Showing posts with label Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orchestra. Show all posts

April 9, 2013

Meet Neal Gittleman


Neal Gittleman
©2007 Andy Snow
Photo credit Andy Snow
During the current Muncie Symphony Orchestra season staff, musicians and the Board of Directors were presented with an opportunity to seek conductors for each concert who bring with them a set of unique skills and a personal interpretation of the music.  Each of the five conductors: Rick Sowers, Sameer Patel, David Glover, Neal Gittleman and Larry Rapchak were recommended by the MSO musicians who had played under the conductor’s baton.  What I am saying is that each conductor was highly praised and heartily recommended.  If you have attended the concerts this season, you know we choose well.  The feedback from those who experienced the MSO most recent concerts has been exceedingly complimentary. 

I have heard many praises of Neal Gittleman in the past 15 years from musician friends who played in the Marion Philharmonic Orchestra when Neal was Music Director there. When he moved from the Marion Phil to the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra there was much sadness in Grant County.  Indeed, he is still missed.  Maestro Gittleman has many wonderful and innovative accomplishments in his resume.  You may read about them here and here .

One of the delights of my time in orchestra administration has been to get to know those who make the music.  We often hear about how the life experiences of the composer influenced the music she/he wrote.  A tangible human connection with those making music also adds another dimension to my listening experience.   For this reason I was searching for an intimate conversation with Neal Gittleman and came across this interview published on Saturday, October 20, 2012 in the Dayton Daily News.   I hope getting to know a little of the personal side of Neal adds to your enjoyment of the concert he will conduct on April 20th.

You are  cordially invited to Prelude, MSO's pre-concert talk at 6:30 p.m. in Williams Lounge (lower floor of Emens Auditorium).  The speakers will be  Mr. Gittleman and guest violinist Svetlin Roussev. 

A Sunday Chat with Neal Gittleman
The first in a series of up-close and personal visits with the folks who make an impact on the arts in our region
Staff Writer

In 1994, when the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra was seeking a new music director, several candidates were brought to town for auditions. Audiences were then asked to fill out written evaluations on each of them.
“I remember what I wrote after Neal Gittleman was here,” says Rochelle Goldstein, a long-time DPO subscriber.  “I wrote: ‘HIRE THIS MAN!’”
The Clayton resident says she’s never been disappointed.
“Neal has re-energized the arts community and the orchestra,” Goldstein says. “He’s brought out the best in every section of the orchestra, and he’s been brilliant at outreach and in conceiving new program ideas. His Classical Connections series is great for people who would like to understand more about what they’re hearing.”
Gittleman, at ease in both his tuxedo and his Spiderman costume, is one of those local arts personalities who’s earned a special place in the heart of the community through the years. Whether he’s emerging from a coffin in a ghoul costume, visiting schools to share his love of music with youngsters, or performing his own zany lyrics in a stripped-down version of The Mikado at a Fraze Pavilion summer concert.
There is no one better to kick-off our new series of informal conversations about life as a working artist than the music director of the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra.

THE FORMATIVE YEARS 
Q: So, what kind of child were you?
A: Well, I thought I was pretty normal until my mom moved into assisted living and in going through her files I found all the early school evaluations they saved. 

Q. What triggered your interest in music?
A: My mother was a public school music teacher, so there was always music in the house. I have vivid (and thrilling) memories of seeing rehearsals and performances of her chorus at Bushwick High School in Brooklyn. (The Hallelujah Chorus and “Buffalo Gals” were my two biggest favorites.). So I guess I was more or less always interested in music.

Q: Do you play instruments?
A: The instruments that I’ve been known to play are (in chronological order) piano, violin, and viola. I certainly use the piano as a tool — for score study, to accompany soloists in pre-rehearsal rehearsals, and so on. 

