but the Russian people who are the hero of the 1812 Overture as they are in Shostakovich s Symphony No. 5 depicting the siege of Leningrad, and in Mussorgsky s populist opera of czars and political intrigue, Boris Godunov. This idea the common people as hero is a democratic ideal that may be the closest link between America's national culture and the historical origins of our beloved 1812 Overture. Michael Clive is a cultural reporter living in the Litchfield Hills of Connecticut. He is program annotator for Pacific Symphony and Louisiana Philharmonic, and editor-inchief for The Santa Fe Opera. THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSOR MICHELLE AND DAVID HOROWITZ Michelle and David Horowitz are ardent and generous supporters of culture in Orange County, especially Pacific Symphony. They are wonderful ambassadors, bringing many friends and acquaintances to share their love for great music. The Horowitz family has also been a great advocate of the Pacific Symphony Youth Orchestra. Michelle and David have been the generous hosts of the Symphony s annual guest artist luncheon. We are deeply grateful for their ongoing support and for their underwriting of this final Summer Festival concert at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre. Tchaikovsky Spectacular

CARL meet the music director The 2016-17 season marks Music Director Carl St.Clair s 27th year leading Pacific Symphony. He is one of the longest tenured conductors of the major American orchestras. St.Clair s lengthy history solidifies the strong relationship he has forged with the musicians and the community. His continuing role also lends stability to the organization and continuity to his vision for the Symphony s future. Few orchestras can claim such rapid artistic development as Pacific Symphony the largest orchestra formed in the United States in the last 50 years due in large part to St.Clair s leadership. During his tenure, St.Clair has become widely recognized for his musically distinguished performances, his commitment to building outstanding educational programs and his innovative approaches to programming. Among his creative endeavors are: the opera initiative, Symphonic Voices, which continues for the sixth season in 2016-17 with Verdi s Aida, following the concert-opera productions of La Bohème, Tosca, La Traviata, Carmen and Turandot in subsequent seasons; and the highly acclaimed American Composers Festival, which, now in its 17th year, celebrates the 70th birthday of John Adams with a performance of The Dharma at Big Sur, featuring electric violinist Tracy Silverman, followed by Steven Boyers Ellis Island: The Dream of America. St.Clair s commitment to the development and performance of new works by composers is evident in the wealth of commissions and recordings by the Symphony. The 2016-17 season features commissions by pianist/composer Conrad Tao and composer-in-residence Narong Prangcharoen, a follow-up to the recent slate of recordings of works commissioned and performed by the Symphony in recent years. These include William Bolcom s Songs of Lorca and Prometheus (2015-16), Elliot Goldenthal s Symphony in G-sharp Minor (2014-15), Richard Danielpour s Toward a Season of Peace (2013-14) Philip Glass The Passion of Ramakrishna (2012-13), and Michael Daugherty s Mount Rushmore and The Gospel According to Sister Aimee (2012-13). St.Clair has led the orchestra in other critically acclaimed albums including two piano concertos of Lukas Foss; Danielpour s An American Requiem and Goldenthal s Fire Water Paper: A Vietnam Oratorio with cellist Yo-Yo Ma. Other commissioned composers include James Newton Howard, Zhou Long, Tobias Picker, Frank Ticheli and Chen Yi, Curt Cacioppo, Stephen Scott, Jim Self (Pacific Symphony s principal tubist) and Christopher Theofanidis. In 2006-07, St.Clair led the orchestra s historic move into its home in the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall at Segerstrom Center for the Arts. The move came on the heels of the landmark 2005-06 season that included St.Clair leading the Symphony on its first European tour nine cities in three countries playing before capacity houses and receiving extraordinary responses and reviews. From 2008-10, St.Clair was general music director for the Komische Oper in Berlin, where he led successful new productions such as La Traviata (directed by Hans Neuenfels). He also served as general music director and chief conductor of the German National