Evocative Elegance Concert Programme

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kamloopssymphony.com 250.372.5000 NOVEMBER 12 SATURDAY 7:30PM Evocative Elegance

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Message from the Executive Director

Good evening Music Lovers, On behalf of all of us at the Kamloops Symphony, welcome to Evocative Elegance!

With a newly elected board of directors, and our Season underway, the Kamloops Symphony has a many exciting things on the horizon.

Of major note is our imminent move into Kelson Hall, a newly renovated educational and administrative space for us and our colleagues at Western Canada Theatre. This new facility on the 300 block of St. Paul Street has been made possible by the incredibly generous support of Ron & Rae Fawcett, and Kelson Group. Kelson Hall will help us provide greater opportunity for musical education here in Kamloops, by allowing us to expand our Music School programming, providing a new permanent rehearsal space for our KSO Chorus, and eventual extending benefits to the community through various music groups.

Also important, the new facility is a concrete step towards the creation of new arts centre for Kamloops, one that will eventually house our Symphony performances and be a key amenity to citizens of the city. So please join me and thanking Ron & Rae for their incredible gift to us and WCT, and their continued support of the Arts here in Kamloops. We can’t wait to invite you to visit Kelson Hall when it’s ready.

With appreciation,

Kamloops Symphony

The Kamloops Symphony wishes to acknowledge that this concert is taking place on Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc territory within the traditional lands of the Secwépemc Nation.

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Kamloops Symphony Society

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

John McDonald, ICD.D | President

Steve Powrie | Vice President

Tyler Klymchuk | Treasurer

Kait Methot | Secretary

Kathy Collier

Lisa Fuller Christy Gauley Lucille Gnanasihamany

Gabriele Klein Rod Michell Sydney Takahashi

Simon Walter

HONOURARY LIFE MEMBERS

Bonnie Jetsen

Art Hooper

Proud Member of Orchestras Canada, the national association for Canadian orchestras

ADMINISTRATION

Executive Director Daniel Mills Music Director Dina Gilbert Office Administrator Sue Adams Operations Coordinator Sam Bregoliss Marketing Coordinator Ryan Noakes Librarian

Sally Arai

Orchestra Personnel Manager Olivia Martin

Production Assistant Adrien Fillion Chorus Master Tomas Bijok Collaborative Pianist Daniela O’Fee

Music Director Emeritus Bruce Dunn

MUSIC DIRECTOR

Music Director Dina Gilbert is a Canadian conductor passionate about educating audiences of all ages and broadening their appreciation of orchestral music through innovative collaborations. This commitment, as well as Dina Gilbert’s extensive repertoire—often highlighting Canadian and women composers—have shaped her career and the orchestras she has worked with over the years. Regularly invited to conduct in Canada and overseas, Dina Gilbert attracts critical acclaim for her energy, precision and versatility.

In addition to conducting the Kamloops Symphony, highlights of the 2022-2023 season include debuts with the Orchestre national des Pays de la Loire and a tour with the Orchestre national de Metz in France and return invitations with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal and the Orchestre symphonique de Québec. As the Principal Conductor of the Orchestre des Grands Ballets Canadiens de Montréal, she will perform Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring and Prokofiev’s Cinderella.

Over the years, Dina has been invited by leading Canadian orchestras including the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, the Orchestre Métropolitain, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the Hamilton Philharmonic and the Orchestre symphonique de Québec. She also conducted performances in Oregon and North-Carolina, in Colombia, Spain, France, and in Niigata and Tokyo.

Her innate curiosity towards nonclassical musical genres and her willingness to democratize classical music have brought her to conduct the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and the Orchestre national de Lyon in several Hip Hop Symphonic

programs featuring renowned Hip hop artists I AM, MC Solaar, Youssoupha and Bigflo & Oli. Dina is also renowned for her expertise in conducting multidisciplinary projects such as cineconcerts performances (The Red Violin, The Artist, E.T. the Extraterrestrial) as well as Video Game soundtracks (The Montreal Video Game Symphony, Outlast, The Amazing Spiderman 2).

