Simon Says

11
Mar
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Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra 

Bach Birthday Edition
March 2010

Get ready for some

Mandolin MagicMandolinist Avi Avital

“Avital’s playing, which can be defined as ‘everything you never dreamt a mandolin could do,’ was truly breathtaking in virtuosity and dedication.”

Israeli mandolin virtuoso Avi Avital joins  your favorite chamber orchestra in music of Bach and Beethoven, plus a wonderful Corelli concerto grosso and Oswaldo Golijov’s “Last Round”, a simmering tango-infused work for double string quartet and double bass.

Coming soon to a concert hall near you!
5:30 Thursday, Mar 18 Rush Hour Concert @ Contemporary Jewish Museum, SF
8:00 Friday, Mar 19 @ Herbst Theatre, SF
8:00  Saturday, Mar 20 @ St. Mark’s Episcopal Church,    Palo Alto
3:00 Sunday, Mar 21 @ First Congregational Church, Berkeley
member’s reception following this Berkeley concert: please join us
8pm Monday, Mar 22 @ Empress Theatre, Vallejo

Click here for more information

Read the SF Classical Voice’s great preview article about this program

Watch Avi perform his Bach concerto here.  You’ll be impressed!

Three two one

Bach 150

are the magic numbers that cause musical rejoicing every March.  Born on 3.21 in the year 1685, Johann Sebastian Bach is the most famous of five generations of Bachs that ruled musical life in north Germany for over 100 years.  But JS was better known in his own lifetime as a teacher and organist. His compositions were considered old-fashioned, and overly difficult; at least two of his musician-sons were much more famous at the time.  

Come hear our magical mandolinist, Avi Avital, perform a great Bach violin concerto (on the mandolin, of course) on our next Home Series concerts.

Click here for some really jazzy Bach, courtesy of YouTube.  I’m sure the old guy would have loved it.

Who said it? 


The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.

(answer below)

Concerto Countdown

Number 5 real

number 9more days until our Composer in Residence, Berkeley’s beloved Gabriela Lena Frank, pulls her new violin concerto out of the hat.  Written for our concertmaster Robin Sharp, it now has a titleHailli Lírico and is being prepared for publication right now.   Are you excited?  We are!

Ask the Maestro

waiter tux

Dear Maestro,

Why do waiters and musicians both wear tuxedos at work?  I can’t think of anybody else who does, except perhaps the odd butler.

signed, Curious in Cupertino

Dear Curious, musician tux

Back in the day, musicians were household servants. The great Joseph Haydn was Composer in Residence for the well-placed Esterhazy family in western Hungary, and remarked in a letter that musicians were of a social status slightly above the cooks but below the valets.  They all ate together in the “downstairs” kitchens.  The tuxedos and tailcoats must be a vestige of their uniforms as staff people.


Got a burning question about classical music?  Got a tune stuck in your head and don’t know what it is?  Ask the Maestro right
here.

Coming up

Classical  Crossover with Gabriela Lena Frank
From Esterhazy to EcuadorChaskinaquy
Trio Chaskinaquy 
& the SFCO All-Stars

Please join us for a special concert event, as musicians from the SFCO and the folkloric musicians of Trio Chaskinakuy explore the fascinating intersections of classical and folk music. SFCO Composer in Residence Gabriela Lena Frank will talk about her string quartet, Inkarri, and the multi-cultural forces that underlie her powerful and evocative music.  

8pm Thursday, Apr 8  La Peña, Berkeley 
2pm Sunday, Apr 11  Empress Theatre, Vallejo  
7:30pm Thursday, Apr 15  Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, San Francisco
Click here for more information.

plus a Bach Birthday Bash on our Classical at the Freight series featuring violinist Kay Stern, violist Ben Simon, and cellist Michelle Djokic  performing the incomparable Goldberg Variations for string trio!
Monday March 19, 8pm.  Click here for more information.

Viola joke of the month

Why did the chicken cross the road?

To get away from the viola recital.

Adopt-a-Musician  

Recession-busting prices on cellists this month: $479.99     
Robert Howard

Prices have NEVER been so low. Get in on the ground floor of a new fundraising program for your favorite chamber orchestra, wherein you can “adopt” a member of the orchestra for an entire year for a very reasonable sum (and don’t have to provide housing, clothing, or meals… or college…such a deal! ). 

Adopt SFCO cellist Robert Howard (pictured here) for only $479.99.  That’s only $2.86 per month for the next fourteen years.  Or an instrumentalist from any other section in the orchestra (available in flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, French horn, trumpet, trombone, tuba, percussion, piano, harpsichord, violin, viola, or double bass) for only $20.01 more.  

Interested? Colleen would be delighted to talk to you (415-692-5297), or email her here.  

Your support helps keep our priceless music absolutely free, our concerts more frequent, and our connections with our community stronger.  Thank you.

Video of the month

Rowlf
But would the old guy have liked this?

Probably not.

Bach or bumper-to-bumper?  You decide. 

cjmRUSH HOUR CONCERT
@ the beautiful Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco
5:30 on Thursday, March 18

Beat the traffic and enjoy our free, one-hour preview concert in the stunning CJM in downtown SF.  The museum is offering an array of specials in their wonderful cafe, including 16-string pasta and Mandolin Tuna Salad… and museum admission is just $5 after 5pm.  Such a deal!  

For more information, click here.

Who said it


The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.

Johann Sebastian Bach
German organist and teacher*  (1685 – 1750)

*He composed a little, too.

Simon Says
chicken
Why did Mozart hate chickens so much?

They ran around all day clucking “Bach, Bach, Bach!”

