Concert
Autumn
November 20, 2022 2022/23 SEASON
BE A PART OF IT IN THE HEART OF IT. MSMNYC.EDU NEW YORK, NY admission@msmnyc.edu Manhattan School of Music
Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
Sunday, November 20, 2022, at 3:00 p.m.
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Concert Hall at Severance Music Center
Daniel Reith , conductor
LILI BOULANGER (1893–1918)
PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840–1893)
D’un soir triste (Of a Sad Evening)
SERGEI PROKOFIEV (1891–1953)
Violin Concerto in D major, Opus 35
I. Allegro moderato
II. Canzonetta: Andante
III. Finale: Allegro vivacissimo
MOSHI TANG, violin
INTERMISSION (20 minutes)
Excerpts from Romeo and Juliet, Opus 64
Madrigal
Minuet
Masks
Montagues and Capulets
Juliet, the Young Girl
Friar Laurence
Dance
Romeo and Juliet Before Parting
Dance of the Maids from the Antilles
Romeo at the Fountain
Morning Dance
Nurse
Death of Juliet
This performance is about 1 hour and 40 minutes in length. This performance will be broadcast on ideastream/WCLV Classical 90.3 FM on Sunday, January 8, 2023, at 4:00 p.m. It will re-air on Sunday, March 26, 2023, at 4:00 p.m. and Sunday, September 10, 2023, at 4:00 p.m.
3 2022–2023 Season
Introducing COYO Music Director Daniel Reith
As he begins his tenure in Cleveland, Daniel Reith looks to share the electrifying power of music he experienced while growing up in Germany.
Daniel Reith was raised in a small town in Southwest Germany, surrounded by apple trees, vineyards, and the foothills of the Black Forest mountains. He grew up in a non-musical family, however, his lack of exposure to the vast history of music only made the process of falling in love with it that much more exciting — discovering endless portals to alien realms, each filled with life-affirming experiences.
Daniel was three years old the first time music captured his interest, when his 10-year-old brother Manuel started piano lessons. Manuel only practiced for five minutes before each of his lessons at a standing keyboard and quickly abandoned the instrument. But Daniel picked up the melodies and began teaching himself. By age eight, Daniel asked his parents if he could take piano lessons at a local music school, and those lessons eventually led to his participation in youth piano competitions, first in Germany and later across Europe.
He later began attending concerts. When he was 15, he attended the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra’s performance of Shostakovich’s Tenth Symphony. Reith had gone with an interest in hearing Beethoven’s Fifth Piano Concerto, but the riveting Shostakovich ignited his dream of becoming a conductor.
“During this piece, I felt pressed into my chair,” Reith recalls. “I couldn’t breathe anymore. All my muscles stuck together, especially in the second movement … It was just incredible to feel the deepest depression of the first movement towards this grotesque, sarcastic ‘killing’ atmosphere of the second movement towards the triumphant end.”
Having been so moved by the symphony was an epiphany for Reith, and he saw conducting as a means to pursue more of these experiences. “I was just thinking, ‘What is this music doing to me?’ I couldn’t sleep for two nights after hearing that. … I was fascinated by how it could show me emotions that I have never felt before. … That was a moment for me where I thought I want to explore this music and discover all the different corners of it.”
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Reith hopes to provide COYO students with similarly electrifying experiences. During his own time in youth orchestras, he remembers being influenced by the conductors’ curiosity. “For me, the most inspiring conductors were the ones who shared their burning fascination for the repertoire with the orchestra. … This is exactly what I want it to be like for COYO. We will have a broad repertoire with very different styles in our season program, and use curiosity as the driving motor of all our work.”
He also hopes young musicians unlock the exciting and fulfilling treasures left behind by composers through music theory. “Music theory, for me, was always a very fun activity because I felt very enriched by feeling that I cracked the code of the piece. I was trying out different keys to the piece, and finally, I figured out how it was constructed, and I got an insight into the brain of the composer.”
But above all, Reith just hopes to create enriching experiences for young musicians that will last a lifetime, no matter what career path they pursue. “I think the awareness of being an individual within a larger group is an important lesson for one’s whole life. It would be impossible to distinguish between music-making and learning for life in general. Everything is music, and everything is life.”
