Maestro Thomas Wilkins
Dominique-René de Lerma writes to the Sarasota Herald Tribune:
The following emails might be of some interest to you.
From: William J. Zick
[mailto:wzick@ameritech.net]
Sent: Thursday, December 06, 2012 10:52 AM
To: Dominique-René de Lerma
Subject: YourObserver.com: 'Sarasota Orchestra Masterworks II concert with Conductor Thomas Wilkins'
Sent: Thursday, December 06, 2012 10:52 AM
To: Dominique-René de Lerma
Subject: YourObserver.com: 'Sarasota Orchestra Masterworks II concert with Conductor Thomas Wilkins'
Hello
Dom,
Thomas Wilkins makes a splash in Sarasota:
http://africlassical.blogspot.com/2012/12/yourobservercom-sarasota-orchestra.html
Thomas Wilkins makes a splash in Sarasota:
http://africlassical.blogspot.com/2012/12/yourobservercom-sarasota-orchestra.html
====
My
reply:
Dear Bill,
I knew Sarasota very well before my Indiana days. Renée Longy and I were
both added to the faculty of the University of Miami at the same time, as the
first faculty appointments of Dean John Bitter (she had been his solfège
teacher at Curtis, where he had had been a flute student of
Kincaid). Mme Longy and I hit it off beautifully da capo (we even
contemplated buying a French chateau in Goral Gables, which she thought
wickedly delightful to contemplate) because I knew her father had been
first oboist with the Boston Symphony before Koussevitsky, who Georges Longy
hated, and she retained great devotion for her father).
When she said she
would like to visit another former student, David Cohen, in Sarasota, I offered
to drive her on our first break. (Renée left Miami later to teach
at Juilliard until her death). I became enormously fond of David and he
was crazy about chamber music (although by profession he was owner of a huge
wholesale business -- Smith's Specialty Company, and he was amused as a Jew to
have a firm with that name!).
Dave had been a violinist at Curtis and he
had friends who completed a string quartet, all passionate amateurs. He
enlisted me to join the group, which I did every time Renée and I got to
Sarasota and often on my own. The cellist was a superb dowager whose
husband (who hated music) had owned a railroad in the Upper Midwest. She,
like Dave, was a person of substantial wealth -- I was greeted at the door by a
butler, the first of two times with that experience [the other was when I was a
dinner guest of Chicago's French consulate].
Dave later paid for my
graduate study (I was supposed not to know this) and became the city's
mayor. The orchestra at the time had as many locals as possible,
but imported players from elsewhere for the concerts, conducted by Alexander
Bloch (who was a very sweet guy). I was booked for a concert and played
the G-minor oboe concerto by Handel as well as the Swan of Tuonela (on
English horn). I played like a god, by the way. I loved Sarasota
and its rich blessing of music and art lovers. Dave built a home on
Siesta Key, such an architectural innovation that it won the international
award for the year. It is featured on the Internet.
When the New College
was going to open, Dave wanted me to join the faculty (its head was the son of
the composer of Mammy's little baby loves shortnin' bread) but I had just
started the 14 years I spent passing through Indiana. This was about the
time the city imported the 18th-century opera house from Italy (Osolo, I think
it was), in which my former Morgan student, Kevin Short, would appear several
times. More recently, Eileen Cline (formerly my dean of the faculty at
Peabody) moved there. I knew all along that Sarasota would have a great future,
and I am so happy to hear this news! I hope this beautiful city never
forgets David Cohen!!
------------------------------------
Dominique-René
de Lerma
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
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