Actually, Mozart was a big fan of JS Bach and a close friend with his famous son, Carl Philipp Emanuel. Come hear what all the clucking is about at our upcoming Mandolin Magic concert, and don’t forget to tell your friends and neighbors about the fresh, fun, first-class and free classical programs of your favorite chamber orchestra.   

As ever, thanks for your continued support.  Our orchestra continues to strengthen and grow, despite a rough economy.  If you’re interested in volunteering or getting more involved with the Bay Area’s favorite chamber orchestra, drop us an email.  Memberships make great gifts for friends and family… and help support our mission of making classical music accessible to all. 

Musically yours, 
Ben Simon

www.sfchamberorchestra.org
415.248.1640

Join our mailing list!
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Category : Simon Says | Blog
19
Feb
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Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra

Valentine’s Day Edition
February 2010

Do you really love us? 

Family Concert Animal Orchestra

Despite the formal wear, the fancy concert halls, and the exalted status granted to us by society, classical musicians, deep down, are just plain people.  Plain, insecure people who need constant applause and adoration to feel worthwhile. 

So, do you really love us?  Really?

Facebook users: click here to post your love letter…  or email us here.   

Thanks, and happy valentine’s day.

And we love you too! 

Mandolinist Avi Avital

Members, we couldn’t live without you!  Your generous support of the SFCO keeps our stalwart little band going, and growing.  

In a few days, all members will be receiving a very special Valentine’s surprise via email… a little token of our love and appreciation. 

Not a member yet?  Don’t break this young man’s heart!

Click here to join our growing community of lovers – San Francisco Chamber Orchestra lovers!

Concerto Countdown

Number 5Number 5 real

more days until the world premiere of Gabriela Lena Frank’s violin concerto for our concertmaster Robin Sharp.  Are you excited?  We are!  Read more from our first-ever Composer-in-Residence, recent-Grammy-Award-winner in her new blog, an SFCO exclusive!!
Click here for Gabi’s latest installment

Tres Mitos de Mi Tierra, Gabi’s most recent piece, was commissioned by The King’s Singers and will be given it’s world premiere on Wednesday, Feb 17 at Herbst Theater through San Francisco Performances. Click here for more information.

Love and Music Matching Game

Bach 150

Match the quote and its author.  Answers below. 

1. If music be the food of love, play on.  

2. He had 20 children because he had no stops on his organ. 

3. I am not handsome, but when women hear me play, they come crawling to my feet.

4. In music the passions enjoy themselves.  organ pipes

5. Music is my mistress, and she plays second fiddle to no one.

6. Music is only love, looking for words.

a. PaganiniLawrence Durell

b. Duke Ellington

c. Friedrich Nietzsche

d. Niccolo Paganini

e. Johann Sebastian Bach

f. William Shakespeare


Coming up

Piedmont Choirs

Family Concert
Music and Song
with the Piedmont East Bay Children’s Choir

SF: Sat, Feb 27 2pm

Berkeley: Sun Feb 28 noon

San Mateo: Sun Feb 28 3pm


Click here for more information.

Our next Classical at the Freight program brings the triumphal SFBrassreturn of the fabulous San Francisco Brass Quintet in a wide-ranging program. This is a ticketed event:  $8.50 until 7pm on the night of the show; $9.50 after that.  Members get two tickets for the price of one at the door only; not on advance sales.  Click here for more info.

Musician’s classified #1

For sale: Viola, German, 19th century, 405mm. Excellent condition. Recently tuned.

Congratulations,  Stephen!

Stephen Waarts2009 Debut Artist Stephen Waarts continues his rocketing success, winning the recent Fremont Symphony’s Young Artist Competition.  SFCO fans will remember his remarkable Mendelssohn violin concerto performances with us last season back when he was only 12!  Stephen will be also be heard on the national radio program ‘From the Top’ in February, after winning first place in KDFC’s 2009 Classical Star Search, ages 10 to 20.

Adopt-a-Musician 

February special on violists: $499.95, while supplies last    
Sharon Wei
Get in on the ground floor of a new fundraising program for your favorite chamber orchestra, wherein you can “adopt” a member of the orchestra for an entire year for a very reasonable sum (and don’t have to provide housing, clothing, or meals… or college…such a deal! ).

Adopt any  SFCO musician, of your choice: $500 (violists $499.95, while supplies last)

Interested? Colleen would be delighted to talk to you (415-692-5297), or email her here

Your support helps keep our priceless music absolutely free, our concerts more frequent, and our connections with our community stronger.  Thank you.

Math for Musicians

From the Jewelyard School of Music exit exam (doctoral program):

Ralph loves to drink coffee.  Each week he drinks three more cups of coffee than Harold who drinks exactly one third the amount the entire bass section consumes in beer.  How much longer is Ralph going to live?

Got questions? Need some musical advice? Dating a violist?

Typical SFCO concertgoers are

couple

suave, sophisticated, and sexy.

But not all orchestras can claim such wonderful listeners.  Click here to see the kinds of people other groups are attracting.

Musician’s classified #2

Established string quartet seeks two violinists and a cellist.

Love and Music Matching Game answers

Shakespeare

1f
2e
3d
4c
5b
6a

Video of the month

Jack Benny

Does anyone remember Jack Benny?

Classic comedy.  And who is his accompanist?  The thirteenth person to email the correct answer gets a free 2009 – 10 season poster.

Simon Says
Avi

Our season starts to heat up now, and won’t cool down until mid-May… so fasten your seatbelts for an exciting musical ride.  Our next Home Series concert, Mandolin Magic, will feature Israeli mandolin virtuoso Avi Avital and music of Corelli, Bach, Beethoven, and Osvaldo Golijov, represented by his sexy, simmering Last Rounds, written as an homage to tango master Astor Piazzolla.

