Watch Leonardo da Vinci’s Musical Invention, the Viola Organista, Being Played for the Very First Time

Oh my God … this music is so stunningly amazing! Tears are welling in my eyes listening to it! The sound to me is a cross between a viola da gamba and an organ, with the subtleties in expression and dynamics that a pipe organ inherently lacks – except for the swell stop. Of course, I know the Marais and the Boccherini performed below (click on the photo) – the latter I have performed many times. The Forqueray is a work I know intimately, as I have transcribed his gamba pieces for the viola. What glorious music, and this new/ancient instrument brings it across marvelously. I am really looking forward to hearing more about this!!!

Help support the Kickstarter Viola Organista campaign to record the first CD of the instrument:

You can learn more on the Viola.Organista  page on Facebook. There is plenty of information here on its history, how it was built, how it works, and lots of other interesting things.

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Seattle Symphony In the News – April 17, 2015

SEATTLE SYMPHONY

IN THE NEWS

April 17, 2015

ANNOUNCEMENTS

We recently launched a new, co-branded and co-curated KING FM Seattle Symphony Channel with a 24-hour streaming marathon on March 29 featuring live recordings from the recent Sibelius festival.  See reports of this on Seattle Vanguard and Memeteria by Tom May. This new ongoing aspect of our partnership with KING FM is going to help us expand our reach nationally and internationally. The stream will continue to provide a variety of symphonic repertoire, infused with our point of view and conversations with our musicians and guest artists. Aside from the unique Sibelius 24-hour marathon, music used on the streaming channel will primarily be from commercially released recordings by the SSO and others. We’ll also have the opportunity for some of our interview and in-studio performance content to be served on demand. This channel is also available online through iHeartRadio, TuneIn, iTunes, or through the free KING FM smartphone app.

We have received overwhelming positive responses for the Sibelius Festival, here’s a look back in photos from the opening concert.   The Seattle TimesSeattle Weekly, City Arts and Classical KING FM 98.1 previewed the festival, and KOMO Television ran an extended video feature covering the opening night. A feature, also ran in Finland’s largest newspaper, the Helsingin SanomatThe Seattle Times reviewed all three weeks[week 1, week 2, week 3], and other excellent reviews came from national outlets across the country, including BachTrack and Classical Voice North America,which wrote:

What remains lodged in the memory and heart…are the beauty of the Seattle Symphony’s playing, the depth and spiritual integrity of Dausgaard’s inquiry, and the rare privilege to appreciate Sibelius’ evolution as a composer and speaker of truth via the dedicated efforts of a single conductor and orchestra. The bravos were well-deserved.

Musical America also published separate reviews two weeks in a row [week 2, week 3] [also available via the attached PDFs] stating:

“In what has become a trademark of this conductor’s Sibelius, a thrilling focus on momentum, on accumulated energy, swept the proceedings forward, even amid the score’s occasionally puzzling silences – above all in the long accelerando of the finale.”

We recently gave our final Potlatch Symphony community performance. The three-year Native Lands Project started with the desire to build cultural understanding and respect through music between the Seattle Symphony and tribal nations in the Puget Sound region. Audience members were encouraged to bring their own drums and join in song and dance led by Native artists.  Photos are here.

ON SOCIAL MEDIA

We recently participated in the social media video challenge, showcasing Link Up: Seattle Symphony, in order to support efforts of Cultural Access Washington to reach local public officials.


One of our top Facebook posts this month featured a photo of the orchestra and standing ovation on opening night of our Sibelius Festival. The post reached 11,396 people and generated 765 likes, comments and shares, both on our page and the pages it was shared to.

Longest. Standing ovation. Ever. Our Sibelius Festival is off to a grand start – bravo to Maestro Dausgaard and the orchestra!

 

ADDITIONAL PRESS COVERAGE

Artist Spotlight: Simon Trp?eski at Benaroya Hall

Eric Jensen, KOMO News

March 3, 2015

Music in the Round: #71

Kalman Rubinson, Stereophile

March 11, 2015

Seattle Symphony shows dedication to the diverse community [PDF attached]

Kelly Huang, Seattle Chinese Times

March 12, 2015

The Seattle Symphony received a “rave” in The Seattle Times’ Rant & Rave section

Seattle Times Reader, The Seattle Times

March 13, 2015

Conductors and Critics on Contemporary Orchestral Music

William Robin, WQXR

March 23, 2015

CD & DVD Reviews

Bradley Winterton, Taipei Times

March 26, 2015

London Symphony Orchestra
Tom Keogh,The Seattle Times

March 29, 2015

Inside the Mind of Mad Music Scientist Trimpin

Brangien Davis, Seattle Magazine

April 2015

Symphony, KING FM Partner on Streaming Channel

Queen Anne & Magnolia News

April 1, 2015

Sipping with the symphony—Nicole Brodeur visits a Seattle Symphony house concert

Nicole Brodeur, The Seattle Times

April 6, 2015

Klassikzeit:  Gabriel Fauré

Hans Reul, BRF

April 8, 2016

Seattle Symphony to present mighty ‘Leningrad,’ dramatic Schnittke
Tom Keogh, The Seattle Times

April 10, 2015

The New York Times mentioned Ludovic Morlot among many other conductors who could be considered to lead the New York Philharmonic when Alan Gilbert steps down in 2017. Chief classical critic Anthony Tommasini described Ludovic as “an exciting and substantive musician. But he seems such a good fit for Seattle. Things are going so well for him and the orchestra and its audience.”