Q: Who were influences in your life and in what ways did these people influence you?
A: It has to be five teachers: Helen Goodwin, the music teacher in Norwich, Vermont who first got me interested in the violin; Channing Kempf, a Boston-area freelance violinist who figured out how to get me from scratchy to having a real sound in a single lesson; John Mauceri, conductor of the Yale Symphony, whose joy on the podium made me think about conducting; Nadia Boulanger, who made me (and helped me make myself) into the musician (and person) that I am; and Charles Bruck, who taught me countless lessons (positive and negative) about the technique and the psychology of conducting.
One other important formative influence: watching Leonard Bernstein’s Young People’s Concerts on TV when I was kid. Probably more than anything else, that gave me the idea that classical music (and orchestral music in particular) was interesting, fun, and exciting.

Q: When did you decide you wanted to conduct and what about it appealed to you?
A: Playing in the Yale Symphony made me fall in love with the orchestra as an “instrument” and as a way of collectively making music. It also convinced me that I liked the sound of the orchestra much better than the sound of my own violin in my left ear! That got me thinking of conducting as a way to stay in orchestral music without hearing myself play.

ON BEING A CONDUCTOR 

Q: What is the role of the conductor, has it changed over the years?
A: In the “bad old days” it was rather dictatorial… “My way or the highway!” Now it’s more collaborative, more democratic — at least here, in the U.S.

Q: How would you describe the relationship between the conductor and the members of the orchestra?
A: That’s the most complicated — and most interesting part — of the job. You have to lead, you have to tell people what to do and often you have to tell them to change what they’re doing. But you have to realize that the players have their own (often quite valid) ideas about how the music should go. So how you navigate the orchestra’s need for unity with the musicians’ need for individual expression is where it really gets interesting. Bruck used to tell me, “The conductor’s job is to get them to do what you want but have them feel they’re doing what THEY want.”
As far as the “relationship,” you have one relationship with the orchestra as a whole and also 83 individual relationships with the players. And that’s a delicate balancing act — the one relationship is more important than the 83. Some musicians want you to be their friend, others just want you to be the boss who lets them do their job and otherwise leaves them alone, some want no relationship at all. So it’s exactly like conducting…managing both the micro and the macro simultaneously, always listening for changes in the equilibrium, and adjusting as appropriate. 

Q: What qualities do you think make a good conductor?
A: As a conductor on the podium I think the most important thing is knowing how to lead while understanding what’s it’s like to be led. Then there’s all the behind-the-scenes stuff…studying the music, thinking about and making decisions about interpretation. And THEN there’s the other stuff…planning, programming, PR, fundraising, etc.

Q: What do you look for when hiring someone new for the orchestra? Is it solely your decision?
A: Everyone who gets into the DPO (or any other U.S. professional orchestra) does so by winning an audition. Our auditions are “blind” — an Audition Committee (several musicians and me) sit behind a screen. We don’t know who the auditioner is, we don’t see them, we can only hear how they play. We have them play a selection of representative (and difficult) excerpts from standard-repertoire pieces, and we pick the person we think who plays them the best.
Once someone wins the audition, then we find out how they work in the context of the orchestra, and usually they do very well. So it’s not solely my decision. According to the audition rules of our collective bargaining agreement, the conductor gets one vote, just like everyone else. Except if there’s a tie, and then I have an extra, tie-breaking vote. And I can veto a selection. But in practice, I’ve never used my tie-breaker or my veto. At auditions, I see my job as akin to that of the foreman of a jury, and I try to help the committee reach a consensus decision.

Q: How do you select pieces for concerts?
A: I work in close collaboration with Dayton Performing Arts Alliance President Paul Helfrich and also with a program committee. The latter makes me a bit of an anomaly among conductors. Most conductors don’t want anyone meddling in their programming decisions. But I actually find the committee to be very useful, serving both as a source for good ideas that I haven’t thought of myself, and also as a sounding board for my own good and wacky ideas.

OFF THE CLOCK

Q: What do you do in your off-time?
A: Movies, books, squash, golf, tai chi, yoga. Sometimes I get to nap, too.

