Music to tour Europe
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Elia Powers
After 27 years of playing to local audiences, Orange County’s Pacific
Symphony is going global.
Symphony representatives announced details of the orchestra’s
first European concert tour at a press conference Wednesday.
The 11-day, nine-city series begins in Munich, Germany, on March
20, 2006, and concludes in Vienna, Austria. Orchestra members and
guests will travel by plane, train and bus to the German cities of
Cologne, Dusseldorf, Essen, Frankfurt, Hannover and Wuppertal, and to
the Swiss city of Lucerne.
“We are confident in our commitment to the tour, and we are
determined to make it work,” Pacific Symphony President John Forsyte
said in front of a packed room Wednesday at Orange County Performing
Arts Center’s Founders Hall.
About 200 people will make the overseas trip, he said. Longtime
symphony supporters Sandy and John Daniels donated $750,000 and are
the lead sponsors of the tour. Forsyte received an overall commitment
of $1 million last summer, which he said will cover most of the
travel expenses.
The Segerstrom Foundation is a supporting sponsor of the tour, and
PIMCO -- Pacific Investment Management Co. -- and Allianz Global
Investors are the Munich concert supporters.
John Daniels, chairman of the orchestra liaison committee and
symphony board member, said he is interested in seeing the orchestra
gain international attention.
“The Pacific Symphony is a major symphony orchestra, but the world
doesn’t know it yet,” said Daniels, property manager of South Coast
Plaza.
An overseas tour had been a priority for Forsyte and the board of
directors since a summer 2003 meeting with a European-based concert
management company.
Jim Medvitz, who served as the symphony’s vice president of
artistic operations for 18 years, said Wednesday’s announcement is a
major milestone.
“No one would have dreamed of this years ago,” he said. “It’s a
synergistic moment with the opening of our new concert hall.”
The orchestra’s future home, the Renee and Henry Segerstrom
Concert Hall, is scheduled to open in fall 2006.
During the orchestra’s final season in the Orange County
Performing Arts Center’s Segerstrom Hall, Music Director Carl St.
Clair said audiences will get a preview of music to be played at next
year’s European tour.
He said he is planning to mix traditional and contemporary music
into the orchestra’s repertoire.
St. Clair is planning to honor overseas audiences by including
European masterworks, including Richard Strauss’ Ein Heldenleben and
Shostakovich’s Concerto No. 1 for Cello and Orchestra.
A 15-year music director with the Pacific Symphony, St. Clair has
guest-conducted at a variety of European concert halls.
But he said this trip provides a new challenge.
“This is one of the biggest moments in this orchestra’s history,”
St. Clair said.
“Knowing I’m going to be standing on some of the greatest stages
in the world, I have great anticipation.
“It’s almost too much to handle.”
At the press conference, St. Clair unveiled the 2005-06 symphony
schedule.
The Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom Family Foundation Classics Series
kicks off Sept. 28 with a concert featuring violinist Joshua Bell.The
center’s Pops season, running Sept. 30 through June 10, includes
appearances by recording artists Kenny Rogers and Burt Bacharach.
To close the Classics Series, St. Clair said the orchestra will
play Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, the first major work performed at the
original Segerstrom Hall’s opening night in 1986.
“It gives us a certain degree of closure,” St. Clair said. We’ll
leave the way we came in.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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