CCO Logo Blue with Dana

Sunday, September 22, 2024, 3:00 p.m.
Gershwin Performing Arts Center | Murrieta Mesa High School

Today’s Program

Diane Wittry (b. 1964)
Summer Sun (2021) (West Coast Premiere)

 

Ottorino Respighi (1879 – 1936)

Trittico Botticelliano

1. La Primavera
2. L’adorazione dei Magi
3. La nascita di Venere

INTERMISSION

Frederick Deliu (1862 – 1934), arr. Robert Threlfall

Irmelin Prelude

Igor Stravinsky (1882 – 1971), arr. Paul Leonard Schaffer

  1. Introduction
  2. Prelude & Dance of the Firebir
  3. Rondo
  4. Infernal Dance
  5. Lullaby
  6. Final Hymn

 

Thanks to the Murrieta Valley Unified School District for their support of this concert.

 



About Our Artistic Director and Conductor

Dana Zimbric is marking her 14th season as Artistic Director and Conductor of the California Chamber Orchestra.

In addition to her work with us, she is Music Director of the Classics Philharmonic Orchestra, which performs educational programs for San Diego area students, and recently made her conducting debut with the San Diego Symphony.

Dana’s past conducting experience includes positions with the San Diego Youth Symphony, Avante Chamber Orchestra, Orchestra Nova San Diego, and the University of Wisconsin Chamber and Symphony Orchestras.

An accomplished clarinetist, Dana holds a Bachelor of Music in Clarinet Performance and a Master of Music in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Wisconsin. She lives in San Diego with her husband and two young daughters.


Members of the California Chamber Orchestra

Violin I

Kate Hatmaker (Concertmaster)
Kenneth Liao
Sarah Schwartz

Violin II

Missy Lukin (Principal)
Isaac Allen
Angela Xing

Viola

Michael Molnau (Principal)
Linda Piatt
Greg Perrin

Cello

Andrew Hayhurst (Principal)
Elizabeth Brown

Bass

Sam Hager (Principal)

Flute

Pam Martchev (Principal)

Oboe

Rong-Huey Liu (Principal)

Clarinet

Frank Renk (Principal)

Bassoon

Ryan Simmons (Principal)

Horn

Darby Hinshaw (Principal)

Trumpet

Elizabeth Howard (Principal)

Trombone

Sean Reusch (Principal)

Timpani

Beverly Reese Dorcy (Principal)
David Whitman

Harp

Elena Mashkovtseva (Principal)

Piano

Brian Verhoye (Principal)

Orchestra Personnel Manager and Music Librarian

Michael Molnau

 

 

AFM logo

California Chamber Orchestra musicians in this concert are members of The American Federation of Musicians, Local 325


Program Notes

We begin today’s concert with the West Coast Premiere of Summer Sun (2021) by Diane Wittry. Born in California, Ms. Wittry is celebrated as a conductor, author, teacher, and composer. Composed during the Covid pandemic, Summer Sun evokes, in the composer’s words, “the steam from the heat rising like a cloud from the pavement as the morning sun sizzles and shimmers.” Today’s performance by the California Chamber Orchestra is among the first live renditions of this work.

Next, we present Trittico Botticelliano (1927) by Italian composer Ottorino Respighi, inspired by three famous early Renaissance works by artist Sandro Botticelli.

The first movement is inspired by Botticelli’s Primavera (c. 1482), which depicts a lush orchard scene with fruit-filled trees and flowers covering the ground. The figures include Mercury, the Three Graces, Venus, Cupid, Flora, Chloris, and Zephyrus. Respighi’s musical interpretation captures the vibrant energy of spring with high trills and quick, playful motifs shared between the strings and woodwinds.

The second movement draws from Botticelli’s L’Adorazione dei Magi, illustrating the Biblical story of the three kings following a star to present gifts to the baby Jesus. Respighi weaves the familiar tune Veni Emmanuel (O Come, O Come Emmanuel) throughout the movement.

The final movement, La Nascita di Venere (The Birth of Venus), reflects Botticelli’s famous painting of the goddess Venus emerging from the sea. Respighi mirrors the rolling waves with a repeating string motif, while the upper woodwinds float in and out like gentle breezes. As Venus approaches the shore, the dynamics swell before gradually returning to the peaceful undulation of the sea, which slowly calm to stillness.

The second half of the concert begins with the beautiful Irmelin Prelude by English composer Frederick Delius (1862–1934). Irmelin was Delius’ first opera, combining two folktales—The Princess and the Swineherd and Irmelin. The opera tells the story of Princess Irmelin, who dreams of a heroic suitor. In the final act, she meets him disguised as a swineherd, and they immediately fall in love, concluding the opera with a romantic duet. Despite early performances, Irmelin achieved limited success.

In the final years of his life, when Delius became blind and paralyzed, he relied on the artistic support of the young English composer Eric Fenby. Fenby became Delius’ “compositional hands,” enabling Delius to continue creating music. It was through this partnership that Delius returned to Irmelin and created this short prelude based on the original opera. Characterized by pastel-colored orchestration, Irmelin Prelude features rising and falling woodwind solos.

We close with selections from an orchestral reduction of Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite (1945) Igor Stravinsky’s The Firebird Suite (1945), a ballet score originally written for Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, based on Russian folktales.

In the ballet, Prince Ivan hunts in an enchanted forest (Introduction) and captures the magical Firebird, who pleads for her release. In exchange, she promises to aid the prince in the future. Ivan agrees, and the Firebird gives him a magical feather (Dance of the Firebird). The prince continues his journey, discovering 13 princesses held captive by the evil King Kashei (Rondo). The princesses reveal that Kashei turns his enemies to stone. With the Firebird’s feather, Ivan is protected. The prince engages in a fight with the king when the Firebird returns, enchanting the king and his ogres. She casts a spell to make them dance themselves into exhaustion (Infernal Dance). The Firebird then lulls them to an eternal sleep (Lullaby), freeing the princesses and Kashei’s stone victims. In the Final Hymn, the celebration of freedom begins.

— Dana Zimbric

 


 

Thank You to Our Sponsors and Donors

Society Sponsors

Judy Call
Prudhomme Associates, CPAs
City of Temecula
Leslie and Joseph Waters

Season Sponsors

Mark Margolin
Nicola Helm & Stephen Ryder

Education Sponsors

Craig Carper, LaPointe Wealth Management
Murrieta Rotary

Concert Sponsors

Susan & Ken Dickson
Walt Fidler

Soloist’s Circle

Kiyoe MacDonald

Concertmaster’s Circle

Terry Kvitky
Kathryn McCarty
Barry Weiss
Rudy Wokoek

Principal’s Circle

John Welniak

Musician’s Circle

Candace Flint
Karen Hartnett
Susan Humphrey
Sarah Ivar
Martha Minkler
Sana Quijada



Join us at The Merc on the 2nd Sunday of each month for recitals by some of the region’s best musicians. These intimate performances include opportunities to hear from the musicians about their art, their careers, and the music being performed.