News
The PSO has lost a dear friend
7/26/2010
Today, the Peoria Symphony Orchestra mourns the passing of Sam Fan, who not only gifted the orchestra with his excellence on cello, but with many hours of volunteerism as well. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his wife, Lori, and his family.
As the faculty of Bradley University, where Sam taught beginning in 1992 knows, Sam was an outstanding colleague. Aside from his role on stage, Sam also served as the Players Representative to the PSO board from 1998 to 2002 and served on the music director selection committee in 2009-2010. His talent, cheerful attitude and humor will be sorely missed by us.
A celebration of Sam's life will be this Sunday, August 1, at 2:00 p.m. at Dingeldine Music Center on the campus of Bradley University. To read the published obituary, please go to:
http://www.legacy.com/pjstar/Obituaries.asp?Page=Lifestory&PersonId=144314651
PSO Season Programs Announced
7/8/2010
There’s Mozart, Schumann and Strauss, to be sure. Dvorak, Beethoven and Prokofiev are also among the favored composers in the Peoria Symphony Orchestra’s just-released repertoire for its 2010/2011 season. But with a new music director, local music lovers should expect some new classical offerings, as well - including pieces by Peoria composers from the past and present.
“I like to think of programming as creating a wonderful recipe,” said George Stelluto, who was named the PSO’s music director on June 24. “You combine the best of local and regional ingredients with exotic things you find on your travels to create a sound palate that people not only enjoy but remember. I want people to experience the concert, not just hear it.”
The PSO season opens on September 18 and features a fanfare written by John Orfe, an Assistant Professor of Music at Bradley University who has won numerous ASCAP awards. Also on that evening’s program are Wagner’s Meistersinger Overture, William Schuman’s Symphony No. 5 and Dvorak’s ninth symphony, “From the New World.”
The October 23d concert takes the audience to Russia, opening with contemporary composer Elena Roussanova Lucas’ Russian Fanfare and Celebration Music. Prokofiev’s final masterpiece, Symphony No. 7 follows, and pianist Terrence Wilson (winner of a SONY ES Award for Musical Excellence) closes the concert with Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2.
Fans of Amadeus will appreciate the concert on November 13, as it features four distinct styles of Mozart’s work. The concert opens with the comic Der Schauspieldirektor, and Opera Scenes and Arias follows. After intermission, fifteen year-old violinist Anna Lee (who performed on NPR’s “From the Top” from Carnegie Hall at age 13) performs the Violin Concerto No. 3, and then vocalists will take the stage for the finale, Mozart’s Coronation Mass.
On January 15, the audience will be treated to ballet music both new and old, as well as masterworks from the 19th and 20th centuries. Opening the concert is Darius Milhaud’s 1923 ballet music Creation du Monde, followed by Ernest Bloch’s Concerto Grosso No. 1.
The second half of the concert belongs to Beethoven, with the overture to the ballet Creatures of Prometheus followed by what the composer called “my little symphony in F,” his cheerful Symphony No. 8.
On February 19, the Symphony welcomes Joseph Johnson, principal cellist of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, for his interpretation of Schumann’s Concerto for Cello in A minor. Opening the concert is Path of Echoes by award-winning contemporary composer Huang Roa, and Schumann’s mastery continues in the second half with his Symphony No. 3.
Another Concerto Grosso opens the March 26 concert; this one by contemporary composer Ellen Taffe Zwilich. Then, one of the finest oboe players in the world, Alex Klein, takes the stage for a performance of Richard Strauss’ Oboe Concerto. In 2002, Mr. Klein won a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra for his recording of this concerto with the Chicago Symphony. The music of Richard Strauss returns in the second half with his Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme.
The season’s final concert on April 16 brings the music of another Peorian, an exciting new operatic work by a young composer, and two well-loved favorites of the concert hall. First is the medley of Three Movie Songs by Richard Whiting, a Peorian who found fame in Hollywood in the 1920’s and 30’s writing music for film. Then, Grammy Award-nominated violinist Phillipe Quint performs Eric Korngold’s soaring Violin Concerto, and after intermission, young composer Armand Ranjbaran’s Justice, an operatic work based on comic super heroes, is given its first voice outside of New York City. The season comes to a close with selections from one of the most beautiful ballet scores ever composed: Prokofiev’s Romeo et Juliet.
Aside from its seven season subscription concerts, the Peoria Symphony Orchestra will also present Classical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to the Beatles on Friday, September 24 at 7:00 p.m. at O’Brien Field. Featuring the Peoria Symphony Orchestra and the four musicians/vocalists that made Beatlemania a hit on Broadway, it promises to deliver a Beatles experience like no other. Tickets are $30 and $40, and can be purchased at O’Brien Field or by calling the O’Brien Field box office at 680-4008.
Season tickets for the Symphony’s season are now on sale starting at $149, with school-age children’s season tickets at half price. Five-concert Flex Passes and four-concert packages are also available. For information and to purchase tickets, please call the PSO ticket line at 309-671-1096.
New PSO Music Director Announced
6/24/2010
The Peoria Symphony Orchestra is pleased to announce the identity of our new Music Director, who will ascend the podium for us at the opening of our 2010/2011 season on September 18.
Maestro George Stelluto, who with the orchestra presented a thrilling concert on February 18, has been chosen to lead the PSO. Mr. Stelluto was one of seven candidates who auditioned last season, chosen from an intial field of over 250 applicants for the position. The candidates included Michael Butterman, Sarah Hicks, Leslie Dunner, Robert Franz and Brett Mitchell. The seventh candidate, Morihiko Nakahara, withdrew his candidacy during the selection process.
In addition to his new position with the Peoria Symphony Orchestra, Mr. Stelluto is the Resident Conductor at the Juilliard School, the Assistant Conductor of the Ravinia Festival with the Chicago Symphony, and is an advisor to Sinfonia por La Vida in Ecuador a new orchestra based on Venezuelas Il Sistema program. A versatile conductor comfortable in many styles and genres, George Stelluto led performances at Lincoln Center with the Juilliard Orchestra and collaborates with the Dance, Vocal, Pre-College, and Jazz divisions at Juilliard in numerous projects.
In George Stelluto the Peoria Symphony Orchestra has found a humble man whose demonstrated artistic, educational, and business values will enable the organization to lead a renaissance of cultural values in our region, said Peoria Symphony Orchestra president Dr. James L. McGee. Mr. Stelluto is deeply committed to the role of the arts in America's increasingly diverse society. He will be an important community resource for those of all ages and social status who seek the relevance that classical music and the arts can add to our shared lives. I look forward to the new era ahead.
Added PSO executive director Judy Furniss, The Peoria Symphony Orchestra extends its warmest welcome to George Stelluto, and we look forward to exciting seasons of providing the best musical experience to the area under his baton.
Founded in 1897, The Peoria Symphony Orchestra is the nations 14th oldest orchestra. Its programming consists of a seven-concert Masterworks Series as well as educational concerts for students and cross-over concerts such as Classical Mystery Tour - A Tribute to the Beatles to be performed on Friday, September 24 at OBrien Field.
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