 |
The Providence Mandolin Orchestra
acknowledges with deep gratitude the D’Addario Foundation for
the Performing Arts for their support of our 2006 season. |
| Hingham
Library Concert, Sunday, November 19, 2006
The concert will be at 3:30 pm at 66 Leavitt
Street.
|
Yale
University Concert, Saturday, November 11, 2006
This concert will be at 2:00 pm at Sprague Memorial
Hall, 470 College Street, New Haven, CT.
Song of Japanese Autumn |
Yasuo Kuwahara (1946-2003) |
Song for My Father |
Clarice Assad |
|
|
Concerto de Media Luna |
Jose Luis Barroso |
| Recuerdos |
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| Elegia |
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| Danza |
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Program Notes
By Robert A. Margo As a classical instrument, the mandolin has
its origins in the eighteenth century, but it was around the turn
of the twentieth century that the instrument reached its zenith
of popularity in the Old and New Worlds. By World War I interest
in the mandolin had largely died out in America, but the instrument
retained a passionate following in other countries, particularly
Germany and Japan. Beginning in the 1970s the United States has
experienced a revival of interest in classical mandolin, including
the mandolin orchestra. The contemporary American mandolin orchestra
is made up of sections of first and second mandolins (tuned in
fifths like the violin), the tenor mandola (viola), the mandocello
(cello), the mandobass (string bass), and classical guitar as harmonic
support.
Yasuo Kuwahara was a virtuoso performer on mandolin
and perhaps the most important Japanese composer for mandolin ensemble
during the latter half of the twentieth century. While many of
his pieces utilize extended techniques and unconventional harmonies, “Song
of Japanese Autumn” is a more traditional romantic work in
several contrasting sections, including a virtuosic cadenza, here
performed by concertmaster Joshua Bell.
The Providence Mandolin Orchestra has longed
maintained an active program of commissioning new works for mandolin
ensemble. Clarice Assad is a composer, vocalist, and pianist living
in New York City, and the daughter of the celebrated classical
guitarist Sergio Assad. Ms. Assad has a lengthy catalog of vocal,
piano, guitar, and orchestral works, including a violin concerto
composed for and recorded by Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg. Commissioned
for the Orchestra by Robert Margo and written in honor of Sergio
Assad, “Song for My Father” is filled with the subtle
harmonies and infectious rhythms of the composer’s native
Brazil.
The final work on the program, Jose Luis Barroso’s “Concierto
de Media Luna” was originally composed for an ensemble of
bandurrias and laudes – instruments tuned in fourths but
otherwise played like mandolin family instruments. Barroso’s
music is Spanish to its core, with many explicit references to
flamenco in its harmonic and rhythmic structure. His “Concierto” is
in three movements – a mysterious “Recuerdos” followed
by a moving “Elegia”, and ending with a dynamic and
fleet “Danza”.
The Providence Mandolin Orchestra was founded
by the late Hibbard Perry in 1971. Since then it has become one
of the leading American mandolin ensembles, with regular appearances
throughout the Eastern United States, Canada, and Western Europe.
With well over two hundred pieces in its repertoire, the Orchestra
features a wide range of musical styles from Renaissance dances
to Baroque concertos, turn-of-the-century nostalgia, and avant-garde
expressions. The group’s unique tonality has inspired exciting
new works by Clarice Assad, Will Ayton, Owen Hartford, Eva Kendrick,
Barbara Kolb, Robert Martel, Michael Nix, Stephen Funk Pearson,
Francine Trester, and many others. The Providence Mandolin Orchestra
is under the direction of Mark Davis. Mr. Davis pursues an active
career as a solo and ensemble performer, educator, and conductor.
Mark Davis directs a multi-level guitar ensemble program at the
Wheeler School in Providence RI.
All three works on today’s program are
included on the Providence Mandolin Orchestra’s new recording, “Spectrum”.