Theater and Staatskapelle (GNTS) in Weimar, Germany, where he led Wagner s Ring Cycle to critical acclaim. He was the first non-european to hold his position at the GNTS; the role also gave him the distinction of simultaneously leading one of the newest orchestras in America and one of the oldest in Europe. In 2014, St.Clair became the music director of the National Symphony Orchestra in Costa Rica. His international career also has him conducting abroad several months a year, and he has appeared with orchestras throughout the world. He was the principal guest conductor of the Radio Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart from 1998-2004, where he completed a three-year recording project of the Villa Lobos symphonies. He has also appeared with orchestras in Israel, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and South America, and summer festivals worldwide. CARL ST.CLAIR WILLIAM J. GILLESPIE MUSIC DIRECTOR CHAIR In North America, St.Clair has led the Boston Symphony Orchestra (where he served as assistant conductor for several years), New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic and the San Francisco, Seattle, Detroit, Atlanta, Houston, Indianapolis, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver symphonies, among many. A strong advocate of music education for all ages, St.Clair has been essential to the creation and implementation of the Symphony s education and community engagement programs including Pacific Symphony Youth Ensembles, Heartstrings, Sunday Casual Connections, OC Can You Play With Us?, arts-x-press and Class Act. Summer Festival 2016

PAUL meet the guest artists Recipient of the prestigious 2015 Avery Fisher Career Grant, Taiwanese-American violinist Paul Huang is already recognized for his intensely expressive music making, distinctive sound and effortless virtuosity. Following his Kennedy Center debut, The Washington Post proclaimed: Huang is definitely an artist with the goods for a significant career. In 2013, The New York Times praised his masterly account of Barber s Violin Concerto with the Orchestra of St. Luke s at Alice Tully Hall. Huang's 2015-16 season included subscription debuts with the Louisiana Philharmonic, Brevard Symphony, Seoul Philharmonic, as well as return engagements with the Detroit Symphony, Alabama Symphony, Hilton Head Symphony, Bilbao Symphony, National Symphony of Mexico and National Taiwan Symphony. In addition, Huang appeared in recitals at the Phillips Collection in Washington D.C., Herbst Theatre in San Francisco, Barre Opera House in Vermont, Symphony Hall in Detroit, the Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach and Caramoor Festival Rising Stars series. In 2014-15, Huang stepped in for Midori to appear with the Detroit Symphony under the baton of Leonard Slatkin performing the Sibelius concerto to critical acclaim. He also appeared with the Alabama Symphony on short notice to perform the Walton concerto. Other season highlights included his concerto debut performing the Barber concerto with the Orchestra of St. Luke s at Lincoln Center, as well as his sold-out solo recital debut on Lincoln Center's Great Performers Series. Huang's recent recital appearances include Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, University of Georgia Performing Arts, University of Florida Performing Arts, the Strathmore Center, Buffalo Chamber Music Society, Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Jordan Hall, the Louvre in Paris, Seoul Arts Center and National Concert Hall in Taiwan. His first solo CD, Intimate Inspiration, was released on the CHIMEI label. In association with the Camerata Pacifica, he also recorded Four Songs of Solitude for solo violin for their album of John Harbison works. The album was released on Harmonia Mundi in fall 2014. An acclaimed chamber musician, Huang appears as a member of the prestigious Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center s CMS Two as well as a principal artist for the Camerata Pacifica in Santa Barbara and throughout California. A frequent guest artist at summer music festivals worldwide, his upcoming appearances include debuts at Music@Menlo, La Jolla, Bad Kissingen, as well as returning to Caramoor, CHANEL, Great Mountains and Moritzburg Festivals. His collaborators have included Gil Shaham, Pamela Frank, Kim Kashkashian, Nobuko Imai, Maxim Rysanov, Roberto Diaz, David Finckel, Paul Watkins and Frans Helmerson. Winner of the 