29th Anniversary Season 2015 Wo o ds toc k O pe ra House Wo ods toc k, Illi noi s ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– S a nfilippo Ba rrington Es t at e H ills , I l l i noi s Earn your degree close to home at the Aurora University Woodstock Center. Offering bachelor’s and graduate degree programs in: » Addictions (CADC) » Business » Communication » Education » Nursing » Social Work Evening, weekend and online classes are available. Learn more at aurora.edu/woodstock Aurora University Woodstock Center 222 Church St. | Woodstock, IL 60098-3315 815-337-6051 | WCadmission@aurora.edu Join us for PRE-CONCERT INTRODUCTIONS in the Community Room of the Woodstock Opera House July 25-26 Conductor/Artist Conversation Saturday, 7:00 P.M. BRIAN GRONER, conductor Sunday, 2:00 P.M. KEVIN CASE, violin NAZAR DZHURYN, cello August 8-9 Conductor/Artist Conversation Saturday, 7:00 P.M. IGOR GRUPPMAN, conductor Sunday, 2:00 P.M. MYKOLA SUK, piano ◆ 1◆ W O OD STOCK MOZAR T F E ST I V A L ’ S Resident StringTrio presents THE FIRST TEN YEARS of Mozart’s Life You are invited to attend a program about The First Ten Years of Mozart’s Life with a narrative accompanied by projected visuals about the young composer and his development. Between sections of the narrative, our Resident String Trio will perform movements of Mozart’s Divertimento for String Trio in E-flat Major, K 563. A movement of Mozart’s Piano Trio in G Major, K. 564 opens the program. DATES AND LOCATIONS Tuesday, October 6th from 1:00-2:00 P.M. Leucht Conference Center of McHenry County College $5 for General Admission tickets. To order tickets, call the Registration Office (815)455-8588 and use the course ID# NMU S17001. Or register in person at MCC in room A258. For more information, contact Dori Sullens (815)455-8559 or dsullens@mchenry.edu Friday evening, October 9th at 7:00 P.M. in the beautiful new Sanctuary of the Dupage Unitarian Universalist Church in Naperville. To order $20 tickets ($10 for seniors 65+ and students) visit concerts@dupageuuchurch.org Tuesday, October 13th at 12:00 Noon Aurora University’s Crimi Auditorium in the Institute Building for Collaboration. Tickets are free but reservations are required. Please register by contacting Suzy McGary at (630)844-4924 or smcgary@aurora.edu We thank the Dr. Scholl Foundation for its support of the Festival’s educational outreach effort through the presentation of these programs ◆ 2◆ BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2015 Maija Mizens, Ph. D., President Judysharon Buck, Ph. D., Vice President Mark Schiffer, M.D., Secretary Amy Ottens, Treasurer Marcia Koenen Al Ottens, Ph. D. Marsha Portnoy Tom A Svoboda, Lt., Col. Ret. The Woodstock Mozart Festival is a member of the League of American Orchestras and the Illinois Arts Alliance F E ST I V A L ST A F F Anita Whalen, Artistic and General Director Lori Babinec, Personnel Manager/Librarian Pat Kalina, Administrative Assistant Alexandra Nelson, Grants and Social Media Funding is provided by the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency, and through private, foundation, and corporate contributions. ◆ 3◆ A MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT Dear Friends, Welcome to the 29th Season of the Woodstock Mozart Festival. It is a pleasure to bring you another season of great music. Throughout the past year, the Board of Directors and the Artistic and General Director have worked to sustain and grow the Festival. In April the spring fundraiser again was held at the Sanfilippo Estate. Thank you to Jasper and Marion Sanfilippo and the Sanfilippo Foundation for supporting the Festival and thank you to all who participated and helped make it a memorable evening. Fundraisers are important to sustain and grow the Festival, so I would like to encourage your support by attending future events and, if you can, to volunteer your time to help make them a success. The Festival is also continuing and expanding our outreach program with the Festival’s Resident Trio. With a generous grant from the Dr. Scholl Foundation, later this year Anita Whalen, our Artistic and General Director, and the Resident Trio will present an educational outreach program, the “First Ten Years” of Mozart’s life. The program will be presented at McHenry Community College, Aurora University, and the Dupage Unitarian Universalist Church in Naperville. This is not only a great opportunity to bring a great program about Mozart to the community, but also to increase the awareness of the Mozart Festival. Next year is the 30th anniversary of the Festival and we are already planning this milestone celebration. But, it is your generous donations that ensure that the Festival will be celebrating thirty years and many more. It is through your generous support and participation in our events that this great tradition can continue. To all who have already made a donation this year, thank you. If not, please consider one. On behalf of the Board thank you for attending the Woodstock Mozart Festival and remember, it is through your support throughout the year that the Festival will be maintained and grow. Thank you and enjoy the concerts of the 29th Season, Maija Mizens, PhD President ◆ 4◆ Marsha Portnoy Writer Articles / Ads / Press Kits Web Content / Sales Literature Editorial & Marketing Consultation 14604 Kishwaukee Valley Rd. Woodstock, IL 60098 815-206-0409 E-Mail mport331@aol.com Celebrating5 Years 9 Yearsonon Celebrating Woodstock Square Woodstock Square! Fine books, unique gifts and eclectic music “Those who love good music, good books, good pictures, good company, good conversation, are the happiest people in the world.” William Lyon Phelps The Only Best Western in McHenry County Woodstock Inn 990 Lake Avenue Woodstock, IL 815-337-0165 Indoor Pool & Exercise Facility Complimentary Continental Breakfast High-Speed Internet in Every Room Business Center • Meeting Rooms More info at www.bestwestern.com ◆ 5◆ Celebrate the Stars We applaud the musicians, directors, entrepreneurs and volunteers – everyone who uses their creative drive to enrich our communities. Crystal Lake: 381 South Main Street H 815.479.8600 Huntley: 10101 Route 47 H 847.669.0777 McHenry: 1500 South Route 31 H 815.385.5556 Woodstock: 1290 Lake Avenue H 815.338.2300 amcombank.com Equal Housing Lender ◆ 6◆ Member FDIC Cary / Crystal Lake / McHenry ◆ 7◆ program I & Charitable Foundation for their support of our opening weekend’s concerts. ◆ 8◆ W OOD STOC K MOZAR T F E ST I V A L PROGRAM I Saturday, July 25, 2015 • 8:00 P.M. Sunday, July 26, 2015 • 3:00 P.M. Woodstock Opera House BRIAN GRONER, conductor KEVIN CASE, violin NAZAR DZHURYN, cello Cosi fan Tutte Overture, K. 588 Concerto in C Major for Piano, Violin and Cello, Op. 56 Triple Concerto I. Allegro II. Largo III. Rondo: alla polacca Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Ludwig van Beethoven INTERMISSION Symphony No. 38, in D Major, K. 504 PragueWolfgang Amadeus Mozart I. Adagio –Allegro II. Andante III. Presto ◆ 9◆ July 25-26 BRIAN GRONER, conductor Brian Groner is Music Director of the Fox Valley Symphony in Wisconsin. He is also the music director of the Harper Symphony Orchestra in Illinois and serves as a faculty member of Northeastern Illinois University. As a guest conductor, he has appeared with the Shenzhen Symphony in China, the San Diego Symphony, Czech National Symphony Orchestra, and the International Contemporary Ensemble. He also has conducted for the Moscow Classical Ballet, the Joffrey Ballet, Ballet Chicago, Nashville Ballet, Butler Ballet and the Blair Ballet. Mr. Groner’s concerts have been broadcast by National Public Radio in the United States and as a champion of new music, he has conducted the world premiers of works of more than twenty American composers. His advanced degree in conducting is from Northern Illinois University in collaboration with Northwestern University under the guidance of Victor Yampolski. ◆ 10 ◆ July 25-26 MYKOLA SUK, piano Mykola Suk’s international career has spanned four continents from the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory to Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and Carnegie Hall in New York. He has appeared as soloist with numerous leading orchestras from the Russian National Symphony to the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn, and has collaborated with many outstanding conductors: Mikhail Pletnev, Janos Ferencik, Arvid Jansons, James DePriest and Carl St. Clair. Mr. Suk’s interviews, live performances, and CD recordings have been broadcast throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia on prominent radio stations and broadcast systems such as WQXR and WNYC, New York; WFMT, Chicago, and WGBH, Boston. Recital invitations have taken Mr. Suk to the Soviet Union, France, Germany, England, Finland, Egypt, Mexico, the U.S., Canada, Korea, China, Mongolia and Australia. The European Piano Teacher’s Journal wrote that Mykola Suk is “…surely the most towering and volcanic talent to have come out of Russia since Anton Rubenstein.” In addition, his passion for chamber music has taken him to many distinguished festivals throughout the world including the Kuhmo Chamber Music Festival (Finland), Kiev International Music Festival (Ukraine), Australian Festival of Chamber Music, and the International Keyboard Institute and Festival in New York City. Mykola Suk completed his Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Piano