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Mimi Stillman, Artistic Director
Dolce Suono Trio Dolce Suono Trio Dolce Suono Trio Dolce Suono
Trio
Classics and CommissionsClassics and CommissionsClassics and
CommissionsClassics and Commissions
Sunday, October 14, 2018 at 3:00pm
Trinity Center for Urban Life
22nd and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia
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Dolce Suono Ensemble Presents
Dolce Suono Trio Classics and Commissions
Mimi Stillman, flute
Nathan Vickery, cello
Charles Abramovic, piano
Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano Bohuslav Martinu
(1890-1959)
Poco Allegretto
Adagio
Andante – Allegretto scherzando
Paean, Epitaph, and Dithyramb from Ode Jeremy Gill (1975)
Viaje for Flute, Cello, and Piano Zhou Tian (1981)
Stillman, Vickery, Abramovic
Intermission
Piano Trio #1 in D Minor, Op. 49 Felix Mendelssohn
(1809-1847)
Molto allegro agitato
Andante con moto tranquillo
Scherzo: Leggiero e vivace
Finale: Allegro assai appassionato
Overture to “Candide” * Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990)
(arr. Abramovic)
Stillman, Vickery, Abramovic
* premiere of new arrangement
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About the Program
Welcome to Dolce Suono Ensemble’s 2018-2019 season! We are
delighted to open DSE Presents with our
flagship ensemble Dolce Suono Trio, whose latest album “American
Canvas” is under consideration in two
Grammy categories this year. Our program “Dolce Suono Trio
Classics and Commissions” spans standard
repertoire by Mendelssohn and Martinu, two of our marvelous
commissions by Jeremy Gill and Zhou Tian
highlighting our enthusiasm for the creation of major new works
through our commissioning program, and
a new arrangement by our pianist Charles Abramovic of the
overture to Candide in celebration of the
centennial of Leonard Bernstein in 2018. Please join us
throughout our season as we launch two exciting
major projects: “Fall for Chamber Music” supported by a grant
from the William Penn Foundation and
“Rediscoveries: Festival of American Chamber Music,” for which
we were awarded a grant from the
National Endowment for the Arts, and programs devoted to great
wind quintets, our annual Baroque
concert “The Lure of Paris,” and more.
Bohuslav Martinu, Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano (1944)
Bohuslav Martinu was a Czech composer who took refuge in the
United States from the upheaval of World
War II. He was very prolific – 15 operas, 6 symphonies, 14
ballets, and numerous orchestral, chamber, and
solo works. Martinu settled in Paris in 1923, where he
encountered modernist styles such as expressionism,
was influenced by jazz, and embraced aspects of Stravinsky’s
neoclassicism. In 1941, he and his wife
emigrated to the United States where Martinu received major
commissions and performances and taught
at Tanglewood, Mannes, and Princeton. Among his students were
Alan Hovhaness, Chou Wen-chung, and
Burt Bacharach. Written in 1944, the Trio for Flute, Cello, and
Piano is a major work in the repertoire for
this trio combination, substantial in scope and substance. The
Poco allegretto opens in a lively way typical
of Martinu’s style. Brief motifs repeat and serve as units in
more extended sequences, creating a brilliance
born of speed and rhythmic drive. The Adagio is lyrical and
poignant, seemingly blossoming from a
mysterious beginning to a soaring climax and a tranquil close.
The finale begins with an Andante for solo
flute which introduces the Allegretto scherzando, a sparkling,
energetic movement in which a C Major
section surrounds a contrasting, waltz-like portion before the
work comes to a festive close.
Felix Mendelssohn, Piano Trio #1 in D Minor, Op. 49 (1839)
Felix Mendelssohn’s Piano Trio #1 in D Minor is one of the most
beloved works in the piano trio genre and
one of Mendelssohn’s most popular chamber works. This piece and
Mendelssohn’s Octet for Strings, Op. 20
tied for 6th place in Dolce Suono Ensemble’s Chamber Music Top
Twenty poll as part of our new “Fall for
Chamber Music” project launching this October. This grand work
is a tour de force for the ensemble, with a
particularly demanding piano part. The first movement blends
gravitas and tenderness; the second is a
particularly moving movement in a lyrical vein reminiscent of
Mendelssohn’s songs without words; the
third has the vivacity and exquisite lightness characteristic of
the composer’s scherzos, like the famous one
from the overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and the vibrant
finale in rondo form builds to a climactic
finish in D Major.