And pass word of our upcoming Family Concerts to all your friends with kids – these admission-free, less-than-an-hour programs are the perfect introduction to classical music for listeners young and older.  Come hear four wonderful woodwind players and the amazing Piedmont East Bay Children’s Choir and beat those rainy-day blues with some great songs about water, and rain.

As ever, thanks for your continued support.  Our orchestra continues to strengthen and grow, despite a rough economy.  If you’re interested in volunteering or getting more involved with the Bay Area’s favorite chamber orchestra, drop us an email.  Memberships make great gifts for friends and family… and help support our mission of making classical music accessible to all.

Musically yours,

Ben Simon

www.sfchamberorchestra.org
415.248.1640

Join our mailing list!

Category : Simon Says | Blog
21
Jan
ben smile 150
Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra 

January 2010

We love you, Vallejo!

Empress 1.2.10
The entire town, it seems, turned out for our first ever concert at our newest venue, the beautiful Empress Theater in downtown Vallejo.  The SFCO concerts were packed in Berkeley, Palo Alto, and San Francisco, but we actually had to turn people away from the Empress on January 2.  Who knew?  

We apologize to those who were turned away and hope you will join us for our next concert at the Empress on Monday night, March 22(Mandolin Magic). Advance reservations and the best seats in the theater are yours if you become a member of the SFCO, for only pennies a note.

Next up for San Francisco, Berkeley, and San Mateo:  our second Family Concert, Music and Song with the wonderful young singers of the Piedmont East Bay Choirs and talented string players from three local youth orchestras join the pros of the SFCO.  Feb 27/28:click here for details.

Concerto Countdown

Number 0Number 6Number 1

more days until the world premiere of Gabriela Lena Frank’s violin concerto for our concertmaster Robin Sharp.  Are you excited?  We are!  Read more from our first-ever Composer-in-Residence, recent-Grammy-Award-winner in her new blog, an SFCO exclusive!! 
Click here for Gabi’s first installment

Ten things you need to know about  Wolfie

Mozart child 2

1. Son of a court musician, Mozart was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg, Austria. His full name was Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. 

2. He first performed in public at the age of five, the same year he wrote his first piano pieces.  

3. At seven, he picked up a violin for the first time and played it perfectly.  

4. He adored his older sister, Nannerl, and was close to her his entire life.Mozart 150

5. He composed his first symphony at age 9 and his first opera (La Finta Semplice) at age 12.  

6. Slight of build, with fine fair hair, he was “not over five feet four inches tall”.

7. He fell in love with soprano Aloysia Weber during a trip to Mannheim when he was 21 (she was 16).  After Aloysia  dumped him, he married her younger sister Constanze. They had six children, two of whom survived to adulthood.  

8. He liked playing billiards, bad puns,  and dirty jokes. 

9. “I write music as a sow piddles”

10. Mozart LangeAside from the piano, at which he was a true virtuoso, his favorite instrument was the viola! We’ll prove it next Monday evening at the Freight and Salvage Coffeehouse in Berkeley with a performance of one of his greatest chamber music works, the viola quintet in E-flat Major.  See below for details on our Mozart Birthday Celebration.   

Who said it?

Orch photo

You are the music, 
while the music lasts.

{answer below}

Happy 254th Birthday, dear Wolfie!  

Alicia Telford 150Mozart child 2Kris 150 colorEugene Chuklov

Classical at the Freight presents a
Mozart Birthday Celebration

Join us for one of our most popular Freight programs of the year, complete with free birthday cake, our monthly classical music trivia contest, and much much more.  Featuring the amazing musicians of the SFCO All-Stars:
Eugene ChuklovGarrett McLean, violins
Ben SimonDarcy Rindt, violas
Kris Yenney, cello
with special guest  Alicia Telford, French horn

performing the Horn Quintet and the late, great E-Flat Major Viola Quintet

This is a ticketed event.  You can purchase your ticket in advance through the Freight & Salvage box office for $8.50, or pay $9.50 at the door.  As always, SFCO members get two tickets for the price of one.  Just show your membership card at the door and bring a friend for free!  Yet another valuable benefit of your SFCO membership.  Why don’t you join today?  Click here for more information.

Viola joke of the month

What’s the difference between a violist and a vacuum cleaner? 

You have to plug one of them in before it sucks.  

Adopt-a-Musician  

Who doesn’t need a little more music in their life?     

GarrettGloria Justen Mad 150

Get in on the ground floor of a new fundraising program for your favorite chamber orchestra, wherein you can “adopt” a member of the orchestra for an entire year for a very reasonable sum (and don’t have to provide housing, clothing, or meals… or college…such a deal! ). 

Adopt any  SFCO musician, of your choice: $500 (violists $495)

Interested? Colleen would be delighted to talk to you (415-692-5297), or email her here.  

Your support helps keep our priceless music absolutely free, our concerts more frequent, and our connections with our community stronger.  Thank you.

Math for Musicians

From the Jewelyard School of Music exit exam (doctoral program):     

Jethro has been playing the double bass in a symphony orchestra for 12 years, 3 months, and 7 days.  Each day, his inclination to practice decreases by the equation: (total days in the orchestra) x .000976.  Assuming that he stopped practicing altogether six months ago, how long will it be before he is completely unable to play the double bass?

Got questions? Need some musical advice? Dating a violist?   
Ask the Maestro at SimonSays@sfchamberorchestra.org

From the Berzerkeley Dictionary of Musical Terms

Concerto grosso – a concert of, for example, accordions. 

Polonaise- a condiment often put on a parrot sandwich

Perfect pitch – throwing the banjo into the dumpster and   hitting the accordion

Write your own review

typewriter

We’d love to hear what you think of our concerts. 