Q: What books are you reading and would you recommend?
A: I’m currently reading “Game of Thrones” and “Before the Dawn,” a book that explores human history in light of recent advances in research into the human genome. 

Q: What are a few of your favorite pieces of music?
A: That’s so hard to answer, but here are few that come to mind immediately: Bach: St. Matthew Passion; Brahms: German Requiem; Debussy: La mer; Steve Reich: The Cave; Shostakovich: Symphony #13 (“Babi Yar”); The Beatles: A Day in the Life; The Who: Baba O’Reilly; The Rolling Stones: Gimme Shelter.

Q: What would you recommend to parents or grandparents who want their children to be interested in music?
A: Expose them to music — all kinds of music — from the moment they’re born. And not just music that comes from an electrical appliance. Sing to them. Sing with them. When to start lessons is a tricky question. If you want your child to have a chance to get really good at music, the earlier the start the better — often you find that world-class musicians started as early as age 3 or 4. But the best time to start lessons on an instrument is when the child expresses interest.

Q: Where do you spend vacations?
A: (My wife,) Lisa and I usually spend a couple of weeks each summer in Door County, Wisconsin. It’s a wonderful, peaceful, quiet place for R&R, perfect for “recharging the batteries.”

Q: Where have you traveled that you’ve liked the most?
A: One of my favorite places to visit has been Japan. I’ve been there three times — all for work. I found Japan (particularly urban Japan) an amazing and infinitely fascinating place, both very familiar and foreign-feeling at the same time.

Q: What’s on your bucket list?
A: A round of golf at the Old Course at St. Andrews, hearing Wagner’s operas at Bayreuth, and throwing out the first pitch at a baseball game. 

THE FUTURE

Q: What dreams do you have for the orchestra?
A: My dream for the orchestra — and for all the arts in Dayton — is to be a central part of the civic life of our community. To an extent, that dream is already a reality. But there are still many people who don’t think our music is “for them.” I’d love to have the chance to win them over.

Q: What are the greatest challenges Dayton faces at the moment? The arts?
A: I think Dayton’s biggest challenge is how to successfully move from the Dayton-of-the-past (built on manufacturing and big national and international companies) to a Dayton-of-the-present/future (built on something else). For the arts, thinking big-picture, it’s how to keep the arts important to people’s lives when so many children have little or no experience or exposure to the arts. Fortunately, art is very compelling and powerful. Usually you just have to get someone to get up the courage to try it and you’ve got a good chance to get hooked.

Written by Judy Cowling

April 8, 2013

April 20, 2013 MSO Concert: Who ARE these people?!


This is the first in a short series about the music and people you will meet at the MSO Season Finale concert on April 20th.
Most of the people you will see are old friends and seasoned MSO musicians.  No matter who else is on stage, conductor, choir, dancers, it is the talent and incredible dedication to music who make the music you hear.

Muncie Symphony Orchestra at Sursa Hall February 23, 2013
Muncie Symphony Orchestra at Sursa Hall
February 23, 2013
All my life I have heard the term “sacrifice for missionary work”, and it is applicable in the world of the musical arts at MSO.  Sacrifice is not necessarily all monetary.  Just one example: One particular MSO employee has a Master of Music from Indiana University.  Full time employment earning a living as a musician is very rare and difficult to achieve.  This musician has one full time job, one part time job, and is a regular section musician for the three regional orchestras, Muncie Symphony, Anderson Symphony, and Marion Philharmonic.  Musicians are sent music several weeks before rehearsals begin. They are expected to know the music when they sit for the first rehearsal.
Keep practicing