Why am I playing one of the world’s best-known piano trios on
flute? For the first English publication of the
work in 1840, Mendelssohn was asked to prepare a flute version
as an alternative to the violin part. In a
letter to the composer, Edward Buxton, owner of the publishing
house J.J. Ewer & Co., explained that “a
separate flute arrangement is indispensable in this country.”
The flute was extremely popular among
amateur musicians in England. Mendelssohn subsequently wrote his
friend, the pianist and composer Ignaz
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Moscheles, suggesting that the second and third movements be
arranged for flute, asking Moscheles’s
advice on this and leaving the question up to him and Buxton.
The first English edition included a flute part
for all four movements, but was subsequently lost and only
rediscovered in the 1990s. There is no extant
autograph of the flute part, but copies of the first publication
are held at the Bodleian Library at Oxford
University. I often make arrangements of works for my instrument
but I never would have arranged this
piano trio without knowing that it had Mendelssohn’s imprimatur.
I am overjoyed by this discovery.
—Mimi Stillman
Zhou Tian, Viaje (2015)
Viaje (Voyage) was commissioned by Dolce Suono Ensemble, with a
grant from the National Endowment
for the Arts. My gratitude goes to Mimi Stillman, without whose
awesome musicianship and commitment
the work would not have been possible. Experiencing Spain for
the first time and learning about the
legendary Spanish nobleman and military leader El Cid (c.
1040-1099) inspired me to compose this 9-minute
thrill ride. I was particularly drawn to the relationship
between El Cid and his two daughters as they went
through an innocent childhood, separation, distrust, and
finally, reunion. I imagined the flute as the voice of
the daughters and the cello as the voice of their father. A
musical dialogue between the two instruments
emerges in the middle of the piece, as if recalling a
long-overdue conversation between father and
daughters. It wasn’t until the piece was finished that I
realized that I had unconsciously married my musical
roots as a Chinese-American with my new found love of Spanish
music.
"Viaje fused the composer's Chinese-American sensibility with
the lore of ancient Spain so convincingly that
the exotic flute solos for Mimi Stillman sounded like the most
natural thing in the world" (The Philadelphia
Inquirer).—Zhou Tian
Jeremy Gill, Paean, Epitaph, and Dithyramb (2008)
Paean, Epitaph, and Dithyramb is a set of three instrumental
movements excerpted from Ode (2008). Ode
is an exploration of Greek lyric poetic forms, including two
heard here: the dithyramb, honoring the wild
Dionysus; and the paean, honoring the healer, Apollo. Together
with the ode and hymn (sung by mezzo-
soprano in the complete Ode), these constituted the principal
lyric poetic forms of Ancient Greece.
An epitaph was, as now, an inscription or eulogy to one
deceased. In this work, it is given by the flute
alone—an extended solo bordered by movements for the full
ensemble of flute (doubling piccolo), cello,
and piano.
There are echoes of other musics throughout Paean, Epitaph, and
Dithyramb: bits of Monteverdi (Orfeo),
Puccini (Tosca), Mahler (Rückert Lieder), and others. Each of
these is fragmented, as if each were being
heard centuries from now, in part, without context, their
meanings largely obscured and only sensed, not
known. – Jeremy Gill
Leonard Bernstein, Overture to “Candide” (1956), arranged by
Charles Abramovic
Leonard Bernstein’s music to “Candide” straddles the worlds of
opera, operetta, and musical theater. It is
an intellectual and musical delight based on the great satire of
Voltaire, with an original libretto by Lillian
Hellman. The full work has had a mixed history of success, but
is now considered one of Bernstein’s
masterpieces. The rollicking overture has been a staple of the
orchestral repertoire since its first
performance in 1956. There are several musical ideas from the
show that find their way into the overture,
the most prominent being the duet between Candide and Cunegonde,
one of Bernstein’s best tunes. Full of
rhythmic and melodic invention, brilliant orchestration, and
high spirits, this overture continues to be one
of Bernstein’s most popular works. – Charles Abramovic
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The Artists
DOLCE SUONO TRIO, Dolce Suono Ensemble’s’ high-profile trio of
flute, cello, and piano, evolved
organically from the longstanding collaboration of flutist Mimi
Stillman and pianist Charles Abramovic
joined by cellist Nathan Vickery to explore and expand the
repertoire of this captivating combination.
