October 6, 2008
Established in 2004, the string orchestra includes winners of competitions sponsored every year since 1996 by the Detroit-based Sphinx Organization. Sphinx is devoted to finding and helping promising Latino and black string players enter the professional classical music world, and some of its competition winners have done just that. Thanks in large part to Sphinx's efforts, the widely held perception that young people of color simply aren't interested in a life in classical music is slowly being laid to rest. Judged simply on musical terms, the Sphinx Chamber Orchestra emerged as a top-notch ensemble Saturday night, playing with a tightly woven sound and palpable zest under conductor Chelsea Tipton II, resident conductor of the Toledo Symphony Orchestra. The program of short works showed off the young players' versatility. Mozart's D Major Divertimento, K. 136, had a nice bounce and bright sheen, while Vivaldi's Concerto for Four Violins and Orchestra in B Minor dug a little deeper. Soloists, including 15-year-old Clayton Penrose-Whitmore of Evanston, confidently tossed Vivaldi's melodic threads back and forth, listening intently to each other as they tore through the concerto's quick tempos. [Full Post] [Aaron P. Dworkin (b. 1970), Founder/President of The Sphinx Organization, is profiled at AfriClassical.com]
Harlem Quartet
Inaugural Tour
Harris Theater, Chicago
Chelsea Tipton II
Aaron P. Dworkin
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