All replies are confidential, except the ones we really like which we will shamelessly promote. 

Let us have it!  click here!

Who said it

TS Eliot
You are the music, 
while the music lasts.

T. S. Eliot
English poet  (1888 – 1965)

Video of the month

kitchen gadgets

You can throw all these away when you purchase… 

a Viola-matic!

Simon Says
Very First Leighton
This season, our Very First Concerts and Family Concerts are bringing top-flight classical programs to thousands of young listeners across the Bay Area.  Our most recent program at the Crowden School in Berkeley took place on a very rainy MLK Day earlier this week; we sang lots of songs about water and rain plus Happy Birthday, Bingo, and many more.  Our next family “feature” is our Music and Song Family Concert with the wonderful Piedmont East Bay Choirs over the last weekend in February (27 & 28).  Bring your family, bring your friends, and enjoy our priceless music, absolutely free.  

Of course, if you’re able to return our generosity with your own, many thanks for helping to support our mission of making classical music accessible to all.  Click here to make your tax-deductible contribution.

Musically yours, 
Ben Simon

www.sfchamberorchestra.org
415.248.1640

Join our mailing list!

Category : Simon Says | Blog
29
Dec


 



ben smile 150
Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra

December 2009


You’re in so much trouble, you’re in Double Trouble! 

Our first Home Concert concert series, coming right up!

Isabel Lau

Gloria JustenTod Brody

DOUBLE TROUBLE, a program of concerti for two instruments, including a pair of Debut Artists and a world premiere, plus a great, double-digit Haydn symphony, coming soon to a concert hall, church, or theater near you!

As a SFCO Member, you not only get the best seats in the house, but you also get to make advanced reservations for our Double Trouble series, allowing you to bypass those long lines. Members can also reserve priority seating for guests for a $20 donation per ticket. Please plan on arriving at least 15 minutes before the concert is scheduled to start; members who arrive after this cannot be guaranteed seating. 

We’ve also got our first member’s reception following our January 3 concert at San Francisco’s Herbst Theatre.  Please join us!

And the winner is…

Haydn

The winner of our Name That Haydn Symphony contest is Don Smiegiel of San Francisco.  Don’s winning entry, which was chosen by a finely calibrated applause-o-meter at the Freight and Salvage on Monday evening, Nov. 30, is “The Freight and Salvation Symphony”. Inspired perhaps by his surroundings, Don’s name triumphed over scores (pun intended) of strong entries, including “The Sunset Strip Symphony”, “The To Grandma’s House We Go Symphony” “The New Year’s Symphony”, and my personal favorite: “The Duck Symphony”. Thanks to all of you who played our game, and in the bargain had the great fortune of hearing the New Esterhazy String Quartet perform two and a half quartets by Haydn on our Classical at the Freight series.  Congratulations to Don, whose grand prize was a beautiful, brand-new
 
San Francisco Chamber Orchestra sweatshirt,Teenage models 200
which you too can own by visiting our beautiful, brand-new online store.  Pick up a poster, or perhaps a set of lovely black-and-white notecards featuring the whimsical cartoons of Berkeley artist Gail Machlis.  Our ever-popular t-shirts and sweatshirts are now available in a wider variety of colors and sizes.  You can even adopt your own San Francisco Chamber Orchestra musician in our online store.  All instruments still available, but hurry – our supply of violists is limited!
Start a hot fashion trend on your block.

Who said it?

band

Brass bands are all very well in their place – outdoors and several miles away.

   {answer below}

Viola joke of the month

A violist and a ‘cellist were standing on a sinking ship.

“Help!” cried the ‘cellist, “I can’t swim!”

“Don’t worry,” said the violist, “just fake it.”

 



Missed Beethoven’s Birthday? 

December 16 was the official start of the musicians’ holiday season, which runs through Mozart’s birthday on January 27.

schroederStock up on the perfect gift for all your music-loving friends:  a gift membership to the Bay Area’s best chamber orchestra.  Help keep our concerts admission free, and full of Ludwig, Wolfgang, and their pals Franz Josef, Johann Sebastian, Georg Frederic not to mention Gabriela and Gloria!
 
Speaking of members,
your SFCO memberships are now on an automated system of renewal… but you’re welcome to sign back up at any time.  This year, members can make advance reservations for themselves and their guests ($20 per guest suggested admission, please) at our increasingly popular Home Series concerts.

Click here for membership info.

Ask the Maestro

snoopy sleepingDear Maestro

I think Haydn is boring.  Why should I come to your Double  Trouble program to hear his 77th symphony if I don’t like his first 76?
                  Snoozing in Sausalito

Dear Snoozing,
I appreciate your honesty, you callow philistine!  Sorry, that just slipped out…  In today’s world of the 3-minute pop song, video on demand, and Guitar Hero on your 47-inch flat screen, attending a classical music concert can seem about as exciting as watching paint dry.  Our attention spans have dwindled and our appetite for dramatic gestures has increased.

What’s wrong with this picture is that listening to music, and classical music in particular, has become a passive activity.  Sit back, relax, and enjoy yourself.  And try to stay awake! 

Instead, try this:  sit back, but instead of relaxing, open up your ears and your imagination as widely as possible. There’s an entire musical world to explore, and enjoy, in a Haydn symphony – wit and humor, delightful melodies, the interplay of voices and themes, sudden shifts of mood, color, texture.  Make up your own internal movie to Haydn’s soundtrack.  Connect the dots.  Be an active listener – it takes a bit of effort but one that is richly rewarded, especially in classical music. 

And if you don’t like Haydn’s 77th, there’s always number 78!
 