Dolce Suono Trio is renowned for its contributions to the
repertoire through its arrangements and
commissions, the latter including works by Pulitzer
Prize-winning composers Jennifer Higdon and Shulamit
Ran and Grammy-winning composer Richard Danielpour. Its most
recent album “American Canvas”
features four premieres by Higdon, Ran, Zhou Tian, and Andrea
Clearfield, with acclaimed soprano Lucy
Shelton. “The three were flawlessly in sync – even their
trills!” (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
“Dazzling performances of brilliant new works” (The New York
Sun)
The trio’s innovative program Música en tus Manos (Music in Your
Hands) combines its engagement
initiative with the Latino community of Philadelphia with
programming that includes chamber and popular
music from Spain and the Americas.
Dolce Suono Trio has enthralled audiences at venues including
the Smithsonian American Art Museum,
Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Southern Exposure New Music
Series (SC), Princeton and Cornell
Universities, Bard, Haverford, Bryn Mawr, and Franklin and
Marshall Colleges, Great Hall Series (MA),
Symphony Space (NY), and Brooklyn’s Roulette. The trio was
invited to perform a gala concert featuring
Jennifer Higdon's “American Canvas” at the Brandywine River
Museum for the Andrew Wyeth: In
Retrospect centennial exhibit. Dolce Suono Trio's residencies
have included Kingston Chamber Music
Festival, Lake George Music Festival, Friends of Chamber Music
of Reading, and the Dolce Suono Ensemble
Steven Stucky Young Composers Competition.
Mimi Stillman, flute
“A consummate and charismatic performer” (The New York Times);
Founding Artistic Director, Dolce Suono
Ensemble; Yamaha Performing Artist, author on music and history,
recording artist; Soloist with The
Philadelphia Orchestra, Bach Collegium Stuttgart, Chamber
Orchestra of Philadelphia, Chamber Orchestra
of Indianapolis, Orquesta Sinfónica de Yucatán, and at Carnegie
Hall, The Kennedy Center, La Jolla Chamber
Music Festival, Verbier Festival. BM, Curtis Institute of Music,
MA in history, University of Pennsylvania;
Faculty, Temple University, Curtis Summerfest, Music for All
National Festival. www.mimistillman.com
Nathan Vickery, cello
Member of the New York Philharmonic; performs on the
Philharmonic’s Ensembles chamber series and
CONTACT! new music series; Soloist with Indianapolis Symphony
Orchestra, recitals and chamber music at
festivals including the Marlboro Chamber Music Festival,
Ravinia’s Steans Music Institute, and the Chamber
Music Workshop at the Perlman Music Festival, as well as
throughout Europe with Curtis on Tour; appeared
on NPR’s From the Top and won Second International David Popper
Cello Competition (Hungary); BM,
Curtis Institute of Music.
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Charles Abramovic, piano
“Sensitive orchestra-invoking powers on piano” (The Philadelphia
Inquirer); Solo, chamber, and recording
artist, composer; Performances with the Pittsburgh Symphony,
Baltimore Symphony, and at international
festivals in Berlin, Salzburg, Bermuda, Dubrovnik, Aspen and
Vancouver; Recordings of the works of Babbitt,
Schuller, and Schwantner; BM, Curtis Institute of Music, MA,
Peabody Conservatory, DMA, Temple
University; Professor of Keyboard Studies, Temple
University.
DOLCE SUONO ENSEMBLE has been thrilling audiences and
invigorating the music world since its founding
by flutist and Artistic Director Mimi Stillman in 2005. Hailed
as “an adventurous ensemble” (The New York
Times) and “One of the most dynamic groups in the US!” (The
Huffington Post), the ensemble presents
critically acclaimed chamber music concerts on its home series
in Philadelphia, performs on tour,
commissions important new works, makes recordings, and engages
in community engagement
partnerships.
