Overture Magazine 2019-20 BSO_Overture_Jan Feb | Page 27

CHARLIE CHAPLIN’S LEGACY: CLASSICAL MUSIC IN FILM adding that “Quint’s tonal opulence, generously inflected with subtle portamentos, sound like a throwback to the glory days of Fritz Kreisler.” An American violinist of Russian heritage, Philippe Quint is constantly in demand and regularly appears with major orchestras and conductors worldwide at venues ranging from the Gewandhaus in Leipzig to Carnegie Hall in New York. Quint’s award-winning discography comprises 17 commercial releases including his recent debut on the Warner Classics label, Chaplin’s Smile, which features original arrangements of music by Charlie Chaplin. The album inspired Philippe to create and produce Charlie Chaplin’s Smile, a multimedia show that will have debuts worldwide throughout the 2019–20 season. Chaplin’s granddaughter, Kiera Chaplin, said in Forbes magazine, “I think it’s amazing that in 2019, one hundred and thirty years after his birth, my grandfather Charlie Chaplin is still around and loved by so many, that even a hundred and five years after his first movie was made, he still surprises people. Philippe Quint’s new album Chaplin’s Smile is allowing him to be discovered by a whole new audience as a talented composer, a side of him many people did not know.” The Chicago Tribune proclaimed, “Here is a fiddle virtuoso whose many awards are fully justified by the brilliance of his playing.” In 2018–19, Quint was named Artist-in-Association by Utah Symphony, and in 2015, he hosted the Second Annual Benefit “Philippe Quint & Friends” at Carnegie’s Zankel Hall. Making his home in New York since 1991, Quint was born in Leningrad, Soviet Union; studied with Andrei Korsakov; and made his orchestra debut at the age of nine. After moving to the U.S., he earned both his bachelor and master degrees from The Juilliard School. His distinguished mentors included Dorothy DeLay, Cho-liang Lin, Masao Kawasaki, Isaac Stern, Itzhak Perlman, Arnold Steinhardt and Felix Galimir. Philippe Quint makes his BSO debut. About the Concert mourning the young lives snuffed out by the Vietnam War. ADAGIO FOR STRINGS Samuel Barber Instrumentation: String orchestra. Born in West Chester, PA, March 9, 1910; died in New York City, NY, January 23, 1981 CHACONNE FOR VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRA Like most American music lovers in the 1930s, Samuel Barber was mesmerized by Arturo Toscanini and his fiery interpretations of the great symphonic and operatic literature. In 1933, the 23-year-old composer used his status as nephew of the celebrated operatic contralto Louise Homer to pay a visit to the maestro at his summer retreat on Italy’s Lake Maggiore. They struck up an immediate friendship, and the old conductor expressed interest in performing a work by Barber, despite the fact that he generally avoided contemporary music. But Barber was by no means a typical contemporary composer. Although only recently graduated from Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute, he was a precocious artist who had already found his own creative voice: lyrical, deeply expressive and rooted in the harmonic language of the late 19 th century. It took Barber several years to produce two works he thought worthy of Toscanini’s attention. Finally, early in 1938 he sent the maestro his newly completed First Essay for Orchestra and the Adagio for string orchestra he had fashioned from the slow movement of his String Quartet of 1936. Toscanini’s selection of both pieces for his evening radio broadcast with the NBC Symphony on November 5, 1938 was the ultimate promotional coup for Barber’s career. The Toscanini radio concerts had a passionate nationwide following, and by the next morning, Samuel Barber was a household name for American music lovers. The Adagio for Strings remains his most beloved and frequently performed composition. Called our “national funeral music,” it has eloquently expressed Americans’ grief at the ceremonies for Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945 and John F. Kennedy in 1963. In 1986, it moved a new generation in the Academy Award-winning Platoon, John Corigliano Born in New York City, NY, February 16, 1938 In March 2000, the Academy Award for best film score of 1999 went to one of America’s finest composers of concert and operatic works, John Corigliano, for his music for the Canadian film The Red Violin. Although this extraordinarily evocative film, conceived and directed by François Girard, never reached a mass audience, it became a cult favorite among classical music lovers, who were swept away by Corigliano’s glorious score, featuring immensely challenging music for solo violin. Before the film was released, Corigliano created a one-movement concert work from its score, The Red Violin Chaconne, which was premiered by Joshua Bell and the San Francisco Symphony in November 1997. And then the BSO commissioned him to write a full-length Violin Concerto expanding the Chaconne, which was premiered in Baltimore in 2003 and subsequently recorded by the BSO. At this concert, however, we will hear the original work: the 17-minute Chaconne. The Red Violin tells a fantastic tale of the worldwide journeys and near-miraculous survival of the eponymous violin after its creation in Italy during the 17 th century. As Corigliano explains: “A story this episodic needed to be tied together with a single musical idea. For this purpose, I used the Baroque device of a chaconne: a repeated pattern of [seven rising] chords upon which the music is built. Against the chaconne chords, I juxtaposed Anna’s theme, a lyrical yet intense melody representing the violin builder’s doomed wife [whose soul seemingly enters the Red Violin]. Then, from those elements, I wove a series of virtuosic etudes for the solo violin that followed the instrument from country to country, century to century.” After an ethereal opening, bassoons present the dark and foreboding chaconne JA N – F E B 2020 / OV E R T U R E 25