— Lizzie Manno
5 2022–2023 Season
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Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
“
”
D’un soir triste (Of a Sad Evening)
Composed: 1918
BY Lili Boulanger
BORN
August 21, 1893
Paris, France
DIED
March 15, 1918
Mézy-sur-Seine, France
Lili Boulanger was surrounded by musical excellence from the moment she was born. Her father, Ernest, was a composer who won the Prix de Rome, the highest honor for aspiring French composers, and her mother, Raïssa, was a professional singer. Her grandfather, Frédéric, was a noted cellist, and her grandmother, Marie-Julie, a successful mezzo-soprano. Not to mention that her sister, Nadia, six years her senior, became one of the most celebrated teachers of musical composition.
However, Lili Boulanger did not live an easy life. She contracted a severe case of bronchial pneumonia and continued to suffer from ailments, leading to her death at age 24. Health issues aside, she was able to pursue composition studies and even studied with Paul Vidal, a respected conductor who taught at the Paris Conservatory. At the age of 19, she won the Prix de Rome, becoming the first woman composer to win the prize — an accolade that even Nadia failed to achieve after four attempts.
By the time she composed D’un soir triste in 1918, her health had significantly deteriorated. This piece and its companion, D’un matin de printemps (On a Spring Morning), were completed only with the help of Nadia. Despite the physical pains Lili faced, D’un soir triste captures an advanced ability to harness complex emotions. Filled with dusky hues, which paint a melancholy and foreboding picture, the work can even be described as dirge-like, with its decidedly solemn palette. But there are also moments of high drama in the strings and horns, as well as a sense of mystery and elusiveness. Knowing of Boulanger’s imminent death, one could interpret this work as an attempt to grapple with her own suffering, though the piece stands on its own as a dynamic and thoughtful portrait of longing, fear, and sadness.
Duration: 12 minutes
7 2022–2023 Season
Violin Concerto in D major, Opus 35
Composed: 1878
BY Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
BORN
There is no shortage of great masterpieces that met with negative criticism at their premiere, but few have fared worse than Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto. This may sound surprising, since this work — now one of the most popular of all concertos — has none of the revolutionary spirit of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring, Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung operas, or Beethoven’s heroic Third Symphony, to name just three works that generated heated controversies around the time they debuted. Yet, at its premiere, the Tchaikovsky concerto clashed with the expectations of people who had strong opinions about what a violin concerto ought to be like.
May 7, 1840 near Votkinsk, Russia
DIED
November 6, 1893
St. Petersburg, Russia
The great violinist and teacher Leopold Auer, for whom Tchaikovsky had written the concerto, rejected it. And the Viennese critic Eduard Hanslick, a friend of Brahms and a fierce opponent of Wagner, uttered the immortal phrase that the concerto “stank to the ear,” after the 1881 premiere. The harshness and vulgarity of these opinions could not help but exacerbate Tchaikovsky’s depressive tendencies, which were rarely far from the surface. The composer never forgot Hanslick’s caustic remarks.
Why this unusually strong resistance to a work that did not challenge the existing world order but “simply” wanted to be what it was: a brilliant and beautiful violin concerto? In Hanslick’s case, the answer may lie in the critic’s inability to accept symphonic music that was not Germanic in spirit. The first great violin concerto to come from Russia, Tchaikovsky’s work certainly struck a chord that was disconcertingly foreign in Vienna. (It is ironic that Hanslick thought of Tchaikovsky as a Russian barbarian, while in Russia, the composer was considered a “Westernizer” whose music was not as truly Russian as that of the group of composers known as the “Mighty Five.”)
As for Auer, the novel technical demands of the piece may have seemed out of place to him. He was quoted later as feeling that certain passages were “not in keeping with the demeanor of the violin,” as he knew the instrument. To his credit, he took a second look and changed
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his mind soon enough. Once it was introduced by others, he became a great advocate of the concerto — although, he modified certain passages to conform to his view of how they should have been written. Auer, one of the great violin teachers of his era, taught the work to many of his own star students, including Mischa Elman, Jascha Heifetz, and Efrem Zimbalist.
