6 minute read

VIOLENT FEMMES WITH ORCHESTRA

Tuesday, October 3, 2023 at 7:30 pm

ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL

Ryan Tani, conductor

Violent Femmes, Gordon Gano, Brian Ritchie, Blaise Garza, and John Sparrow

Program

GORDON GANO/Tim Jones
Violent Femmes

“Add It Up”

“Confessions”

“Prove My Love”

“Promise”

“All I Want”

“Color Me Once”

“To The Kill”

“Gone Daddy Gone”

“Look Like That”

“I Held Her in my Arms”

“American Music”

“Kiss Off”

“Please Do Not Go”

“Gimme the Car”

“Add It Up” Reprise

The length of this concert is approximately 2 hours. All programs are subject to change. Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.

RYAN TANI, ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR

Ryan Tani is in his first season as assistant conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. In 2021, he completed his two-year tenure as the Orchestral Conducting Fellow for the Yale Philharmonia under Music Director Peter Oundjian, where he was the recipient of the Dean’s Prize for artistic excellence in his graduating class. Committed to meaningful community music-making in the state of Montana, Tani has directed the Bozeman Chamber Orchestra, Bozeman Symphonic Choir, Second String Orchestra, and MSU Symphony Orchestras. He frequently serves as cover conductor for the St. Louis, Colorado, and Bozeman symphonies and also recently served on the faculty at the Montana State University School of Music.

Tani recently concluded his tenure as music director of the Occasional Symphony in Baltimore. A fierce advocate of new music, Tani curated over 20 commissions from Baltimore-based composers during his four-year directorship of OS. As resident conductor of the New Music New Haven series, he has collaborated, under the guidance of Aaron Jay Kernis, with Yale University composition students and faculty.

Tani is also a graduate of the Peabody Institute where he studied conducting with Marin Alsop and Markand Thakar, and of the University of Southern California, where he studied voice with Gary Glaze. In 2015, he was declared the winner of the ACDA

Conducting Competition at their national conference in Salt Lake City, Utah. In addition to his studies at Yale and Peabody, Tani has also studied conducting with Larry Rachleff, Donald Schleicher, Gerard Schwarz, Grant Cooper, and José-Luis Novo. Tani currently resides in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he can be found in the park with his dog, playing board games with friends and family, in the library with a good book, or in the practice room with his violin.

Guest Artist Biographies

VIOLENT FEMMES 40TH ANNIVERSARY

The world may look different, but every generation goes through high school—or something like it.

Back in 1983, Violent Femmes documented the boredom, the anxiety, the elation, the depression, and the wonder of the high school experience, while living it on their seminal selftitled full-length debut, Violent Femmes. Akin to other totems to growing up à la The Catcher in the Rye, this album has only proven more relevant as it’s lived through the fall of the Berlin Wall, the advent of the internet, an uneventful Y2K, a very eventful turn-of-the-century, seven presidents, and one pandemic to celebrate its 40th birthday.

So, how did these tracks make it this long?

For starters, they’re real. Frontman, singer, songwriter, and guitarist Gordon Gano chronicled life as a high schooler in Milwaukee as it was happening to him (he didn’t do so years retrospectively as a twenty-something). So, his lyrics reeked of glorious awkwardness, whether it be the headscratching confession of “I stain my sheets” on opener “Blister In The Sun” or the prick principal’s warning, “I hope you know that this will go down on your permanent record,” during “Kiss Off.” This was the ultimate report from the frontlines of the teenage experience—back when the drinking age was 18—before we got so used to such a thing in wantonly self-indulgent social media posts.

As the story goes, Gano, bassist Brian Ritiche, and drummer Victor DeLorenzo recorded at Castle Recording Studios in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, over the course of one weekend. For as openhearted as the lyrics may be, the single-recording takes allowed for Brian’s acoustic bass to drill through Gano’s masterfully plucky riffs in a way that gives the listener the feeling that they are witnessing the cracks and grooves of Victor’s sole snare drum to rattle your brain. The record also harbors a quirky history befitting of its unlikely legacy. Of note, their fans practically destroyed Carnegie Hall when they played there in ’86, leading to a ban for the group and every other rock band for the next 20 years!

It was also the album that enshrined Violent Femmes as folk punk progenitors. The album steadily sold a million copies in its first decade, going platinum in America by its 10th anniversary. Not surprising, a well-worn cassette of Violent Femmes and a dog-eared copy of The Catcher in the Rye were rites of passage for high school and college kids from coast to coast. To date, the album has sold over 3 million copies worldwide, placements on “greatest albums of the eighties” lists by the likes of Pitchfork, a slot on the first Lollapalooza in 1991, co-headlining Big Day Out Festival with Nirvana in 1992, prevalence in Grosse Pointe Blank in 1997, and a cover of “Gone Daddy Gone” by Gnarls Barkley [Cee Lo x Danger Mouse] on their platinum St. Elsewhere in 2006. Violent Femmes has proven to be a singular cultural artifact as it continues to be the perfect companion piece to teenage angst and pubescent aspirations.

Some of Violent Femmes’s contemporaries may have shifted tens of millions of units, received constant rotation on MTV, picked up Grammy Awards, and sold more shirts at Hot Topic, but few (if any) made an album as prescient, potent, and powerful from top-to-bottom as Violent Femmes. The master recordings may have been lost for over three decades, but the band will play it once again in its entirety on tour in 2023.

If you haven’t seen them since high school or college, bring your kids and their friends, because Violent Femmes are just as daring, dangerous, and dynamic as ever. You know high school still sucks, but Violent Femmes rule.

—Rick Florino, February 2023

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