AND JUST FOR FUN…


In honor of The Seattle Times’ annual PEEPS contest, we created our own entry — Symphony No. 1 in Peep-flat Major. Other possible titles: Prokofiev’s Peeper & the Wolf, Chopin’s Peepano Concerto… We invited our social media followers to comment with their own “masterpeeps” titles and got dozens of hilarious responses. Check them out on our Facebook page!

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Native Lands Project Potlatch Symphony Performance

The Native Lands Project started with the desire to build cultural understanding and respect through music between the Seattle Symphony and tribal nations in the Puget Sound region. This jointly created composition between the Seattle Symphony and Native artists was premiered in September 2013 and will be performed again on March 14, 2015 at the East Shore Unitarian Church in Bellevue.

Participants will include Native artists Swil Kanim and Paul “Che oke ten” Wagner, Native youth, students from Cornish College of the Arts and musicians of the Seattle Symphony.

Everyone is invited to participate in song and dance led by Native artists. Audience members are encouraged to bring their own drums to the performance for this group jam session.

Special thanks to the kwax-wad-ad-achi Cultural Family, Kate Elliott and the East Shore Unitarian Church.

Concert Program

Janice Giteck: Potlatch Symphony

David Alexander Rahbee, conductor
Swil Kanim, native violin
Paul “Che oke ten” Wagner, native flute
Paul Taub, flute
Angelique Poteat, clarinet
Native Youth

Native dances and storytelling

Group jam session – drums are encouraged!

Tickets: Free. No RSVP required, all are welcome.

Location: East Shore Unitarian Church, 12700 SE 32nd Street, Bellevue, 98005

Directions: East Shore is located in the Factoria area of Bellevue, just off Richards Road near I-90. Once you are on SE 32nd St, the church is at the top of the hill. Please note parking in the church lot is limited. Street parking is permitted.

Sponsors

The Seattle Symphony gratefully acknowledges the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Foundation, the Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation and the League of American Orchestras for their generous support of the Native Lands Community Composition Project.

This concert is presented as part of the Seattle Symphony’s Family, School & Community programs, which are supported by 4Culture, The Boeing Company, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Foundation, The Clowes Fund, Inc., Delta Air Lines, Fales Foundation Trust, Elizabeth McGraw Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Peach Foundation, Peg and Rick Young Foundation, Schiff Foundation, Seattle Office of Arts & Culture, The Sheri and Les Biller Family Foundation, Snoqualmie Tribe, Ten Grands Seattle, U.S. Bank Foundation and Wyman Youth Trust.

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Sad news: percussionist Ron Johnson

From Seattle Symphony President and CEO Simon Woods
March 3, 2015

Ron JohnsonDear Symphony Family,

I am so sorry to share the news that our dear friend Ron Johnson passed away this morning after a long and courageous battle with cancer.

Ron has been a part of the SSO family since he joined our percussion section in the late sixties. Ron was a soloist many times with the SSO and his recording of the Hovhaness “Japanese Woodprints” is a lasting example of his artistry on the marimba. Although his first love was music, Ron was also an avid collector of Japanese art and antiquities and WWI armaments and memorabilia. He was a champion motorcycle and auto racer. He built his own race cars and participated in the sport until last summer. His friendship, humor, and enthusiasm touched us all, and we are blessed to have known him.  He will be greatly missed.

Please keep his wife Bonnie in your thoughts during this difficult time.  At this time, the family is not planning a service, but you are welcome to send condolences care of the Symphony at P.O. Box 21906, Seattle, WA  98111.

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And the Grammy goes to…UW Music faculty and alumni

Submitted by Joanne De Pue on February 9, 2015 – 9:22am
music.washington.edu/news/2015/02/09/and-grammy-goes-touw-music-faculty-and-alumni

Senior artist-in-residence Stephen Stubbs won a 2015 Grammy for Best Opera Recording.

UW Music faculty artist Stephen Stubbs was awarded the Grammy for best opera recording and affiliate professor Ludovic Morlot conducted the Seattle Symphony in the Grammy winning entry for best classical composition in the 57th Grammy awards February 8 in Los Angeles.