Tchaikovsky wrote his Violin Concerto in the spring of 1878. In order to recover from the recent trauma of his ill-fated and short-lived marriage to Antonina Milyukova, the composer retreated to the Swiss village of Clarens, on the shores of Lake Geneva, accompanied by his brother Modest and a 22-year-old violinist named Yosif Kotek, who assisted him in matters of violin technique.
The composition progressed so effortlessly that the whole concerto was written in only three weeks, with an extra week taken up by the orchestration. During this time, Tchaikovsky wrote not only the three concerto movements that we know, but a fourth one as well. The initial second movement, “Méditation,” was rejected at an early run through and replaced with the present “Canzonetta,” written in a single day. Due to Auer’s initial unfavorable reaction, no violinist accepted the work for performance for three years, until the young Adolf Brodsky, a Russian-born virtuoso living in Vienna, chose it for his debut with the Vienna Philharmonic.
One of the things that makes this concerto so great is the ease with which Tchaikovsky moves from one mood to the next. Lyrical and dramatic, robustly folk-like, and tenderly sentimental moments follow one another without the slightest incongruity, just as a variety of elements had in his First Piano Concerto, written three years earlier. Another remarkable feature is the combination of virtuosity with emotional depth. Although the technical difficulties of the solo part are tremendous, every note also expresses something that goes far beyond virtuosic fireworks. All in all, it is one of the greatest violin concertos ever written, and no critic after Hanslick has ever challenged its status again or smelled anything unpleasant in the work!
Duration: 35 minutes
9 2022–2023 Season
Excerpts from Romeo and Juliet, Opus 64
Composed: 1935
Though Sergei Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet became one of the most beloved dance works in the repertory and spawned a series of famous orchestral suites, it was practically doomed from the start — much like the eponymous starcrossed lovers in this Shakespeare classic.
BY Sergei Prokofiev
BORN
April 23, 1891
Sontsivka, Ukraine
DIED
Prokofiev received a commission for a new ballet from the Kirov Theatre (now the Mariinsky) upon his return to the Soviet Union, following a 15-year, self-imposed exile. But the Kirov company backed out, likely due to the difficult subject choice of Romeo and Juliet — Tchaikovsky had already written a symphonic poem based on this play — and the political upheaval that led to the ousting of the Kirov’s director Sergei Radlov.
March 5, 1953
Moscow, Russia
Prokofiev signed a contract to stage the work with the Bolshoi Ballet instead, but the directors found the music impossible to dance to and the happy ending confusing. As a result, they rejected the ballet and broke the contract. With no fully staged performance in sight, Prokofiev extracted two orchestral suites — each with seven movements — from the 52 numbers in the complete ballet score, correctly predicting that the suites would create a demand to hear the work in its entirety.
The ballet was eventually staged for the first time in Brno, Czechoslovakia, in December 1938, and Prokofiev had the pleasure of seeing the Kirov and Bolshoi vie for the first Soviet production — it fell to the Kirov in January 1940. Prokofiev later composed a third suite, with six movements, in 1946.
For this concert, COYO music director Daniel Reith drew a series of movements from all three suites. From the first suite we hear Madrigal, an elegant, downtempo work titled for the music that fills the Capulets’ ball. Delicate strings radiating with innocence accompany Romeo’s first glimpse of a lovely maiden and soon-to-be-lover. Romeo, Mercutio, and Benvolio — all Capulets — arrive at the ball uninvited, so they arrive wearing Masks . You can hear a sense of jolly trickery in the bouncing
10 Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
woodwinds as well as the mocking cornet and timpani, as the three sneak into the revelry.
The opening scene of the second suite, Montagues and Capulets sets the scene on a street in Verona, where the feuding families are engaged in a brawl. The brawny violin melody displays the bravado of the knights, while the ladies are depicted with passages of dainty strings and woodwinds. Next, we’re formally introduced to Juliet, the Young Girl, a playful figure who is engaged in banter with her Nurse, captured with the excited, rip-roaring tempos of the strings. We also hear a clarinet solo, which reveals Juliet’s softer side and serves as one of her main motifs.
We are next introduced to Friar Laurence and a Dance, but as we know, this couple’s fortunes are short-lived, and we soon hear hints of their imminent tragedy. Romeo and Juliet Before Parting swells with flowy passion, built on the theme of Romeo’s love. With stately horns and cascading strings, it communicates the rapture and glow following the first exchange of reciprocated romantic feelings. Though the quiet, more measured woodwinds of the outro suggests that there is reason to pump the brakes.