2011 Young Concert Artists International Auditions, Huang made critically acclaimed recital debuts in New York at Merkin Concert Hall and in Washington, D.C. at the Kennedy Center. Other honors include First Prize at the 2009 International Violin Competition Sion-Valais in Switzerland, the 2009 Chi-Mei Cultural Foundation Arts Award for Taiwan s Most Promising Young Artists, the 2013 Salon de Virtuosi Career Grant, and 2014 Classical Recording Foundation Young Artist Award. Born in Taiwan, Huang began violin lessons at the age of 7. Since entering the Juilliard Pre- College at 14, he has continued studies at the school with Hyo Kang and I-Hao Lee. Huang was a recipient of the inaugural Kovner Fellowship at The Juilliard School, where he earned his bachelor's and master's degrees. He plays on the 1742 ex-wieniawski Guarneri del Gesù on loan through the generous efforts of the Stradivari Society of Chicago. PAUL HUANG VIOLIN Tchaikovsky Spectacular

GUESTS meet the guest artists Comparisons with Argerich should not be given lightly, but Paremski is so clearly of the same temperament and technique that it is unavoidable here. American Record Guide With her consistently striking and dynamic performances, pianist Natasha Paremski reveals astounding virtuosity and voracious interpretive abilities. She continues to generate excitement from all corners as she wins over audiences with her musical sensibility and flawless technique. Born in Moscow, Paremski moved to the United States at the age of 8 and became a U.S. citizen shortly thereafter. She is now based in New York. Paremski was awarded several very prestigious artist prizes at a very young age, including the Gilmore Young Artists prize in 2006 at the age of 18, the Prix Montblanc in 2007 and the Orpheum Stiftung Prize in Switzerland. In September 2010, she was awarded the Classical Recording Foundation s Young Artist of the Year. Her first recital album was released in 2011 and it debuted at No. 9 on the Billboard Traditional Classical chart. In 2012 she recorded Tchaikovsky's first concerto and Rachmaninoff s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Fabien Gabel on the orchestra's label distributed by Naxos. Paremski has performed with major orchestras in North America and she tours extensively in Europe. She has performed under the direction of conductors including Peter Oundjian, Andres Orozco-Estrada, Jeffrey Kahane, James Gaffigan, Dmitri Yablonski, Tomas Netopil, JoAnn Falletta, Fabien Gabel and Andrew Litton. Paremski has toured with Gidon Kremer and the Kremerata Baltica in Latvia, Benelux, the UK and Austria and performed with the National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra in Taipei. With a strong focus on new music, Paremski's growing repertoire reflects an artistic maturity beyond her years. In the 2010-11 season, she played the world premiere of a sonata written for her by Gabriel Kahane, which was also included in her solo album. At the suggestion of John Corigliano, Paremski brought her insight and depth to his Piano Concerto with the Colorado Symphony. In recital, she has played several pieces by noted composer and pianist Fred Hersch. Paremski continues to extend her performance activity and range beyond the traditional concert hall. In December 2008, she was the featured pianist in choreographer Benjamin Millepied's Danse Concertantes at New York's Joyce Theater. She was featured in a major two-part film for BBC Television on the life and work of Tchaikovsky, shot on location in St. Petersburg, performing excerpts from Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto and other works. In the winter of 2007, Paremski participated along with Simon Keenlyside and Maxim Vengerov in the filming of Twin Spirits, a project starring Sting and Trudie Styler that explores the music and writing of Robert and Clara Schumann, which was released on DVD. She has performed in the project live several times with the co-creators in New York and the UK, directed by John Caird, the original director/ adaptor of the musical Les Misérables. Paremski began her piano studies at the age of 4 with Nina Malikova at Moscow's Andreyev School of Music. She then studied at San Francisco Conservatory of Music before moving to New York to study with Pavlina Dokovska at Mannes College of Music, from which she graduated in 2007. Paremski made her professional debut at age 9 with the El Camino Youth Symphony in California. At the age of 15 