Stubbs, a senior artist-in-residence at the UW and artistic director of ensemble-in-residence Pacific MusicWorks, was recognized for work as co-artistic director, with colleague Paul O’Dette, of the Boston Early Music Festival. He and Odette shared the Grammy for best opera recording for the Boston Early Music Festival Ensemble’s recording of “Charpentier: La Descente d’Orphée aux Enfers.”

Reached at the School of Music a few days after the awards ceremony, Stubbs said he was thrilled with the recognition, particularly since relatively few Grammys are awarded for classical music.  “Only one Grammy is conferred in the category of opera,” he said. “So I couldn’t be happier.”

In addition to awards received by Seattle Symphony and Stephen Stubbs, recent UW Music gradute Eric Neuville (’14 DMA Voice) was tenor soloist with Austin, Texas-based vocal ensemble Conspirare on its Grammy winning album “The Sacred Spirit of Russia.”

Neuville, a former student of Thomas Harper, has secured several high-profile engagements since graduating from the School of Music in 2014. In addition to work with Conspirare, he recently sang the tenor solo in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony with the Seattle Symphony and the role of Tamino in Tacoma Opera’s 2014 production of The Magic Flute. He is slated to sing Scaramuccio in Ariadne Auf Naxos with the Seattle Opera in May 2015.

The Grammy award for Seattle Symphony was the orchestra’s first Grammy win. “We’re so very proud that Become Ocean is recognized with a Grammy Award,” Morlot, nominated with Seattle Symphony for five Grammys, said in a statement from SSO. “John Luther Adams is one of our most important contemporary American voices and I am grateful for my collaboration with him, and for the artistry and dedication of our musicians and our audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay in bringing this recording to life.”

The Grammy winning faculty artists both make public UW appearances in 2015.  Stubbs conducts the Pacific MusicWorks and School of Music co-production of the Magic Flute May 8-10. He also conducts the UW Chamber Orchestra and soprano (and newly appointed faculty member) Cyndia Sieden in arias from the Magic Flute on Feb. 20. Morlot, meanwhile, joins UW Symphony conductor David Alexander Rahbee and members of the Seattle Symphony and UW Symphony in a free side-by-side concert April 24.  All performances are at Meany Theater.

More information about SSO’s and Stubbs’s Grammy recognition appeared in the February 8, 2015 issue of  the Seattle Times.

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Seattle Symphony Celebrates “Best Contemporary Classical Composition” Grammy

Seattle Symphony’s Recording of John Luther Adams’ Become Ocean is First-Ever Recording by the Orchestra to Receive a Grammy Award

20141015-182902.jpgFebruary 8, 2015

It was announced earlier today that the Seattle Symphony recording of Become Ocean by John Luther Adams won “Best Contemporary Classical Composition” at the 2015 Grammy Awards. This marks a historic moment in the Symphony’s 111-year history as their first recording to win a Grammy after a total of 18 nominations.

Seattle Symphony Music Director Ludovic Morlot says: “We’re so very proud that Become Ocean is recognized with a Grammy Award. John Luther Adams is one of our most important contemporary American voices and I am grateful for my collaboration with him, and for the artistry and dedication of our musicians and our audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay in bringing this recording to life.”

In December, it was announced that the Seattle Symphony received six nominations in five categories – the most they have received in a single year. Nominations included Best Orchestral Performance, Best Classical Instrumental Solo by Xavier Phillips, and Best Engineered Performance for Seattle Symphony Media’s Recording of Works by Henri Dutilleux. In addition, Seattle Symphony’s commission and performance of Become Ocean by John Luther Adams received nominations for Best Contemporary Composition and Best Engineered Performance. Seattle Symphony Media Recording Engineer Dmitriy Lipay was nominated for Producer of the Year.

About the Recording

“John Luther Adams’ atmospheric and revolutionary piece Become Ocean was commissioned by the Seattle Symphony and received its world premiere in Seattle on June 20, 2013. Adams received a 2014 Pulitzer Prize in Music for this composition. Music Director Ludovic Morlot and the Seattle Symphony gave its east coast premiere at Carnegie Hall in May 2014 as part of Spring for Music, and the acclaimed recording of Become Ocean – made in November 2013 at the Symphony’s acoustically superb Benaroya Hall in Seattle – was released on September 30, 2014 by Cantaloupe Music. The recording was created using the Symphony’s own state-of-the art in-house recording facility, supervised by audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay.

“It may be the loveliest apocalypse in musical history.”

The New Yorker

About Ludovic Morlot

French conductor Ludovic Morlot is Music Director of the Seattle Symphony. During the 2014–2015 season Ludovic and the Seattle Symphony will continue to invite their audiences to ‘listen boldly,’ presenting a wide variety of works ranging from Mozart’s Requiem, Dvorák’s last three symphonies, Berlioz Roméo et Juliette and Mahler Symphony No. 3 to Ives, Dutilleux and Salonen as well as premieres by Sebastian Currier, Julian Anderson and Trimpin.