Performance at the Moscow Conservatory. He gained international recognition as the winner of the First Prize and Gold Medal at the 1971 International Liszt-Bartók competition in Budapest, Hungary. Before coming to the United States, he served as Professor of Piano at the Kiev State Conservatory and Moscow State Conservatory. In the U.S., he has taught as an adjunct faculty member at various music schools such as the New England Conservatory, Manhattan School of Music, Columbia University, and the University of Southern Alabama. In 2001, Mr. Suk settled in Las Vegas, Nevada where he oversees keyboard studies in the Music Department of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. A champion of 20th and 21st century music, Mr. Suk has premiered numerous works of Ukrainian composers that were composed for, dedicated to, or commissioned by him. His recordings appear on the following labels: Melodia (Russia); Russian Disc; Hungaraton (Hungary); Meldac/Tritan (Japan); Troppe Note/Cambria, and Music & Arts (USA) labels. ◆ 11 ◆ July 25-26 KEVIN CASE, violin The Festival’s concert master, Kevin Case performs frequently in Chicago as a soloist, chamber musician and with several orchestras. He has served as concertmaster of the Memphis Symphony, the Grant Park Symphony, and the Dallas Opera, and also has been featured as soloist with orchestras throughout North America and Canada. Mr. Case received a Bachelor of Music degree from the Eastman School of Music where he was the teaching assistant to the renowned violinist Zvi Zeitlin. Now an attorney as well as a violinist, he is the founder and principal of Case Arts Law LLC, a boutique law firm catering to the needs of classical musicians and other performing artists. July 25-26 NAZAR DZHURYN, cello A native of Lviv, Ukraine, Nazar Dzhuryn received his degrees from the Lviv Music School and Moscow Conservatory where he subsequently spent two years as an Assistant Professor of Cello. He has performed in solo recitals throughout Russia, Ukraine, South America, Europe, Africa and the United States. An active Chamber Musician in the Chicago area, he also maintains private teaching studios, is assistant principal cellist of the Elgin Symphony Orchestra and serves on the music faculties of Northeastern Illinois University, Elgin Community College and Naperville’s School for the Performing Arts. As principal cellist of the Festival, Mr. Dzhuryn was featured during the 2013 season as soloist with the orchestra in Haydn’s C Major Cello Concerto. ◆ 12 ◆ MozartAd2015:Layout 1 5/18/15 5:19 PM Page 1 Please Join Us for the 52nd Annual CREATIVE LIVING SERIES Always More Than You Expect Making Masterpiece: Downton Abbey and more Rebecca Eaton, October 15, 10 a.m. A Food-Inspired Life Libbie Summers, November 19, 10 a.m. Coffee & conversation at 9 a.m. Visit woodstockfinearts.org to read more. Six-speaker series tickets available June 22. Single tickets available after September 1. To order, call or visit the Woodstock Opera House (815) 338-5300. Woodstockoperahouse.com Supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts ◆ 13 ◆ PROGRAM I NOTES Notes by Roger Ruggeri © 2015 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart b. January 27, 1756; Salzburg d. December 5, 1791; Vienna Overture to the opera “Cosí fan tutte,” K. 588 Regarded by connoisseurs as Mozart’s finest achievement in the realm of comic opera, Cosí fan tutte was the final product in a series of Italian-style collaborations with the librettist, Lorenzo Da Ponte. Their earlier ventures, The Marriage of Figaro (1786) and Don Giovanni (1787), are, however, more frequently performed. As the noted authority Edward J. Dent observed: “One might say that Cosí fan tutte has always been the Cinderella of Mozart’s three Italian comic operas; though it is hardly fair to call The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni ‘ugly sisters.’ But they made their way throughout the world in the course of time, whereas Cosí fan tutte was almost completely neglected until the great Mozart revival which took place in Munich about 1895. Even then it would hardly have attracted much notice if it had not been enthusiastically encouraged by Richard Strauss, who in those days was a young conductor hardly known at all as a composer.” It is believed that the Emperor Joseph II generally suggested the story of Cosí fan tutte when, in the autumn of 1789, he commissioned Mozart to write an opera, for apparently such a tale was popular in upper-class circles at that time. Mozart and Da Ponte subsequently produced an opera for truly sophisticated tastes, a work which has been called “the last expression of 18th-century artificialism.” Set in 18th-century Naples, Cosí fan tutte (“Thus Do They All”) tells of a cynical old bachelor who wagers with two young soldiers upon the changeable affections of the sisters who are their fiancées. Masquerading as foreigners, the soldiers manage, with some difficulty, to win the hearts of each other’s “true loves.” Remarking upon the fact that this work has been “the one most severely criticized for moral shortcomings,” Contemporary scholar Stanley Sadie observes: “The subject of the comedy, feminine fickleness, was found shocking even quite shortly after the opera’s composition, and is made the more so by the convention (standing equally in Figaro and Don Giovanni) that the action should span no more than twenty-four hours. The opera is however susceptible to more positive interpretations, for example as a commentary on the strength and uncontrollability of amorous feelings and on the value of a mature recognition of them.” Perfectly matching the miniature symmetries of the opera itself, the overture begins with a brief Andante introduction, at the end of which is heard the Cosí fan tutte theme that is ultimately sung toward the end of the opera. The main portion of the overture is a bubbling Presto that is punctuated by forceful orchestral tuttis while progressing to a final restatement of the Cosí fan tutte motive. Continued— ◆ 14 ◆ Program I Notes Continued— Ludwig van Beethoven b. December 16, 1770; Bonn d. March 26, 1827; Vienna Concerto in C major for Violin, Violoncello, Piano and Orchestra, Opus 56 Of all Beethoven’s concertos in larger form, his Triple Concerto is the least frequently performed. Written during 1803-04, the work was premiered in 1807, but found no further performances during Beethoven’s lifetime. Perhaps the foremost reason for the work’s infrequent appearance is that it requires three superb soloists to be employed in one place at the same time. Even beyond the artistic and financial problems posed by the piece, it was viewed by some of Beethoven’s greatest admirers as something of a disappointment in the light of the master’s other works in concerto form. In his considerations of Beethoven’s concertos, Basil Deane comments that “... the division of interest and difficulty within the solo group is uneven. Neither the piano nor the violin part would present any special problems for the artist capable of playing Beethoven’s solo concertos; but the solo cello part was written with an Olympian disregard for the convenience of the player, and the work is one of the most taxing in the cello repertoire. These obstacles, however, can be, and often are, overcome, and still the concerto has not won general acceptance. The cause must lie, at least in part, in the quality of the music itself. In the first movement the material of the exposition is melodic in character and is subjected to restatement within the solo group. The middle ‘development’ section also relies on repetition of previously heard material. The basis of the movement, then, is lyric statement and restatement, not motivic development. Unfortunately the themes themselves do not have sufficient intrinsic interest to justify the repetition. The Largo, on the other hand, has a Schubertian melodic grace and makes striking use of the cantabile qualities of the string soloists, playing together in tenths. With it Beethoven abandons modulatory form in favour of varied repetition of lyric melody and provides a link which leads directly to the finale, a Rondo alla polacca, whose most remarkable features are the sprightly main theme itself and its derivations in the coda.” One might well wonder why Beethoven wrote this work. Beethoven’s contemporary biographer, Schindler, stated that it was written for the Archduke Rudolph (at that time, a teen-aged piano student of Beethoven), the violinist Seidler and the cellist Kraft; it was dedicated to Prince Lobkowitz. It is important to notice that the work was not commissioned; Beethoven wrote it because he wanted to write such a work. Perhaps he wanted to enthrone one of his favorite chamber ensembles in a concerto setting, or perhaps he wanted to investigate the possibilities of a romantic version of the baroque concerto grosso. Whatever his reasons, Beethoven knew he was doing something novel; in a letter to his publisher, he mentioned that “a concertante with Continued— ◆ 15 ◆ Program I Notes Continued— three such concerting parts is indeed something new.” Those who listened to the work agreed that it was indeed “something new,” but were also very aware that the formal considerations of triple exposition and development extended the work to an unusual degree. Leaping to the work’s defense, British annotator Donald Tovey advanced the idea that Beethoven’s later concertos would not have been possible without the achievement of the Triple Concerto. Tovey continues: “...if it were not by Beethoven, but by some mysterious composer who had written nothing else and who had the romantic good fortune to die before it came to performance, the very people who most blame Beethoven for writing below his full powers would be the first to acclaim it was the work of a still greater composer. Let us take it on its own terms, and see what it can tell us.” Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 38 in D major, “Prague,” K. 504 Less than a year after the first performance of Le Nozze di Figaro, Mozart accepted an invitation to visit Prague, where his ribald comic opera was enjoying tremendous success. Mozart and his wife arrived in Prague on January 11, 1787, to spend a month presenting concerts and socializing with Czech high society. At a concert on January 19th, Mozart unveiled the present symphony, a work that he had completed in Vienna on the previous December 6th. (In his recent study of Mozart’s symphonies, Neal Zaslaw points out that the Finale was written on the same kind of manuscript paper that Mozart used for the last half of Figaro; thus, he suggests, this movement predates the rest of the symphony by about eighteen months.) Mozart’s first new symphony in three years, the “Prague” is often regarded as a link between his earlier works in this form and the more epic final three symphonies. Zaslaw writes: “The ‘Prague’ symphony distinguishes itself from the sixty-odd symphonies that Mozart had previously written by being noticeably more difficult: it is harder to perform and more challenging conceptually.” With each of its three movements in sonata form, this D major symphony thoroughly delighted the Prague audience. Equally enthusiastic is the pianist-scholar Charles Rosen, who, in his Sonata Forms, writes: “In the sonata forms, the meaning of a phrase depended on its place in the work as a whole, on its position in the general movement from polarization to resolution. The forms, therefore, demanded clearly separable elements whose altered functions could be clearly recognized as they appeared at different points of the work…The Prague Symphony, Mozart’s most massive achievement in the symphonic genre—a work which unites grandeur and lyricism as no other—shows this play of individual and permutable motivic elements at its highest…The opening phrase reveals the same relation between main voice and accompanying voices and the same ambiguities that we have observed in Haydn’s symphonies and quartets, accomplished with a delicacy, even a smoothness Continued— ◆ 16 ◆ Program I Notes Continued— of surface that was not in Haydn’s range…Once again, in this work, we can see the reciprocal relation between motif and structure in a sonata form: the motif articulates structure, emphasizes the most crucial points, and the structure reinterprets the motif, giving each appearance a new and sometimes radically different significance.” Some consternation has circled around the fact that this symphony, lacking a minuet, has but three movements. For a while it was nicknamed “the D major symphony without a minuet.” Mozart wrote a number of symphonies in the same format; it was only the Austrian symphonies that included minuets, his early ones based upon Italian models were all in three-movement form. Of course, the present work is far removed from the genre of Mozart’s early symphonies. It has been theorized that the composer felt that a typical minuet would have weakened the overall architecture of the work; others think that Mozart didn’t have time to write a minuet, that he postponed the writing of a minuet, or that he substituted another minuet at the symphony‘s Prague performance. The esteemed Mozart scholar, Alfred Einstein, dismisses the whole subject, writing that this symphony “says everything it has to say in three movements.” Unlike Haydn and Beethoven, who were fond of beginning symphonies with slow introductions, this is one of only four Mozart symphonies to begin in such a manner. (Characteristic of the monumental design of this work as a whole, its 36-measure introduction remained unparalleled until Beethoven created a 33-measure introduction to his Second Symphony in 1802.) Strings present the first theme of the Allegro section. Strings reveal the second theme of this highly contrapuntal movement. Omitting the trumpets and tympani of the outer movements, Mozart composed a beautiful Andante whose first theme is given a divided exposition between strings and woodwinds. Like the preceding movements, the Finale is also in sonata form. With an air of refined gaiety the violins present the first theme as this Presto whirls through contrapuntal development to a sparkling conclusion. La Bellissima Kathleen Basista, owner kbasista@labellissima-online.com www.labellissima-online.com 10 N. Williams St. Crystal Lake, IL 60014 (815) 477-3404 Hours Mon - Wed 10-6 · Th 10-8 · Fri 10-6 · Sat 10-5 ◆ 17 ◆ FROM THE ARTISTIC and GENERAL DIRECTOR Dear Friends, It is a privilege to welcome you to our 29th season, and especially to have been able to bring you great music for so many years! Those of you who have been attending our concerts know that we celebrate the legacy of Mozart, not only by performing his works, but also the works of other composers. During this season, we highlight two major piano works by Beethoven, who was very much influenced by Mozart… Anita Whalen his Triple Concerto for piano, violin and cello; and his Fifth Piano Concerto, nicknamed Emperor by a French army officer who referred to it as “an emperor among concertos.” In 1787 Mozart met the seventeen-year-old Ludwig van Beethoven in Vienna, and remarked, “Keep your eyes on him; some day he will give the world something to talk about.” Beethoven’s purpose in going to Vienna was to study with Mozart, but he had to leave suddenly for Germany, where his mother was dying in Bonn. Later he returned to Vienna just after Mozart had died. Although disappointed, he continued his studies with Mozart’s teacher, Haydn. We hope you will enjoy today’s concert and we thank you for your attendance. We also hope you will continue supporting the Festival through your attendance and with your contributions on behalf of our 30th Anniversary Season next year. As we look to the future, we thank you for the privilege of sharing with you the wonderful gifts of Mozart and More! Anita Whalen Artistic and General Director ◆ 18 ◆ ◆ 19 ◆ program II With Deepest Apprecition we thank Jane & Robert Barkei for their continuing sponsorship of this weekend’s performances. ◆ 20 ◆ W OOD STOC K MOZAR T F E ST I V A L PROGRAM II Saturday, August 1, 2015 • 8:00 P.M. Sunday, August 2, 2015 • 3:00 P.M. Place de la Musique IGOR GRUPPMAN, violinist and conductor VESNA GRUPPMAN, violin and viola Johann Sebastian Bach Concerto in C Minor for Oboe and Violin, BWV 1060 (with two violins) I. Allegro II. Adagio III. Allegro “Estate”(Summer) Op. 8, No. 2 (RV315) from The Four Seasons I. Allegro non molto; allegro II. Adagio; Presto III. Presto INTERMISSION Antonio Vivaldi Gustav Holst St. Paul’s Suite for String Orchestra I. Jig (Vivace) II. Ostinato (Presto) III. Intermezzo (Andante con moto) IV. Finale (Allegro) The Dargason Astor Piazzolla The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires Summer and Autumn Jerome Kern Smoke Gets in Your Eyes Arr: Igor Frolov We sincerely thank Jasper and Marion Sanfilippo for inviting us into their home for this weekend’s concerts ◆ 21 ◆ August 1-2 IGOR GRUPPMAN, violinist and conductor Ukrainian violinist Igor Gruppman enjoys a multi-faceted career as soloist, conductor, orchestra leader and chamber musician. Currently he serves as concert master of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and as guest Leader of orchestras such as the London Symphony, London’s Royal Philharmonic, and St. Martin in the Fields. He also performs as guest soloist and conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic, the Mariinsky Theater Orchestra and Chamber Orchestra, and during 2014-2015, the Orquesta Clasica Santa Cecilia in Madrid. Appearing in the Unites States in this role as well, he is the Principal Conductor of the Orchestra at Temple Square in Salt Lake City and, in the spring of 2015, launched a new orchestra, the Soloists of Europe. Mr. Gruppman has collaborated with and been influenced by important conductors: George Solti, Valery Gergiev, Mstislav Rostropovich, Sir Colin Davis, Sir Simon Rattle and Bernard Haitink. He sometimes shares the podium with Maestro Gergiev, and in 2009 was invited by him to conduct the Mariinsky Stradavari Orchestra on a tour of Asia. In that part of the world, he also has been invited for solo and conducting engagements with the Tokyo NHK and Seoul Philharmonic Orchestras. Mr. Gruppman appeared in an all-Mozart program at the De Doelen Great Hall in Rotterdam where, in addition to conducting, he gave the Netherlands premier of Mozart’s recently reconstructed Concerto for Violin and Piano with pianist Ronald Brautigam. He has since been asked by the orchestra to conduct his own series of concerts, and was the conductor of the orchestra’s 2010 and 2011 proms series. Igor Gruppman’s discography is extensive on the Naxos, Koch, and Video Artist International labels. He is a graduate of the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied with Leonid Kogan and Mstislav Rostropovich, followed by studies with