SSO Goes to the Movies - A Night of Oscar® concert program

Page 1

Saskatoon Symphony Pops Series presented by

Build your dreams

GOES TO THE MOVIES!

CAR A NIGHT OF OSUS IC

AWARD-WINNING M Maestro Victor Sawa and the

Maestro Victor Sawa conductor

Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra

SATURDAY APRIL 2, 2011 TCU PLACE, SID BUCKWOLD THEATRE, 7:30 PM

saskatoonsymphony.org


Style for Life

This is an all green truck.

Saskatoon’s best green option is the simplest – All Green’s one cart, no sort residential curbside recycling system. Simply place all your recyclables in one cart and roll it to the street. We do the rest, with Saskatchewan’s first single stream recycling facility.

www.braidflooring.com #1–2301 Millar Avenue, Saskatoon, SK Ph: 306-244-1973

Choose to participate. Choose to recycle. Choose the All Green alternative!

4955 Braid SSO Ad_Nov2010.indd 1

Book & Music Sale

11/4/10 4:39 PM

April 7 – 16

Confederation Mall Saskatoon’s largest

BOOKS – MUSIC – VIDEOS – COLLECTIBLES fiction & non-fiction, hardcover & paperback, sheet music, records, audio cassettes, videotapes, CDs, DVDs, and collectibles

New stock daily – at fabulous prices!

PROCEEDS SUPPORT THE SASKATOON SYMPHONY Opening Fanfare: April 7, 10 am; more music performances April 11, 13, 15 (times vary)

For more information call or visit: SSO Office - 665-6414 or sale.wgpotter.com


meet the orchestra Violin 1 Michael Swan (Concertmaster) Martha Kashap (Assistant Concertmaster) Mary Lou Day Lillian Jen-Payzant Joan Savage Marcel van den Hurk Simon Fanner Maxim Pletnev Violin 2 Oxana Ossiptchouk (Principal) Karen Bindle Oriana Watt Sarah Tsoi Rosanne Daku Karen Ogle Sarah Tsoi Sophie McBean Viola James Legge (Principal) Saache Heinrich Jeremy Janzen Katie McBean Cello Scott McKnight John Payzant Bernadette Wilson Carman Rabuka Terry Sturge Christina Bakanec Bass Richard Carnegie (Principal) David Humphrey David Grosse Warren Hay David Pyra Flute Randi Nelson (Principal) Brenda Moats Jennifer McAllister

Oboe Erin Brophey (Principal, temporary) Kevin Junk Clarinet Margaret Wilson (Principal) Bradley Powell Alyssa Thompson Bassoon Peter Gravlin (Principal) Marie Sellar Horn Carol-Marie Cottin (Principal) Arlene Shiplett Dubrena Myroon Micajah Sturgess Trumpet Terry Heckman (Principal) Daniel Funk Frank Harrington Eric Woodsworth Trombone Don Schmidt (Principal) Brian Unverricht Dawn McLean Belyk Tuba Brent Longstaff Timpani Darrell Bueckert (Principal) Percussion Trent Reminger Brad Lister Mark Altman Will Martin Harp Cecile Denis Piano Lynn Ewing

1


meet maestro sawa Music Director / Conductor Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra

Victor Sawa is a triple threat of talent, experience and personal dynamism in the orchestral world. Now Music Director of the Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra, he holds similar positions with orchestras in Sudbury and Regina. He was previously Resident Conductor with the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra (19931997), Music Director with the North Bay Symphony, the Guelph Youth Orchestra and the Kitchener-Waterloo Orchestra. He also served as Principal Clarinet with the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony. He has been guest conductor for orchestras across the country.

2

Maestro Sawa has received many awards and honours, including three Canada Council awards for Conducting, a Grand Prix du Disque—Best Chamber Music Recording (Canadian Chamber Ensemble), a Grammy award (with the New England Ragtime Ensemble), and the Tanglewood Festival award for Outstanding Musician. A Montreal native, Mr. Sawa holds a Bachelor of Music with Distinction from McGill University and an Honours Masters of Music Performance from the New England Conservatory of Music and is also a graduate of the Pierre Monteux School for Advanced Conductors.