Ludovic Morlot was Chief Conductor of La Monnaie for three years (2012-2014). During this time he conducted several new productions including La Clemenza di Tito, Jenufa and Pelléas et Mélisande. Concert performances, both in Brussels and Aix-en-Provence, included repertoire by Beethoven, Stravinsky, Britten, Webern and Bruneau.

During the 2014–2015 season Ludovic will return to both the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Chicago Symphony Orchestras. He also has a strong connection with the Boston Symphony Orchestra whom he conducts regularly in Boston and Tanglewood and recently on a tour to the west coast of America. This relationship started when he was the Seiji Ozawa Fellowship Conductor at the Tanglewood Music Center and subsequently appointed assistant conductor for the orchestra and their Music Director James Levine (2004-07). Ludovic has also conducted the New York Philharmonic and the symphony orchestras in Philadelphia, Cleveland and Pittsburgh. Elsewhere, Ludovic’s engagements have included the Royal Concertgebouw, London Philharmonic, Czech Philharmonic, Dresden Staatskapelle, Budapest Festival, Orchestre National de France, Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin and Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestras.

Trained as a violinist, Ludovic studied conducting in London and was conductor in residence with the Orchestre National de Lyon (2002-04). Ludovic was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in 2014. He is Chair of Orchestral Conducting Studies at the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle.

About the Seattle Symphony

Founded in 1903, the Seattle Symphony is one of America’s leading symphony orchestras and is internationally acclaimed for its innovative programming and extensive recording history. Under the leadership of Music Director Ludovic Morlot since September 2011, the Symphony is heard live from September through July by more than 300,000 people. It performs in one of the finest modern concert halls in the world — the acoustically superb Benaroya Hall — in downtown Seattle. Its extensive education and community-engagement programs reach over 100,000 children and adults each year. The Seattle Symphony has a deep commitment to new music, commissioning many works by living composers each season, including John Luther Adams’ recent Become Ocean, which won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Music. The orchestra has made more than 140 recordings and has received 18 Grammy nominations, two Emmy Awards and numerous other accolades. In 2014 the Symphony launched its in-house recording label, Seattle Symphony Media.

The Seattle Symphony’s commission of John Luther Adams’ Become Ocean was generously underwritten by Lynn and Brian Grant. The premiere of this piece was supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Mike McCready with Seattle Symphony Previewed on Evening Magazine

Mike McCready Sonic Evolution

Tonight’s Sonic Evolution concert, featuring special guest Mike McCready with the iconic rock group Mad Season, was featured yesterday on KING5’s Evening Magazine. You can view it here, starting at 23:17.

After last season’s Sonic Evolution concert in 2014, a YouTube video of Sir Mix-a-Lot performing Baby Got Back with the Seattle Symphony went viral.

Tonight’s concert is sold out.

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Seattle Symphony In the News: Dec. 31 “Best of 2014 Edition”

From Rosalie Contreras | Vice President of Communications | SEATTLE SYMPHONY

SSO Logo Header

ANNOUNCEMENTS

As 2014 comes to a close, we’re featured in a record number of “best of 2014” lists, and covered in numerous publications for our six Grammy nominations and our Sonic Evolution news. This month we also held a stellar Holiday Musical Salute, gave a world premiere by Mason Bates, honored “Sonia” our 100-year-old patron, and wished a very happy retirement to Larey McDaniel.

The New York Times included our “spectacular” Carnegie Hall performance again in 10 Best Classical Music Events of 2014: “The standout was the Seattle Symphony, thriving under its dynamic music director, Ludovic Morlot.” The Seattle Symphony is listed in The New York Times’ “Biggest Classical Music Stories of 2014,” winning the Upbeat Award for bringing Become Ocean to Carnegie Hall just after it won a Pulitzer Prize, and mixing things up with a viral video featuring Sir Mix-A-Lot performing “Baby Got Back” at June’s Sonic Evolution concert.

Attached is a review of Become Ocean from Gramophone magazine. The recording was also listed in NPR Music’s 50 Favorite Albums of 2014 and named Classical Album of the Year in iTunes’ Best of 2014. Seattle Symphony Media received a shout-out from Iowa Public Radio, and our recent Stravinsky & Raskatov CD was reviewed on All Music here: “Morlot’s lucid and measured interpretation of The Rite of Spring more than meets expectations, and the orchestra delivers a compelling version that is as vibrantly colorful and energetic as anticipated by the Raskatov concerto.” The Seattle Symphony was included in this article on a number of other orchestras successfully launching their own recording labels.

Here’s the run-down on the “best of 2014” lists (so far) that have featured Become Ocean:

20141015-182902.jpgDutilleaux Tout un Monde

Congratulations again to Ludovic Morlot and the musicians of the Seattle Symphony, and audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay, on SIX Grammy nominations in five categories! The nominations were covered in numerous media outlets across the country. Read the press release, learn more about Seattle Symphony Media, and view all nominations at The Seattle Times. The Grammy Award winners will be announced in February.