Jascha Heifetz in Los Angeles. He is now on the faculty of the Rotterdam Conservatory. Recently Igor and his wife, Vesna, premiered Paul van Brugge’s Double Concerto for Violin and Viola with the Temple Square Orchestra, commissioned by the Dutch Performing Arts Foundation. In 1994 the Gruppman Duo won a Grammy Award for their recording of Malcolm Arnold’s Concerto for two violins, which they performed at the Festival in 2012. Mr. Gruppman plays the 1731 “Julles Garcin” Stradivarius violin generously provided by the Erasmus Foundation. “An artist of vibrant instinct and disarmingly natural musicianship.” – Classical DiscDigest ◆ 22 ◆ August 1-2 VESNA GRUPPMAN, violin and viola Igor & Vesna Gruppman Vesna Gruppman’s solo career began when she was a teenager. By the age of sixteen, she had performed as soloist with several ensembles including the Munich Chamber Orchestra, the Moscow Philharmonic and the Prague Philharmonic. She also received the First Prize at the Jaroslav Kocin International Violin competition in Russia and was the first artist to win the National Violin Competition in her native Yugoslavia six times in a row. A graduate of the Moscow Special School of Music, Ms. Gruppman received a doctorate in performance and pedagogy from the Moscow Conservatory, where she studied with legendary teachers: David Oistrakh, Yuri Yankelevich and Igor Bezrody. As testimony to an active performing schedule, Ms. Gruppman has appeared as soloist and chamber musician with the Dallas Symphony, Edmonton Symphony, Concerto Rotterdam Chamber Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, National Philharmonic Orchestra of Ukraine, London’s Beethoven Philharmonic Orchestra the Rotterdam Philharmonic Strings and Mariinsky Orchestra. Her recital appearances have taken place at Wigmore Hall and St. John’s Smith Square in London, the Hermitage Hall in Amsterdam, Kiev’s Philharmonic Hall and the Mozart Hall in Prague. Ms. Gruppman’s solo and chamber music recordings have received generous reviews in international publications: Gramaphone, American Record Guide, Classical Disc Digest and The Strad Magazines. In 2009 Video Artists International featured her as a soloist and chamber musician. And in 2010 the Netherlands Performing Arts Foundation awarded a commission to Vesna and Igor Gruppman for composer Paul van Brugge’s concerto for Violin, Viola and Orchestra. The premier took place in March 2011 with the Orchestra at Temple Square in Salt Lake City. During Vesna Gruppman’s 2013-2014 season, she was featured in recital and on chamber music tours of Asia and the United States and on a new DVD release for Video Artists International. She is a professor of Violin and Viola at the Rotterdam Conservatory, and she and her husband Igor are co-founders of the Gruppman International Institute. “…drive and passion…deft balance, elegant phrasing and burnished shimmer…” – LA TIMES ◆ 23 ◆ PROGRAM II NOTES Notes by Roger Ruggeri © 2015 Johann Sebastian Bach b. March 21, 1685; Eisenach b. July 28, 1750; Leipzig Concerto for Oboe and Violin in C minor, BWV 1060 (performed with two violin soloists) After seven years as Kantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, J.S. Bach added to his impressive workload the musical direction of the Collegium Musicum. This group, founded by Telemann in 1704, was essentially a voluntary ensemble of professional and student musicians who performed regular public concerts in gardens and coffee-houses (most likely Zimmermann’s Coffeehouse). During the decade of the 1730’s, Bach produced many instrumental works, a number of which were reworkings of compositions dating from his years in Weimar and Cöthen. Unfortunately, not all the versions of Bach’s works survived into modern times. For example, the present concerto (BWV 1060) is known to the modern world as a work for two solo harpsichords, strings and continuo, in a manuscript which dates from the Leipzig period (1723-1750). It is the consensus of scholarly opinion that the work was originally written for oboe and violin soloists; a reconstruction of that instrumentation was made by the noted Bach authority, Max Schneider. Consistent with Bach’s flexible choice of solo instruments, our performances will utilize two violins performing the solo lines. Modeled upon the fast-slow-fast concerto format established by Vivaldi, the work is a felicitous vehicle for the solo instruments. Antonio Vivaldi b. March 4, 1678; Venice d. July 28, 1741; Vienna “Summer,” from “Le Quattro Stagioni” (“The Four Seasons”), Opus 8, No. 2 (RV 315) It is easy to imagine that Vivaldi’s enormous compositional productivity was made possible by the security of his life as a secular priest in the administration of the Ospedale della Pietá in Venice. This picture of creative tranquility is jarred a bit by the realization that Vivaldi was charged with the responsibility of turning parentless girls into professional-quality musicians. The realities of his tenure (1703 to 1740) reveal that Vivaldi’s school was involved in an ongoing struggle for survival. The Ospedale della Pietá was but one of four such schools in Venice; their continued existence was dependent Continued— ◆ 24 ◆ Program II Notes Continued— upon the audiences that they attracted to their concerts and their ability to curry support from Venetian nobility. Later in his career, Vivaldi was given the freedom to tour away from the school. Although he was ostensibly attracting additional patronage to the Ospedale, Vivaldi was also promoting his own reputation. Amid all his activities away from Venice, Vivaldi upheld his responsibility to the school by sending them two new concertos each month. Among the notable works of this period were I Quattro Stagioni, the first four concertos in a set of twelve published about 1725 under the collective title, Il Cimento dell’Armonia e dell’Invenzione (“The Trial of Harmony and Invention”). The “Trial” referred to was the test of whether music and the composer’s inspiration could create convincing impressions of specific programmatic ideas. One of the most famous early examples of program music, The Four Seasons was presented to Vivaldi’s Bohemian patron, Count Venceslas Morzin (whose family later provided Haydn’s first employment). Of course, it is reasonable to assume that Vivaldi’s young female students at the Seminario dell’Ospedale della Pietá in Venice had already performed these concertos by the time that the composer led Count Morzin’s orchestra in a formal appearance. Filled with grace and wit, these concertos exerted such influence on the creation of programmatic music that echoes of them can still be perceived in Beethoven’s Pastorale Symphony. Vivaldi sometimes tried to make his descriptive virtuosity more evident by writing comments within the music itself. It is believed that Vivaldi himself later created the following sonnets for the Amsterdam edition of these works: Concerto in G minor, Op. 8, No. 2 (RV 315) “Summer” I. Allegro non molto; Allegro. In the harsh season scorched by the sun, Languish man and flock, and the pine is set afire; The cuckoo begins to call, and soon after, The turtledove and the goldfinch are heard singing. Zephyr sweetly blows, but Boreas suddenly Enters into a contest with its neighbor; And the little shepherd weeps, for he fears The awesome threatening storm, and his fate; II. Adagio; Presto. To his tired limbs rest is denied By the fear of lightning, awesome thunder And the furious swarm of flies and hornets! Continued— ◆ 25 ◆ Program II Notes Continued— III. Presto. Alas, his fears are justified. The sky is filled with thunder and lightning. And hail cuts down the proud grain. Gustav Holst b. September 21, 1874; Cheltenham d. May 25, 1934; London “St. Paul’s Suite” for String Orchestra After a number of years in which Holst celebrated Hindu culture in his compositions, he changed artistic directions and began to indulge his growing interest in English folk music. This new direction soon produced the St. Paul’s Suite (1913) and his massive work for full orchestra, The Planets (1914-16). The present work was composed for the orchestra of the St. Paul’s Girls’ School in Hammersmith (a suburb of London), where Holst was in charge of the music department. Externally, the work was an expression of gratitude for new music facilities; inwardly, it marked Holst’s renewed involvement with the folk music of his native land. Filled with the musical fragrance of the British Isles, the work begins with a robust Jig (Vivace). This lively folk dance which may derive its name from the Old French word giguer (“to leap” or “to gambol”). Holst’s dance is somewhat unusual in that it uses 9/8 meter in additional to the traditional 6/8 meter. In the second movement, Ostinato (Presto), a repeated figure, first played by second violins, forms the thematic essence of this whirling “perpetual motion.” The first section of the Intermezzo begins with a lovely violin cantalina (Andante con moto), accompanied by pizzicato strings. Contrast is provided by an animated Vivace second section. The Finale is a set of thirty Allegro variations on the folk song, The Dargason. Another famed folk tune, Greensleeves, appears as a contrapuntal countersubject as this high-spirited movement skips to its final measure. Ástor Pantaleóon Piazzolla b. March 11, 1921; Mar del Plata, Argentina d. July 4, 1992; Buenos Aires, Argentina Continued— ◆ 26 ◆ Program II Notes Continued— “Summer” and “Autumn” from The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires The legendary modern Argentine master of the dramatically sensuous tango, Piazzolla was a prodigy bandoneón player who led many groups with his expressive accordion-like instrument. In 1954, the composition of a symphony for the Buenos Aires Philharmonic won him a scholarship to study composition in Paris with Nadia Boulanger. Encouraged by her to explore the possibilities of tango, he returned to Argentina and began to infuse the elegantly sensuous dance with fantastic musical elements, including jazz, chromaticism, fugue, expanded instrumentation and dissonance. Ultimately known as “nuevo tango,” his music was largely dismissed by traditionalists, but continues to gain thousands of admirers throughout the rest of the world. The present work only came into being in 1999, when the Russian composer Leonid Desatnikov (b. 1955) adapted four of Piazzolla’s single-movement tangos for solo violin and strings, periodically adding little musical allusions to Vivaldi’s Seasons. Piazzolla originally wrote these pieces for his Quinteto Nuevo Tango, which consisted of the composer on bandoneón, plus violin, electric guitar, piano and double bass. The earliest of these was “Buenos Aires Summer” of 1965, which ultimately became part of his beloved “Angel” series of tangos. In 1970, he wrote tangos associated with the remaining seasons. Jerome Kern b. January 27, 1885; New York City d. November 11, 1945; New York City Smoke Gets in Your Eyes A product of a cultured middle-class family, Jerome Kern displayed exceptional interest and talent for music, but went along with his father’s desire to have him join the family’s merchandising firm. After an incident in which he was empowered to purchase two pianos, but instead committed to buying two hundred pianos, Kern was encouraged to pursue his musical ambitions. He studied in Heidelberg, then, in the early 1900s, went to London’s musical theaters, where he enjoyed working with P. G. Wodehouse as his lyricist. Kern returned to New York City in 1904 and began writing songs for Tin Pan Alley. Within a decade, Kern began his long string of Broadway and Hollywood successes, including Show Boat (1927) and Roberta (1933). For that latter show, a romance about a fashion designer and a football star, Kern wrote the enduring lyric ballad, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes. Igor and Vesna Gruppman encouraged Igor Frolov to arrange Kern’s song for two violins with piano, later having it reset for string orchestra. ◆ 27 ◆ W OOD STOC K MOZAR T F E ST I V A L MASTER CLASS with IGOR AND VESNA GRUPPMAN, violinists Sunday, August 2, 2015 • 5:30 P.M. Place de la Musique Romance in F Major Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) Banjo and Fiddle Annaliesa Caswell (Age 15) Stockton Teacher: Rachel Handlin William Kroll (1901-1980) Concerto in E Minor Felix Mendelssohn Allegretto non troppo-Allegro molto vivace (1809-1847) Sean Johnson (Age 18) Rockford Teacher: Rachel Handlin Caprice ViennoisFritz Kreisler Joanna Nerius (NIU student) Belvidere (1875-1962) Teachers:formerly Rachel Handlin currently Matthias Tacke Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35 Allegro moderato-Moderato assai ◆ 28 ◆ Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Dennis Anderson, CFP® Branch Manager Senior Vice President – Investments Jenny Murray, AAMS® Assistant Branch Manager Senior Registered Financial Associate Timothy Oman, CRPC® Financial Consultant The Reilly Team Brian Reilly Senior Vice President – Investments David Reilly Financial Consultant The Wormley Team ONCE IN A WHILE SOMETHING NEW CAN HAVE HISTORY Founded by a financial services veteran with a family legacy of serving investors that spans six generations and 120-years, Benjamin F. Edwards & Co. is an investment firm that strives to put our clients first and provide the informed investment advice you deserve. James Wormley, CFP® Senior Vice President – Investments Trust. Integrity. Respect. These are the principles that help us stay focused on what really matters– our clients and your financial well-being. Matt Wormley Financial Consultant Proudly serving all investors in the McHenry County area. Ryan Wormley, AAMS® Senior Vice President – Investments 11621 Catalpa Lane, Woodstock, IL 60098 Phone: 815-337-4485 Toll Free: 855-337-4485 Sandy Peterson Senior Registered Financial Associate benjaminfedwards.com 2013-1473 Exp. 12/31/2016 Member SIPC ◆ 29 ◆ La Petite Crêperie & Bistrot On the Woodstock Square Epicure 847-382-1677 EpicureBistro.com Bistro In the Barrington Foundry 718 W. NW Hwy ◆ 30 ◆ FOSS PIANO SERVICE 630-365-6440 46W009 Keslinger Rd. Elburn, IL 60119 ◆ 31 ◆ ◆ 32 ◆ ◆ 33 ◆ Apple Creek Flowers Weddings & Events Woodstock, IL 815-338-2255 815-2APPLE4 www.applecreekflowers.com www.applecreekweddings.com ◆ 34 ◆ We Salute Our ENCORE CIRCLE MEMBERS $1,000 or More Contributors to The Woodstock Mozart Festival $10,000 Jane and Robert Barkei $5,000 - $9,999 Louise and Erv LeCoque AptarGroup Charitable Foundation Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation MacArthur Fund for Arts and Culture at the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation $2,500 - $4,999 City of Woodstock Dr. Scholl Foundation Home State Bank Illinois Arts Council Vivian B. Sodini and James G. Haughton Lynn and Ray Pensinger Isabel and Mark Shiffer $1,000 - $2,499 Anonymous Amy and Al Ottens Marcia and Mark Koenen Mary Ellen and Ed Streit Jadwiga and Bogdan Lodyga Tom and Sonia Svoboda Charles Mehlman and Anita and Charlie Whalen Maija Mizens Geri and Ron Yonover The Allstate Foundation NIB Foundation The ENCORE CIRCLE is a special recognition association of generous contributors who have made a gift or pledge of $1,000 or more in a 12-month period. In recognition of their special commitments, The Woodstock Mozart Festival Board of Directors thanks these donors. ◆ 35 ◆ program III ◆ 36 ◆ W OOD STOC K MOZAR T F E ST I V A L PROGRAM III Saturday, August 8, 2015 • 8:00 P.M. Sunday, August 9, 2015 • 3:00 P.M. Woodstock Opera House IGOR GRUPPMAN, conductor MYKOLA SUK, piano Divertimento in D Major, K. 125a [136] Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart I. Allegro II. Andante III. Presto Ludwig van Beethoven Concerto No. 5 in E-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, OP. 73, Emperor I. Allegro II. Adagio un poco mosso III. Rondo: Allegro INTERMISSION Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550 I. Molto Allegro II. Andante III. Menuetto: Allegretto IV. Allegro assai ◆ 37 ◆ Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart August 8-9 IGOR GRUPPMAN, violinist and conductor Ukrainian violinist Igor Gruppman enjoys a multifaceted career as soloist, conductor, orchestra leader and chamber musician. Currently he serves as concert master of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and as guest Leader of orchestras such as the London Symphony, London’s Royal Philharmonic, and St. Martin in the Fields. He also performs as guest soloist and conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic, the Mariinsky Theater Orchestra and Chamber Orchestra, and during 2014-2015, the Orquesta Clasica Santa Cecilia in Madrid. Appearing in the Unites States in this role as well, he is the Principal Conductor of the Orchestra at Temple Square in Salt Lake City and, in the spring of 2015, launched a new orchestra, the Soloists of Europe. Mr. Gruppman has collaborated with and been influenced by important conductors: George Solti, Valery Gergiev, Mstislav Rostropovich, Sir Colin Davis, Sir Simon Rattle and Bernard Haitink. He sometimes shares the podium with Maestro Gergiev, and in 2009, was invited by him to conduct the Mariinsky Stradavari Orchestra on a tour of Asia. In that part of the world, he also has been invited for solo and conducting engagements with the Tokyo NHK and Seoul Philharmonic Orchestras. Mr. Gruppman appeared in an all-Mozart program at the De Doelen Great Hall in Rotterdam where, in addition to conducting, he gave the Netherlands premier of Mozart’s recently reconstructed Concerto for Violin and Piano with pianist Ronald Brautigam. He has since been asked by the orchestra to conduct his own series of concerts, and was the conductor of the orchestra’s 2010 and 2011 proms series. Igor Gruppman’s discography is extensive on the Naxos, Koch, and Video Artist International labels. He is a graduate of the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied with Leonid Kogan and Mstislav Rostropovich, followed by studies with Jascha Heifetz in Los Angeles. He is now on the faculty of the Rotterdam Conservatory. Recently Igor and his wife, Vesna, premiered Paul van Brugge’s Double Concerto for Violin and Viola with the Temple Square Orchestra commissioned by the Dutch Performing Arts Foundation. In 1994 the Gruppman Duo won a Grammy Award for their recording of Malcolm Arnold’s Concerto for two violins, which they performed at the Festival in 2012. IGOR GRUPPMAN, conductor “Command of the baton, elegant musicianship, powerful music making.” - KOREAN DIGEST ◆ 38 ◆ August 8-9 MYKOLA SUK, piano Mykola Suk’s international career has spanned four continents from the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory to Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and Carnegie Hall in New York. He has appeared as soloist with numerous leading orchestras from the Russian National Symphony to