Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY)

 - Class of 1972

Page 104 of 136

 

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 104 of 136
Page 104 of 136



Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 103
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Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 105
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Page 104 text:

Eastman Philharmonia Bruno Maderna, Conductor April 16, 1972 PROGRAM IBERIA, Images Pour Orchestre No. 2 Claude Debussy I, Par les rues et par les cheminS II, Les parfums de la nuit iii. Le matin dim iouf de We BIOCRAMMA Bruno Maderna IWorld premiereb FIRST SYMPHONY, Opus 38 tSpringJ Robert Schumann I, Andante un poco maestoso - Allegro ITl0lt0 vivace II. Larghetto III. Scherzo: Molto vivace IV, Allegro animato e graZi0SO W' -afrs 1-di QUIK 'UP' In BIOCRAMMA Bruno Mad h i , , erna as sought to realize in music the lim itless dimensions existing in one obiect or abstraction. There are three contin uous sections - A, B, C - based on the same material in contrastin ' s , . - - or OH Canva ' - feels that any work set down in musical notation, IH Words' - ' - develops its own form. ln paraphrase, all forms or Varian ts of Organiiiation . . be recognize ' , , 8 Organi- have alwa s exist d, t t be d scovered as new but oI1lY to I 5 zation. Mr. Maderna describes the overall mood of the work as one of alive- Througlhout BTOORARAMA all sound Ipitchj is fixed. Little frfeiffsagn ness , evolving mainly from the knowledge that it was being writt f II I ' ' the duration o Cer 31 Young people and to be Performed by' them, en or a owed the players except Occaslonal leeway In tlv at the ' , b t these are IT105 BIOCRAMMA does not employ standard musical forms. Mr. Maderna Sag? and the order of notes In other passages u con uctor's discretion at the moment of performanfe- 100 I jus' I of I 95- a F R04 C ora trei ent I wee of I sce bar i inis Eas 'I out one I ver per I mil wht nor l Slri cal exq Onlj E lv 1 Ibe, I Wis S011

Page 103 text:

rke Cambia Keith Foley Bill Watson lnny G0lSon Ee R0bl1'lS0n Lance Rubin ION Radway ,liver Nelson Frank Zappa don johnson lharlie Parker aarlie Lagond ck Mangiong 31 bi' lack End Ted Piltzecker 1 Doug Walter Traditional Oliver Nelson aj' Repaying its debt to him for having gotten the group officially started, the Jazz Ensemble led lack End in his soth Anniversary Premiere of his piece for Soloist and Jazz Ensemble on April 14 and 15th with the composer conducting. Mr. Beck ably supplied the solo trap set and timpani parts. Sounding a bit dated pro- grammed next to Ray Wright's students' latest arrangements, the piece was en- hanced by Mr. Beclds professional playing especially on the timpani cadenzas. As usual the Theater was packed both nights. Funny how the Iazz Program got the extra alumni concerts this year. But it did give a chance for some more excellent arrangements by Ray's students to be performed and con- tinued to demonstrate the popularity and success of the Contemporary Media and Jazz Studies Department. burden of playing all the 99



Page 105 text:

7 Canvaii I on . 5' forganillllol O I a erecogftllt it Little fl are mo 5 , freedflmaqi gain P ' OI Cell, gl the Not every concert can make a point, musical or otherwise. Music often just is , good, bad, indifferent. In addition to making some telling musical points that verged on the edge of inspired, the Italian composer-conductor Bruno Maderna conducted the 95-piece Eastman Philharmonia yesterday afternoon in Eastman Theater in a program that sharply defined three points which frequently affect the Rochester musical community. One: Maderna's own Biogramma, one of 22 commissions in commem- oration of Eastman School's 50th anniversary, strongly pointed to a strong trend in the contemporary music so frequently performed but so consist- ently ignored here: the crafting of accessible music. Two: Maderna's conducting, after only five two-hour rehearsals this week, proved that communication between conductor and orchestra is one of those elusive, intangible things that, when all goes right, musicians tran- scend themselves and great ideas emerge between notes, staves and barlines. Three: The artistic success of a concert like yesterday's cannot be dim- inished much by the small number of people tabout 3005 scattered through Eastman Theater on a rainy afternoon. The Philharmonia responded to Maderna's piece and presence with some outstanding solo work and the kind of professional rapport which leads one to Point Two. With all the pressure of numerous concerts for their school's sorh anni- versary, Eastman Philharmonia players have had little chance to learn and perform works in the standard orchestral repertory this season. In both Claude Debussy's three-movement Iberia and Robert Schu- mann's Spring Symphony they got a chance to work with a conductor who was more sympathetic to them than to all the musical values more normally associated with these two standard works. The first movements in both tspecifically, the section called In the Streets and Byways and the fanfare prefaced Allegrol seemed a little clini- cal for my taste. Not that Maderna did not fire them with energetic, even exquisitely rounded rubato and all the care that a lesser conductor could Only think about, let alone muster, But the Debussy was too much a literal slice of life approach, not near- ly languid enough, too lusty to evoke the state of mind associated with the Iberian peninsula as Debussy conceived it. 'The closing figures to the first theme group in the Schumann were like- WISS 500 intensely driven to allow them to spread a graceful umbrella of Soun , if f -WFWEYJ. ' A Q All In spite of these minor critical carpings, Maderna roused his youngimu- sicians to frequent musical heights that, over a year's careful observations, are much too infrequent. Members of the Philharmonia obviously respond ed strongly to Madernafs confident but deferential manners toward them and his striking well-prepared musicianship. q V And as for Point Three? Obviously, with high-quality music offered in a free Sunday afternoon concert, those musical Rochesterians who thunk they have stayed in out of the rain, haven't. Theodore Price Democrat and Chronicle 101

Suggestions in the Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) collection:

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 116

1972, pg 116

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 75

1972, pg 75

Eastman School of Music - Score Yearbook (Rochester, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 107

1972, pg 107


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