Keeping Tempo August 2017

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Volume 9, Number 3, August 2017

Keeping Tempo YOBC to Present Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony

Inside this issue: YOBC Board Approves New Strategic Plan

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Executive Director’s Corner: One More Dot to Connect

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Student Spotlight: Catie Smith

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YOBC Students Keep Busy During Summer Vacation YOBC to Embark on International Tour to Andalusia July 2018

Important Dates: 

September 9 — Orientations & Curtain-Raiser Activities

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September 10 — All YOBC Rehearsals Begin

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September 17— Parents’ meetings 2:15 & 5:00 PM

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September 24 — Tour meeting for parents; deadline to join the tour September 25

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October 8–22— PracticeA-Thon

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November 17–18 — Fall Concerts

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As YOBC launches the 2017–18 season, there are some exciting opportunities ahead. Once again, Philadelphia Orchestra musicians will offer master classes, including another violin master class with concertmaster David Kim in February. Additional instruments and dates are still forthcoming. In March 2018, Jennifer Montone, principal horn of the Philadelphia Orchestra, who presented a master class last season, will join YOBC’s Symphony Orchestra as a special guest artist. They will perform the Richard Strauss Horn Concerto No. 1 at Delaware Valley University’s Life Sciences Auditorium. In fact, all three YOBC Symphony and Fanfare Winds concerts will be held at DVU this season. The highlight of the season will be a YOBC first —a presentation of the complete Symphony No. 5 by composer Piotr Ilych Tchaikovsky. The symphony will be performed by the YOBC Symphony Orchestra at their concert on April 29. Famous for its

ingenious use of a “fate” theme, according to program notes for the Philadelphia Orchestra performance, “Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony progresses from a somber beginning to an uplifting, triumphant march in the final movement.” It has also been described as an “exciting roller-coaster ride.” According to Classic FM, “[w]ith his fifth symphony,...Tchaikovsky yet again demonstrated why he was one of the romantic era's finest composers. ...Sadly, the reaction to the four-movement Symphony No. 5 was, at best, muted. Tchaikovsky felt incredibly dejected, even going so far as to distance himself from it for quite some time.” Nevertheless the symphony has regained its popularity and is now considered “one of his most loved largescale creations.” A notable performance was by the Leningrad Radio Or-

chestra during the Siege of Leningrad when city leaders ordered the orchestra to play to keep spirits high. On the night in question they played Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 and the performance was broadcast live to London. As the second movement began, bombs started to fall nearby, but the orchestra continued playing until the final note. The symphony is now one of the composer’s most popular works. The second movement, in particular, is considered to be classic Tchaikovsky: well crafted, colorfully orchestrated, and with a memorable melody for solo horn which will be performed by YOBC principal horn, Jordan Spivack.


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Keeping Tempo August 2017 by YOBC - Issuu