Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_NOV_DEC | Page 20

COPLAND SYMPHONY NO. 3 Instrumentation: Three flutes including piccolo, two oboes, English horn, two clarinets including bass clarinets, E-flat clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, electronica, timpani, percussion, harp, piano, celesta and strings. MOONLIGHT (SECOND CONCERTO FOR OBOE AND STRINGS) Kevin Puts Born in St. Louis, MO, January 3, 1972 To celebrate its 100 th anniversary in 2016, the BSO turned to composer Kevin Puts to create a new work, The City (which was also co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall to salute its own 125 th anniversary). Puts was hardly a surprising choice, for not only has he been on the faculty of the Peabody Institute since 2006, but over that decade he has become one of the nation’s most sought- after composers. And his Network, River’s Rush and Symphony No. 4, “From Mission San Juan,” had already been popular visitors to the Meyerhoff stage. Puts’ opera Silent Night, premiered at the Minnesota Opera in 2011, won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Music and has subsequently been produced at major houses in the U.S., Canada and Europe. In 2015, he followed this success with another opera for Minnesota, The Manchurian Candidate, based on Richard Condon’s famous novel. This past June, Puts’ new Oboe Concerto, Moonlight, was premiered by Katherine Needleman at the BSO’s New Music Festival and now makes its subscription season debut. Kevin Puts explains how it came into being: 18 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org “Immediately following her performance of the beautiful Oboe Concerto of Christopher Rouse at the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music in August 2016, I approached Katherine Needleman about doing a project together, and, to my great delight, she was enthusiastic. The piece was written in the wake of the 2016 presidential election during a time of great upheaval and division in the country and—for me—a profound feeling of disillusionment. I floundered for several months, searching for inspiration until the discovery on a cross-country flight of the 2016 film Moonlight in the in-flight entertainment guide. I found it exquisitely made, and the film’s demonstration of tolerance and compassion in the midst of a tough environment stayed with me for some time, giving me cause for hope. My concerto is in three parts, played without break. I call the first movement (and the whole piece) Moonlight, because …why not? Beethoven did it — or his publisher did. Anyway, I heard this opening music every time I thought of the film, though it does not sound like the soundtrack to the film (which I loved, by the way). The second part, Folly, is driving and sinister, at turns threatening and grotesque, obsessively hanging onto a repeating two-note motive throughout. The third part follows a short cadenza for the oboe out of which a long-breathed melody emerges. Theodore Roethke wrote, ‘In a dark time, the eye begins to see.’ I continue to strive for vision and understanding in the midst of our great national division. My most sincere gratitude and admiration go to Katherine Needleman for her guidance in shaping the oboe part, and to Bette and Joseph Hirsch for their friendship and generous support for this project. And as always to Marin Alsop for her belief in my work.” Instrumentation: String orchestra. SYMPHONY NO. 3 Aaron Copland Born in Brooklyn, NY, November 14, 1900; died in North Tarrytown, NY, December 2, 1990 Aaron Copland’s music reflected his own personality: plain, straightforward, honest and idealistic. Born in Brooklyn, a DJ for electronic dance music and a techno artist in Oakland, CA. The title Mothership comes from his conception of the orchestra as a large mothership in hyperspace at which various soloists – featured in virtuoso riffs – continually dock throughout the piece. Because these solo riffs are improvised on the spot, no two performances of Mothership will be the same.