#132 Prisms

Concert first performed on June 10, 2022.

A stunning panoply of musical traditions and compositional voices closes the 2021-22 season. Abels’ Global Warming paints a vast futuristic desert next to a joyful dance of interwoven musical traditions. Price’s fourth symphony sings echoes of spirituals, antebellum dances and organ hymns together with lush harmonies and orchestral colors that only she can achieve. And our world premier of a new bass clarinet concerto by Mary Kouyoumdjian, featuring soloist Jeff Anderle, brings one of the 21st century’s most distinctive compositional voices to Minnesota.

  • Michael Abels: Global Warming
  • Mary Kouyoumdjian: “Walking with Ghosts” – Bass Clarinet Concerto
    • Jeff Anderle, clarinet
  • Florence Price: Symphony No. 4 in D Minor

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Abels, Michael, Global Warming
  • Kouyoumdjian, Mary, “Walking with Ghosts” with soloist Jeff Anderle, Clarinet
  • Price, Florence, Symphony No. 4 in D Minor with soloist Jeff Anderle, Clarinet

Dates Performed

  • June 4, 2022

#129 Transformations

Concert first performed on June 19, 2021.

Saturday, June 19 at 7:00 pm

  • William Grant Still (arr. Lesnick): “I Ride an Old Paint” from Miniatures
  • Paul Bonneau: Caprice en Forme de Valse
    • Brian Hadley, Bassoon
  • Amy Beach: Pastorale for Wind Quintet
  • Missy Mazzoli: Kinski Paganini
    • Catherine Himmerich, Violin
  • Jonathan Russell: In the Fir Trees: Fireflies
  • Sahba Aminikia: House of Circus

Our season finale is the “second spring” of the 2020-21 season. The music of William Grant Still, Amy Beach, Jonathan Russell and others calls us back to nature. With new music by Iranian-American composer Sahba Aminikia, the world premier of House of Circus features the “Circus Heroes” of the Sirkhane Social Circus School and explores the transformational power of play.

Download the program for ‘Transformations’

Performers

Conductor
Brian Dowdy

Flute
Danielle Boor
Steve Cronk

Oboe
Diane Benjamin

Clarinet
Misen Luu

Bassoon
Brian Hadley
French Horn
Teresa Manzella
Tim Dwight

Trumpet
Buffy Larson
Gordon Meyers

Trombone
Brian McCullough

Tuba
Dean Shea
Violin
Catherine Himmerich
Joe Dolson
Isabel Arenivar
Rebecca Eilers

Viola
Lucas Moen
Blake Scheib

Cello
Kristin Snow
Marinos Glitsos

Bass
Jason Anderson

Percussion
Sarah Johnson

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • William Grant Still (arr. Lesnick), I Ride an Old Paint with soloist )
  • Paul Bonneau, Caprice en Forme de Valse with soloist )
  • Amy Beach, Pastorale for Wind Quintet with soloist )
  • Missy Mazzoli, Kinski Paganini with soloist )
  • Jonathan Russell, In the Fir Trees: Fireflies with soloist )
  • Sahba Aminikia, House of Circus with soloist )

Dates Performed

  • June 19, 2021

#123 “Soundscapes” (cancelled due to Covid-19)

Concert first performed on May 16, 2020.

Sibelius’ Karelia Overture celebrates the composer’s homeland, and MPO celebrates Minnesota’s Mina Kaiser in her Tombeaux & Rainbow. Persichetti’s Pastoral for Wind Quintet and Borodin’s In the Steppes of Central Asia journey through landscapes real and imagined, and William Grant Still’s Symphony No. 5 “The Western Hemisphere”.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Jean Sibelius, Karelia Overture
  • Vincent Persichetti, Pastoral, Op. 21 for Woodwind Quintet
  • Mina Kaiser, Tombeaux & Rainbow with soloists Shelly Gruskin, recorder and Johanna Gruskin, flute
  • Alexander Borodin, In the Steppes of Central Asia
  • William Grant Still, Symphony No. 5 “The Western Hemisphere”

Dates Performed

  • May 16, 2020

#122 “Crossings” (Cancelled due to Covid-19)

Concert first performed on March 14, 2020.

Shimmering colors and unforgettable melodies flow from three works that challenged contemporary notions of the “traditional” and the “new.” Playfulness and groove drive Libby Larsen’s Overture for the End of a Century, juxtaposing the traditional sounds of 20th century orchestral music with orchestral invocations of mixing boards, computer screens and synthesizers.

The pastorale sounds of Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9, “From the New World” interweave with melodies inspired by Native American music and the rhythmic idioms of from Czech music. Finally our incomparable guest artists, Korey Konkol and Stephanie Arado, captivate us with melodic virtuosity in Bruch’s Double Concerto in E Minor.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Libby Larsen, Overture for the End of a Century
  • Max Bruch, Double Concerto in E Minor, Op. 88 with soloist Stephanie Arado, violin and Korey Konkol, viola
  • Antonin Dvořák, Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, “From the New World”

Dates Performed

  • March 14, 2020

#121 “Currents”

Concert first performed on November 9, 2019.