We then travel backward in time to the opening of the third suite, where we meet Romeo at the Fountain , before he sets eyes on his beloved Juliet. This is followed by a lively Morning Dance and the jaunty theme of the Nurse. Yet, we are quickly transported to the final tragic tomb scene, where Juliet lies, and Romeo kills himself under the false impression of her death. When Juliet awakes, she, too, cannot bear the grief of her lover’s death and stabs herself with Romeo’s dagger. Prokofiev paints Death of Juliet with dignified sadness, calling back to her winsome theme with solo violin and again with the full strings. Prokofiev’s choice of unhurried poignancy shows masterful use of restraint and tenderness, as the music fades to a plain, tragic, C-major chord.
Duration: 31 minutes
11 2022–2023 Season
FIRST VIOLINS
Marina Ziegler
CONCERTMASTER
Copley High School
Sherry Du
ASSISTANT CONCERTMASTER
Hudson High School
Carol Huang
Hathaway Brown
Sophie Ng
Avon High School
Hana Mazak
Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School
Emily Boron
Shaker Heights High School
Chengyu Jiang Solon High School
Avaneesh Polaconda
Strongsville High School
Anika Westerbeke
Hawken Mastery School
Cyprus Foster Homeschooled
Holly Bennett Cleveland School of the Arts
Sophia Muller Cleveland Heights High School
Jacob Andreini University School
Nicolo Moulthrop
Shaker Heights High School
Moshi Tang
Hawken School
Anthony Yang
Andrews Osborne Academy
SECOND VIOLINS
Christina Bencin
PRINCIPAL
Hathaway Brown
Aidan Scheuer
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Westlake High School
Cavin Xue
Western Reserve Academy
Ehren Collins University School
Yikun Zhao Hawken School
Alice Han
Beachwood Middle School
Andrew Heinzen Roxboro Middle School
Hannah Lee
Hudson High School
Harris Y. Wang Solon Middle School
Brian Hong Solon High School
Audrey Greer
Strongsville High School
Kailani Farivar
Solon High School
Elizabeth Huang
Shaker Heights High School
VIOLAS
Alexandra Yeoh PRINCIPAL
Homeschooled
Ben Wong
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL Mentor High School
Julia Peyrebrune
The Lyceum
Lindsey Jones Oberlin Senior High School
Jason Wei
Solon High School
Milo Page Homeschooled
Roy Morcos
Hudson High School
Ashley Cvetichan **
CELLOS
Eleanor Pompa PRINCIPAL
Laurel School
Ada Ortan
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Avon High School
Kobby Owusu
Solon High School
Stine Adkins
Westlake High School
Chengyu Li
Beachwood High School
Aiden Tian
Hawken Upper School
Elena Ziegler
Copley High School
Claire Hua
Western Reserve Academy
Jill King
Lakewood High School
Alexandra Chen
Oberlin Senior High School
Louis X. Wang
Solon High School
Kaiden Honaker
Twinsburg High School
BASSES
Jonathan Jacques
PRINCIPAL
Shaker Heights High School
Travis Phillips
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL University School
Bettie McGurr
Hudson High School
Sullivan Wiggins Shaker Heights High School
Rowan Toth-Cseplo
Harvey S. Firestone CLC
Bobby Johnston
Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School
Sachin Singh University School
FLUTES
Amy Deng
Avon Lake High School
Olivia Fritz P
Homeschooled
Grace Gregg
Brunswick High School
Elena Ko T
Avon High School
Adriana Krauss B
Homeschooled
12 Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
PICCOLO
Adriana Krauss P
OBOES
Sophie Craciun P
Lakewood High School
Matthew Dawson B
Mentor High School
Andrew Kelly T
Bay Village Middle School
ENGLISH HORN
Isabel Martin B, P
Walsh Jesuit
CLARINETS
Elizabeth Corn
Ontario High School
Chloe Fuller
Villa Angela-Saint Joseph School
Owen Ganor T
Rocky River High School
Ava Haehn P
Riverside High School
Shannon Joyce B
Saint Joseph Academy
BASS CLARINET
Owen Ganor B
Shannon Joyce P
ALTO SAXOPHONE
Celia Head P
Olmsted Falls High School
BASSOONS
Emma Foster B, P
Copley High School
Megan Janke T
Green Local Schools
CONTRABASSOON
Brittney Delpey B, P **
HORNS
Jack Berendt P
Aurora High School
Maxwell Foster T
Hudson High School
Josslyn Rossos
Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School
Alyssa Webb B
Olmsted Falls High School
TRUMPETS