Dolce Suono Ensemble presents dynamic and innovative programs of
Baroque to new repertoire
with historian Mimi Stillman’s curatorial vision setting the
music in its broadest cultural context. Some of its
artistically and intellectually powerful projects include the
celebrated Mahler 100 / Schoenberg 60, Debussy
in Our Midst: A Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of Claude
Debussy, A Place and a Name: Remembering
the Holocaust, Dolce Suono Ensemble Goes to the Opera, Women
Pioneers of American Music, and Música
en tus Manos (Music in Your Hands), our engagement initiative
with the Latino Community. “All programs
should have this much to say and say it so well.” (The
Philadelphia Inquirer)
Dolce Suono Ensemble has performed at venues including Merkin
Hall, Smithsonian American Art
Museum, Southern Exposure New Music Series (SC), Brooklyn’s
Roulette, University of Pennsylvania,
Brandywine River Museum, University of Virginia, Symphony Space,
Great Hall Series (MA), Philadelphia
Chamber Music Society, University of North Carolina/Chapel Hill,
Bard College, Eastman School of Music,
Virginia Tech, Kingston Chamber Music Festival, Princeton
University, Brandeis University, and Cornell
University. The ensemble enjoys a partnership with the
Washington National Opera Domingo-Cafritz Young
Artist Program at the invitation of Plácido Domingo.
Dolce Suono Ensemble has contributed major new works to the
chamber music repertoire through
commissioning, giving 53 world premieres in 13 seasons. Some of
today’s most eminent composers have
written for the ensemble including Jennifer Higdon, Steven
Stucky, Shulamit Ran, Richard Danielpour,
Steven Mackey, David Ludwig, and Zhou Tian. The ensemble’s
recordings Freedom, music for flute, piano,
and the human spirit, Odyssey: 11 American Premieres, both
featuring Mimi Stillman, flute and Charles
Abramovic, piano, and American Canvas featuring Dolce Suono Trio
(Innova Recordings), have been
critically acclaimed. Dolce Suono Ensemble concerts and
recordings are broadcast internationally.
The ensemble has won grant awards including from the National
Endowment for the Arts, William
Penn Foundation, Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia, The
Presser Foundation, Pew Center for Arts &
Heritage, Koussevitzky Music Foundation, Fromm Music Foundation,
and the Knight Foundation.
www.dolcesuono.com
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Check out American Canvas, Dolce Suono
Trio’s latest recording for Innova!
Featuring Dolce Suono Trio, soprano Lucy
Shelton, and four premieres by celebrated
composers Jennifer Higdon, Shulamit Ran,
Andrea Clearfield, and Zhou Tian. Available
at Innova Recordings, Amazon, iTunes,
AppleMusic, Spotify, etc.
Fall for Chamber Music Launch Concert
Wednesday, October 24, 2018 at 7:00pm
Free Library of Philadelphia Central Branch,
1901 Vine Street, Philadelphia
At this free concert, DSE artists will perform selections
from the winning works in our Chamber Music Top
Twenty poll!
Mimi Stillman, flute - Ricardo Morales, clarinet - Amy
Oshiro-Morales, violin - Brandon Garbot, violin - Che-
Hung Chen, viola - Arlen Hlusko, cello - Mary Javian, bass
- Charles Abramovic, piano
"Fall for Chamber Music" is our new 3-year project supported by
the William Penn
Foundation with the goal of engaging new audiences in chamber
music.
Performances and coachings will take place at Philadelphia's
civic venues - the
Free Library Central Branch and Christ Church Neighborhood
House.
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Dolce Suono Ensemble’s Sponsor an Artist Program
With gratitude to our generous Artist Sponsors:
James and Carolyn Barnshaw and Robert Wallner – Mimi Stillman,
flute; Vincent and Lila Russo – Nathan
Vickery, cello; Alton Sutnick and Society Hill Neighbors –
Charles Abramovic, piano; Terri and Mark
Steinberg – Ricardo Morales, clarinet; William A. Loeb – Sarah
Shafer, soprano; Barbara and Matt Cohen –
Kerri Ryan, viola; Kenneth Hutchins – William Polk, violin; Joel
and Bobbie Porter – Doris Hall-Gulati,
clarinet; Jonathan Tobin – William Short, bassoon
Contact us for information about sponsoring an artist!
[email protected] / 267-252-1803
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Acknowledgments Steinway piano selected from Jacobs Music
Company, our Season Sponsor. With gratitude to the Dolce Suono
Ensemble Board of Directors, and especially Chairman Ronni L.