Simon & DmitriyOur Grammy nominations announcement on Facebook, posted with a photo of Simon Woods and Dmitriy Lipay just hearing the news, has become one of our most-liked posts OF ALL TIME, reaching nearly 30,000 people organically and generating 1,190 likes, 64 comments and 50 shares, both on our page and the pages it was shared to.

Mike McCready and LudovicWe were also thrilled to announce that Mad Season’s Mike McCready and Barrett Martin team up with Chris Cornell, Duff McKagan and other guests for our fourth annual Sonic Evolution event. Tickets are sold out. Read more from our press release or check out the coverage in Rolling Stone, Billboard, Loudwire, SPIN, and many others. Art Zone host Nancy Guppy shares some of the early creative conversation between Mike McCready and Ludovic (pictured below – watch the video feature here), as we prepare for a new Sonic Evolution commission from Mike.

Mirga Mason Joshua

We recently gave the world premiere of our co-commission, Mason Bates’ Cello Concerto, at the December 11-13 Masterworks concerts. The program was led by young Lithuanian conductor Mirga Gražinyte-Tyla (pictured below with Mason and Joshua in rehearsal) and featured the Symphony’s former Principal Cello Joshua Roman as soloist. Joshua sent a special video “hello” for Seattle audiences about his experience working with Mason on the concerto. Read previews of the performance from The Seattle Times, Memeteria and Classical KING FM’s Second Inversion, and reviews from Classical Voice America and The Seattle Times here.

In orchestra musician news, see a different side of violinist Stephen Bryant who is featured in Encore Arts’ Symphonic Side Gigs: Stephen Bryant and String Quartet River Rafting. Additionally, the December 11-13 concerts marked Larey McDaniel’s last with the Seattle Symphony, as he has retired after over 50 years with the orchestra. He’s pictured here with fellow clarinetists Laura DeLuca and Benjamin Lulich. Thank you for the music, Larey, and we’ll miss you! Stop by The Score for a few of Larey’s memorable Symphony moments.Larry Lori Ben

ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Sonia SpearAnother recent top Facebook post featured an excerpt from December’s Encore program book about our wonderful longtime patron Sonia Spear. It reached nearly 23,000 people and generated 1,524 likes, comments and shares, both on our page and the pages it was shared to. The post: Meet Sonia Spear – at 100 years of age she’s the Symphony’s longest-running subscriber and a passionate supporter! She saw Rachmaninov perform in person in 1931, and was there for the opening of the Opera House at the 1962 World’s Fair with Stravinsky: http://bit.ly/1GemCkD

PRESS COVERAGE

Executive Director Simon Woods on the orchestral financial landscape in Sinfini, a UK music news site: http://www.sinfinimusic.com/uk/features/other-features/how-did-orchestras-in-the-uk-and-us-fare-in-2014

Concert review: Yuja Wang
A very enchanting evening with Yuja Wang
Philippa Kiraly, Special to The Seattle Times
December 4, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2025164264_yujawangrecitalxml.html

What to See this Weekend
Holiday Pops with Cirque Musica
Lynn Jacobson, The Seattle Times
December 5, 2014

http://blogs.seattletimes.com/artspage/2014/12/05/6-holiday-hits-what-to-see-this-weekend/

Holiday Musical Salute
Seattle Symphony takes care of its own
Nicole Brodeur, The Seattle Times
December 8, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/nicolebrodeur/2025196605_nicolenames09xml.html?syndication=rss

Concert review: Holiday Pops with Cirque Musica
Holiday Pops with Cirque Musica
Philippa Kiraly, City Arts
December 9, 2014
http://www.cityartsonline.com/articles/holiday-pops-cirque-musica

Concert review: Christmas with The King’s Singers
The King’s Singers: A perfect blend of old and new
Melinda Bargreen, Special to The Seattle Times
December 10, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2025199635_kingssingersreviewxml.html?syndication=rss

Concert preview: Handel’s Messiah
Rising-star conductor Macelaru at helm of Seattle ‘Messiah’
Tom Keogh, Special to The Seattle Times
December 18, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2025262309_symphonymessiahpreview19xml.html

Concert review: Handel’s Messiah
A ‘Messiah’ delivered with strength and verve
Melinda Bargreen, Special to The Seattle Times
December 20, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2025276595_messiahseattlesymphonyreviewxml.html

Benaroya Hall and the Seattle Symphony are letter “B” in Vancouver Sun’s “A to Z in the Emerald City.”
http://www.vancouversun.com/travel/Emerald+City/10667019/story.html

Concert preview: Beethoven’s Ninth
Seattle Symphony Ninth concerts to feature guest Matthew Halls
Tom Keogh, Special to The Seattle Times
December 24, 2014
http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2025305200_symphonynewyearconcertsxml.html

The Seattle Symphony’s New Year’s Eve concert, countdown and celebration, featuring Beethoven’s Ninth, is listed in The Seattle Times and Seattle Weekly.