 Got questions? Need some musical advice? Dating a violist?  
Ask the Maestro at SimonSays@sfchamberorchestra.org

From the Berzerkeley Dictionary of Musical Terms

Piano – the neighbors have complained

Forte – the neighbors are out

Fortissimo – the heck with the neighbors

Pianissimo – the neighbors and the police are at the door

Who said it

Beecham 150

Brass bands are all very well in their place – outdoors and several miles away. 
 
Sir Thomas Beecham
     English conductor  (1879 – 1961)

 

Video of the month

cartoon conductor

The conductor’s art, Mr. Bean style.
I say, sign him up! 

Click here to watch.

 

Simon Says

Empress 150 Haydn happens to be one of my favorite composers, and a perfect match for the intimate size and scope of our San Francisco Chamber Orchestra programs.  What is so remarkable about his symphony #77 is that it is so unremarkable – an unnamed, almost never-played work from the middle of his prodigious output.  And yet, a work of staggering genius!  From top to bottom, a delightful work filled with charm and Haydn’s patented brand of musical humor. 

Double Trouble starts our Home Series concerts, and I’m looking forward to seeing you soon in one of our four beautiful halls – including our inaugural visit to the magnificent Empress Theater in downtown Vallejo. 

Tell all your friends about us. We like our concerts crowded! 

Onward and upward!
Ben Simon

Category : Simon Says | Blog
11
Nov
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Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra

November 2009

Hot off the press:  Gabriela Frank wins Latin Grammy award!

Our very own Composer in Residence

Gabi 1

Gabriela Lena Frank, won her first Grammy award last week at the Latin Grammy ceremony in Las Vegas. Gabi’s Inca Dances won in the category Best Classical Contemporary Composition performed by guitarist
Manuel Barrueco & Cuarteto Latinoamericano on Barrueco’s recent Tonar Music album, Sounds of the Americas.

Get your own copy of this award-winning CD here!

Name that Haydn symphony

Haydn

Perhaps you’ve heard of the Farewell Symphony (No. 45), or Surprise (94), or Drumroll (103). But how about Philosopher (22), Hornsignal (31), Mercury (43), Palindrome (47), Schoolmaster (55), La Chasse (73), Bear (82), Miracle (96), Military (100), or London (104)?

Many of Haydn’s 100+ symphonies were named, for a variety of sketchy reasons… but many were left moniker-less. Help us name Symphony #77 in B-flat Major, in time for our performance on New Year’s Eve! Listen to the last movement, and send us your submission ideas. Attend our Classical with a Twist event on Monday evening, Nov. 30 (members and their guests only) when the winner will be selected by popular acclamation from the Freight & Salvage stage at 7:15.  Prizes for the winner and top runner-ups will be awarded.  Winners need not be present to win.

Who said it?

Sheep 150

Is it not strange that sheep’s guts should hale souls out of men’s bodies?

{answer below}

Classical with a Twist: two special events for members (and their guests)

Invite

Classical at the Freight

New Esterhazy SQMonday Nov. 30: 8pm
The New Esterhazy String Quartet performs Haydn

@ the new Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse,
2020 Addison St, Berkeley

These four wonderful players are well-known to Bay Area audiences: Lisa Weiss, Kati Kyme, Anthony Martin, and William Skeen.  At the tail end of their monumental project to perform all 66 of Haydn’s string quartets, they’re bringing a few of their favorites to the Freight for our delectation and delight. This is a ticketed event: $8.50 in advance, $9.50 at the door, and SFCO members get two tickets for the price of one! Click here for more Classical at the Freight info

Viola joke of the month

Three violists are sitting in a car.  Who’s driving?  
The police.

Get a head start on your holiday shopping

by purchasing gift memberships in the SFCO for all your friends and family.
gifts 150Even your tone deaf friends will appreciate your commitment to the arts and your wish to support the fresh, fun, first-rate and absolutely free programming by the Bay Area’s favorite chamber orchestra.  And just think how much more your musically inclined friends will enjoy the gift of live music?

Speaking of members,
your SFCO memberships are now on an automated system of renewal… but you’re welcome to sign back up at any time.  This year, members can make advance reservations for themselves and their guests ($20 per guest suggested admission, please) at our increasingly popular Home Series concerts.

Click here for membership info.

Ask the Maestro

Violin stringsDear Maestro

Sheep’s guts?  I don’t get it.
Puzzled in Palo Alto


Dear Puzzled,

For millenia, before modern industrial techniques made metal strings widely available, zithers harps lutes guitars gambas not to mention violins violas celli and basses were strung with various lengths and thicknesses of sheep’s guts.  A handy and practical solution, unless you were a sheep.  You can still buy gut strings, but most professionals prefer one of the newer composites.  Still interested? Check this out!

Got questions? Need some musical advice? Dating a violist?
Ask the Maestro at SimonSays@sfchamberorchestra.org

Virtuoso violin meets surround sound

Gloria Justen

An Evening with Composer Gloria Justen

Gloria Justen, composer and violinist, will present a unique program on November 14th, which ranges from subtle insect rhythms to passionate virtuoso violin playing.  Original pieces for solo violin will be juxtaposed with digital sound collages played back on a multiple-speaker system.   Her sound collages combine environmental field recordings, studio-recorded instruments, and digital processes to create evocative dream trips.

Saturday, Nov 14, 8pm
tickets $10 – $15
a.Muse art gallery & meeting place
614 Alabama St.
SF, CA 94110
415.279.6281

Gloria is also appearing on Classical at the Freight on Monday evening, Dec 14.  Her new concerto for Violin and Cello will be premiered on the SFCO’s Double Trouble concert set.

