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  • MSO opens with something new

    Melrose Free Press
    Oct 22 2004

    MSO opens with something new
    By Dan Mac Alpine/ [email protected]


    Yoichi Udagawa, musical director of the Melrose Symphony Orchestra,
    drew up the program for the orchestra's season-opening concert a
    little like they way a bride prepares for a wedding - something new,
    something borrowed, something old or at least older and something
    blue.

    The something new would be a world-premiere composition by
    Gloucester composer Robert Bradshaw.

    The something borrowed would be soloist Dennis Alves, borrowed
    from his regular gig as trumpet player for the Boston Pops Esplanade
    Orchestra.

    The something older would be Dvorak's New World Symphony.

    All that's missing is something blue - unless one counts Alves'
    face after he completes one of the challenging trumpet runs in
    Alexander Arutunian's Trumpet Concerto.

    The formula follows the successful pattern Udagawa has used
    since becoming the MSO's conductor and musical director. The
    ebullient and effervescent Udagawa, who leads his rehearsals with a
    smile and an infectious energy that often has him popping up on his
    toes, likes to give his players and his audiences a mix of old
    favorites, a lost classical nugget and/or something contemporary in
    each of his concerts.

    Alves' solo appearance also continues another Udagawa tradition:
    attracting solid, professional musicians and singers from as far away
    as Japan and as near as Boston to work with his all-volunteer
    symphony now in its 87th year, the oldest community symphony in the
    nation.

    "These aren't thematic selections," said Udagawa. "Whenever I
    put a program together, I think of what will the audience, what will
    I and what will the musicians enjoy. I love to do new pieces. They're
    always a surprise for everyone and it's fun to do a piece I know
    people will enjoy, but isn't played very much."

    For the new piece, Udagawa chose Bradshaw with whom he has
    worked in the Cape Ann Symphony - Udagawa is also the musical
    director for that regional symphony.

    Udagawa said he gave Bradshaw few parameters for the five-minute
    composition.

    "The piece had to be within a certain technical ability. We're
    not the BSO," said Udagawa. "We couldn't have too much percussion.
    You can't just write anything and it had to be in a style people
    could grasp."

    Bradshaw's composition, the "Fox and the Countryman," recalls an
    Aesop fable of the same name. In the story, the countryman helps the
    fox hide from hunters, yet betrays him to the hunters. The Bradshaw
    piece follows the story in notes rather than in words.

    "I know a lot of people in the ensemble. Many do perform at the
    highest professional levels. When writing this piece for this
    ensemble, I didn't feel any limitation," said Bradshaw. "I didn't ask
    for extremely complex rhythms or extended solos. I also didn't write
    anything less complicated than when I imagined it."

    "He often thinks about stories when he writes," Udagawa said of
    Bradshaw. "This is a very cute piece. Very energetic and playful.
    There are some terrific parts for the tympanist to play. Everyone
    likes the piece a lot and we are very excited about it. It's
    sophisticated and playful at the same time."

    The Concerto for Trumpet, by Armenian composer Alexander
    Arutunian, is also a contemporary piece, especially by classical
    music standards. Arutunian, born in 1920, wrote the piece, one of the
    few concertos written for trumpet, in 1950. He was a People's Artist
    of the Year in 1970 in the former Soviet Union and the composer uses
    Eastern European musical influences and also draws on the works of
    contemporary Eastern European composers Shostakovich and, in the
    slower sections, a lesser-known composer, Khachaturian.

    The concerto combines both fast and slower, romantic movements,
    although Arutunian wrote the piece without any breaks among the three
    movements. The composer opens the piece with a fast, intense fanfare
    run that fads to more lyrical elements that bring in the strings. The
    middle section includes a clarinet solo. Arutunian brings in the
    whole orchestra for the climax.

    "The piece requires the trumpet player to show off everything,"
    Udagawa said. "High notes. Fast playing. It requires the full range
    of expression from the player. It's just a great piece. There are so
    many great melodies in it."

    Udagawa called the New World Symphony "an old war horse" - the
    term he affectionately uses to describe well-known classical pieces.
    These works have often permeated popular culture. Their themes are
    used in commercials, TV themes and are somehow ubiquitous. The old
    war horses often spark a, "Oh, so that's where that comes from,"
    response from audience members.

    The New World Symphony, by American immigrant composer, Antonin
    Dvorak (1841-1904), likely will provide such a cultural epiphany.

    Dvorak came to New York in 1892, lured by art patron Jeanette
    Thurber, to head the National Conservatory of Music, which she
    founded to help develop American music and especially
    African-American composers of the time.

    "I am convinced that the future music of this country must be
    founded on what are called Negro melodies. These can be the
    foundation of a serious and original school of composition, to be
    developed in the United States," wrote Dvorak.

    Thus, the New World Symphony combines influences both from
    Dvorak's Bohemian childhood and elements of the Negro spiritual and
    in the mixing he created a new and, now, thoroughly loved symphony.

    "It's probably the most popular or at least in the top four of
    all classical music," Udagawa said.
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