- Performer(s):
- Performers: Sæunn Thorsteinsdóttir , Instrument: cello
- Composer: Jane Antonia Cornish
- Styled Title: <em>Portrait</em>
- Formal Title: <em>Portrait</em>
Program Notes
- Performer(s):
- Performers: Marianne Gedigian, Instrument: flute
- Performers: Jean Schneider, Instrument: piano
- Composer: Bohuslav Martinů
- Styled Title: Flute Sonata
- Formal Title: Sonata for Flute and Piano, H. 306
- Performer(s):
- Performers: Marianne Gedigian, Instrument: flute
- Performers: Jeffrey Kahane, Instrument: harpsichord
- Composer: François Couperin
- Styled Title: <em>Le Rossignol en Amour</em>
- Formal Title: <em>Le Rossignol en Amour</em>
- Recording Path: /recordings/roger-zare_neowise_katarina-wincor_sarasota-orchestra.wav
- Live Performance Info: Sarasota Orchestra performed Roger Zare's NEOWISE on April 12 - 14, 2024 with guest conductor Katharina Wincor at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota, Florida.
- Composer: Roger Zare
- Styled Title: <em>NEOWISE</em>
- Formal Title: <em>NEOWISE</em>
Praised for his “enviable grasp of orchestration” (The New York Times) and for writing music with “formal clarity and an alluringly mercurial surface,” Roger Zare is a native of Sarasota and an alumnus of the Sarasota Youth Orchestras. Drawing upon a wide range of inspirations, from math and science to literature and mythology, Zare’s colorful, energetic music has been performed around the world, and he has garnered an impressive number of awards, including the ASCAP Nissim Prize, three BMI Student Composer Awards, an ASCAP Morton Gould award, a New York Youth Symphony First Music Commission, the 2008 American Composers Orchestra Underwood Commission, a 2010 Charles Ives Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Copland House Residency Award, the Grand Prize in the inaugural China-US Emerging Composers Competition, and many other honors. Zare received his DMA in 2012 from the University of Michigan, where he studied with Michael Daugherty, Paul Schoenfield, Bright Sheng, and Kristin Kuster. He also holds degrees from the Peabody Conservatory (M.M. '09) and the University of Southern California (B.M. '07), and his previous teachers include Christopher Theofanidis, Derek Bermel, David Smooke, Donald Crockett, Tamar Diesendruck, Fredrick Lesemann, and Morten Lauridsen. Zare is an assistant professor of music at Appalachian State University and previously taught composition at Illinois State University.
NEOWISE was commissioned by the Trinity Symphony Orchestra, directed by Dr. Joseph Kneer, with generous support from the Stieren Arts Enrichment Grant. As Zare describes the work,
“During the summer of 2020, a rare sight emerged in the night sky. Comet NEOWISE rounded the sun and spent weeks visible to the naked eye during July. Only discovered months earlier, NEOWISE became the most impressive comet to fly by our planet in decades. I have always been an avid follower of astronomy and remember vividly seeing comet Hale-Bopp in 1997, amazed by its sinewy shape and pale glow. Since then, there have not been any comets visible to the naked eye in the northern hemisphere until NEOWISE. The year 2020 was marred by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Many countries, including the United States, locked down to slow down the spread of this extremely contagious disease, disrupting the lives of countless people around the world. While humanity was unable to do so many things that had been taken for granted, nature put on a show.
“This piece portrays the journey of comet NEOWISE through the inner solar system from our viewpoint on Earth. As the comet very gradually gains speed falling towards the sun, the music begins distantly and mysteriously, with an undulating carpet of sound in the strings supporting a questioning clarinet solo. Low brass chords swell in and out of focus and gradually replace the woodwinds, leading the music to grow in speed and energy. The woodwinds sing a graceful and winding melody over a blanket of delicate strings and tambourine rhythms, continuing to build steam as the comet accelerates towards Earth. Rounding the sun, the comet's coma expands and the music blossoms, suddenly pulling back in speed and scope and returning to the vast openness where the music began. A solo bassoon imitates the original clarinet solo, and the brass chords turn into a luminous chorale that launches the music to a high velocity once again. A more massive climax punctuated by bells and resounding brass chords sees NEOWISE traverse our skies. As the comet speeds away from us, the mysterious texture from the opening returns a final time. The clarinet solo also returns, but now from offstage, distant echoes from an eventful close encounter with the Earth.”