From the Berzerkeley Dictionary of Musical Terms

Chromatic Scale: An instrument for weighing that indicates half-pounds

Harmonic Minor: A good music student

Virtuoso: A musician with very high morals

Who said it

Shakespeare
Is it not strange that sheep’s guts should hale souls out of men’s bodies?


William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616),
Much Ado About Nothing

Video of the month

Beethoven 150

Sid Caesar and Nanette Fabray in a classic comedy sketch to Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. 

Click here to watch.

Simon Says

One family concert down,Crowd and an entire season to go.  Our Meet the Composers performances, featuring composer Doctor Professor Laurie San Martin, actor Thomas Flynn, and a cast of dozens of wonderful young musicians from around the Bay Area, was a smash hit over the past weekend in San Francisco, Berkeley, and San Mateo.

Looking forward, we hope you will attend one of our upcoming Classical with a Twist events (members and their invited guests only) and then our first set of Home Series Concerts over the New Year’s weekend, Double Trouble.

Please come to lots of our first-class and admission-free performances, and tell all your friends about us.  Make sure all the children in your neighborhood know about our Very First and Family concerts.  Already a member?  Consider a gift membership for your sister, neighbor, or dentist. Let’s let San Francisco’s best kept secret out of the bag!

Onward and upward!
Ben Simon

Category : Simon Says | Blog
29
Oct
ben smile 150
Simon Says

The almost-monthly newsletter of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra

Welcome back!

Our new season

Robin Sharp 08

gets underway with a flurry of activities in the next 4 four weeks – details below.  Also, we’ve launched our new website.  Please visit and tell us what you think.  Our brand new season brochures are winging their way to your mailboxes right now.  We’ve got a fabulous season lined up:  37 performances in a dozen communities around the Bay Area and beyond.  You won’t want to miss a single note. 

Join our growing community of members and support the Bay Area’s favorite chamber orchestra.  Please click here to keep our priceless music absolutely free.

Who said it?

Beecham 100

There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and finish together. The public doesn’t give a damn what goes on in between.
{answer below}

Upcoming events

Saturday, Oct 18: Commissioning Circle Event

composer drawing 150 Please join us for a very special fundraising event celebrating the creation of new classical music and supporting the SFCO’s active commissioning program. Meet nationally-renowned composer Gabriela Frank, our new Composer in Residence, who will talk about her background, musical influences and artistic process and perform selected works with Maestro Ben Simon.

“Amazing… fascinating…  Gabriela is really brilliant at explaining how she composes… I learned so much by listening to her!.. audience quotes from our previous Commissioning Circle events in Berkeley and Palo Alto. 

This event is being hosted in a private home in Pacific Heights and is free to attend. Guests will be asked to consider a donation to the Commissioning Circle at any level. Space is extremely limited. Please RSVP here by Oct 17th.

Sunday, Oct 25: our very first Very First concert Family Concert Animal Orchestra
@ Crowden Music Center’s annual Community Music Day 11am, 11:40, and 12:20: 1475 Rose Street, Berkeley

Developed in partnership with the Crowden Music Center in Berkeley, these delightful 20-minute concerts for ages 0-6 teach musical concepts, offer hands-on activities and encourage lots of movement and dancing. Starting our second season of concerts for our youngest listeners, this program highlights the great Hungarian composer, Bela Bartok, and his Roumanian Folk Dances!

Crowden opens its doors at 10am to the entire community for their annual Community Music Day.  It’s a lot of fun for you and your young ones: visit the instrument petting zoo, watch demonstrations, and of course attend one of three Very First Concerts presented by your favorite chamber orchestra in the auditorium at 11am, 11:40, and 12:20. 

Monday, Oct 26: Classical @ the Freight presents Percussion Froh marimba 150Fest 2
8pm @ the new Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse, 2020 Addison St, Berkeley

Back by popular demand, three of the Bay Area’s top stick and mallet men return to Classical @ the Freight to perform an exciting array of 20th and 21st century music written for various & sundry percussion instruments.  Featuring Loren Mach, Chris Froh, and Daniel Kennedy. This is a ticketed event: $8.50 in advance, $9.50 at the door, and SFCO members get two tickets for the price of one!

Nov 7 & 8 Family Concert #1: Meet the ComposersVivaldi
The SFCO takes you on a musical voyage to meet Mr. Vivaldi, Mr. Beethoven, and Ms. Gabriela Lena Frank, the orchestra’s brand-new, first-ever Composer in Residence. This program also features noted local actor Thomas Flynn, two wigs, young cellists Nathan Chan and Chloe Lula, two hip-hop dancers, side-by-side participants from three top Bay Area youth orchestras, and the top-notch professional musicians of the Bay Area’s premiere chamber orchestra.  Click here for more information.

Viola joke of the month

What do you call a beautiful girl on a violist’s arm? 
A tattoo.

Adopt a Musician

Take home

Michel Taddei your favorite SFCO musician…  well, in spirit at least!  All of our adorable, talented players are eligible for adoption this season with the exception of our principal double bassist, Michel Taddei, who has already been snapped up by a savvy Berkeley music-lover.  No room & board or college tuition payments required – just a desire to support your favorite chamber orchestra and have a bit of fun in the process.  Stay tuned for details on this exciting new program. 

Post concert receptions, for members only please!

Yet another great reason

party food

to become a member and supporter of the Bay Area’s premiere chamber orchestra.  Members, please join us at one – or all – of our post-concert nibble & schmoozes, featuring Naomi’s famous lemon-bars and a chance to meet SFCO musicians, soloists, and members of our Board of Directors. Our receptions this season will be held in

San Francisco – Sunday, Jan 3 @ Herbst Theatre, following our 3pm
concert.
Berkeley - Sunday, Mar 21 @ First Congregational Church, following our
3pm concert
Palo Alto – Saturday, May 8 @ St. Mark’s Church, following our 8pm
concert

Let Indigineous People’s Day slip by?

