BARTLESVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA _5-4-24__ - podcast episode cover

BARTLESVILLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA _5-4-24__

May 01, 20246 min
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Transcript

Good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. It's time. Now do you speak with Maestro Lauren Green. And we've got a big show coming up on the fourth. Tell us a little bit about it. Good morning, Tom, Yes, we do. This Saturday, the symphony is giving its final concert of the season. And it's sort of an unusual premise for a concert. And because we selected three fairly unusual

composers, and who might those be, well funny you should ask. I discovered just to browsing one day that there are three composers who are somewhat fairly well known and who lived very long live almost duplicating each other in terms of when they were born and when they died. They were born in the middle of the eighteen hundreds, nearly in the eighteen seventies sort of, and died

in the nineteen fifties. And these three composers are an America, Charles Ives, who's known for being rather experimental and unusual, and Jean Sebelius, who's most well known for his piece Flandia that most people would recognized, but he

was from Finland. And then Rafe Vaughan Williams, who is considered to be one of the great British composers, and these guys all lived in their respective countries and wrote music that had a lot to do with their respective countries, all at the same time, but yet at the same time made three different kinds of music. So we threw them all on a concert together, and that's basically where we came up with the idea of Three's Company, and that's

the name we called the concert. Well, this is going to be really fun. We're going to get a sample from around the world in pretty much a snapshot in time. It really is. And of course there were a lot of even more famous composers composing during that time, and these three are so unusual and so unique that it's a real interesting comparison. Especially Charles I

was the American. Not surprisingly, he was sort of off doing his own thing, and he composed music that sort of combined, you know, twenty tunes all at once, and they were all sort of folk tunes and marches and things like this from his New England background. And so contrast that with some of the beautiful other stuff with Sabellilius and Penlandia and so forth, and it's going to be a wide variety on this concert. Now, this is

really great. It's a nice way to kind of end up the season here with something so completely different and refreshing and kind of an eye opener as well as an ear opener. Well, you know, you use exactly i'ves He used to say, you know that you needed open ears to hear his music, and that's true. But you're ear exactly right that this would be probably like no concert people have experienced in some ways. You know. There's also an even added thing here at the end. We are doing three short little

pieces. It all have to do with Warren Peace, one by each of the composers. And to help us out doing this, we have members of the Bartlestill Corral and the Tulsa Corral combining to be singing with the orchestra on these pieces. And then on the final piece, which is Sabelia Spinlandia, we also have members of the Bartlestille High School Orchestra joining us. So we're going to have hundreds of people on stage for the grand finale of this concert,

and it's going to be really exciting. And it's a real good thing that the Community Center, as it's such a big, big stage there in the auditorium it's huge. It'll fit you all comfortably, right, well, well, funny should it's a conundrum, and without getting into the technical weeds too much, we perform as the orchestra in this wonderful orchestral shell that surrounds

us and it's this giant steel structure that projects the found out. But the downside of that is it confines us a little bit because we aren't able to expand into the wings and so forth. So the only way to expand really is towards the audience. So we'll probably be moving the orchestra a little closer to the audience and adding in about well, a whole bunch of chairs and risers for the singers and the wolf fit. We'll make it work. It's

going to be cozy, it'll be interesting. It'll be interesting, but it'll be great fun. And it's a great experience for the high school string players to be able to come in and sit amongst professional players and playing this music that they've been practicing hard on and to do it, you know, on

such a high level. It's really a great chance for everybody. And the pieces that we're they're singing and we're performing are so interesting and so fun and again give three entirely different perspectives on war and piece and just sort of getting along, and it'll be a really inspiring way to end the season and end the concert. Now, how do we get tickets for this show? Well, you just go to the Community Center, go to their website, whichever

you prefer, and there are tickets available there. All right, givem call and they can do it even over the phone. Mike Stra, thank you very much for joining us early this morning. Appreciate it. Well my pleasure. Thank you for calling me, Tom, and you have a great day, and we hope to see everybody at the concert.

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