Gordon, for their steadfast support and vision. Thank you
to Terry Sikora at Jacobs Music; Ron and Raquel Lane, publicity
support; David Osenberg, Host and Music Director, and
Ross Amico, Host, WWFM The Classical Network, for broadcasting
DSE Presents concerts; Michael Rathke and Susan
Lewus at WRTI Radio for hosting Dolce Suono Ensemble in live
broadcast previews for DSE Presents concerts.
Dolce Suono Ensemble is grateful to its corporate, foundation,
and private sponsors:
National Endowment for the Arts, William Penn Foundation,
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and Greater Philadelphia
Cultural Alliance, Philadelphia Cultural Fund, The Musical Fund
Society of Philadelphia, The Presser Foundation, Yamaha
Corporation of America, MKM Foundation, Christian Humann
Foundation
Anonymous—Alison Anderson—Charles Abramovic and Heidi
Jacob—Jacqueline Axilbund—Sheila S. Bassman—Sarah
and Roger Blood—Melissa and David Bonenberger—Peter and Miriam
Burwasser—Lisa and Charles Carmalt—Fang
Man—Robert Gordon—Penina Gould—Bonny Hohenberger and Nathan
Farbman—Mary and Keith Johnson—Nancy
and Richard Kauffman—Jeff and Holly Kofsky—Carol Kujawa—Monica
Kulaski—Matthew Levy—Solomon Moses
Hope Punnett—Richard Reicherter—Martin Rosenberg and Ellen
Fennick—Lionel Ruberg—Robert and Sally Salon
Rheta Smith—Shirley Smith—Roland Smith and Lu Qingqing—June
Zaccone—Benjamin Zuckerman
Project Leaders Circle
Anthony Brown—Jan Krzywicki—Doris Dabrowski—Deborah Somers
Eichman and John Eichman—Janice Gordon
Keith Hansen— Olive Mosier—Paul Merluzzi—Larry Pethick— Tom
Purdom—Dianne Stillman and Robert Greene
Alton Sutnick—Carol and George Weinbaum—Thomas Whitman
Ambassadors Circle
Ruth Baker—Barbara and Matt Cohen— John and Eugenie
Esser—Marilyn Fishman and James Macelderry—Nancy W.
Hess—The Humann Family—Kenneth Hutchins—Reinhard and Sue D.
Kruse—Raquel Benabe-Lane and Ron Lane
Sherman Leis—William Morris—Ann Moskow—Barbara Moskow—Marie
O’Donnell and Bruce Satalof—Joel and
Roberta Porter—Vince and Lila Russo—Terri and Mark
Steinberg—David M. Stillman—David Tamaccio—Jonathan S.
Tobin—Anne O’Donnell Vogelmann—Robert Wallner—Carol Westfall
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Mimi Stillman, Artistic Director
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Ronni L. Gordon, Chairman
James Barnshaw
Stuart Fleming
William A. Loeb
Robert McShea
Ralph Rosen
Ann Saul
Alexander T. Stillman
Mimi Stillman
William Ward
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* Visit our website www.dolcesuono.com and follow links to our
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recordings, videos, and news. Our CDs and other merchandise are
available online.
* Sign up for our e-mail list to receive concert announcements
and news by emailing us at [email protected].
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Please donate online through PayPal by following the “Support
DSE” link at www.dolcesuono.com or
send your tax-deductible contributions to:
Mimi Stillman, Artistic Director
Dolce Suono Ensemble
135 N. 22nd St.
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Dolce Suono Ensemble, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit
organization
The official registration and financial information of Dolce
Suono Ensemble, Inc.
may be obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of State by
calling toll-free, within Pennsylvania, 1-800-732-0999.
Registration does not imply endorsement
BOARD OF ADVISORS
George Crumb
Richard Danielpour
David Devan
Plácido Domingo
Gary Graffman
Jennifer Higdon
Jeffrey Khaner
Jaime Laredo
Philip Maneval
Nello McDaniel
Shulamit Ran
Sharon Robinson
Steven Stucky *
Michael Tree *
Susan Wadsworth
Elizabeth Warshawer
John Wittmann
* in memoriam
135 N. 22nd St.
Philadelphia, PA 19103
267-252-1803 www.dolcesuono.com