AND JUST FOR FUN…

The Seattle Symphony celebrated its 111th birthday on December 29! In 1903 the orchestra gave its first concert at Christensen’s Hall, across the street from what is now Benaroya Hall.

SSO 111th Birthday

See you in 2015!

Rosalie

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Seattle Symphony Receives Six Grammy Nominations

Seattle Symphony press release–December 5, 2014

Seattle Symphony Media’s Recording of Works by Henri Dutilleux Receives Nominations for:

Best Orchestral Performance
Best Classical Instrumental Solo by Xavier Phillips
Best Engineered Performance

Seattle Symphony Commission and Performance of Become Ocean by John Luther Adams Receives Nominations for:

Best Contemporary Composition
Best Engineered Performance

Seattle Symphony Media Recording Engineer Dmitriy Lipay Nominated for Producer of the Year

It was announced today that the Seattle Symphony has received six nominations in the classical category for the 2015 Grammy Awards®. This marks a historic moment in the Symphony’s 111-year history as the most nominations received in a single year.  Nominations include Best Orchestral Performance, Best Classical Instrumental Solo by Xavier Phillips, and Best Engineered Performance for Seattle Symphony Media’s Recording of Works by Henri Dutilleux. In addition, Seattle Symphony’s commission and performance of Become Ocean by John Luther Adams received nominations for Best Contemporary Composition and Best Engineered Performance. Seattle Symphony Media Recording Engineer Dmitriy Lipay is nominated for Producer of the Year.

“Both of these recordings are very personal to me because of my relationship with the late Henri Dutilleux, my special creative collaboration with John Luther Adams, and my friendship with the wonderful cellist Xavier Phillips,” says Music Director Ludovic Morlot, “but perhaps even more personal is that these nominations bring recognition to the extraordinary people whom I’m lucky enough to work with in Seattle – our musicians, who inspire me at every concert, our magnificent audio engineer, Dmitriy Lipay, and the entire staff team who brought our new CD label to life.”

Seattle Symphony Executive Director Simon Woods states: “It’s an absolute joy and honor for all of us at the Seattle Symphony to receive so many nominations in this year’s Grammys. We’re thrilled to have been able to bring John Luther Adams’ innovative and moving creation into the world. And ever since the launch of our new in-house label earlier this year, we felt that we had something very special indeed with this first disc in our Dutilleux series. It’s one of those rare occasions when great music, stunning artistry on stage, and superb technical production all comes together in a quite magical way.”

About the Recordings

DUTILLEUXThe recording of orchestral works by Henri Dutilleux was the first recording released on Seattle Symphony’s newly launched record label Seattle Symphony Media.  It was created using the Symphony’s own state-of-the art in-house recording facility, supervised by audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay. In the first of three projected discs surveying the orchestral works of Henri Dutilleux, the Seattle Symphony selected the composer’s Symphony No. 1, the cello concerto Tout un monde lointain (“A Whole Distant World”) with cellist Xavier Phillips, and The Shadows of Time with boy sopranos Benjamin RichardsonKepler Swanson and Andrew Torgelson. Symphony No. 1 and Tout un monde lointain were recorded in studio sessions and The Shadows of Time was recorded live.

Regarding The Shadows of Time, Morlot recalls, “I first met Henri Dutilleux in the fall of 2001 after having spent the summer as a student at Tanglewood, the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s summer home. The Boston Symphony commissioned The Shadows of Time and I had the privilege of sitting next to Dutilleux during rehearsals as he reworked his score from its previous premiere. I witnessed firsthand his considerable creative powers, as he was a perfectionist in the best sense of the word and always engaged. We subsequently met over martinis in Paris, discussing music and literature. He made an important era of 20th century music come alive for me, and in the process deepened and enriched my understanding. I feel grateful to have known him.”

20141015-182902.jpgJohn Luther Adams’ atmospheric and revolutionary piece Become Ocean was commissioned by the Seattle Symphony and received its world premiere in Seattle on June 20, 2013.  Adams received a 2014 Pulitzer Prize in Music for this composition earlier this spring. Music Director Ludovic Morlot and the Seattle Symphony gave its east coast premiere at Carnegie Hall earlier this spring as part of Spring for Music, and the acclaimed recording of Become Ocean – made in November 2013 at the Symphony’s acoustically superb Benaroya Hall in Seattle – was released on September 30, 2014 by Cantaloupe Music. The recording was created using the Symphony’s own state-of-the art in-house recording facility, supervised by audio engineer Dmitriy Lipay.

