Overture Magazine 2019-20 BSO_Overture_Jan Feb | Page 14

MOVIE WITH ORCHESTRA: AMADEUS Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (BSO) since 2007. Trained by Robert McDonald and Leon Fleisher, Johnson’s extensive orchestral collaborators include Pinchas Zukerman, Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Midori Gotō, Leila Josefowicz, Augustin Hadelich, Joshua Bell and Jean-Yves Thibaudet. Johnson has also performed as soloist with the Baltimore and Delaware symphony orchestras multiple times. Johnson’s discography includes a 2001 album, The Jennings-Johnson Duo, with flutist Christina Jennings, and a 2010 Centaur Records release of Inner Voice with BSO violist Peter Minkler. Her recording of Arvo Pärt’s Spiegel im Spiegel was featured in the official teaser trailer for the 2013 Warner Brothers film Gravity. Johnson can also be heard on several recordings released by the BSO, including Naxos’ Grammy-nominated release of the Bernstein Mass. Johnson’s first solo CD, Turning, was released in the summer of 2014. Devoted to chamber music from an early age, her many recital partners include BSO concertmaster Jonathan Carney; clarinetist Anthony McGill; cellists Ilya Finkelshteyn, Amit Peled and Kenneth Slowik; and flutist Marina Piccinini. She is a founding member of three duos, the Jennings-Johnson Duo with flutist Christina Jennings; Times Two with violinist Netanel Draiblate; and Duo Lalu, a cabaret duo with soprano Lara Bruckmann. She performs with VERGE Ensemble, 21 st Century Consort, PostClassical Ensemble and the Towson New Music Ensemble. Johnson has taught piano at the Peabody Institute since 2002 and has taught on the faculty of the Sequoia Chamber Music Workshop and the Apple Hill Center for Chamber Music. Formerly the Artistic Director of Baltimore chamber music series Music in the Great Hall, Johnson has also worked as Pianist and General Manager with the PostClassical Ensemble in D.C., an innovative and ambitious chamber orchestra that is reinventing the presentation of classical music with programming that is thematic and cross-disciplinary. 12 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org Johnson holds degrees from Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, where she was a student of Brian Connelly. Early studies were pursued under the direction of Jeanne Kierman Fischer in Johnson’s hometown of Oberlin, Ohio. Johnson’s very first piano lessons were with her father, Dale Johnson, an amateur pianist and professor at Oberlin College. When not onstage, Lura can be found on the dance floor. She is an avid social and competitive dancer with roots in gymnastics, ballet and ballroom, specializing now in West Coast Swing. Lura Johnson last appeared with the BSO in February of 2018, performing Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals, Marin Alsop, conductor. BSO Symphonic Chorale BSO Symphonic Chorale, formerly Concert Artists of Baltimore, are best- known for their rousing rendition of Handel’s Messiah with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and Edward Polochick. As Concert Artists of Baltimore (CAB), the highly talented and passionate group often performed Mozartian masterworks as part of their Maestro Series, including Mozart’s Mass in C Minor at the Baltimore Basilica for the 255 th anniversary of the Diocese. The group brings its Mozartian expertise to the much beloved film Amadeus with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra to ring in the New Year. Under the umbrella of Concert Artists of Baltimore, this ensemble also performed throughout the region with Lyric Opera Baltimore, Moscow Ballet, Ballet Theatre of Maryland, the Baltimore Basilica, Temple Oheb Shalom, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, McDaniel College, St. Louis Church, The Holocaust Museum, The Visionary Arts Museum, The Greek Orthodox Church of St. George and Catholic Charities. In 2015 CAB produced a groundbreaking collaboration with the Baltimore Rock Opera Society at 2640 Space, a partnership that continued into 2016 at the Light City Baltimore festival. The BSO Symphonic Chorale last appeared with the BSO in December 2019, performing Handel’s Messiah, Edward Polochick, conductor. About the Concert Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Born in Salzburg, Austria, January 27, 1756; died in Vienna, Austria, December 5, 1791 What is the nature of genius? How does it differ from ordinary talent? And what happens to the psyche and soul of someone who desperately aspires to possess the former while being perfectly conscious he has only been granted the latter? These questions lie at the heart of Peter Schaffer’s play Amadeus (1979), which was transformed into an Academy Award-winning movie in 1984. Schaffer chose as his subject the quintessential musical genius Wolfgang Gottlieb Mozart (1756 –1791). We know his middle name better as “Amadeus”: the Latin version of “Gottlieb,” meaning “love of God” or “loved by God.” In the story, Mozart’s nemesis is the Austro-Italian composer Antonio Salieri (1750 –1825), kapellmeister at the Viennese imperial court, who realizes the younger man is vastly more gifted than himself and plots to bring about his downfall. In the words of British actor Simon Callow—who played the role of Mozart in the play’s original production as well as the operatic impresario Emanuel Schikaneder in the film—Schaffer’s drama is “a vast meditation on the relationship between genius and talent.…[Salieri], who was industrious, skillful and pious, [was] driven to homicide by a Mozart who was foul- mouthed, feckless, infantile and effortlessly inspired. In Schaffer’s play, Salieri was the one person in 18 th -century Vienna who fully grasped the extent of Mozart’s genius and thus was the one most savagely wounded by it. To him, it was a cruel joke, perpetrated by the God he worshipped, that the vessel chosen to receive the greatest music ever written was the least worthy of His creatures. All Salieri’s piety and good taste had been passed over in favor of a repulsive little nerd.”