Rehearsal time can be used to plan and rehearse the tempos and dynamics that make the music as breathtaking as Beethoven’s 7th Symphony  experienced at MSO’s February 23rd concert.  Commonly orchestras have concerts around the same time of the year.  The next several weeks this individual’s schedule is inhuman:  Job 1: 8a – 5p, Job 2 5:15p – 6:30p, Orchestra rehearsal (including travel time) 6:45p – 11:15p.
Rehearsals for MSO’s April 20th concert begin on April 17th.  This season, the orchestra, the conductors and the soloists face a unique and challenging situation to bring live music to the stage.  Each is new to their role in creating an ensemble.  Ensemble performance is extremely nuanced.  Small ensembles do not as a rule have a conductor.  The musicians know intuitively and from much rehearsal how and when to change a tempo and a dynamic, and how to play together as one instrument.  Orchestras need a conductor to achieve this level of musicianship.  Ideally, the conductor and orchestra work together for many seasons and learn how to communicate to achieve beautiful music.  This season, you will see the fourth conductor of the MSO.  (And there is yet a fifth at Festival on the Green.)  The search is continuing for a Music Director/Conductor.
 ©2007 Andy Snow
Neal Gittleman conducts the Season Finale Concert.  You will meet him in another post in this series.

February 14, 2013


POWER-ful Brass ~  not brass exactly. Think of brass as fearless, adventurous, brave, or courageous.   That is what I think of a concert in a warehouse – adventurous, brave, courageous, fearless!
How does one pull off very special experience in a warehouse?  Book a great band, partner with a long-time Muncie business, decorate with lots of fabric, balloons, and color.  Offer luscious snacks, classic music of the crooners of the 20th century and today, and of course dancing!  It’s a perfect end to Valentine’s week.
Start with the quintessential Sinatra song list, add the lyrical styling of Tony Bennett, sprinkle in the hot, contemporary horn charts of Harry Connick Jr., and then add the modern flavor of Michael Buble. The Harry Arnett Band will entice you and your friends to dance the night away!

Program
Almost Like Being in Love                                Frederick Loewe / Alan Jay Lerner
Night and Day                                                      Cole Porter
More                                                                        Alex Alstone /Tom Glazer
I Left My Heart in San Francisco                   George Cory / Douglass Cross
The Way You Look Tonight                             Jerome Kern / Dorothy Fields,
Sway                                                                        Pablo Beltrán Ruiz / Norman Gimbel
A Foggy Day                                                          George and Ira Gershwin
Georgia on My Mind                                           Hoagy Carmichael / Stuart Gorrell
Wonderful Tonight                                             Eric Clapton
Save the Last Dance for Me                               Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman
An eclectic mix of light instrumental jazz standards as well as dance classics
Holiday dinner and dance

Guest Artists:
Harry Arnett – Vocals
Jim Rhinehart – Keyboard
Jon Block – Bass
Gene Markawitcz – Drums
Will Frazier – Trombone
Larry McWilliams – Trumpet

Muncie Power Products
Pershing Street Warehouse
Saturday, February 16, 2013
7:30 pm

342 N Pershing Drive
Muncie, IN 47305

Tickets at the door:
Adults $30
$15 BSU & IVY Tech Students with ID

November 29, 2012

Start Your Holiday Celebrations with MSO's Holiday Show


holiday-pops
There is no better experience to start the season than with the sightssounds,  scents, textures and flavors  of the Holidays!
The MSO Holiday Show will have it all this coming Saturday afternoon at 4 p.m. in Emens Auditorium.
Enjoy  the Ball State University holiday decorations of  as you approach Emens Auditorium.  Once inside the warmth of the season will embrace you with the festive decorations of Emens Lobby.  Family and individual portraits are offered courtesy of Murray's Jewelers before the concert.  Give us your happy holiday smiles then download the free portrait from www.munciesymphony.org.
Nutcracker
The concert offers an fun, eclectic mix of music and performers from high energy singing by the Ball State University Glee Club and dancing of the Nutcracker by the Ball State Dancers to an  intimate duet "Baby It's Cold Outside", to Anderson's "Suite of Carols" featuring the brass, strings and woodwinds of the Muncie Symphony Orchestra.
Baby It's Cold Outside
Holidays are rich with flavors, too!  So, come to the Williams Lounge during
intermission and taste yummy cookies and lemonade.
Santa will be in Emens Lobby at intermission with candy canes for the children.
March of the Toys
 Imagine yourself a in the "March of the Toys" at the MSO Instrument Petting Zoo.
You can play instruments in Emens Lobby before the concert and at intermission.
The Little Drummer Boy

And no holiday is complete without Carols!