the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn, and has collaborated with many outstanding conductors: Mikhail Pletnev, Janos Ferencik, Arvid Jansons, James DePriest and Carl St. Clair. Mr. Suk’s interviews, live performances, and CD recordings have been broadcast throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia on prominent radio stations and broadcast systems such as WQXR and WNYC, New York; WFMT, Chicago, and WGBH, Boston. Recital invitations have taken Mr. Suk to the Soviet Union, France, Germany, England, Finland, Egypt, Mexico, the U.S., Canada, Korea, China, Mongolia and Australia. In addition, his passion for chamber music has taken him to many distinguished festivals throughout the world including the Kuhmo Chamber Music Festival (Finland), Kiev International Music Festival (Ukraine), Australian Festival of Chamber Music, and the International Keyboard Institute and Festival in New York City. Mykola Suk completed his Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Piano Performance at the Moscow Conservatory. He gained international recognition as the winner of the First Prize and Gold Medal at the 1971 International Liszt-Bartók competition in Budapest, Hungary. Before coming to the United States, he served as Professor of Piano at the Kiev State Conservatory and Moscow State Conservatory. In the U.S., he has taught as an adjunct faculty member at various music schools such as the New England Conservatory, Manhattan School of Music, Columbia University, and the University of Southern Alabama. In 2001, Mr. Suk settled in Las Vegas, Nevada where he oversees keyboard studies in the Music Department of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. A champion of 20th and 21st century music, Mykola Suk has premiered numerous works of Ukrainian composers that were composed for, dedicated to, or commissioned by him. His recordings appear on the following labels: Melodia (Russia); Russian Disc; Hungaraton (Hungary); Meldac/Tritan (Japan); Troppe Note/Cambria, and Music & Arts (USA) labels. “An astonishing blend of muscular power, poetry and utter control, he will prove to be one of the more formidable to have appeared in this country in years” – American Record Guide ◆ 39 ◆ PROGRAM III NOTES Notes by Roger Ruggeri © 2015 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart b. January 27, 1756; Salzburg d. December 5, 1791; Vienna Divertimento in D major for Strings, K. 136 (125a) Amid several extensive forays in Italy with his father, Mozart returned home to Salzburg in time to celebrate his sixteenth birthday. With Italian ovations still fresh in his mind, the aging prodigy disconsolately settled into Austrian small-town life. During these early months of 1772, Mozart composed three string works, possibly intended for use at some unspecified point during his next tour to Italy. Mozart did not assign a title to these works; a later hand inscribed the word Divertimento. (Some present day musicologists would not call this work a divertimento, because it lacks the requisite minuet movement.) It is unlikely that Mozart would have objected to this designation, for he was generally unconcerned about subtle differentiations between divertimenti, cassations, serenades, etc. There was a time when this work and its two companions were thought to be string quartets, but it is now generally accepted that they are works for massed strings. The opinion of respected Mozart scholar, Alfred Einstein, is always welcome. Concerning K. 136, 137 and 138, he writes: “They are simply symphonies for strings alone, without oboes and horns; or rather they tend towards the symphonic style in the same degree that Mozart’s first quartet had tended towards the chamber-music style. I believe that Mozart wrote them in preparation for the last Italian journey, in order not to be disturbed during the composition of [the opera] Lucio Silla if symphonies should be demanded of him, and that he would then have added wind-instruments to the outer movements on the spot in Milan, according to need and feasibility. The keys chosen are evidence for this supposition. There is nothing of chamber music in the first ‘quartet,’ in D (K. 136): the first movement [Allegro] is rather a virtuoso piece for the violins, which play somewhat in the manner of a concertante duet; the second movement [Andante] is graceful and ‘tender,’ quite in the Italian fashion; and the last [Presto] while not a rondo, has a low specific gravity, the beginning of the development being characterized by a bit of counterpoint.” Continued— ◆ 40 ◆ Program III Notes Continued— Ludwig van Beethoven b. December 16, 1770; Bonn d. March 26, 1827; Vienna Concerto No. 5 for Piano and Orchestra, in E-flat major, Opus 73 Having first noticed that his hearing was impaired at the age of twenty-six, Beethoven continued to perform as a pianist, but directed an increasing proportion of his energies to composition. By the time that he was in his late thirties, his public performances were behind him. The four piano concertos which he had composed and premiered were conceived in a manner that gave Beethoven ample opportunity to display his celebrated powers of extemporization. However, with his fifth and final concerto, completed in 1809, Beethoven created a more controlled environment for the soloist, forbidding even the traditionally improvised cadenza at the close of the first movement. Written shortly after the Sixth Symphony, his Concerto No. 5 was completed during the chaotic period of Napoleon’s siege and occupation of Vienna. During the rifle fire and explosions, which rattled Beethoven’s residence, the composer would cover his head with pillows in a vain attempt to preserve the remnants of his hearing. Largely because of the political turmoil of the period, the concerto was not given a performance until November 28, 1811, when Friedrich Schneider was the soloist in the Leipzig premiere. A few months later, Beethoven’s noted student, Carl Czerny, played the first Viennese performance on February 12, 1812. According to an apocryphal tale, the concerto received its nickname at that later performance, when a French army officer referred to it as “an emperor among concertos.” Although the designation was not the composer’s own, the title “Emperor” has survived because it seems appropriate to the work’s lofty breadth. The effect of this concerto upon early audiences was very dramatic, for they were used to the conventional procedures of the day. For example, rather than the usual orchestral introduction of the themes, the orchestra plays a decisive chord and the soloist immediately launches a series of rhapsodic passages that create a sense of an introductory cadenza. After this impetuous beginning, the work continues with a closely argued flow of heroic and contemplative materials which range through widely contrasting tonalities. Referring to its premiere in Leipzig, a writer for the Allgemeine Musik Zeitung stated: “It is without doubt one of the most original, imaginative, most effective but also one of the most difficult of all existing concertos.” A Viennese critic expressed his reaction to this adventuresome composition from a negative stance, dismissing Beethoven as “proud and overconfident...He can be understood and appreciated only by connoisseurs.” I. Allegro, E-flat major, 4/4. Launched by a decisive orchestral chord, the soloist begins a virtual introductory cadenza. After this impulsive outset, violins introduce a first theme Continued— ◆ 41 ◆ Program III Notes Continued— which is then taken up by the clarinet. The flowing majesty of this idea is contrasted by the violins’ softly stated second theme. French horns take up this thought before the pianist reenters with extended treatment of both subjects. Development centered largely upon the first theme, yields to a recapitulation and a long crescendo to the normally expected cadenza. Breaking with tradition, Beethoven commands the soloist to play only the short solo passage with leads to the movement’s coda. Thus, the movement ends, in the words of Scott Goddard, “in a blaze, not of imperial splendor, but of E-flat.” II. Adagio un poco mosso, B major, 4/4. Set apart by its distant key of B major, the serene Adagio begins with muted violins intoning a hymn-like main theme. Ornamented varieties of this theme are set forth by the piano; only toward the end of the movement does the soloist present the unadorned theme. Over the sustained note of the bassoon, the soloist subtly begins to evolve the theme of the finale and then, without a break, launches the exhilarating theme of the final movement. III. Rondo: Allegro, E-flat major, 6/8. Called “the most spacious and triumphant of concerto rondos,” this finale is an ingenious combination of rondo and sonata forms. Toward the end, the timpani takes up the rhythm of the rondo theme while the piano plays a reflective series of chords. With a rush of ascending scales, the soloist invites the orchestra to join in an exuberant conclusion. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550 Mozart wrote his last three symphonies, “The Great Trilogy,” during the summer of 1788, completing No. 40 in G minor on July 25th. Considering that these three masterworks of the symphonic repertoire poured forth from his mind within this brief period of two months, it is curious that the area surrounding this fertile summer were devoid of any other works of particular significance. However, if one takes into account the problems that the composer faced during this period, it is surprising that he accomplished as much as he did. His health was beginning to fail, he was heavily in debt, and he was extremely depressed about the lack of recognition that was being afforded him. To make matters worse, he was not comfortable with his new position in Vienna as composer to Emperor Joseph II. Following the death of Gluck in late 1787, the Emperor had to fill the prestigious post of court composer. Although Joseph II was not fond of Mozart’s music, the problematic genius was the only man who could creditably fill the position. On an earlier occasion, after hearing the premiere of The Abduction from the Seraglio in 1782, the Emperor is reported to have said: “Too beautiful for our ears, and far too many notes, my dear Mozart.” Never at a loss for words, the composer rejoined: “Exactly as many, Your Majesty, as are needed.” Perhaps the Emperor recalled that exchange when he established Mozart’s salary; Gluck had earned 2,000 florins... for Mozart the fee was set at 800 florins. However, the reduction could have been justified because of reduced demands; all Mozart had to do was provide the court with minuets, waltzes and country dances for the elaborate Continued— ◆ 42 ◆ Program III Notes Continued— masquerades which were then the rage in Vienna. Mozart remarked that his salary was “too much for what I do; too little for what I could do.” At least, Mozart’s spirits were lifted by the relative tranquillity of his new home in Vienna. In a letter of late June, the composer wrote: “I have done more work in the ten days that I have lived here than in the two months in my other lodgings, and I should be much better here, were it not for dismal thoughts that often come to me. I must drive them away; for I am living comfortably, pleasantly, and cheaply.” I. Allegro molto; G minor, 4/4. The sonata form first movement begins with violins expressing a restive theme while violas and basses provide simple accompaniment. Strings and woodwinds later reveal a less emotionally charged second theme. After development and recapitulation, a brief coda completes the movement. II. Andante; E-flat major, 6/8. Most classic era slow movements are in “song form” (ABA); perhaps suggesting deeper emotional content, the materials of the present movement evolve in sonata form. The first theme is begun by low strings and continued by violins. Seemingly filled with sighs, a second theme is entrusted to the violins. Lament and consolation also emerge from a third theme. III. Menuetto: Allegro; G minor, 3/4. The graceful and vigorous Menuetto is contrasted by a Trio section of charming simplicity. However, the dance’s minor mode conveys an unexpectedly ominous quality that might have been intended to disquiet perceptive aristocratic ears. IV. Finale: Allegro assai; G minor, 4/4. Again using materials that express themselves in sonata form, Mozart begins his final movement with the violins’ immediate presentation of the theme. It’s interesting to recognize the similarity between the first eight notes of this movement and those of Beethoven’s later Fifth Symphony Scherzo (which, however, is in C minor with somewhat different rhythm). A second theme is initiated by the violins and later expressed by the clarinet. Although Mozart fought off what he referred to as “dismal thoughts” in his E-flat major symphony (No. 39), darkness seems nearer to the surface in this next symphony. The key of G minor is perhaps indicative, for it is the tonality that Mozart frequented for the expression of more turbulent moods. It is, however, vital to recall that Mozart was a classicist; his expression was not that of a romantic outpouring, but rather that of a balanced artistic statement. His Symphony No. 40 has a range of expression and a classical symmetry that is exceptional, even for Mozart. It is fascinating to realize that our society tends to reserve the word “perfect” to describe symmetrical structures; no matter how great the works themselves, the word rarely seems appropriate to romantic expressions. Philip Hale unconsciously paid tribute to this concept upon writing: “There are few things in art that are perfect. The G minor Symphony is one of them.” ◆ 43 ◆ Make it a SWEET DAY! 124 Cass Street • Woodstock 815.206.5224 • www.JacisCookies.com COWLIN, CURRAN AND COPPEDGE Attorneys at Law 20 Grant Street P.O. Box 188 Crystal Lake, Illinois 60039-0188 815-459-5300 • 847-669-3000 The Woodstock Branch of Wells Fargo Advisors is proud to support The Woodstock Mozart Festival The Woodstock Branch of Wells Fargo Advisors 2424 Lake Shore Dr. Woodstock, IL 60098 815-334-2550 lawrence.baier@wellsfargoadvisors.com wellsfargoadvisors.com Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC,is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. © 2011, 2013 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. 0114-03329 [74127-v4] A1702 (1259969_452702) ◆ 44 ◆ MEET THE MUSICIANS Lisa Fako, violin A Chicago area native and member of the Festival orchestra for ten years, Lisa studied with Betty Lambert and Victor Aitay. With a bachelor of music degree in Violin Performance from DePaul University, she also studied with Joseph Silverstein. An active Chamber musician, Lisa has been heard on WFMT, with the West End String Quartet with “Corky Siegel’s Chamber Blues”, the Chicago Philharmonic Chamber Players and many other groups. As a freelance orchestral player as well, she performs regularly with many orchestras including the Chicago Philharmonic, Lyric Opera, Lake Forest, and Elgin Symphonies. Additional Festival appearances have been at Tanglewood, Aspen, Strings in the Mountains, and Moab. Paul Vanderwerf, viola New to the orchestra last year, Paul Vanderwerf is an active chamber and orchestral musician with a doctorate in music from Northwestern University where he studied under the guidance of Myron Kartman. He performs regularly with the Chicago Philharmonic, Joffrey Ballet, Lake Forest Symphony and Music of the Baroque. A member of the Chicago Ensemble, Paul maintains a private teaching studio and serves on the faculties of the Music Institute of Chicago Academy and of North Park University. He also teaches privately. A long-time colleague of concert master Kevin Case, Paul will join the Festival’s Resident String Trio in performances at three locations this October. “I am an erring young man, like so many others, but I can say to my own comfort, that I wish all were as little erring as I.” – MOZART 1781 ◆ 45 ◆ After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” – ALDOUS HUXLEY Casalena/Wilson Group David D. Casalena, CIMA® First Vice President – Wealth Management Wealth Management Advisor 815.654.6351 • www.fa.ml.com/casalena_wilson_group Merrill Lynch 6958 Spring Creek Road, Rockford, IL 61114 Life’s better when we’re connected® Merrill Lynch Wealth Management makes available products and services offered by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, a registered broker-dealer and Member SIPC, and other subsidiaries of Bank of America Corporation. Investment products: Are Not FDIC Insured Are Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value The Bull Symbol, Life’s better when we’re connected and Merrill Lynch are trademarks of Bank of America Corporation. Investment Management Consultants Association (IMCA®) is the owner of the certification marks CIMA® and Certified Investment Management Analyst®. Use of CIMA® and Certified Investment Management Analyst® signifies that the user has successfully completed IMCA's initial and ongoing credentialing requirements for investment management consultants. © 2015 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved. | ARWRJM6N | AD-04-15-0070 | 470944PM-0315 | 04/2015 ◆ 46 ◆ 2015 Mozart Festival ORCHESTRA PERSONNEL Flute Violin I Janice Bjorkman Kevin Case, Concertmaster Dr. James G. Haughton and Lynn and Ray Pensinger Chair Vivian B. Sodini Chair Linda Korducki Carol Dylan Laura Hourt Oboe Philip Koch Lisa Fako Nina Saito Jaime Duff, Week 1 Emily Knaapen, Week 3 Violin II Clarinet Rachel Handlin Tracy Jasas-Hardel Christian Ellenwood Catherine Bush Christopher Zello Pamela Simmons Bassoon Erik Leveille Lori Babinec Charles Mehlman and Viola Maija Mizens Chair Amanda Koch Sonia and Tom Svoboda Chair Peter Brusen Paul Vanderwerf Horn Olga Tuzhilkov Michael Buckwalter Cello Liz Deitemyer, Week 1 Nazar Dzhuryn Mary Jo Neher, Week 3 Anonymous Donor Chair Trumpet Kevin Wood Matt Lee, Week 1 John Burson, Week 3 Timpani Jon Mortensen ◆ 47 ◆ Michael Beert Roza Borisova Bass Charles Grosz Al and Amy Ottens Chair Personnel Director and Librarian Lori Babinec 2015 CORPORATE/FOUNDATION DONORS The following corporations and foundations have demonstrated exemplary leadership to help ensure quality symphonic music in our community. CONCERT UNDERWRITER: $10,000 Barkei Family Fund Jane and Robert Barkei SPONSOR: $5,000-$9,999 PATRON: $1,000-$2,499 AptarGroup Charitable Foundation The Allstate Foundation Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation Foundation for Free Speech LeCoque Family Foundation Ronald and Geri Yonover Foundation NIB Foundation The MacArthur Fund for Arts and Culture at the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation MATCHING GIFT: $100-$499 Bank of America Foundation GUARANTOR: $2,500-$4,999 Dr. Scholl Foundation City of Woodstock Home State Bank Illinois Arts Council