Then you’ve let pass a perfect opportunity
to purchase a perfectly progressive gift for your Berkeley friends: a SFCO membership.  Show your political bent, solve an unusually difficult gift decision, and support your favorite chamber orchestra in one easy step: Click here to get all your leftie friends a gift they’ll enjoy all season long, a membership in the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra.

Speaking of members,
your SFCO memberships are now on an augifts 150tomated system of renewal… but you’re welcome to sign back up at any time.  This year, members can make advance reservations for themselves and their guests ($20 per guest suggested admission, please) at our increasingly popular Home Series concerts.  And don’t forget: SFCO memberships make the perfect holiday gift for that music lover in your life, or that certain someone whom you think would enjoy our fresh, fun, and first-rate performances. Click here for more info.

Ask the Maestro

Dear Maestro

violin

How did someone figure out that putting tree sap on horsehair attached to a stick and run across a steel or gut wire which are attached to a wooden box would make a good noise?
On Top of It in Oakland

Dear On Top,
Trial and error, I suppose.  Actually, our modern string instruments evolved from hundreds, if not thousands, of years of experimentation in resonating chambers and materials suitable for amplifying that resonance. The modern violin is a masterpiece of acoustical engineering, not to mention a gorgeously hand-crafted piece of wood.  And who ate the first tomato? 

Got questions? Need some musical advice? Guitar hero got you down?  
Ask the Maestro at SimonSays@sfchamberorchestra.org

Know anyone

Empress 150 in Vallejo, Benicia, Hercules, Napa, American Canyon, Fairfield, Concord, Pleasant Hill, or Pittsburgh?  The SFCO is making its debut performances in Vallejo this season, thanks to a very generous grant from the Irvine Foundation.  Our new home in the North Bay is the beautifully restored Empress Theatre in downtown Vallejo, and we want you to tell all your friends in the area about our fresh, fun, first-rate, and FREE classical music performances. 
Quartet for the End of Time

End of Time

Our friends at the Jewish Music Festival are presenting a narrated, multi-media production of cabaret and art music from the Terezin concentration camp.  THEY LEFT A LIGHT: Masterpieces from the Nazi prison camps will feature Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time; first played in a German POW camp on a brutally cold January night in 1941, Alex Ross of the New Yorker has called this piece “the most ethereally beautiful music of the twentieth century”.

Time: Sunday, Oct 18 @ 7:30pm
Place: JCC East Bay, 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley CA 94709
$25 General, $20 Seniors, Students, and JCC Members
Click here for tickets, or call 1-800-838-3006

From the Berzerkeley Dictionary of Musical Terms

Conductor: A musician who is adept at following many people   at the same time.

English Horn: Neither English nor a horn, not to be confused with the French Horn, which is German.

Flute: A sophisticated pea shooter with a range of up to 500 yards, blown transversely to confuse the enemy.

Who said it

Beecham 150
There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and finish together. The public doesn’t give a damn what goes on in between.

Sir Thomas Beecham (1879 – 1961), famous British conductor and wit

Simon Says

Orch photo Welcome to our new season.  After months of planning, our very first Very First Concert is right around the corner, with our first Family Concert, Meet the Composers, close behind.  I’m very excited to be starting up again, and feel that this will be a very important season for the SFCO.  Our organization is growing up in many ways – with out first full-time employee, new Executive Director Colleen Marlow, a strong and growing Board of Directors, a band that gets better every year, a burgeoning membership program – this year will mark an important turning point for us. 
Please come to lots of our first-class and admission-free performances, and tell all your friends about us.  Make sure all the children in your neighborhood know about our Very First and Family concerts.  Already a member?  Consider a gift membership for your sister, neighbor, or dentist. Let’s let San Francisco’s best kept secret out of the bag! 

Onward and upward!
Ben Simon

www.sfchamberorchestra.org
415.248.1640

Join our mailing list!

Category : Simon Says | Blog
2
Oct

Illustration by Gail Machlis

Your almost-monthly e-newsletter from The Maestro!

2009-10 Highlights:

  • 37 performances in 14 concert venues in San Francisco, Berkeley, Palo Alto, Vallejo, San Mateo, Oakland, Burlingame, and Fallbrook.
  • Three Home Series Concert programs, each performed five times, including our new Community Concert Series venue in Vallejo.
  • Three Family Concert programs, each performed three times with side-by-side collaborations with local youth orchestras
  • Three Very First Concerts at the Crowden Music Center in Berkeley and at least one at the Whitney Child Development Center in the Bayview/Hunter’s Point neighborhood in San Francisco
  • Nine brand new Classical at the Freight programs, featuring our wonderful SFCO musicians in a chamber music setting, performed at the brand new Berkeley Arts District home of the venerable Freight and Salvage coffee house.
  • A planned expansion of our MAGIC in school program
  • Two world premieres, two Debut Artists, & eight Home Season soloists
  • Plus house concerts and other fundraising events

The SFCO is also pleased to introduce our first-ever Composer in Residence, Gabriela Lena Frank. Gabi, who lives in Berkeley, is one of this country’s most exciting young composers and a rising star in the classical music firmament. Gabi has written works for Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the Brentano String Quartet, Chanticleer, and soon the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra: on our May concert set we will be presenting the world premiere of her new violin concerto, written for our concertmaster Robin Sharp. Scored for four flutes, two percussionists, and ten string players, it promises to be a highlight of our season.

Please read our exclusive, in-depth interview with Gabi below.