As the Music Director of the Orchestre symphonique de l’Estuaire (20172022), Dina expanded the symphonic repertoire and has reached thousands of children with her interactive and participative Conducting 101 workshops As the founder and artistic director of the Ensemble Arkea, a Montreal-based chamber orchestra, she premiered over thirty works from emerging Canadian composers. From 2013 to 2016, Dina Gilbert was the assistant conductor of the Orchestre symphonique de Montreal and Maestro Kent Nagano, also assisting guest conductors including Zubin Mehta, Sir Roger Norrington and Lawrence Foster.

Dina Gilbert earned her doctorate from the Université de Montréal and she polished her skills in masterclasses with Kenneth Kiesler, Pinchas Zukerman, Neeme Järvi and the musicians from the Kritische Orchester in Berlin. Awarded the Opus Prize of “Découverte de l’année” in 2017, Dina Gilbert was also named as one of the “50 personnalités créant l’extraordinaire au Québec” in 2018 by the Urbania Magazine. She has also received support from the Canada Arts Council, the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec and from the PèreLindsay Foundation.

Dina Gilbert

Orchestra

FIRST VIOLIN

Cvetozar Vutev concertmaster *

Elyse Jacobson assistant concertmaster *

Susan Aylard

Jiten Beairsto Fang Chen (Lina) Han Carol Hur Adora Wong I-Hsin Wu

SECOND VIOLIN

Boris Ulanowicz* Francisco Barradas Narumi Higuchi Haley Leach Natalie Monolov Angela Ruthven

VIOLA Ashley Kroecher* John Kastelic Tony Kastelic Calvin Yang

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CLARINET Sally Arai* Krystal Morrison BASSOON Olivia Martin* Karmen Doucette

HORN Sam McNally* Heather Walker

TRUMPET Mark D’Angelo* Jeremy Vint

TROMBONE Wade Dorsey++ Cindy Hogeveen Rod Simmons

TIMPANI Caroline Bucher*

PERCUSSION Caroline Bucher HARP Naomi Cloutier*

*Principal +Acting Principal ++Substitute Principal

Geoff & Judith Benson | concertmaster

Rod Michell | assistant concertmaster

Gabriele Klein | principal second violin June McClure | principal viola Anonymous | principal cello Eleanor Nicoll | principal flute John & Joyce Henderson | principal clarinet Kelvin Barlow | principal bassoon Hugh & Marilyn Fallis | principal trumpet

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PROGRAMME

Lili Boulanger ..........D’un matin de printemps (arr. Camille Pépin)

Claude Debussy ......Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (arr. Yoon Jae Lee)

Ina Boyle ..................Concerto for Violin and Orchestra

I. Lento ma non troppo—poco piu lento

II. Adagio—Animato e crescendo

III. Allegro ma non troppo—A tempo, tranquillo—Tempo primo—Teneramente e tranquillo —Tempo primo

INTERMISSION

Philip Glass..............Concerto grosso

I. II. III. Samy Moussa ..........Violin Concert “Adrano”

I. circa 48—Piu mosso circa 58

II. Cadenza—senza misura

III. Circa 96

IV. Epilogue—circa 48

PERFORMANCE
Dina Gilbert, Conductor | Andrew Wan, Violin
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ARTIST

Andrew Wan

Andrew Wan was named concertmaster of the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal (OSM) in 2008. As a soloist, he has performed worldwide under conductors such as Rafael Payare, Kent Nagano, Maxim Vengerov, Vasily Petrenko, Bernard Labadie, Carlo Rizzi, Peter Oundjian, Xian Zhang, Michael Stern and James DePreist. He has played chamber music with artists such as the Juilliard Quartet, Vadim Repin, Marc-André Hamelin, Daniil Trifonov, Menahem Pressler, Jörg Widmann, Emanuel Ax, Johannes Moser, Arabella Steinbacher, James Ehnes, and Gil Shaham as a frequent artist at the Seattle Chamber Music, La Jolla Summerfest, Ottawa Chamberfest, Toronto Summer Music, Orford Musique, St. Prex, Colorado College and Olympic festivals. Wan performs regularly as guest concertmaster for the Pittsburgh, Houston, Indianapolis, National Arts Centre, Toronto and Vancouver Symphony orchestras. Wan’s discography includes Grammy-nominated and Juno, Felix and Opus awardwinning releases with the Seattle Chamber Music Society, New York’s Metropolis Ensemble, Charles Richard-Hamelin and the New Orford String Quartet. In the fall of 2015, he released a live recording of all three Saint-Saëns violin concerti with the OSM and Kent Nagano to wide critical acclaim. His recent live album of works for violin and orchestra by Bernstein, Moussa and Ginastera with Nagano and the OSM won the 2021 Juno award for Best Classical Recording for Large Ensemble.