Symphonic hymns and airs resound with nature imagery in Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Symphonic Variations on an African Air, Dvořák’s In Nature’s Realm, and Sibelius’ Finlandia. MPO and One Voice Mixed Chorus celebrate contemporary composers with local history in works by Dessa and Jocelyn Hagen, Mari Ésabel Valverde, and Lee Hoiby.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Antonin Dvořák, Nature’s Realm
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Symphonic Variations on an African Air, Op. 63
  • Jean Sibelius, Finlandia
  • Mari Esabel Valverde, Cloths of Heaven with soloist One Voice Mixed Chorus
  • Dessa/Jocelyn Hagen, Controlled Burn with soloist One Voice Mixed Chorus
  • Lee Hoiby, Hymn to the New Age with soloist One Voice Mixed Chorus

Dates Performed

  • November 9, 2019

#119 “The Inspirations of Youth”

Concert first performed on May 4, 2019.

During their brief lifetimes, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, José Pablo Moncayo, and Franz Schubert all made lasting impacts on their unique cultural landscapes. While still a student at the University of Minnesota, Libby Larsen co-founded what would become the American Composers Forum. MPO’s Spring concert is a celebration of youthful inspiration, cultural diversity, and musical advocacy.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Libby Larsen, Fanfare for a Learned Man
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Violin Concerto with soloist Catherine Himmerich
  • Franz Schubert, Symphony No. 8 “Unfinished”
  • José Pablo Moncayo, Huapango

Dates Performed

  • May 4, 2019

#118 “La Belle Musique”

Concert first performed on March 9, 2019.

Dancing skeletons, hidden identities, musical innovations, and romantic virtuosity sound forth in the music of late 18th and early 19th-century French composers Augusta Holmés, Cesar Franck, Camille Saint-Saëns, Gabriel Fauré, and Paul Dukas.

Lydia Artymiw, pianist

Lydia Artymiw, PianistThe recipient of an Avery Fisher Career Grant and the Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Prize, Philadelphia-born Lydia Artymiw has performed with over one hundred orchestras world-wide including the Boston Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony, St. Louis Symphony, National Symphony, Detroit Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Cincinnati Symphony, St. Luke’s Chamber Orchestra, and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra.

Solo recital tours have taken her to all major American cities and to important European music centers, and throughout the Far East. She has performed in England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, Ukraine, Estonia, Finland, and Poland, as well as in China, Singapore, New Zealand, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and South Korea.

Critics have acclaimed her seven solo recordings for the Chandos label, and she has also recorded for Bridge, Centaur, and Naxos. Her debut Chandos “Variations” CD won Gramophone Magazine’s “Best of the Year” award, and her Tchaikovsky Seasons CD sold over 25,000 copies. Her festival appearances include Alexandria, Aspen, Bantry (Ireland), Bay Chamber, Bravo! Vail Valley, Caramoor, Chamber Music Northwest, SaltBay, Chautauqua, Grand Canyon, Hollywood Bowl, Marlboro, Montreal, Mostly Mozart, Seattle, and Tucson. Her newest CD of the “Complete Cello and Piano Music by Felix Mendelssohn” with cellist Marcy Rosen was released on the Bridge label in April 2018 and is receiving enthusiastic reviews.

An acclaimed chamber musician, Artymiw has collaborated with such celebrated artists as Yo-Yo Ma, Richard Stoltzman, Arnold Steinhardt, Michael Tree, Kim Kashkashian, Marcy Rosen, John Aler, Benita Valente, and the Guarneri, Tokyo, American, Alexander, Borromeo, Daedalus, Miami, Orion, and Shanghai Quartets, and has toured nationally with Music from Marlboro groups. A recipient of top prizes in the 1976 Leventritt and the 1978 Leeds International Competitions, she graduated from Philadelphia’s University of the Arts and studied with distinguished concert pianist and former Director of the Curtis Institute of Music, Gary Graffman, for twelve years. In 2017, Artymiw was a juror for the Lang Lang Futian International Piano Competition in Shenzhen, China and in 2015, she was a juror for the first Van Cliburn Junior International Piano Competition in Fort Worth, TX, as well as on the juries for fifteen piano concerto competitions at the Juilliard and Manhattan Schools in New York. She has been a frequent guest piano teacher at Juilliard since 2015 and presented master classes at both Juilliard and the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia in 2016.

She is Distinguished McKnight Professor of Piano at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis where she has taught since 1989. In 2015 Artymiw was awarded the University of Minnesota’s “Excellence in Graduate Teaching” award. For more information, please visit her website at lydiaartymiw.com.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Paul Dukas, Fanfare pour précéder La péri
  • Gabriel Faure, Pavane, Op. 50
  • Cesar Franck, Variations Symphoniques for Piano and Orchestra with soloist Lydia Artymiw, Piano
  • Camille Saint-Saens, Danse macabre, Op. 40 with soloist Catherine Himmerich
  • Augusta Holmés, Irlande

Dates Performed

  • March 9, 2019

#117 Uncommon Voices

Concert first performed on November 3, 2018.

To begin the next 25 years of MPO history, we join forces with One Voice Mixed Chorus in a transcontinental program featuring Libby Larsen’s Fanfare for Humanity, Florence Price’s Symphony No. 1, and opera choruses by Verdi and Copland.

Conducted by Brian Dowdy

Works Performed

  • Libby Larsen, Fanfare for Humanity
  • Florence Price, Symphony No. 1 in e minor
  • Giuseppe Verdi, Overture to Nabucco
  • Giuseppe Verdi, “Va Pensiero” from Nabucco
  • Giuseppe Verdi, “Vedi! Le fosche” (Anvil Chorus) from Il trovatore
  • Aaron Copland, “The promise of living” from The Tender Land

Dates Performed

  • November 3, 2018