For more information and sound clips, visit Seattle Symphony Media online

About Dmitry Lipay

Seattle Symphony’s Director of Audio & Recording Dmitriy Lipay has nearly three decades of experience as an audio engineer and recording producer. Following a career with Russian National TV & Radio in St. Petersburg, Russia, where he produced TV and radio programs featuring numerous classical luminaries, he was a producer, engineer and editor with Sony Classical in both St. Petersburg and New York. His work has appeared on numerous record labels including Sony Classical, Naxos, Harmonia Mundi, Cantaloupe Music, JVC Classics, Crystal Records and Romeo Records. Since he joined the Seattle Symphony in 1996, he has been producing, engineering, recording, editing and mastering recordings for CD production and concert broadcasts which air on Classical KING FM 98.1. In April, 2014, he received two Emmy Awards from the New York Chapter of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in the categories of Special Event Coverage and Audio: Post Production.

He is nominated for Producer of the Year, Classical, for his work on the following six Seattle Symphony recordings:

  • Adams, John Luther: Become Ocean (Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony)
  • Dutilleux: Symphony No. 1; Tout Un Monde Lointain; The Shadows Of Time (Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony)
  • Fauré: Masques Et Bergamasques; Pelléas Et Mélisande; Dolly (Ludovic Morlot, Seattle Symphony Chorale & Seattle Symphony)
  • Hindemith: Nobilissima Visione; Five Pieces For String Orchestra (Gerard Schwarz & Seattle Symphony)
  • Ives: Symphony No. 2; Carter: Instances; Gershwin: An American In Paris (Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony)
  • Ravel: Orchestral Works; Saint-Saëns: Organ Symphony (Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony)

About Ludovic Morlot

LudoFrench conductor Ludovic Morlot is now in his fourth season as Music Director of the Seattle Symphony. During the 2014–2015 season he will lead the Symphony in performances of works ranging from Dvo?ák’s final three symphonies, the Mozart Requiem, Berlioz’s Roméo et Juliette and Mahler’s Symphony No. 3, to pieces by Ives, Dutilleux and Esa-Pekka Salonen, to world premieres by Sebastian Currier, Julian Anderson and Trimpin.

Morlot is also Chief Conductor of La Monnaie, one of Europe’s most prestigious opera houses. This season sees him conduct the world-premiere performance of Pascal Dusapin’s Penthesilea and a new production of Don Giovanni, concert performances of music by Brahms, Dutilleux and Dvo?ák, Berlioz’s L’enfance du Christ and a complete symphony cycle by Schumann.

Morlot’s orchestral engagements this season include returns to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Los Angeles Philharmonic. He also has a strong connection with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, which he conducts regularly in Boston and Tanglewood, and recently on a West Coast tour. This relationship began when he was the Seiji Ozawa Fellowship Conductor at the Tanglewood Music Center and was subsequently appointed Assistant Conductor to the orchestra and Music Director James Levine (2004–07). Morlot has also conducted the New York Philharmonic and the symphony orchestras of Cleveland, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Elsewhere, Morlot’s engagements have included the Budapest Festival, Czech Philharmonic, Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Dresden Staatskapelle, London Philharmonic, Orchestre National de France, Royal Concertgebouw, Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin and Tokyo Philharmonic.

Trained as a violinist, Morlot studied conducting in London and was Conductor in Residence with the Orchestre National de Lyon (2002–04). He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in 2014. He is Chair of Orchestral Conducting Studies at the University of Washington School of Music, and lives in Seattle with his wife, Ghizlane, and their two children.

About the Seattle Symphony

The Seattle Symphony, founded in 1903, is recognized as a major symphonic orchestra in the United States and is internationally acclaimed for its innovative programming and extensive recording history. Under the leadership of Music Director Ludovic Morlot the Symphony is heard live from September through July by more than 315,000 people. Its innovative education and community engagement programs reach over 100,000 children and adults each year. The orchestra has completed more than 140 recordings, received twelve Grammy nominations, two Emmy Awards and numerous other accolades. The Seattle Symphony performs in one of the world’s finest concert venues – the acoustically superb Benaroya Hall – in downtown Seattle.

Seattle Symphony Media CDs are generously supported by Joan Watjen in memory of her husband Craig.

The Dutilleux recording is made possible by the French-American Fund for Contemporary Music, a program of FACE with major support from the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, SACEM, Institut Francais, the Florence Gould Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Xavier Phillips’ performances were generously underwritten by Sheila Noonan and Peter Hartley.

The Seattle Symphony’s commission of John Luther Adams’ Become Ocean was generously underwritten by Lynn and Brian Grant.  The premiere of this piece was supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Music May Not Be the Universal Language We Thought…

Often we hear the thought expressed that music is a universal language. While it is true that music in some form exists universally, different cultures can have very different perceptions of what music is and its role in life. I have spent a great deal of time contemplating the nature of music in its various manifestations, and I have come to see that music may not quite be the universal language that many think.