2011_SSO_FULL_page_ad_Final.pdf 1 1/21/2011 11:29:53 AM

Proud to support the

Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

1.800.667.7477 conexus.ca


April 2, 2011 7:30 p.m.

TCU Place, Sid Buckwold Theatre

Saskatoon Symphony Pops Series is presented by

Build your dreams

Maestro Victor Sawa, conductor

concert program Lawrence of Arabia (Maurice Jarre) Chariots of Fine (Vangelis) E. T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (John Williams) Moon River (Henry Mancini) The Pink Panther (Henry Mancini) Casablanca (Max Steiner) INTERMISSION Exodus (Ernest Gold) The Shadow of Your Smile (Johnny Mandel) Swan Lake (Pytor Tchaikovsky) Star Wars Suite (John Williams) Special thanks to Terry Stannard, Roxy Theatre, Rainbow Cinemas, Magic Lantern Theatres, Darren’s Music Place, Masala Model & Talent, Patrick Wolfe, TCU Place staff, and everyone who assisted with this event.

4


and the winner is . . . Lawrence of Arabia (1962) Maurice Jarre Best Music, Score - Substantially Original An epic film over 3 hours in length, director David Lean’s movie had ten nominations and won seven of them, including Best Picture and Best Original Score. Maurice Jarre’s score won out over another standout—Elmer Bernstein’s emotional music for To Kill a Mockingbird.

Chariots of Fire (1981) Vangelis Best Original Score The low-budget inspirational story of the running event from the 1924 Paris Olympics won Best Picture in a major upset over Warren Beatty’s Reds, which was highly-favoured to win. Vangelis’ throbbing score of rich electronic music remains one of the most memorable movie scores in Oscar history.

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) John Williams. Best Original Score Steven Spielberg’s science-fiction block– buster, which tells the story of an adorable creature from another world and his bond to a young boy, lost to the British biopic Gandhi, but the magical score netted a win for composer John Williams—his fourth Oscar.

Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) Henry Mancini Best Score - Dramatic or Comedy Picture; Best Original Song ‘Moon River’ lyrics by Johnny Mercer Blake Edwards’ retelling the Truman Capote story of eccentric Holly Golightly features one of Audrey Hepburn’s most-loved roles. Mancini’s music, with Mercer’s lyrics, not only won two Oscars but created a “standard” that still plucks at the heartstrings fifty years later.

The Pink Panther (1964) Henry Mancini Nominated Best Music Score Substantially Original Mancini’s playful score to this hilarious Blake Edwards movie has been reused in numerous sequels and remakes, and cartoons for the big screen and TV, it but lost to Disney musical Mary Poppins (itself overshadowed that year by the success of The Sound of Music, which had an adapted score). The big pink cool cat, with the same jazz-inspired music, still managed to nab an Oscar that year, for the animated short ‘The Pink Phink,’ – a re-working of the title sequence from the feature film.

Casablanca (1943) Max Steiner Nominated - Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture. While Casablanca (the most quotable movie of all time, some say) won the Best Picture Oscar, Steiner’s score came away with only a nomination, losing to The Song of Bernadette, in a huge field of sixteen nominees. Nonetheless, the score remains a classic. Max Steiner received a total of 26 Oscar nominations for Best Score during his lifetime, winning three times. ‘As Time Goes By,’ sung by Dooley Wilson (Sam) in the movie, was actually written in 1931 by Herman Hupfeld for the Broadway musical Everybody’s Welcome.

Exodus (1960) Ernest Gold. Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Besides winning the Oscar and two Grammy Awards, Gold’s dramatic music for this Otto Preminger war epic based on Leon Uris’s novel has been covered and remixed many times. A version by continued on p. 7

5


“Life’s Best Moments”

Furnished by

Garden Architecture & Design 315 Avenue A South . 306.651.2828 . www.gardenarchitecture.ca

`

Girls’ Night Out! Friday, April 15th @ 7:30pm Cava Caffé (at the farmer’s market)

tickets $50 ($20 charitable donation) Women’s mini-tradeshow, entertainment, silent auction, amazing food, and

For tickets call Lynn - 652-2240 Karen - 717-3454 SSO - 665-6414


and the winner is . . . Exodus, cont’d. from p. 5 piano duo Ferrante and Teicher rose to number 2 on the pop charts and the music became a vocal hit, with lyrics by Pat Boone. It even found its way into hiphop, sampled by Ice-T (‘Ice’s Exodus’), Nas, and T.I.