Charlie Brown's Christmas



Join Andrew Crow, Muncie Symphony Orchestra, Ball State Dancers and Ball State
University Singers Glee Club on Saturday, December 1st at 4 p.m. in Emens Auditorium to
kick off the Holidays.
Andrew Crow, guest conductor
Tickets are available at Emens Box Office and Ticketmaster.  Children K-12 and younger are admitted free.
Muncie Symphony is on
SPOTIFY
To listen to the Holiday Concert Playlist (a collection of tunes on the Holiday program) on Spotify, type "spotify:user:munciesymphony" in the spotify app search box. You can download the spotify app here.

August 21, 2012

Pop Over for Picnic and Pops!


Summer outdoor concerts are a dime a dozen.  Well, not literally.  Admission prices in the three-state area begin at $15 (Lexington) and go up . . . Symphony on the Prairie ($22), Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra ($25) to name a couple.
NOT IN MUNCIE!!  Bring the whole family, share a picnic, dance on the lawn, gaze at the clouds (no rain please!); sip a refreshing, favorite beverage.  It’s all about one last summer celebration before winding down for the school year.
Enjoy the Muncie Symphony Orchestra’s
PICNIC AND POPS
at the Summer Stage Fest at Minnetrista
Wednesday 22nd August @ 7pm
Can’t make it to the whole concert?  That’s okay! Come when you can, leave when you must.
Now what you have been waiting for….What are you going to hear?
Richard Sowers, now in his 22nd season music director/conductor Anderson Symphony Orchestra, will direct the MSO in an eclectic mix of old and newer favorites.  There is something for everyone.
The concert opens with the Overture from Die Fledermaus
Followed by music from Carmen
Carmen Suite No. 1 by Georges Bizet
4.    Les dragons d’Alcala     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MC_atQK8eNI
Highlights from Wicked – Schwarts/Rickets
 When I Fall in Love – Selden/Custer
Duke Ellington! – arr. Custer
Beach Boys Medley – arr. Custer
Pirates of the Caribbean – Badelt/Rickets
 
 America the Beautiful – Bates/Reed
Stars and Stripes – Sousa
Help your community & enjoy the MSO Holiday Concert
Food items will benefit Second Harvest Food Bank of East Central Indiana
Bring 10 non-perishable food items and receive 1 free ticket to the MSO Holiday concert!
or
 Anyone who brings at least 1 non-perishable food item to the MSO’s Picnic & Pops concert at Minnetrista will have a chance to be entered into a raffle to win a family pack (4 tickets) for the MSO Holiday Concert in Dec.
Find MSO and this event on facebook .
The event is brought to you by:
George and Frances Ball Foundation

April 24, 2012

An Imaginary Journey

Imagin. . . the music . . . taking you on an imaginary journey . . . . conjured up in your mind . . as you listen to the dynamic range of the golden flute of Mihoko Watanbe and the Muncie Symphony Orchestra perform the World Premier of a new composition by Jody Nagel .  .    .     .      .       .        .         .

"A Swashbuckling Adventure . . . From Days of Yore".

That is just what each student in the Metal Art studio of Professor Pat Nelson did.  The myths in each part of Jody Nagel's composition, Sea Voyage in Search of a Fairy Queen, The Enchanted Castle, The Dungeon and the Beast, The Hero's Three Impossible Deeds, and The Battle for Virtue and the Celebration Feast were the inspiration for the sheet metal artwork will be on display in the lobby of Emens Auditorium for the concert this Saturday.