Frank Berendt P
Aurora High School
Sam Haskell T
Brunswick High School
Kahlen Sykora
Jackson Local Schools
Alex Wu B
Western Reserve Academy
TROMBONES
Grace Berendt B
Aurora High School
Elden Schrembeck P
Lake High School
Thomas Toth
Mentor High School
TUBA
Casey Mobley B, P
Wadsworth High School
TIMPANI
Aaron Miller P
Lake Middle/High School
David Schrembeck B, T
Lake Local Schools
PERCUSSION
Aaron Miller
David Schrembeck
Kaden Smutz**
HARP
Lina Tian B, P Hathaway Brown
PIANO
Isabel Mearini B, P Shaker Heights High School
MANAGER
Kennedy McKain
LIBRARIAN
Malia Rivera
DIRECTOR OF INSTRUMENTAL PATHWAYS
Lauren Generette
Performers are listed alphabetically within each woodwind, brass, and percussion sections. Superscripts indicate principal player according to the following key:
B Boulanger
T Tchaikovsky
P Prokofiev
** Extra/substitute musician
The future of classical music shines brightly through the talented young musicians of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra. Thank you to The George Gund Foundation for their generous gift to the Orchestra’s endowment in support of the Youth Orchestra, and the estate of Jules and Ruth Vinney for generously endowing a Touring Fund to support the Youth Orchestra’s performances beyond Northeast Ohio.
The following eight endowed Youth Orchestra chairs have been created in recognition of generous gifts to The Cleveland Orchestra’s endowment:
Concertmaster, Daniel Majeske Memorial Chair
Principal Cello, Barbara P. and Alan S. Geismer Chair
Principal Viola, Anthony T. and Patricia A. Lauria Chair
Principal Bass, Anthony F. Knight Memorial Chair
Principal Flute, Virginia S. Jones Memorial Chair
Piccolo, Patience Cameron Hoskins Chair
Principal Harp, Norma Battes Chair
Principal Keyboard, Victor C. Laughlin M.D. Memorial Chair
13 2022–2023 Season
14 Cleveland
Learn from a dedicated resident faculty Discover your own path Belong to a fiercely supportive community For application information visit esm.rochester.edu/admissions
Orchestra Youth Orchestra
Daniel Reith
Music Director, Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
Assistant Conductor, The Cleveland Orchestra
Sidney and Doris Dworkin Chair
Daniel Reith was appointed assistant conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra and music director of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra (COYO) starting in the 2022–23 season. As COYO’s music director, Mr. Reith oversees the ensemble’s artistic planning, selects personnel for the ensemble, and leads rehearsals and performances of the Youth Orchestra. He’s also actively involved with the Orchestra’s education programs and community performances, and provides assistance for the Orchestra’s Classical and Blossom Music Festival seasons.
Mr. Reith was the 2019 winner of Opptakt, Talent Norway’s program for fostering young conductors, and has since performed with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony Orchestra, Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, and the Norwegian Armed Forces. In 2022, Mr. Reith made his debuts with the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra and Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra. He also served as assistant conductor for the Norwegian Opera production of Orpheus in the Underworld.
In addition to his conducting work, Mr. Reith is a talented pianist and chamber musician, having performed in concerts and competitions throughout Germany, Norway, and other countries. Mr. Reith has been awarded several scholarships in Germany, where he’s worked with orchestras such as the Hamburg Philharmonic and Neubrandenburg Philharmonic.
Mr. Reith grew up in Bühl, Germany, and studied music in his home country as well as Norway. He received bachelor’s degrees in piano from Freiburg’s Academy of Music and the Norwegian Academy of Music. He also received a bachelor’s degree in music theory at Freiburg’s Academy of Music, followed by a bachelor’s degree in conducting at Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts. In 2021, he received his master’s degree in conducting at the Norwegian Academy of Music.