The Sandpiper (1965) Johnny Mandel Best Original Song ‘The Shadow of Your Smile’ - lyrics by Paul Francis Webster Also known as ‘Love Theme from The Sandpiper,’ this song also won the Grammy Award for Song of the Year in 1966 and remains far more popular than the soap opera-like Elizabeth Taylor/ Richard Burton movie it sprang from. It’s a ‘standard’ covered by the likes of Tony Bennett, Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis, Barbara Streisand and myriad of jazz vocalists. Among Mandel’s other notable hits is ‘Suicide is Painless,’ the theme from the movie and then TV series M*A*S*H.

Black Swan (2010) Clint Mansell, based on themes by Pyotr Tchaikovsky (uncredited) Score ruled ineligible by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Performed is a selection from Swan Lake, Mansell’s source material. The score for Darren Aronofsky’s psychological thriller set in the ballet world of ballet is sometimes as harrowing as the tale itself, but the legendary Swan Lake Theme features prominently throughout, sometimes in playful homage, at times bursting through with dramatic effect. Current AMPAS rules exclude scores that are “diluted by . . . preexisting music . . .” and thus Mansell’s own masterful work could not be nominated.

(cont’d) Star Wars (1977) John Williams Best Original Score Composer John Williams has 45 Oscar nominations and 5 wins thus far in his career. His iconic music for George Lucas’s space fantasy is reminiscent of Max Steiner’s symphonic scores and the main theme resembles composer Wolfgang Korngold’s composition for the 1942 movie Kings Row. It is one of the most widely recognized pieces of music of any genre. Williams also scored the rest of the original Star Wars trilogy, as well as the later three prequels. John Williams has served as the Principal Conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra, and is now its Laureate Conductor, leading it for several concerts each year.

Passion Live

with

Inspired live music performed with passion to transform your event into an experience of a lifetime.

www.saskatoonstringensemble.com

Ph: 306-292-6811

7


performed in the

Season Title Sponsor

BOX OFFICE

384-7727

www.persephonetheatre.org BMO 2010/2011 Season

Remai Arts Centre, 100 Spadina Crescent East S7K 0L3


Style for Life

This is an all green truck.

Saskatoon’s best green option is the simplest – All Green’s one cart, no sort residential curbside recycling system. Simply place all your recyclables in one cart and roll it to the street. We do the rest, with Saskatchewan’s first single stream recycling facility.

www.braidflooring.com #1–2301 Millar Avenue, Saskatoon, SK Ph: 306-244-1973

Choose to participate. Choose to recycle. Choose the All Green alternative!

4955 Braid SSO Ad_Nov2010.indd 1

Book & Music Sale

11/4/10 4:39 PM

April 7 – 16

Confederation Mall Saskatoon’s largest

BOOKS – MUSIC – VIDEOS – COLLECTIBLES fiction & non-fiction, hardcover & paperback, sheet music, records, audio cassettes, videotapes, CDs, DVDs, and collectibles

New stock daily – at fabulous prices!

PROCEEDS SUPPORT THE SASKATOON SYMPHONY Opening Fanfare: April 7, 10 am; more music performances April 11, 13, 15 (times vary)

For more information call or visit: SSO Office - 665-6414 or sale.wgpotter.com


Saskatoon Symphony Pops Series presented by

Build your dreams

GOES TO THE MOVIES!

CAR A NIGHT OF OSUS IC

AWARD-WINNING M Maestro Victor Sawa and the

Maestro Victor Sawa conductor

Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra

SATURDAY APRIL 2, 2011 TCU PLACE, SID BUCKWOLD THEATRE, 7:30 PM

saskatoonsymphony.org


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.