she debuted with Los Angeles Philharmonic and recorded two discs with Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra under Dmitry Yablonsky, the first featuring Anton Rubinstein's Piano Concerto No. 4 coupled with Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini and the second featuring all of Chopin s shorter works for piano and orchestra. HUNTINGTON BEACH CONCERT BAND NATASHA PAREMSKI PIANO The Huntington Beach Concert Band has been performing for Southern California audiences for 40 years. Founded by John Mason in 1973, this non-profit volunteer community concert band is conducted by Thomas Ridley and provides concerts to the greater Orange County area throughout the year. The band s purpose is to provide a creative opportunity for all musicians age 18 or older to share musical talents and bring enjoyment to others through public performance. They are formally organized as a California non-profit corporation. The band plays 12-15 concerts a year throughout Orange County. This includes two concerts as part of the annual Sunday Summer Concert Series. The band is proud to have organized and sponsored this series for many years, increasing the number of concerts from a low of four in 2004 to 11 since 2006. Another highlight is playing a concert on the grass at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre and then joining Pacific Symphony on stage for the 1812 Overture. Summer Festival 2016

MEET the orchestra CARL ST.CLAIR MUSIC DIRECTOR William J. Gillespie Music Director Chair RICHARD KAUFMAN PRINCIPAL POPS CONDUCTOR Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom Family Foundation Principal Pops Conductor Chair ROGER KALIA ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR Mary E. Moore Family Assistant Conductor Chair NARONG PRANGCHAROEN COMPOSER-IN-RESIDENCE FIRST VIOLIN Vacant Concertmaster, Eleanor and Michael Gordon Chair Paul Manaster Associate Concertmaster Jeanne Skrocki Assistant Concertmaster Nancy Coade Eldridge Christine Frank Kimiyo Takeya Ayako Sugaya 20 Ann Shiau Tenney Maia Jasper Robert Schumitzky 30 Agnes Gottschewski Dana Freeman 30 Grace Oh Angel Liu Marisa Sorajja SECOND VIOLIN Bridget Dolkas* Elizabeth and John Stahr Chair Yen-Ping Lai Yu-Tong Sharp Ako Kojian Ovsep Ketendjian Linda Owen Phil Luna 30 MarlaJoy Weisshaar Alice Miller-Wrate Shelly Shi Chloe Chiu VIOLA Vacant* Catherine and James Emmi Chair Meredith Crawford** Carolyn Riley 20 John Acevedo 30 Erik Rynearson Victor de Almeida Julia Staudhammer Joseph Wen-Xiang Zhang Pamela Jacobson Adam Neeley Cheryl Gates Margaret Henken CELLO Timothy Landauer* Catherine and James Emmi Chair Kevin Plunkett** John Acosta Robert Vos László Mezö Ian McKinnell M. Andrew Honea Waldemar de Almeida Jennifer Goss Rudolph Stein BASS Steven Edelman* Douglas Basye** Christian Kollgaard David Parmeter Paul Zibits 30 David Black Andrew Bumatay Constance Deeter 30 FLUTE Benjamin Smolen* Valerie and Hans Imhof Chair Sharon O Connor Cynthia Ellis PICCOLO Cynthia Ellis OBOE Jessica Pearlman Fields* Suzanne R. Chonette Chair Ted Sugata ENGLISH HORN Lelie Resnick CLARINET Joseph Morris* The Hanson Family Foundation Chair David Chang BASS CLARINET Joshua Ranz BASSOON Rose Corrigan* Elliott Moreau Andrew Klein Allen Savedoff 30 CONTRABASSOON Allen Savedoff 30 FRENCH HORN Keith Popejoy* Mark Adams TRUMPET Barry Perkins* Susie and Steve Perry Chair Tony Ellis David Wailes TROMBONE Michael Hoffman* David Stetson BASS TROMBONE Kyle Mendiguchia TUBA James Self* 30 TIMPANI Todd Miller* PERCUSSION Robert A. Slack* Cliff Hulling HARP Mindy Ball* Michelle Temple PIANO CELESTE Sandra Matthews* PERSONNEL MANAGER Paul Zibits 30 LIBRARIANS Russell Dicey Brent Anderson PRODUCTION STAGE MANAGER Will Hunter STAGE MANAGER & CONCERT VIDEO TECHNICIAN William Pruett * Principal ** Assistant Principal On Leave The musicians of Pacific Symphony are members of the American Federation of Musicians, Local 7. Celebrating 30 or 20 years with Pacific Symphony this season. Tchaikovsky Spectacular