I have always been fascinated by music from different cultures and their multifarious forms. My travels have brought me close up to some of these, and the diversity of humanity that I prefer to be surrounded by among my friends and in society has exposed me to yet others.

I grew up with the stories my mother told me of hearing the talking drums in Africa. She told me about how they were used for long-distance communication and how they would permeate the soundscape where she lived in Mbeya in what is now Tanzania. My father also shared stories of his impressions of the sounds he heard while living in Kuala Lampur, Malaysia or the vocal music of the Mauri people during his years in New Zealand.

When I was in college I was once invited to dinner at the home of a professor at Michigan State University. I remember intensely the tremendous impression it made upon me when he played for us a recording of music from India and spoke about his interest in music from around the world.

While working in the Filarmónica in Santiago, Chile during the early 80’s, I loved to absorb the sounds of the charangos, quenas, zampoñas and bombos–tiny armadillo-shelled guitars, reed flutes, panpipes and cylindrical drums–of the musicians who would busk Andean music in the streets. Theirs is a music that grew as a protest to the dominating Spaniards by the Aymara and Quechua-speaking Indians of the Andes to the north.

I had several opportunities while I was there to take a break from the orchestra to travel south to the Araucanía region of Chile, a ten-hour overnight bus trip. Temuco, together with Villarrica 45 miles farther south, are a hub to the Mapuche culture of this region. The Mapuche are a strong and ancient culture with a profoundly spiritual view of the universe, the only indigenous people in Latin America to never have been conquered by either the Incas or the Spaniards.

Among my traveling companions on one of these trips, to Nueva Imperial, 35 miles east of Temuco, was a ten-year-old Bahá’í Mapuche boy with his kultrún, the sacred Mapuche drum. I have observed that the rhythm of indigenous peoples in the Southern Hemisphere tends to be in three, whereas that of those in the Northern Hemisphere tends to be in two or four. This is the case with a typical Mapuche rhythm of

as opposed to the northern drum rhythm that I have heard so many times at pow-wows and other First Nations gatherings here in North America:

My friend and I decided to blend together this traditional Mapuche rhythm with the gigue from Bach’s 3rd cello suite, which I played on my viola. The result was so captivating that we were invited to play on the local radio station and talk about our motivation for making this unique mix of music. We shared our perspective that the diversity of cultures is something beautiful to be celebrated and that different peoples can indeed come together in harmony.

More recently I have been doing research for a potential composition that would include ideas influenced by Mapuche music. In the process of doing this research, I discovered that in the Mapuche language of mapundung there is no word for “music.” To me, this is quite telling about the Mapuche cosmology, which includes the view of the material world as a reflection of the spiritual. Music is such an integral part of Mapuche life and communication that there is no need to have a special word to separate it. Music is a thread that connects the physical existence to the reality of realms that can be felt rather than seen.

I had the privilege of participating in a three-day Mapuche conference that was held to deal with a severe fifty-day drought. The crops so important to a traditionally agrarian culture were dying. A nguillatún dance by all present was performed as a prayer to address the urgent need for rain. Many of the participants were playing kultrúns, rattles and various types of Mapuche trumpets, flutes and whistles. On the following day, not only had it begun to rain, but the rain was so intense that there were literally rivers flowing down the streets.

In other cultures around the world, music of a given society can have a profoundly different meaning from that of another. There are many examples available that could be expanded upon. I feel so fortunate to have an extensive collection of CD’s of world music with informative liner notes as well as numerous mp3’s, and my library contains a fascinating number of books on the topic. In addition, the ample resources today on the internet for study of divers cultures provide an enormous advantage over what was available just a few decades ago.

Without considering only their outward elements when comparing musics, but also looking to what function and meaning music has to a people, I have come to believe that music, in a universal sense, is more akin to the essence of language rather than being a universal language in and of itself.

Allow me to explain this concept. The essense of language is the capacity of human beings to communicate with each other through the use of words, phrases, symbols and gestures. However, for any of these things to be able to convey the intended meaning to another person, that person needs to share the same understanding of what those words, phrases, symbols and gestures mean. This is what constitutes a language.

We can appreciate the beauty of the sounds and rhythms of a given spoken language, but if one does not understand the meaning of the words and phrases, or deeper still, the cultural context of that language, one is missing a great deal.

This concept can be extended to music. I have come to view a specific culture’s understanding of what music means as a language, which may not be the same language as a different culture. We certainly can appreciate the beauty, power, spirituality, aggressiveness, or whatever a particular cultural music may convey, but unless we can really deeply understand the meaning of the music within the cultural context of its creators, we have not received the whole message.

I am very much an advocate of listening to music from all cultures, and I hope that you will open your ears to do this as much as you can. In the process, open both your heart and mind to try to learn something about those cultures and also what that music is saying to them. When we combine understanding with acceptance, then we are able to grow love. This would certainly be a positive step toward creating more harmony in the world.

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