Wan enjoys a deep collaborative relationship with Canadian pianist Charles Richard-Hamelin, silver medalist of the 17th Chopin International Piano Competition, with whom he has recorded all ten Beethoven sonatas for piano and violin. Their second album of Beethoven’s 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 5th Sonatas garnered the 2022 Juno award for Best Classical Recording for Small Ensemble.

Wan graduated from The Juilliard School with Bachelor of Music, Master of Music and Artist Diploma degrees and is currently a member of the New Orford String Quartet, Associate Professor of Violin at the Schulich School of Music at McGill University, Artistic Director of the Prince Edward County Chamber Music Festival and for the 2017–18 season was Artistic Partner of the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra. In 2019, he won the Part-Time Teaching Award at the Schulich School of Music.

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PROGRAMME NOTES

Lili Boulanger (1889–1918)

D’un matin de printemps (1918) (arr. Camille Pépin)

This is the second occasion that the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra has had the pleasure of presenting the music of Lili Boulanger. Yes, that’s right, Lili Boulanger (1893–1918), not Nadia Boulanger (1887–1979), Lili’s much better-known older sister. She was a composer too, but also a composition teacher, through whose influential hands many of the Twentieth Century’s most renowned and productive composers passed. Lili, however, spent most of her life in ill health and lived and composed in the expectation of an early death. That death, at age 24, left much of her potential unfulfilled, yet in her short life she achieved much. Most notably, at the age of nineteen she won the Prix de Rome, which is France’s long standing and most prestigious award for composition. That puts her in a company which includes Berlioz, Gounod, Bizet and Debussy to name only a few. And, most significantly, she was the first woman to win.

D’un matin de printemps (On a morning in spring) is a brief, busily energetic and joyful evocation of nature’s renewal of life. The sprightly opening theme is carried by flutes accompanied by a quietly rhythmic figure in the upper strings. Other

instruments take up the melody and vary it in a lively and richly orchestrated section. Then gradually, the strings develop a slower but an increasingly more emotional take on Spring’s arrival which is then curtailed by a return to the opening material, though not yet in its original form and key. That more emphatic restatement Boulanger keeps until the climax of her piece, just before its assertive ending.

Lili completed D’un matin de printemps in the last months of her life, along with a companion piece, D’un soir triste (On a sad evening). It is not clear which came first, but it is hard to avoid speculating about the relationship between the two in the context of her imminent death. If D’un soir triste is her final musical statement is it her sad but realistic revision of the vitality and energy we experience as we listen to D’un matin de printemps? If D’un matin de printemps is her final work we are then free to take it as a courageously heroic affirmation of life in the face of impending death. It is likely we will never know. What we do know is that we have encountered and then lost a wonderfully expressive and absolutely distinctive musical voice.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Claude Debussy (1862–1918)

Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (1892–94) (arr. Yoon Jae Lee)

Debussy was born at St. Germain-enLaye near Paris in 1862 and died, aged 55, in Paris in 1918. His early years were unsettled so he got little formal education until he was accepted into the Paris Conservatoire in 1872. In his piano lessons there he showed promise of a career as a virtuoso; however, starting in 1880, he showed more interest in composition, and in 1884 he won the coveted Prix de Rome. His career as a composer still took time to develop as he experimented with different forms (e.g. opera) and with the influence of competing styles (e.g. Wagner). Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (or Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun), was Debussy’s first major venture in writing for orchestra. In many ways, it is the clearest early sign of those distinctive features of Debussy’s influential style that helped transform music in the early Twentieth Century through his use of sound-colour (or timbre) to shape his music rather than through traditional developmental structures like sonata form. It was this aspect of his style that gave rise to the term “impressionism” in music, as an analogy to the similarly named movement in painting that used light in a similar fashion.