The Providence Mandolin Orchestra gratefully
acknowledges the support of the D’Addario Foundation. |
| Mattapoisett
Concert, Sunday, October 29, 2006
This concert will be held Sunday evening 7:30
pm, at the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, 27 Church Street,
Mattapoisett, MA. Concert tickets $15
Take 195 eastbound to the Mattapoisett exit
(it's the next one after Fairhaven). The ramp will spit you out
southbound on North Street. Continue on North Street; you will
cross US 6 at a stop light, then come to a stop sign at the corner
of North & Church. Turn right onto Church Street. The church
is in the next block. There's a small parking lot behind the church
- to get there, continue past the church and take a right onto
Barstow Street; just beyond the white horse shed, turn right into
the parking lot. |
| WaterFire "CD
Release" Concert
September 23, 2006. 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
RISD Auditorium, Providence.
 |
The Providence Mandolin
Orchestra will give two free public performances at the September
23 WaterFire, to celebrate the release of their new CD, Spectrum.
The performances will take place in the RISD Auditorium at
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
The PMO, directed by Mark Davis, will perform contemporary compositions
by Clarice Assad, Claudio Mandonico, Yasuo Kuwahara, Jose Barroso,
and others. |
|
| June
10 concert with Carlo Aonzo
June 10, 2006. 8:00 p.m. St. Martin's Church,
50 Orchard Ave, Providence. $15 ($10 seniors/students)
I. |
|
Suite No. 6 |
Hermann Ambrosius |
Concierto de Media LunaJose Luis
Barroso |
|
Concerto per orchestra a pizzico |
Victor Kioulaphides |
Concerto in A Minor, Op. 3, No.
6 (RV 356) |
Antonio Vivaldi |
Carlo
Aonzo, mandolin |
|
II. |
|
|
|
Prelude No. 10, Op. 112 |
Raffaele Calace |
Carlo
Aonzo, mandolin |
|
|
|
Burlesca |
Silvio Ranieri |
Serenata |
Fabrizio Guidice |
Kaze |
Katsumi Nagoaka |
Carlo
Aonzo, mandolin, Mark Davis, guitar |
|
Song for My Father |
Clarice Assad |
|
|
Concerto in C Major (RV 425) |
Antonio Vivaldi |
| Carlo
Aonzo, mandolin |
|
Program Notes
By Robert A. Margo
Italy
is the ancestral home of the mandolin, spiritually and literally. It
was in Italy that the “mandolino” and “mandoline” first
made their appearances in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The mandolino had six courses (double strings) tuned mostly in
fourths while the mandoline had four courses tuned in fifths like
the modern mandolin (or violin). Vivaldi wrote his “mandolin” works
such as the familiar RV 425 for the six course instrument although
these are frequently performed on the modern mandolin. Originally
for violin (from the collection of concerti known as “L’estro
Armonico”) the “Concerto in A Minor” also transfers
beautifully to the modern mandolin.
By the mid nineteenth century the mandolin had
fallen into disuse in European art music but remained popular as
a folk instrument in Italy. A revival ensued in the late
nineteenth century, and the mandolin soon became one of the most
widely played instruments in the Old and New Worlds. Virtuosos
burst on the scene, tutors written, ensembles of all sizes and
types formed, and vast quantities of music published. Perhaps
the greatest of all the early twentieth century mandolinists was
the Italian Raffaele Calace who performed widely and also personally
constructed some of the finest instruments of the era. If
this were not enough Calace composed many of the mandolin’s
greatest works, perhaps none greater than a series of unaccompanied
preludes -- immensely attractive musical jewels, fiendishly difficult,
of which No. 10 is one of the most spectacular.