- Composer: George Gershwin
- Styled Title: <em>Rhapsody in Blue</em>
- Formal Title: <em>Rhapsody in Blue</em>
- Featured Soloist(s): Michelle Cann, piano
- Excerpt Recording: rhapsody-opening-clarinet-30-scond-1.wav
Virtually everyone has experienced the shock of learning they have an obligation that they had either forgotten, or had never known about. From a longago scheduled doctor’s appointment that somehow never made it into your calendar, to the due date of a project which you could have sworn was at least a month away, we have all had that momentary jolt of terror when we realize someone is expecting something of us that we weren’t expecting of ourselves. Such was George Gershwin’s experience when he read in the New York Tribune on January 3, 1924, that the bandleader Paul Whiteman would be premiering Gershwin’s new “jazz concerto” the following month. Gershwin had written no such concerto, nor was one in the works. He had no idea what the article was referring to, but he knew that he had better call Paul Whiteman and find out.
Reaching Whiteman the next day, Whiteman confessed that he had been pressured into announcing his new concert, titled “An Experiment in Modern Music,” earlier than he had intended. He had learned that another conductor was about to announce a similar program highlighting works that blended jazz and classical music, and Whiteman wanted to make sure he announced first. He reminded Gershwin that he had broached the idea of a jazz concerto with the composer over a year earlier, but Gershwin had become engrossed in other projects, and had long ago forgotten about Whiteman’s suggestion. After some negotiating over the length of the work and who would do the orchestration, Gershwin agreed to drop everything else he was doing and begin composing. Three days later, he began work on the piece that would end up changing his life—and American music—forever.
Later in life, Gershwin wrote that the initial outline of the work came to him while he was on a train to Boston: “It was on the train, with its steely rhythms, its rattle-ty bang that is often so stimulating to a composer ... And there I suddenly heard—and even saw on paper—the complete construction of the rhapsody, from beginning to end ... I heard it as a sort of musical kaleidoscope of America—of our vast melting pot, of our unduplicated national pep, of our metropolitan madness. By the time I reached Boston I had a definite plot of the piece, as distinguished from its actual substance.”
Returning from Boston, Gershwin began work in earnest at the Upper West Side apartment he shared with his brother Ira in Manhattan. Ferde Grofé, whom Whiteman had hired to do the orchestration of the work, was a daily visitor to the apartment, recalling “I practically lived too in their uptown Amsterdam and 100th Street apartment, for I called there daily for more pages ... He and his brother Ira had a back room where there was an upright piano, and that is where Rhapsody in Blue grew into being.”
Grofé’s initial orchestration was for jazz ensemble instead of full orchestra, and it was in this form that the work was premiered at New York’s Aeolian Hall on February 12, 1924, a mere six weeks after Gershwin had seen the New York Tribune article. The New York Times’ music critic, Olin Downes, described the performance: “Then stepped upon the stage, sheepishly, a lank and dark young man—George Gershwin. He was to play the piano part in the first public performance of his Rhapsody in Blue for piano and orchestra. ... the audience was stirred and many a hardened concertgoer excited with a sensation of a new talent finding its voice ... There was tumultuous applause for Mr. Gershwin’s composition.”
Suddenly, Gershwin, who until that point had been known purely as a composer of popular songs and Broadway musicals, was being viewed in a different light. Rhapsody in Blue was a new kind of music—a work that effortlessly combined the jazz idiom with the classical tradition. It was a uniquely American sound that had not been heard before, and audiences could not get enough of it. Grofé would go on to do a second score for full orchestra in 1926, and the work has been a staple in concert halls and on recordings ever since.
The iconic glissando in the first clarinet part which opens the piece was another “happy accident.” Gershwin had originally written a trill and a 17-note scale leading to the opening melody. Paul Whiteman’s clarinetist, perhaps in a passive/aggressive jab at Gershwin, or perhaps because he couldn’t navigate the written scale, decided to play a glissando instead. Far from being insulted, Gershwin loved the sound, and today mastering the bluesy opening of Rhapsody in Blue is a rite of passage for every orchestral clarinetist. Following the orchestral introduction, the pianist enters with an extended solo, alternating between sultry nightclub music and the “steely rhythms” and “rattle-ty bang” sounds of that train ride to Boston where Gershwin had found his inspiration. The work continues as a series of interludes for soloist and orchestra, featuring pompous brass and bar room stride piano, before the final, expansive melody is announced in the orchestra. The conclusion is the grandest of finales, where the “unduplicated national pep” and “metropolitan madness” of 1920s New York is on full display and irresistibly intoxicating. George Gershwin wasn’t looking to birth a new kind of American music in 1924, and he certainly wasn’t looking for the pressure of producing a totally new kind of concerto in just over a month. But he took the risk, and his career exploded as it might never have otherwise. 100 years later, audiences still cheer his courage and his work ethic and revel in one of the “happiest accidents” in music.