15 2022–2023 Season
Moshi Tang
Violin
Moshi Tang, 17, fell in love with music before he could speak. He started his first violin lessons at age three-and-a-half. He joined COYO when he was 12 and has been serving as co-concertmaster since age 14. Currently, he studies violin with Joan Kwuon (Colburn School, previously Cleveland Institute of Music) and Carolyn Warner (The Cleveland Orchestra, CIM). He also studies music theory and composition with Alissa Shuster (CIM), from whom he took piano lessons. Previously, he studied with Elizabeth Faidley (Manhattan School of Music) and Liesl Langmack (CIM).
Moshi is an avid chamber music player and has played violin, viola, and piano in chamber ensembles for more than eight years. He and Carolyn Warner give several recitals as a sonata duo each year at Judson Manor and other local venues. Moshi was a semifinalist in the International Johansen Competition in 2022 and a winner of the 2022 National YoungArts Competition. He was also the 2021–2022 state winner of the Music Teachers National Association Competition in the categories of both Senior String Performance and Composition. Moshi has won local competitions, including the Concerto Competitions of the Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra, the Suburban Symphony Orchestra, the Lakeland Civic Orchestra, and the CIM preparatory program, performing concertos with them as a result.
This past summer, Moshi joined the National Youth Orchestra of the United States, organized by Carnegie Hall, and served as its assistant concertmaster on a tour in Europe with conductor Daniel Harding and soloist Alisa Weilerstein.
Moshi is a senior at Hawken School. He is a recipient of the James A. Hawken scholarship and 2023 National Merit Scholarship Semifinalist. He plays on the school’s varsity soccer team and enjoys studying languages, philosophy, and science. He plans to continue his musical studies while pursuing a broad academic education when he goes to university next year.
16 Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
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About the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
The Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra is a full symphonic ensemble composed of 89 young musicians drawn from 41 communities in 12 counties across Northern Ohio. Founded in 1986 by Jahja Ling (then resident conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra), the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra (COYO) provides serious young music students of middle and high school age with a unique pre-professional orchestral training experience. The 2022–23 season marks COYO’s 37th season and the first under the direction of Daniel Reith.
Among the acclaimed artists to work with COYO are Marin Alsop, Pierre Boulez, Stéphane Denève, Christoph von Dohnányi, Giancarlo Guerrero, Witold Lutosławski, Yo-Yo Ma, Gil Shaham, Michael Tilson Thomas, Antoni Wit, and Cleveland Orchestra Music Director Franz Welser-Möst. The ensemble has been featured on three international tours.
The Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra is part of a suite of Cleveland Orchestra programs designed to nurture aspiring young musicians, which also includes the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Chorus, the Cleveland Orchestra Children’s Chorus and Preparatory Chorus, and the Crescendo and Music Mentors pathways initiatives for students in Cleveland schools. In addition, with the support of many generous individual, foundation, corporate, and governmental funding partners, the Orchestra’s full range of education and community programs reach more than 100,000 young people and adults annually, helping to foster a lifelong relationship with music by removing barriers to participation, advocating for and helping to facilitate equitable access to comprehensive music education in schools, and harnessing the lifechanging power in service to the community.
19 2022–2023 Season
UPCOMING PERFORMANCES BY THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA YOUTH ORCHESTRA AND CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA YOUTH CHORUS
WINTER CONCERT
Friday evening, February 24, 2023 at 8:00 p.m.
SPRING CONCERT
Friday evening, May 5, 2023 at 8:00 p.m.
For more information, visit clevelandorchestra.com/coyo.
