[Maestro Chelsea Tipton II conducts Sphinx Chamber Orchestra]
ToledoBlade.com
Article published Monday, October 13, 2008
SPHINX CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Seasoned musicians shine in group's debut
By SALLY VALLONGO
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Still, Aaron Dworkin, who founded Sphinx in 1998, had the last word. "In the history of our country, there has never been an orchestra of black and Latino performers on tour. It involves great risk," he said before introducing Tipton and violinists Elena Urioste and Melissa White. Urioste and White presented an elegant, innovative, and thoroughly patriotic rendition of our National Anthem while the audience - diverse in every way - stood enrapt. Then it was on to the "Presto" from Mozart's Divertimento in D Major, given a light but wonderfully nuanced performance. Urioste, who is touring with the SCO as a soloist, returned for "Winter in Buenos Aires," from Piazzolla's marvelous Four Seasons of Buenos Aires. Playing a 1750 Bergonzi instrument on longtime loan, Urioste sent a husky, warm sound spinning through the historic hall in a virtuosic performance given precise and subtle support by the SCO.
After infusing spirit and caprice into the fugue from Villa-Lobos's Bacchianas Brasileiras No. 9, the orchestra turned tender in a sensitive performance of George Walker's Lyric for Strings. A mid-20th century work, it married the tenderness of Samuel Barber with the surprising acidity of contemporary composers such as Arvo Part. Tipton and the SCO pulled out every bit of subtlety and contrast in a beautiful performance. The astonishingly vital Harlem Quartet - violinists Ilmar Gavilan and White, violist Juan- Miguel Hernandez, and the memorable cellist Desmond Neysmith - wrapped up the first half with a portion of Wynton Marsalis's intense, engaging "Hellbound Highball." Violinists Gavilan, Urioste, White, and the enfant terrible of the group, 15-year-old Clayton Penrose-Whitmore, delivered a solid and convincing account of Vivaldi's beloved Concerto for 4 Violins and Orchestra. But the best work came last: Michael Abels' engaging Delights and Dances, commissioned to mark the first decade of Sphinx, and given a rapturous reading by the Harlem Quartet and the SCO. [George Walker (b. 1922) and Aaron P. Dworkin (b. 1970) are profiled at AfriClassical.com]
Orchestra Hall Debut
George Walker
Michael Abels
Chelsea Tipton II
Aaron P. Dworkin
This was truly a remarkable concert. I'm Michael Taylor, new media and PR associate here at the DSO and I'm sure anyone who was able to attend left inspired. This is a tour that will continue to have "life" long after the tour is over.
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