Debussy’s Prélude is his musical reaction to the poem “Afternoon of a Faun” by poet Stephane Mallarmé,

who was a friend of his. As the word “prelude” implies, Debussy’s original intention was to compose other movements, namely an Interlude and a Finale, but he decided to focus all his musical ideas into just the one movement. The original work is scored for three flutes, two oboes, english horn, two clarinets (A and B-flat), two bassoons, four horns, two harps, two crotales (tuned brass cymbals that are struck), and strings. However, as you will see from the number of musicians on stage, the KSO will be performing a reduced orchestration arrangement by Yoon Jae Lee which allows us to hear this beautiful work without the necessity of, for example: two harps. Debussy’s own description of the work is instructive: “The music of this prelude is a very free illustration of Mallarmé’s beautiful poem. By no means does it claim to be a synthesis of it. Rather there is a succession of scenes through which pass the desires and dreams of the faun in the heat of the afternoon. Then, tired of pursuing the timorous flight of nymphs and naiads, he succumbs to intoxicating sleep, in which he can finally realize his dreams of possession in universal Nature.” The palette of orchestration and instrumental voicings Debussy uses is varied and sophisticated as we follow the prelude’s main melody

PROGRAMME NOTES

from instrument to instrument, from solo to duo, from unison to solo, every combination expressing a different atmosphere from the same melodic element.

What did Mallarmé think of Debussy’s intention to the use of his poem for a musical composition? According to another poet, Paul Valéry—not much! Mallarmé believed the verbal music

of his poem was more than adequate on its own. However, as a friend and fellow artist, he did attend the premiere when Debussy invited him, and expressed nothing but enthusiasm for Debussy’s composition saying: “it presents no dissonance with my text, but goes much further, into nostalgia and into light…”

Ina Boyle (1889–1967)

Concerto for Violin and Orchestra (1932–33)

The Irish composer Ina Boyle (1889–1967) was born near Enniskerry in County Wicklow and lived her entire life in her family home. She is one of those talented women composers who struggled, most often unsuccessfully, to have her works performed or published, and who, as a result, have for decades been ignored by music history. Although a few of her works, including The Magic Harp (1919), and her Symphony No.1, Glencree (1924–27) did receive acknowledgement and first performances during her lifetime, the majority of her compositions remain unpublished. It is only in recent years that the true breadth of her talents has been rediscovered. This includes choral and chamber compositions and opera, ballet and vocal music, as well as orchestral works such as the beautiful Violin Concerto on tonight’s programme.

Her earliest music lessons were with her governess and with her father, a clergyman whose hobby was making violins. When her interests turned to composition she took lessons in counterpoint and harmony at first with noted English musicians temporarily resident at Trinity College in Dublin. After the success of her early orchestral rhapsody, The Magic Harp, the new impetus to her career required she find a new teacher. She contacted Ralph Vaughan Williams, and, starting in 1923, Boyle took the steamship across the Irish sea whenever her family duties allowed and took lessons with him, focusing on whatever works she was composing at the time. Although the outbreak of World War Two put an end to this travelling, Vaughan Williams remained an admirer and strong supporter of her work.

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PROGRAMME NOTES

Ina Boyle, continued

Boyle’s Concerto for violin and orchestra (1932–33) is brief and deeply moving. The concerto is dedicated to the memory of her mother, who died in 1932. The emotion it evokes, the wistful and nostalgic feelings punctuated by more openly passionate passages from the violin, is likely a reflection of these strong personal associations. There are three movements each of which is quite short—in fact when she took the work to one of her lessons with Vaughan Williams he suggested that she dispense with the breaks between movements, which she did. The result is a continuous work more along the lines of her teacher’s The Lark Ascending. The first movement, Lento ma non troppo, begins with a sombre orchestral melody, responded to passionately

by the violin. The same tune is heard later accompanied by the violin, the music growing to a climax, then with the solo violin leading into the second movement. The Adagio continues the contemplative and heart-felt exchange between violin and orchestra. The third movement, Allegro ma non troppo, presents a more energetic conclusion to the concerto. Boyle draws on her own earlier setting of a Christmas carol, ”All Souls’ Flower,” she had written for mother in 1928. She uses the form of a rondo—a lively tune that is repeated with musical episodes in between each repetition. These episodes are based on the carol tune and feature the violin both solo and with different orchestral combinations, with a joyful sound like bells that fades to a gentle conclusion.

Philip Glass (1937)

Concerto Grosso (1992)

Philip Glass was born in 1937 and grew up in Baltimore. He studied at the University of Chicago, the Juilliard School and in Aspen with French composer Darius Milhaud. Then, dissatisfied with much of what was considered as modern music in North America, he moved to Europe, where he studied with the legendary teacher Nadia Boulanger (older sister of composer Lili Boulanger on tonight’s programme) who also taught American composers Aaron Copland, Virgil Thomson and Quincy Jones.