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Youth Orchestra Coaching Staff
The following members of The Cleveland Orchestra have served as section coaches for the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra in preparation for this concert:
VIOLINS
Stephen Tavani
Assistant Concertmaster
Kathleen Collins
Yoko Moore
Emeritus Violin
VIOLA
Stanley Konopka
Assistant Principal
Lisa Boyko
Patrick Connolly
Emeritus Viola
CELLOS
Mark Kosower
Principal
David Alan Harrell
BASSES
Mark Atherton
Martin Flowerman
Emeritus Bass
WOODWINDS
Jessica Sindell
Assistant Principal Flute
John Rautenberg
Emeritus Flute
Frank Rosenwein
Principal Oboe
Robert Woolfrey
Clarinet
Phil Austin
Emeritus Bassoon
Gareth Thomas Bassoon
BRASSES
Hans Clebsch
Horn
Alan DeMattia
Emeritus Horn
Lyle Steelman
Assistant Principal Trumpet
Shachar Israel
Assistant Principal Trombone
James DeSano
Emeritus Trombone
TUBA
Yasuhito Sugiyama
PERCUSSION
Thomas Sherwood
HARP
Trina Struble
Principal Harp
EMERITUS COACH
Joela Jones
Emeritus Keyboard
WITH SPECIAL THANKS
Michael Ferraguto
Librarian
21 2022–2023 Season
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School Music Teachers
The members of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra express gratitude to their school music directors for the role they play on a daily basis in developing musical skills:
Mason Smith Aurora High School
Jesse Martin
Avon High School
Joshua Brunger Avon Lake High School
Mark Awad
Bay Village Middle School
David Luddington Beachwood High School
Lisa Goldman
Beachwood Middle School
Steven Cocchiola
Brecksville-Broadview Heights High School
Ethan Eraybar
Brunswick High School
Daniel Heim
Cleveland Heights High School
Diana Richardson
Cleveland School of the Arts
Michael Foster
Copley High School
Basil Kochan
Copley High School
Sloan Stakleff Firestone CLC
Amy Rach
Green Local Schools
Linda Simon-Mietus
Hathaway Brown School
James Hogan
Hathaway Brown School
Jelani Watkins
Hawken School
Yu Yuan
Hawken Mastery School
Kyra Mihalski Hawken School
Sam Hartman Hudson High School
Roberto Iriarte Hudson High School
Michele Monigold
Jackson Local Schools
Jared Cooed Lake Local Schools
Demetrius Steinmetz
Lakeland Community College
Elizabeth Hankins
Lakewood High School
Clinton Steinbrunner
Lakewood High School
Joseph Kucel The Lyceum
Steven Poremba
Mentor High School
Matthew Yoke
Mentor High School
Audrey Melzer
Oberlin Senior High School
Julie Budd
Olmsted Falls High School
Elijah Henkel Ontario High School
David Schwartz
Riverside High School
Michael Komperda
Rocky River High School
Katherine Holaway
Roxboro Middle School
Brian Patton
Saint Joseph Academy
Bill Hughes
Shaker Heights High School
Donna Jelen
Shaker Heights High School
Gerald MacDougall
Solon Middle & High School
Andrew Hire
Strongsville High School
Damon Conn Twinsburg City School District
Devon Steve University School
David Kay University School
Darlene Khoury
Villa Angela St. Joseph
Dana Hire
Wadsworth High School
Nicholas Ratay
Walsh Jesuit
Margaret Karam
Western Reserve Academy
Hilary Patriok
Westlake High School
23 2022–2023 Season
It's your stage from the moment you get here.
At Oberlin, you don't line up behind graduate students vying for ensemble positions, world premiere performances, or touring opportunities. You're at the center of the action from day one. Learn more at oberlin.edu/conservatory.