Pensinger Charitable Fund “I should be only too happy to renounce all my virtues in exchange for Mozart’s sins; but that of course, I could not venture to determine the extent of his virtues.” ◆ 48 ◆ – MENDELSSOHN Supporters of the Festival 2015 Individual Donors CONCERT UNDERWRITER: $10,000 Marengo Jane and Bob Barkei Woodstock Anonymous Jill B. Hartman Linda and Mark McCormick SPONSOR: $5,000-$9,999 Crystal Lake Louise and Erv LeCoque Omaha, Nebraska Julie and Chuck Whalen DONOR: $200-$499 Crystal Lake Marian and Jerold Michaels GUARANTOR: $2,000-$4,999 Woodstock Dr. James G. Haughton & Vivian B. Sodini Lynn and Ray Pensinger Isabel and Mark Schiffer Huntley Barbara Bonner Lucia and Gerald LaBonte PATRON: $1,000-$1,999 Chicago Ronald and Geri Yonover Manhattan Eileen and Andy Partak McHenry Janet and Allen Kennedy Joan & Tom Skiba Beth and Jim Wester Crystal Lake Maija Mizens and Charles Mehlman Fox River Grove Sonia and Tom Svoboda Nashville, TN Jan and Larry Pass Naperville Anita and Charlie Whalen Skokie Marsha Hawley and Peter Paul Park Ridge Jadwiga and Bogdan Lodyga Spring Grove Dianne & Edward Halpern Rockford Amy and Al Ottens Uniontown, OH Anastasia Kozer Saint Charles Marcia and Mark Koenen Wheaton Carolyn and Heather Collins Woodstock Mary Ellen and Ed Streit Winnetka Malcom Vye Benefactor: $500-$999 Fox River Grove Carol and Frank Svoboda Woodstock Helen and Mark Alizon Norma D. Anderson Ann Kohl Sue and Paul Skowronski RB Thompson Glen Ellyn Jeffrey Jens and Ann Boisclair Marengo Susan and Gilbert Tauck Continued— ◆ 49 ◆ Supporters of the Festival 2015 Individual Donors INVESTORS: Up to $199 Algonquin James Connelly Island Lake Judysharon Buck Lincolnshire Joseph Yashon Sue Lerch and David Lubowitz James G. Janossy, Jr. Barrington Constance and Harrington Bischof Belvidere Dennis F. Fancsali Mt. Prospect Elizabeth and John Zulaski Bolingbrook Mary Ellen and Donald Newsom Naperville Marcia and David Hulan Chicago Alexandra Nelson Ernest Rossiello Valerie Moore and Benjamin Recchie Venessa A. Rich Victoria A. Miller Niles Vivian Mitchel Snannon Kris Garnhart St. Charles James Bachman and Susan Riffer Joann and Adolf VanDril Crystal Lake David Kazmierczak Kay and Haskel Pitluck Kris and Ron Rogers Molly and Robert Walsh Susan and Robert Kessler Wheeling Maria M. Olszak Willow Springs Nancy Richter Dekalb Daisuke Yamaguchi Francisco J. Solares-Larrave Winnetka Sylvia and Larry Margolies Evanston James Wicklund Woodstock Barbara Klein Bette and David Chwalisz Catherine and Douglas Knuth Gerald Crohn Grace and Frank Greenwald Jane and Bob Koehler Marsha and Sherwin Portnoy Patrician and Kenneth Johnson Phillip C. Veramae Sandy and Mike Neese Susan and Richard Eyre Forest Park Margaret Callaghan Gilberts Robert Scutt Glenview Naomi Frankel Huntley Diane and Steven Hendrickson Joyce Barker ◆ 50 ◆ SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Festival’s Board of Directors wishes to thank the following individuals and organizations for their gifts-in-kind to the Woodstock Mozart Festival The Woodstock Opera House staff for their generous assistance Mark Foss of Foss Piano Service for tuning services Elisabeth Crisp of Apple Creek Flowers for Festival floral arrangements GNT Limousine for providing complimentary travel arrangements of Mozart Festival soloists and special guests Best Western of Woodstock for hosting our guest artists, and the Woodstock’s Quality Inn for our staff accommodations Christopher Borg for Festival Photography Steven Salzbrunn of Krea’tiv Edge for publicity design work Lette’r Rip Mailing Service for their exemplary service Greg Dunham of Lindgren, Callihan, Van Osdol and Co., Ltd. for our financial audit Indepth Graphics and Printing, for donating their special efforts in the compilation of this year’s program booklet “Does it not seem as if Mozart’s works become fresher and fresher the oftener we hear them?” – SCHUMANN ◆ 51 ◆ The Woodstock Opera House was built in 1889 to house City Hall, the public library, fire department and a second-floor auditorium. A production of the play Margery Daw presented by the Patti Rosa Company provided the inaugural performance on September 2, 1890 filling the main floor and balcony of the auditorium to capacity. The Opera House soon became McHenry County’s center for entertainment and hospitality with touring vaudeville, minstrel, and dramatic companies providing diversion after a week’s labor. Farmers’ wives chatted among themselves in the “parlour” while their husbands attended market. When the traveling circuits disappeared, the House became the site for the Chicago area’s first summer stock theatre. Produced in 1934 by Roger Hill, headmaster of Woodstock’s Todd School for Boys, the Shakespeare plays starred his young student, Orson Welles. In 1947 the Woodstock Players was formed by citizens and provided acting experience for students graduating from the Goodman School. Now-famous personalities Paul Newman, Tom Bosley, Betsy Palmer, Geraldine Page, Shelley Berman, and Lois Nettleton were among them. In 1972 the Opera House was declared a “landmark” by the city. It was later closed for two years of restoration work. It reopened in February 1977 and was renamed the Woodstock Opera House Community Center. The Opera House was considered fully restored with the final addition of the front Portico in 1999. The building continues to be owned and proudly maintained by the City of Woodstock and local residents. It features historic furnishings, stained glass windows, tin ceilings, original woodwork and hand drawn stencil ornamentations. In 2003 a new annex was completed. It provides disability access, a freight elevator, back stage areas, offices and the Stage Left Café. This important addition ensures a new century of performances and an artistic outlet to service the people of McHenry County and northern Illinois. ◆ 52 ◆ The Woodstock Opera House The Woodstock Opera House is owned and proudly maintained by the City of Woodstock as a service to the public. WOODSTOCK CITY COUNCIL Dr. Brian Sager, Mayor COUNCIL MEMBERS Daniel Hart, Maureen Larson, Mark Saladin, Joseph Starzynski, RB Thompson and Michael A. Turner Roscoe C. Stelford III, City Manager WOODSTOCK OPERA HOUSE STAFF Managing Director...........................................................John H. Scharres Technical Director.............................................................Joe McCormack Technical Assistant............................................................. Nathan Knapke Building Manager ............................................................. Mark Greenleaf Office Manager .................................................................. Lori Steinkamp Box Office Manager..........................................................Daniel Campbell Box Office Assistant........................................................... Gerri Granzetto House Managers.............................................Letitia Lyon & Nancy Canty ◆ 53 ◆ P rt f lac & or e M us ic Arts Park presents A A Lakeside Legacy Concerts Events Great Live Music Visit LakesideLegacy.org for full schedule of events & to buy tickets. LAKESIDE LEGACY FOUNDATION ART FAIR AT THE DOLE September 5th & 6th 10am - 5pm Presenting Sponsor Purchase original works of art Wide variety of mediums Fine Art Free to attend Food & Wine 401 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake, IL 60014 ~ 815.455.8000 ◆ 54 ◆ WOODSTOCK MOZART FESTIVAL 2015 Advertisers La Bellissima Lakeside Legacy Arts Park Lynn Carlson, Art Appraiser Marsha Portnoy, Writer Merrill Lynch Music Makers for Life, Inc. Northern Public Radio Polish-American Medical Society Read Between The Lynes Stage Left Cafe Studio 2015 Jewelry The Oaks Dental Ctr., Ltd. Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC Wipfli CPAs & Consultants Woodstock Fine Arts Asso. Young Masters Martial Arts 1776 Restaurant American Community Bank & Trust Apple Creek Flowers Aptargroup Aurora University Woodstock Center Baxter & Woodman, Inc. Benjamin F. Edwards & Co. Best Western, Woodstock Inn Celsis Int’l, Ltd. Centegra HealthSystem Cowlin Curran & Coopege, Attys. Epicure Bistro Foss Piano Service Fox Frame Shop, LLC GNT Limousine Jaci’s Cookies ◆ A special note of thanks to all of our advertisers. We encourage our audience to patronize these festival supporters. ◆ LIKE us on “Did you know you can now connect with the Woodstock Mozart Festival on Facebook?” That’s right, the Mozart Festival is available online with photo galleries, articles, and great messages about us. “Like” us here www.facebook.com/WoodstockMozartFestival to get updates about the festival. ◆ 55 ◆ Become a Friend of the Festival …AND HELP KEEP OUR Mozart Marvelous! The Woodstock Mozart Festival is a world-class musical event that enjoys an international reputation. Yet it is a “homegrown” effort that relies on the energy and dedication of volunteers. Right now, the Festival is looking for a few good friends who can donate three or four hours of their time to assist us with activities and events. YES, I’m interested in helping out as a Friend of the Festival. Please contact me: Name_________________________________________________ Address _______________________________________________ Phone________________________________________________ Email_________________________________________________ Please send to: Festival Friends Woodstock Mozart Festival P.O. Box 734 Woodstock, IL 60098 Thank You! ◆ 56 ◆