Glass also worked closely with the sitar virtuoso and composer Ravi Shankar. He returned to New York in 1967 and formed the Philip Glass Ensemble— seven musicians playing keyboards and a variety of woodwinds, amplified and fed through a mixer.

From the perspective of the 21st Century it is clear that Glass (who is now 85) is one of the most successful serious American composers of our time, commanding an international audience that includes admirers

PROGRAMME NOTES

Philip Glass, continued of pop and jazz as well as classical music. Through his operas, his symphonies, his compositions for his own ensemble, and his wide-ranging collaborations with artists that include Twyla Tharp, Allen Ginsberg, Leonard Cohen and David Bowie, Philip Glass has had an unprecedented impact upon the musical and intellectual life of his times. In addition to his operas—“Einstein on the Beach,” “Satyagraha,” “Akhnaten,” among many others—which continue to play throughout the world’s leading theatres, Glass has written music for experimental theater and for Academy Award-winning motion pictures such as “The Hours.”

For most music lovers Philip Glass’s name is forever linked with the term “minimalism,” a new style of music that emerged in the late 20th Century. The essence of minimalist style is a series of repeating patterns that undergo changes by the addition or subtraction of different instrumental colours, sometimes with distinctly contrasting dynamics, shifts in speed and changes in harmonic pattern. The effect can be atmospherically mesmerising, anticipatory and climactic. Glass himself does not like the term but prefers simply to describe himself as a composer of

“music with repetitive structures.”

The Concerto Grosso we hear tonight exhibits many of the characteristics of minimalist style.

A solo concerto, such as those by Boyle and Moussa on the programme tonight, explores the musical interaction between a single instrument like a violin and a larger instrumental group like an orchestra. A concerto grosso, in distinction, takes a small group of instruments (which in themselves already display musical potential) and develops their musical relationship with the larger orchestra. The concerto grosso form was widely used by composers in the 17th and 18th Centuries, before the solo concerto with its focus on the virtuoso performer became more popular. In this case, the use of the term Concerto Grosso by Glass is quite enigmatic, since over the three movements, each distinctive group of instruments—the woodwinds, brass and strings, even though playing their “solo” part, are all consistently playing at the same time, in this way, giving the responsibility to the performers, and to listeners also, to actually decide for each different section, which group is the featured one and which one is the accompaniment.

PROGRAMME NOTES

Samy Moussa is a Canadian composer and conductor. Born in Montreal in 1984, he has lived in Germany for over a decade and has conducted many of Europe’s finest orchestras in a repertoire that extends from classical to contemporary works. However, he remains very active in North America, with strong links to the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, with the Orchestre symphonique de Québec, and is at present Artist-in-Residence with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. As a composer he has had works commissioned by a range of American and European orchestras as well as by the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Montreal Symphony. His composition activities will not lessen any time soon as he has commissions from the Vienna Philharmonic and other orchestras, and his composing plans include an oratorio, “Antigone,” for contralto and chorus, a trombone concerto, and a flute concerto. Meanwhile, the conducting schedule continues to remain full.

Moussa has won a number of prizes for his compositions over the years. This violin concerto won him the Juno for best classical composition in 2021. The sub-title he has given to it, “Adrano,” is a reference to the ancient

fire god that the early occupants of Sicily believed lived beneath the volcano Mt. Etna and from which the composer drew inspiration when he visited it. There are four movements to the work of which the first and third are the more substantial ones. These two are separated by the second, a cadenza, and the work ends with an epilogue. The slow introduction with which the work begins features low flutes out of which the solo violin climbs in a serene ascending scale to which is added a more ominous tone from the double basses. The violin’s climax leads to a further slow section in turn leading to another, more intense, climax. The second movement is an accompanied cadenza, marked senza misura (meaning in free time) that features ethereal harmonics from the soloist, leading without pause into the third movement that is, by contrast, forward moving, fast and urgent. For an epilogue we hear a slightly different version of the concerto’s slow introduction that fades gradually to a quiet end. Our soloist tonight, Andrew Wan, was the soloist for the premiere of the concerto in 2019, with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal conducted by Kent Nagano.

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