MUSIC.CMU.EDU MUSIC.CMU.EDU MUSIC.CMU.EDU MUSIC.CMU.EDU MUSIC.CMU.EDU MUSIC.CMU.EDU
Private Music Teachers
The members of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra express gratitude to their private teachers for their patience, insight, and expertise:
VIOLIN TEACHERS
Masha Andreini
David Bowlin
Wei-Shu Co
Catherine Cosbey
Heather Crawford
Kim Gomez*
Wei-Fang Gu*
Liesl Hook-Langmack
Olga Kaler
Joan Kwuon
Yung-Ting Lee*
Sonja Braaten Molloy*
Yoko Moore
Eugenia Poustyreva
Mary Price
Amber Rogers
Carol Ruzicka
Zhan Shu*
Laura Shuster
Stephen Sims
Jennifer Walvoord
Joy Wiener
Yu Yuan*
VIOLA TEACHERS
Jeffrey Irvine
Laura Keunen-Poper
Nancy McConnell
James Rhodes
Lembi Veskimets*
Ann Yu
Louise Zeitlin
CELLO TEACHERS
Martha Baldwin*
Ruby Brallier
Eliza Fath
David Alan Harrell*
Rebecca Konow
Paul Kushious*
Daniel Pereira
Richard Weiss*
Jerry Yarovich
Elizabeth Zadinsky
BASS TEACHERS
Patricia Johnston
Tracy Rowell
Bryan Thomas
Susan Yelanjian
FLUTE TEACHERS
Gabriel Cruz
Kyra Kester
Audrey Park
Heidi Ruby-Kushious
Debbie Woods
OBOE TEACHERS
Jack Harel
Mary Kausek
Justine Myers
Corbin Stair*
CLARINET TEACHERS
Meghan Colbert
Adrienne Lape
Alix Reinhardt
Craig Wohlschlager
Robert Woolfrey*
SAXOPHONE TEACHER
Gabriel Piqué
BASSOON TEACHERS
Mark DeMio
Judith Guegold
HORN TEACHERS
Alan DeMattia
Sam Hartman
Rose Madonia
Van Parker
TRUMPET TEACHERS
Chris Hall
Michael Miller*
Rich Pokrywka
Erik Sundet
TROMBONE TEACHERS
Adam Landry
Eric Richmond
Elisabeth Shafer
TUBA TEACHER
Christopher Blaha
PERCUSSION TEACHERS
Luke Rinderknecht
Joan Wenzel
HARP TEACHER
Jody Guinn
KEYBOARD TEACHER
Madeline Levitz
* Member of The Cleveland Orchestra
25 2022–2023 Season
State and federal dollars through the Ohio Arts Council supported your arts experience today.
WHERE WILL THE ARTS TAKE YOU NEXT ? VISIT ARTSINOHIO.COM
Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra
@OHIOARTSCOUNCIL | #ARTSOHIO | OAC.OHIO.GOV
LATE SEATING
As a courtesy to the audience members and musicians in the hall, late-arriving patrons are asked to wait quietly until the first convenient break in the program, when ushers will help you to your seats. These seating breaks are at the discretion of the House Manager in consultation with the performing artists.
PAGERS, CELL PHONES, AND WRISTWATCH ALARMS
Please silence any alarms or ringers on pagers, cell phones, or wristwatches prior to the start of the concert.
PHOTOGRAPHY, VIDEOGRAPHY, AND RECORDING
Audio recording, photography, and videography are prohibited during performances at Severance. Photographs of the hall and selfies can be taken when the performance is not in progress. As a courtesy to others, please turn off any phone/ device that makes noise or emits light.
NEW FREE MOBILE APP
Get instant access to your tickets for Cleveland Orchestra concerts at Blossom Music Center and Severance by using the Ticket Wallet App. More information is at clevelandorchestra.com/ticketwallet
IN THE EVENT OF AN EMERGENCY
Contact an usher or a member of house staff if you require medical assistance. Emergency exits are clearly marked throughout the building. Ushers and house staff will provide instructions in the event of an emergency.
HEARING AIDS AND OTHER HEALTH-ASSISTIVE DEVICES
For the comfort of those around you, please reduce the volume on hearing aids and other devices that may produce a noise that would detract from the program. Infrared AssistiveListening Devices are available. Please see the House Manager or Head Usher for more details.
AGE RESTRICTIONS
Regardless of age, each person must have a ticket and be able to sit quietly in a seat throughout the performance. Classical season subscription concerts are not recommended for children under the age of 8. However, there are several age-appropriate series designed specifically for children and youth, including Music Explorers (recommended for children 3 to 6 years old) and Family Concerts (for ages 7 and older).
Copyright © 2022 by The Cleveland Orchestra and Musical Arts Association
Amanda Angel, Managing Editor of Content (AAngel@clevelandorchestra.com)
Lizzie Manno, Editorial Assistant (LManno@clevelandorchestra.com)
Program books for Cleveland Orchestra concerts are produced by The Cleveland Orchestra and are distributed free to attending audience members. The Cleveland Orchestra is proud to have its home, Severance Music Center, located on the campus of Case Western Reserve University, with whom it has a long history of collaboration and partnership.
27 2022–2023 Season
Cecilia Cooper ’22
Music Performance: Strings
bw.edu