CROSSROADS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA 2004-05

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SANTA MONICA SYMPHONY CONCERT FEATURING CROSSROADS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA DELIGHTS AUDIENCE
article & Photos by D’Lynn Waldron 2004

An enthusiastic audience of nearly 2000 had a wonderful evening Sunday, December 12, at the Santa Monica Symphony’s “Salute to the Community” concert in the Civic Auditorium, celebrating the Symphony’s 60th Anniversary Season.

The Santa Monica Symphony, under the baton of Music Director and Conductor Allen Robert Gross, was joined by acclaimed Santa Monica baritone Jubilant Sykes, and by the very talented young students of the Santa Monica Crossroads Chamber Orchestra.

The program opened with Gross introducing the audience to a new symphonic composition “Momentum” by Chen Yi. Gross gave an animated description of how the piece depicts the thunderous power of lava, the sweeping strokes of Chinese calligraphy, and incorporates traditional Chinese melodies. The orchestra provided a sample of each to the applause of the audience.

The orchestra then played ‘Momentum’, which gives all the percussion, especially timpanist Alan Peck, a unique opportunity to unleash all the power of their instruments.

Next on the program, the Crossroads Chamber Orchestra was conducted by its Director, Alexander Treger in Tchaikovsky’s richly melodic “Souvenir of Florence”, a composition for strings.

The eighteen students in the Crossroads Chamber Orchestra, who range from 12 to 17, amazed everyone with their mastery of their instruments and of the music, and received a standing ovation.

At the intermission, children in the audience were overheard telling their parents and grandparents that they also wanted to play an instrument, and each had already decided, from seeing the orchestra, just which instrument that was.

After the intermission, international concert and recording artist Jubilant Sykes, a native of Santa Monica who lives here with his wife and three young sons, thrilled the audience with American folk songs and spirituals in his marvelous baritone voice that is famed for its richness, range and emotional expression.

Sykes’ first song was the deeply felt “City Called Heaven” in an arrangement for harp and orchestra. Sykes brought to this song an emotional quality few singers are capable of.

In a complete change of mood, Sykes next delighted the audience with Aaron Copland’s arrangement of the folk song “I Bought Me a Cat”, in which the singer emulates, with the orchestra, the sounds of all the animals he acquires, and finally the wife to go with them. This was especially enjoyed by the children in the audience who laughed with delight.

Audience would not stop applauding until Sykes gave them an encore, which was ‘Witness’, the narrative of a spiritual journey set to a beautiful melody.

For the last piece on the program, the young students of the Crossroads Chamber Orchestra sat beside their counterparts in the Santa Monica Symphony to play Dvorak’s Eighth Symphony, under the baton of the Symphony’s Music Director Allen Robert Gross. The rich melodic lines of this much loved symphony were enhanced by having the seventeen very talented young musicians from the Crossroads School augment the orchestra.

The audience thoroughly enjoyed their evening with the Santa Monica Symphony, Jubilant Sykes, and the Crossroads Chamber Orchestra. This 60 year tradition of free concerts is made possible by the City of Santa Monica and the generosity of the Symphony’s donors and sponsors.

There will be two more free concerts in the 2004-2005 Season.

Sunday, March 13, 2005 the program will include Mozart’s melodic Overture to the “Abduction from the Seraglio” and “Sinfonia Concertante”, and Shostakovich’s powerful Eighth Symphony.

Sunday, May 29, 2005, the 60th Anniversary season finale will include Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, “The Choral” for which the orchestra will be joined by four soloists and two full choruses.

Concerts are in the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium at Main and Pico. Concerts begin at 7:30 and there is a very popular pre-concert talk by Raymond Knapp in the auditorium’s Meeting Room at 6:45.

...... Chen Yi: Momentum -- Santa Monica Symphony
...... Tchaikovsky: Souvenirs of Florence -- Crossroads School Chamber Orchestra
...... Traditional American Songs and Spirtuals -- Jubilant Sykes, baritone
...... Dvorak: Symphony No. 8 -- Santa Monica Symphony with The Crossroads Chamber Orchestra
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CROSSROADS SCHOOL CHAMBER ORCHESTRA

The Crossroads Chamber Orchestra, under its Director of Music, Alexander Treger, with Maxim Eshkenazy, Assistant Conductor, is the performance group for the Elizabeth Mandell Music Institute of Crossroads School. The Orchestra was started the 1980’s and as conductors has had Heiichiro Ohyama and Alexander Treger, both acclaimed string players who have become esteemed conductors as well. Alexander Treger is also the conductor of the American Youth Symphony.

The seventeen young people in the 2004-05 Crossroads Chamber Orchestra range in age from 12 to 17.

VIOLIN I: Yejin Kim, 17, Yumi Man, 17, Julie Chang, 16. VIOLIN II: Hyo Joo Uh, 18, Stephanie Yu, 15, Diana Newman, 13, Georgia Broughton, 17. VIOLA: Sophie Cash-Goldwasser, 17, Ken Hamao, 15, Juliana Gabrovsky, 16. CELLO: Han Bin Yoon, 16, Hannah Kim, 15, Jennifer Li, 17, Jeffery Li, 15, Sami Myerson, 12, Max Dowaliby, 12, Ian Gottlieb. FLUTE:,Shelley Ackerman, 13 yrs.






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