Omaha Symphony Music Director Thomas Wilkins
(KVNO News)
(KVNO News)
Omaha Symphony Presents “Festival of the Americas”
January 23rd, 2014
Omaha, NE — This weekend there’s not one, but two different concerts featuring music from the New World.
The Omaha Symphony hosts it’s second annual two-day music
festival this Friday and Saturday. Titled “Festival of the Americas”,
the event focuses primarily on music composed in the New World.
Conductor Thomas Wilkins says that while it is very rewarding to present
two different concert programs back-to-back, it is also very demanding.
“This year we were a little smarter,” Wilkins said. “We
stretched out the rehearsal period over a larger window, because that is
the first challenge is that there’s a lot of notes.”
The first night sports two main themes: music connected to
Latin America, and music combining two or more diverse influences. For
example, the performance opens with a selection American composer Aaron
Copland wrote after a trip to Mexico.
‘El Salon Mexico’ came on an early visit from Copland, and
it is actually named after this restaurant/bar, this nightclub, I guess,
that Copland visited, and he loved the sounds that he heard.”
The man who conducted the premiere of “El Salon Mexico” was
Carlos Chavez, whose “Sinfonia india” in next on the program. Wilkins
points out that the music draws from both American Indian sources and
Chavez’ own background and education.
“Even though there’s this Indian-tribal influence in the
melodic material, the harmonic material is still this very Latin voice
of Chavez.
Also on the program is the “Concierto de Aranjuez” by
Joaquín Rodrigo, music from Alberto Ginastera’s “Estancia”, and the
“Bachianas brasileiras No. 5” by Villa-Lobos. Wilkins says in this work
Villa-Lobos combines two very different musical styles.
“It’s a marriage of his love for Bach and his respect for
Bach, as a lot of composers had, and his own voice as a Brazilian
composer.”
Saturday night’s performance focuses on composers from the
United States. Concertgoers will hear a montage of the northeast in
William Schuman’s “New England Triptych.” The next work is “Honey and
Rue” by pianist, conductor, and composer Andre Previn. Thomas Wilkins
points out this music, with lyrics by Toni Morrison, is very moving, but
like American culture, stylistically diverse.
“This is deeply personal music. It is music that is written
from either a woman’s perspective or from an African-American
experience perspective.”
Speaking of perspective, also on the program is Ferde
Grofe’s epic “Grand Canyon Suite.” Maestro Wilkins says the composer
truly captured the essence of the geography and landscape.
...
The Omaha Symphony presents its “Festival of the Americas” with
“Music from Latin America” Friday, January 24, and “Music from the
United States” on Saturday, January 25. Both concerts start at 8 pm in
the Holland Center. For tickets and more information, you can visit omahasymphony.org.
Comment by email:
I think the piece Honey & Rue mentioned was commissioned by Kathleen Battle. See http://www.deutschegrammophon.com/us/cat/4377872
John Malveaux
John Malveaux
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