If mandolin-cum-guitar conjures up
an image of the proverbial tourist version of “O Sole Mio” the
combination is also responsible for chamber music of a very high
order. Silvio Ranieri, who was born in Italy but spent most
of his creative life in Belgium, was a performer of the first rank
and an important composer. Ranieri’s “Burlesca” is
characteristic of his music, full of rapid scales, elegant phrases,
and Italianate charm. Fabrizio Guidice’s “Serenata” is
another work in a traditional style while Kaze Nagaoka’s “Kaze” draws
on popular musical idioms of Brazil.
At the other end of the ensemble spectrum resides
the mandolin orchestra, modeled after the bowed strings variety.
Calace dreamed of a time when mandolin family instruments would
figure prominently into symphonic music, a dream that despite important
counter-examples from Mahler to Boulez has yet to be realized. However,
orchestras of plucked string instruments thrive today in Europe,
the United States, and Japan, and much new music has been written. Today’s
concert features one of the classics of the modern repertoire,
Hermann Ambroisus’ “Suite No. 6” written in a
friendly, neo-baroque style. Jose Luis Barroso’s “Concierto
de Media Luna” evokes a Spanish atmosphere with its allusions
to flamenco harmonies and rhythms. The concert also highlights
a remarkable new work, Victor Kioulaphides’ “Concerto
per orchestra a pizzico”, composed for the Dutch ensemble
Het Consort and given its United States premiere in February by
the Providence Mandolin Orchestra. Written for the Providence
Mandolin Orchestra, Clarice Assad’s “Song for My Father” is
filled with the subtle harmonies and infectious rhythms of the
composer’s native Brazil.
Born in Savona, Italy, Carlo Aonzo is one of
the world’s premier performers on mandolin. From a musical
family, his first teacher was his father, and he went on to study
with Ugo Orlandi at the Cesare Pollini Conservatory of Padua. He
has received numerous awards including the Vivaldi prize of the
Vittorio Pitzianti National Mandolin Competition in Venice and
first prize in the Walnut Valley National Mandolin Contest in Winfield,
Kansas. Aonzo has toured throughout northern Europe, Italy, and
the United States as a soloist or with chamber ensembles and orchestras.
He has recorded Paganini’s complete works for mandolin on
period instruments (“Integrale per Amandorlino e Chitarra
Francese”). Other recordings with guitarist Beppe Gambetta
and mandolinist David Grisman have featured the works of early
twentieth century Italian composers (“Serenata” and “Traversata”).
For Mel Bay Publishers he has recorded a video concert (“Carlo
Aonzo: Classical Mandolin Virtuoso”) and his work was also
featured in “Mandolin 2000”.
|
| June
10 Workshop with Carlo Aonzo
June 10, 2006. 1:00 p.m. 302 Morgan Hall, Wheeler
School, 216 Hope Street, Providence. Workshop price $30. Workshop
plus concert discount price $40.
Carlo's
workshops are filled with knowledge and inspiration about the instrument.
Take advantage of this opportunity to extent your technique and
musicality. Carlo's unique teaching style accomodates players of
widely differing levels of experience.
Directions
to Wheeler School, Providence, RI |
| June
17 First Parish Church in Concord, MA
The concert will be held Saturday evening 7:30
pm, June 17, 2006. Concert tickets $15.