ABOUT pacific symphony In 2016-17 Pacific Symphony, currently in its 38th season, celebrates the 10th anniversary as the resident orchestra of the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall. Led by Music Director Carl St.Clair, who is in his 27th season, the Symphony is the largest orchestra formed in the U.S. in the last 50 years and is recognized as an outstanding ensemble making strides on both the national and international scene, as well as in its own community of Orange County. Presenting more than 100 concerts and events a year and a rich array of education and community engagement programs, the Symphony reaches more than 300,000 residents from school children to senior citizens. The Symphony offers repertoire ranging from the great orchestral masterworks to music from today s most prominent composers, highlighted by the annual American Composers Festival. Five seasons ago, the Symphony launched the highly successful opera initiative, Symphonic Voices. It also offers a popular Pops season, enhanced by state-of-the-art video and sound, led by Principal Pops Conductor Richard Kaufman, who celebrated 25 years with the orchestra last season. Each Symphony season also includes Café Ludwig, a chamber music series; an educational Family Musical Mornings series; and Sunday Casual Connections, an orchestral matinee series offering rich explorations of selected works led by St.Clair. Founded in 1978 as a collaboration between California State University, Fullerton (CSUF), and North Orange County community leaders led by Marcy Mulville, the Symphony performed its first concerts at Fullerton s Plummer Auditorium as the Pacific Chamber Orchestra, under the baton of then-csuf orchestra conductor Keith Clark. Two seasons later, the Symphony expanded its size and changed its name to Pacific Symphony Orchestra. Then in 1981-82, the orchestra moved to Knott s Berry Farm for one year. The subsequent four seasons, led by Clark, took place at Santa Ana High School auditorium where the Symphony also made its first six acclaimed recordings. In September 1986, the Symphony moved to the new Orange County Performing Arts Center, where Clark served as music director until 1990, and from 1987-2016, the orchestra has additionally presented a Summer Festival at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre. Ten years ago, the Symphony moved into the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall, with striking architecture by Cesar Pelli and acoustics by Russell Johnson and in 2008, inaugurated the hall s critically acclaimed 4,322- pipe William J. Gillespie Concert Organ. The orchestra embarked on its first European tour in 2006, performing in nine cities in three countries. The 2016-17 season continues St.Clair s commitment to new music with commissions by pianist/ composer Conrad Tao and composer-in-residence Narong Prangcharoen. Works commissioned and performed by the Symphony include the release of William Bolcom s Songs of Lorca and Prometheus in 2015-16. In 2014-15, Elliot Goldenthal released a recording of his Symphony in G-sharp Minor, written for and performed by the Symphony. In 2013-14, the Symphony released Richard Danielpour s Toward a Season of Peace and Philip Glass The Passion of Ramakrishna; in 2012-13, Michael Daugherty s Mount Rushmore in 2012-13 all three commissioned and performed by the Symphony. The Symphony has also commissioned and recorded An American Requiem by Danielpour and Fire Water Paper: A Vietnam Oratorio by Goldenthal featuring Yo-Yo Ma. Other recordings have included collaborations with such composers as Lukas Foss and Toru Takemitsu. Other leading composers commissioned by the Symphony include Paul Chihara, Daniel Catán, James Newton Howard, William Kraft, Ana Lara, Tobias Picker, Christopher Theofanidis, Frank Ticheli and Chen Yi. PACIFIC SYMPHONY In both 2005 and 2010, the Symphony received the prestigious ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming. Also in 2010, a study by the League of American Orchestras, Fearless Journeys, included Pacific Symphony as one of the country s five most innovative orchestras. The Symphony s award-winning education programs benefit from the vision of St.Clair and are designed to integrate the orchestra and its music into the community in ways that stimulate all ages. The Symphony s Class Act program has been honored as one of nine exemplary orchestra education programs by the National Endowment for the Arts and the League of American Orchestras. The list of instrumental training initiatives includes Pacific Symphony Youth Orchestra, Pacific Symphony Youth Wind Ensemble and Pacific Symphony Santiago Strings. The Symphony also brings the gift of music to Orange County communities through its many programs including arts-x-press, Class Act, Heartstrings, OC Can You Play With Us?, Santa Ana Strings, Strings for Generations and Symphony in the Cities. Summer Festival 2016