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Recital
RARE BAROQUE GEMS IN CREATIVE ARTS SERIES CONCERT
by Joanna Bramel Young
Sunday, June 02, 2013
A small but appreciative June 2 audience heard in Santa Rosa's Resurrection Parish a delightful buffet of baroque vocal and instrumental works performed by the five-year old Vinaccesi Ensemble of Berkeley. Nanette McGuinness soprano; Kindra Scharich, mezzo soprano; Jonathan Smucker, tenor; and ba...
Opera
POWERFUL OPENING NIGHT FOR CINNABAR'S CARMEN
by Vaida Falconbridge
Saturday, June 01, 2013
When "Carmen" debuted at the Opera Comique in 1875, it was poorly received. Its composer, Georges Bizet, died a few months later, thinking he had written another failure. Now widely considered the most popular opera in the world, "Carmen" was excellently performed and given an enthusiastic reception...
Symphony
FIVE FINGERS WITH THE STRENGTH OF TEN
by Steve Osborn
Thursday, May 23, 2013
"My name is David, and I'm going to be your conductor for this evening." With that corny but amusing opening line, guest conductor David Robertson introduced himself and the San Francisco Symphony to a less than full house at the Green Music Center on May 23. It was hard to understand why the place ...
Symphony
UKIAH SYMPHONY CLOSES SEASON WITH TWO BIG WORKS
by Ed Reinhart
Sunday, May 19, 2013
The Ukiah Symphony closed its 2012-13 season May 19th with a bold matinee presentation at the Mendocino College Theater. Featured were the Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in B Flat minor, Opus 23, and the third and fourth Movements of Beethoven's 9th Symphony, Opus 125. Pianist Lawrence Holmfjo...
Symphony
A PERFECT 10 FOR THE TENTH
by Steve Osborn
Saturday, May 11, 2013
The Santa Rosa Symphony capped off its first year in the resplendent Green Music Center with an impassioned performance of Shostakovich's Tenth Symphony, widely regarded as his masterpiece in the genre. Every section of the orchestra, from the lowest bass to the most stratospheric piccolo, played to...
Symphony
PRAYERS AND REDEMPTION FROM THE APSC
by Nicki Bell
Saturday, May 04, 2013
For its final set of the 2012-13 season on May 4 and 5, the American Philharmonic of Sonoma County offered a program titled "Prayer and Redemption." The first half consisted of the prayers, the second of the joy of redemption. Guest conductor Cyrus Ginwala spoke about the pieces beforehand and then ...
Symphony
FULL CIRCLE FOR KAHANE
by Steve Osborn
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Since the conclusion of his decade-long tenure with the Santa Rosa Symphony in 2006, conductor laureate Jeffrey Kahane has traveled widely, but he has often circled back to Sonoma County as a piano soloist. On Saturday evening, April 27, he upped the ante by not only bringing his prodigious keyboard...
Recital
MESMERIZING IRISH MEZZO TELLS STORIES IN WEILL SONG RECITAL
by Vaida Falconbridge
Sunday, April 21, 2013
There were stories of fiery gypsies, dances, kisses, deep angst, unrequited love, mermaids, and headstrong young maidens. Irish-born mezzo soprano Tara Erraught told her Weill Hall audience April 21 in her lilting Irish brogue, “People ask why I pick the programs the way I do. Well, being from Irel...
Recital
SONG CYCLES FOR CONNOISSEURS
by Terry McNeill
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
Elina Garanca’s April 9 Weill Hall recital was a connoisseur’s program, eschewing the more popular song literature and concentrating on mostly subtle and evocative works of Schumann, Berg and Richard Strauss. With pianist Kevin Murphy, the Latvian mezzo soprano, famous from the opera stage as a sum...
Recital
VADIM REPIN: STARLIGHT, SHINING BRIGHT
by Steve Osborn
Sunday, April 07, 2013
Born in Siberia in 1971, violinist Vadim Repin is as Russian as they come, but he played nary a note of Russian music in his April 7 recital at the Green Music Center's Weill Hall. The closest he got was the last movement of the Janacek violin sonata, which celebrates the triumphal entry of Russian...
SYMPHONY REVIEW
Philharmonia Healdsburg / Saturday, June 02, 2012
Les Pfutzenreuter, conductor; Philip Santos, violin

Krisha Montgomery, Beth Aiken, Rebecca Ayers, Allen Biggs, Les Pfutzenreuter and Philip Santos

SANTOS' MENDELSSOHN CONCERTO SOARS IN SEASON-ENDING HEALDSBURG PHIL CONCERT

by Elizabeth MacDougall
Saturday, June 02, 2012

Conductor Les Pfutzenreuter can’t seem to stand by when an orchestra needs a leader. In addition to directing the Ukiah Symphony for two decades he recently directed at the Mendocino Music Festival and this year formed the Healdsburg Philharmonic, giving the group’s first concert in December and on June 2 completed a gala first season in Healdsburg’s Raven Theater.

Some may think this orchestra fills a gap created by the moves south of the Santa Rosa Symphony and American Philharmonic, but the playing on this concert, albeit with standard repertoire, was exemplary. They have things to say.

Mendelssohn’s E Minor Violin Concerto, Op. 64, was easily the highlight of the evening, and Philip Santos a capable soloist. In the opening statement for the violin there was a rising arpeggio passage that wasn’t in sync with the orchestra, but things soon settled down. Mr. Santos used the score throughout and has a beguiling tone, his virtuosity proving why he is a North Bay favorite.

At the end of the Allegro molto’s cadenza the violin soared and the rhythmic acceleration was captivating, as good a transition as I have ever heard in a hall or on recordings of this ever popular work.

In the Andante, following a sustained bassoon tone in B, the orchestra produced a particularly homogenous sound, and the strings carried even when playing softly. Several clarinet lines were picturesque and the blend was good. The spirited finale (Allegro non troppo) was an exciting romp and just before the end the woodwinds supported Mr. Santos’ long trills to great effect.

After studying Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony in C Minor through concerts and four-hand and Liszt’s solo transcriptions, I found myself on familiar ground with Mr. Pfutzenreuter’s reading of the familiar four-movement piece from 1808. He brought brisk tempos to the first movement and noticeable was the lack of lingering on the initial tutti chords, in 2/4 time as written and not in one as is often heard.

The slow movement was on the edge of too fast and had characteristics of a waltz. In the declamatory fourth movement (Allegro) the conductor paid close attention to the thematic lines, no small task considering the tempo and the final 29 measures in C Major are a continuous fortissimo. Thee the Orchestra’s brass was reminiscent of the famed Chicago Symphony – full, in tune, and really loud.

The audience of 150 in the Raven was clearly amazed at the performance and applauded as one.

Opening the concert was smoothly played Coriolan Overture of Beethoven, Op. 62.
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