I. |
|
Suite No. 6 |
Hermann Ambrosius |
Song of Japanese Autumn |
Yasuo Kuwahara |
Song for My Father |
Clarice Assad |
Concerto per orchestra a pizzico |
Victor Kioulaphides |
Concerto in C Major (RV 425) |
Antonio Vivaldi |
Robert
Paul Sullivan, mandolin |
|
II. |
|
American Songs |
Traditional |
Robert
Paul Sullivan, mandocello |
|
Abendmusik: Nocturne de Salon,
Op. 227 |
Ferdinando Carulli |
Summer Music |
Robert Martel |
Robert
Paul Sullivan and Mark Davis, guitar |
|
|
|
Concierto de Media Luna |
Jose Luis Barroso |
Chagall’s Mandolin |
Hankus Netsky |
Robert
Paul Sullivan, mandolin |
|
Program Notes
By Robert A. Margo
This concert features two of the classics of
the modern repertoire for mandolin orchestra, Hermann Ambrosius’ “Suite
No. 6” written in a friendly, neo-baroque style; and Yasuo
Kuwahara’s “Song of Japanese Autumn”, a neo-romantic
work whose cadenza is spiced by pentatonic scales and arpeggios
that hazily evoke the music of the composer’s homeland. Jose
Luis Barroso’s “Concierto de Media Luna” wears
its Spanish origins on its sleeves with pointed references to flamenco
harmonies and rhythms. The concert also features a remarkable new
work, Victor Kioulaphides’ “Concerto per orchestra
a pizzico”, composed for the Dutch ensemble Het Consort and
given its United States premiere in February by the Providence
Mandolin Orchestra. Written for the Providence Mandolin Orchestra,
Clarice Assad’s “Song for My Father” is filled
with the subtle harmonies and infectious rhythms of the composer’s
native Brazil.
Robert Martel is a classical guitarist and composer
from Massachusetts. His works for mandolin orchestra have been
performed widely, including by the Providence Mandolin Orchestra,
which included his piece “Sky Colored Lake“ on its
recording “Songs Without Words“. True to its title,
Martel’s “Summer Music” for guitar duo features
breezy melodies, wide open harmonies, and relaxed rhythms.
A multi-instrumentalist, composer, and scholar,
Hankus Netsky teaches improvisation and Jewish music at the New
England Conservatory. He is the founder and director of the Klezmer
Conservatory Band, an internationally renowned Yiddish music ensemble.
He has composed extensively for film and television, and has collaborated
with such artists as Itzhak Perlman, Robin Williams, Joel Grey,
and Theodore Bikel. Inspired by the painter’s use of the
mandolin (as, for example, in Chagall’s portrait of his brother
David), Netsky’s four movement concerto deftly mixes both
Yiddish sounds and improvisation (by the soloist).
Robert
Paul Sullivan studied guitar with Hibbard Perry, Rey de la Torre,
Oscar Gighlia, and Emilio Pujol, among others. He has taught at
the University of Rhode Island, Syracuse University, Clark University,
and the New England Conservatory. A master of all instruments plucked,
his recent performances have included the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s
opening Gala concert of Mahler's Symphony No. 8 with conductor
James Levine in Boston and New York; Boston Celebrity Series; Alea
III; New Hampshire Symphony Orchestra; Rhode Island Symphony Orchestra;
Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra; Boston Ballet; Boston Opera Company;
Musica Viva, and Broadway productions of Chicago, Ragtime, Fiddler
on the Roof, and Man of La Mancha. Several of Sullivan’s
students have gone onto major careers, including John Muratore
and Hopkinson Smith.
Directions
to First Parish Church, Concord, MA |
Arts
in the Village
Saturday, April 29, 2006. 7:30 p.m.
Goff Hall
The Arts in the Village concert series is sponsored by the Rehoboth Antiquarian
Society and is supported in part by a grant from the Rehoboth Cultural
Council, a local agency that is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural
Council, a state agency.
Goff Memorial Hall
124 Bay State Rd, Rehoboth, MA
$12 Adults, $10 Seniors, $5 Children & Students
Season Pass $50 Adults, $40 Seniors
Directions
to the Goff Hall |
Spring
Fling
Friday, March 24, 2006.
7 :00 to 8:00pm
Holiday Inn
31 Hampshire Street
Mansfield, MA 02048
Directions
to the Holiday Inn
Tamara Volskaya and Anatoliy Trofimov
On February 25, 2006 the Providence Mandolin
Orchestra will be performing a free concert at the Providence
Public Library with Tamara Volskaya and Anatoliy Trofimov at
2:00 p.m. This concert will feature the American premiere of
Concerto for Plucked String Orchestra by Victor Kioulaphides.
Directions
to the Providence Public Library |
|