Metal Art by students of Pat Nelson, Professor of Art, Ball State University




       imagine a fairy Queen


Metal Art by students of Pat Nelson 



                                                              imagine a hero warrior




Metal Art by students of Pat Nelson 



                          imagine a mermaid  on a sea voyage...........





Metal Art by students of Pat Nelson


imagine an archer in a battle for virtue....................



Metal Art by students of Pat Nelson Ball State University


           imagine a beast in the dungeon




Ball State students from Pat Nelsonʼs Metals class, were challenged to design and create a figure from sheet metal that represented some of the musical characters within the concerto. The figures are mounted and displayed with a “Pied Piper” created by Pat Nelson.

Dr. Jody Nagel
Cindee Cox, photographer

Susan Athertonʼs 4th grade music students from Storer Elementary, produced an artistic representation of the 3rd movement of Nagelʼs piece, creating a large paper diagram that illustrated the dynamic range and storyline of the music within the 3rd movement. Their artwork will be on display in the lobby of Emens Auditorium for the concert.

Dr. Nagel explains music of Part 3 from
"A Swashbuckling Adventure...From Days of Yore".


Muncie Symphony Orchestra
Season Finale Concert

A Swashbuckling Adventure

Bohuslav Rattay, conductor
Mihoko Watanabe, flute

A Swashbuckling Adventure...From Days of Yore
Shostakovich Symphony No. 5 in d minor op. 47

April 28, 2012
6:30 p.m. Pre-concert talk
7:30 p.m. Concert

Emens Auditorium, Ball State Universtiy

$18 - $30 for Adults
$5 for students and youth
.

March 22, 2012

of a most URGENT nature

In just ten days, violinist Anna Vayman takes the stage for Romantic Hero! 
a Muncie Symphony Orchestra classical concert 

The concert is in the extraordinary Sursa Hall.  

Sursa Hall is a musical jewel for the entire community, blending first-rate acoustical design with musical intimacy. It is designed to foster a close connection between performers and audiences, and its acoustical tuning capabilities allow performers to adjust the hall's sound qualities to suit their individual preferences.  The cornerstone of Ball State University's Music Instruction Building  is named in honor of benefactors David and Mary Jane Sursa.  credit

Tickets to performances in 600-seat Sursa Performance Hall, sell out fast.  
Seating is general admission.
ADULTS $ 30 
Students tickets are FREE with BSU or IVY Tech Student until March 30th. 
All student tickets at the door $5

 Buy tickets at Emens Box Office or Ticketmaster.  



Shostakovich Violin Concerto No.1 Mvt.1 - Sayaka Shoji 



A pre-concert talk by Bohuslav Rattay and guests at 6:30 p.m. in Sursa Hall is free with a concert ticket.
Guests:
Peter Blume, director of the David Owsley Museum of Art
Laura Kuykendall, assistant professor of art history at Ball State University.


More detail about the MSO concert, Romantic Hero! HERE

February 6, 2012

Jungle Book Fun

This event occurs on one of the Muncie Children's Museum's Free Saturdays.
There is no cost to attend. 

February 2, 2012

Into the Wilder Blue Yonder

Spring Rattanovy Concert 
Date & Venue Change


The 7th April  date of the spring Rattanovy Concert has been changed to 17th March.

Tickets for the 7th April Concert (at Muncie Power Products Pershing Warehouse)
will be honored for the 17th March concert at the Academy of Model Aeronautics Museum.


The program entitled 
Into the Wilder Blue Yonder 
will be selections from Alec Wilder Octets.  
This jazzy, upbeat music will get your toes tapping!


Cash bar and light refreshments are available for your enjoyment.


 You get an additional bonus with the event- 3 hour childcare 
through MSO partnership with High Street United Methodist Church
It is available only for those who purchase a ticket to the concert 
$10 one child, $13 for two children from the same family. 
Childcare spots limited to 20 on first come first serve basis. 

Here are a few previews of the music!









Alec Wilder - Her old man was suspicious (1941)


Partial previews are available on Amazon. The first 14 are Alec Wilder Octets.