Noting down the seasons
Young Chang
The Pacific Symphony Orchestra’s 2002-03 season has all the
climates of a full year.
Through the works of everyone from Mozart to Neil Sedaka, the
season will offer music fitting for the chilliest of winters, the
prettiest of springs, the most romantic of falls and the most
blazingly intense of summers.
“We make our own independent judgments as to what a balanced
season looks like,” said orchestra president John Forsyte. “We try to
have different styles.”
With three separate series to book performers for, the styles
really do run the gamut.
The 2002-03 Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom Family Classics Series
starts Wednesday with Arnaldo Cohen performing Liszt’s Piano Concerto
No. 1. Conductor Carl St. Clair will then lead the symphony Oct. 5 in
a performance of Strauss’ tone poem “A Hero’s Life.”
“We’re really excited to hear the orchestra play one of the most
sonorous and rich works in the repertoire,” Forsyte said of the
Strauss piece. “That’s a test piece, a piece which every musician
will play at their very best. It tests every instrument.”
Guest conductor Angel Gil-Ordonez will lead the symphony in
flamenco works including Joaquin Turina’s “Orgia” and Roberto
Gerhard’s “Alegrias” on Oct. 16 and 17.
Pianist Andre Watts will perform Nov. 13 and 14.
Guest conductor and violinist Jean-Jacques Kantorow will lead the
symphony in a program titled “Immortal Mozart” on Dec. 4 and 5.
Mozart’s “Overture to Don Giovanni,” Concerto No. 4 for Violin and
Orchestra in D Major are among the pieces to be played.
Violinist Sarah Chang will perform Jan. 8 and 9 with the orchestra
to perform Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1 and Ravel’s “Tzigane,
Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra.”
The American Composers Festival will begin Feb. 5 and 6 with the
West Coast premiere of composer William Bolcom’s “Songs of Innocence
and of Experience.” The American Composers Competition will be held
March 12 and 13.
On April 3 and 4, Beethoven interpreter Stephen Kovacevich will
perform Beethoven’s Concerto No. 5 for Piano and Orchestra with the
symphony. The next month, St. Clair and the symphony will perform
Stravinsky’s “The Fairy’s Kiss” and Tchaikovsky’s “Suite from Swan
Lake.” Symphony concertmaster Raymond Kobler will also perform those
nights (May 7 and 8) with Prokofiev Concerto No. 1 for Violin and Orchestra in D Major.
The classics’ season ends June 4 and 5 with Brahm’s Symphony No. 1
in C minor, Wagner’s Prelude to Act III of “Lohengrin,” Chopin’s
“Adante Spinato and Grande Polonaise in E-flat Major” and Christopher
O’Riley’s “Ode to Liberace.”
The Symphony’s 2002-03 Pops Season will run Friday through May 10
at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
The Righteous Brothers will perform Friday and Oct. 5. Three
Broadway stars will perform the hits of Rodgers and Hammerstein and
Andrew Lloyd Webber on Nov. 15 and 16. Michael Feinstein’s Holiday
Romance, a night of holiday music, will happen Dec. 13 and 14 and
Anne Murray, who Forsyte calls “one of the most beloved
multi-platinum singers” will make her Pacific Symphony debut Feb. 7
and 8.
The Canadian Brass will present some New Orleans blues March 14
and 15, Ann Hampton Callaway will perform April 4 and 5 and Neil
Sedaka will conclude the series May 9 and 10.
The symphony’s 2002-03 Mervyn’s Musical Mornings series, an active
and interactive concert experience for kids between ages 4 and 11 and
their families, is just as mixed up in mood and melody. “The Lone
Ranger’s Triumph” will happen Nov. 16, “Heroes for the Holidays” will
take place Dec. 14, “Sleeping Beauty” on Feb. 8, “Masterminds of
Music!” on March 15, “The Magic Flute” will be presented on April 5
and “Red, White and Blue Heroes” will conclude the series on May 10.
For more information on any of the series, call (714) 755-5799 or
check out www.pacificsymphony.org.
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