Who said it?
There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and finish together. The public doesn’t give a damn what goes on in between. {answer below}

Commissioning Circle
The SFCO Commissioning Circle is an exciting new “donor club” for those of you who’d like to play a role in bringing new works of classical music to SFCO audiences. Gifts to the Commissioning Circle will help the SFCO continue our work of commissioning important local composers and will give you an inside peek at the process of creating a new work! We’re thrilled to be able kick this new program off with a Matching Commission Grant from the San Francisco Foundation’s Fund for Artists. All contributions to the Commissioning Circle will be matched by the Fund up to $4500!

Please join us for a Circle kickoff event! Here’s your perfect chance to meet Gabi in an intimate salon, hear her talk about her music and play works on the piano at one of three house concerts:

Sunday, September 13: Berkeley (1 – 3pm)
Sunday, September 20: Palo Alto (2 – 4pm)
Sunday, October 18: San Francisco (1 – 3pm)

Seating will be limited, and current SFCO Members and Donors will be given priority. For more information about the Commissioning Circle, or to make a reservation for one of the above house concerts featuring Gabi Frank and music director Ben Simon, please email Colleen at colleen@sfchamberorchestra.org.

We’re almost there!
Our recent annual fund campaign has raised over $10,000 towards the $15,000 we need to match a gift by our Board of Directors. Please help us reach our goal; contributions small and large are greatly appreciated. If you’ve enjoyed our performances this year, gotten a giggle from Simon Says, love the idea of “free”, and can afford to put your money where your ears (and heart) are, make a donation now and keep our first-class concerts admission free forever.

Don’t have your Labor Day gifts lined up yet?
We’re all members of the union, Local 6 American Federation of Musicians. Show your solidarity with the labor cause, solve an unusually difficult gift decision, and support your favorite chamber orchestra in one easy step: Click here to get all your union friends a gift they’ll enjoy all season long, a membership in the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra.

Ask the Maestro
Dear Maestro,
We’ve heard all the jokes, but what’s the REAL difference between a violin and a viola?
Confused in Cotati

Dear Confused,
The viola burns longer.

Got questions? Need some musical advice? Guitar hero got you down?
Ask the Maestro at SimonSays@sfchamberorchestra.org

Who said it?
There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and finish together. The public doesn’t give a damn what goes on in between.
Sir Thomas Beecham, famous British conductor and wit

An interview with Gabriela Lena Frank
Simon Says caught up with our composer-in-residence recently near her home in downtown Berkeley. Short with a shock of wiry black hair, eyes that are bright and intelligent, and a completely disarming manner, Gabi speaks passionately about a wide range of subjects, from politics to art to the latest episode of The Wire.

Simon Says: What were your earliest musical experiences? Did you grow up in a musical household?

Gabriela Frank: I started playing piano when I was 2 or 3 years old.  My older brother Marcos had started lessons, and I naturally gravitated to the instrument. The interesting thing is that I was born with a hearing loss, which was not diagnosed until I was five years old.  So, although my first perception of music was largely silent, I could feel the vibration of the piano keys through my fingers. Just as little kids learn languages quickly, I probably acquired my perfect pitch at this time.  We believe that I got my music ability from my Jewish grandmother, Lucy Frank, who could improvise beautifully.  My first songs were those that I picked up from sitting close during my brother’s lessons, changing and improvising around them.

SS: Where were you born?

GF: In Berkeley, CA, and I grew up here. After Berkeley High School I went to Rice University in Houston, and then the University of Michigan for my doctorate.  I flirted briefly with the idea of moving to New York but am very happy that I decided to move back to my hometown.  I’m on the road quite a bit for concerts, so having a home base that is familiar to me is healthy.

SS: What were some of your formative musical experiences?

GF: My mama is from the beautiful country of Peru, and in the 70’s and 80’s, the Bay Area welcomed many folkloric musicians from Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Bolivia, Chile… As a little girl, I loved those concerts and would go home and try to make my piano sound like panpipes, charango guitars, and quena flutes. I’ve had three main piano teachers who have all influenced me greatly: Babette Salamon who mentored me from the time I was five until I went to college, Jeanne Fischer at Rice University who introduced me to my first Latin American classical music composer Alberto Ginastera from Argentina, and Logan Skelton at the University of Michigan, who introduced me to the beauties and rigor of Bela Bartok’s study and incorporation of Eastern European folk music. Another very important person was my composition teacher at the University of Michigan, the brilliant William Bolcom.  Bill encouraged me to travel in Latin America, and this is when my composing really took off.

SS: When did you get “serious”, and think about music as a profession?

GF: Although I was privately very much in love with music all through my childhood, I am one of those composers who didn’t know that it was possible to have a career in music.  On a whim, I took a summer composition program taught by Dan Becker, at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, before my senior year in high school. It took me only one day to realize that this was what I wanted to do.  It was a huge leap of faith because I didn’t know any professional musicians, and didn’t know anything about what the life was like.

SS: So how did your composing career get started?

GF: I got an early break writing for the award-winning Chiara Quartet (comprised of peers I went to school with), and then unexpectedly catching the attention of a major publisher/agent at G. Schirmer.  Schirmer then brought my name to such organizations as the Kronos Quartet and the Seattle Symphony, who commissioned early works.  From there, it was a very quick trajectory over just a few years to writing for Chanticleer, the King’s Singers, the Brentano Quartet, Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the Indianapolis Symphony, guitarist Manuel Barrueco, and being performed by San Francisco Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Atlanta… It’s been a crazy ride, and I’m terribly blessed.

SS: How you see the future of classical music evolving?

GF: I’m biased — I think new music is: Where. It’s. At.  That, and the fact that classical musicians are genuinely trying to make connections to their communities without pandering or dumbing down what they do.  One strong aspect of this is recognizing how diverse we are, ethnically and culturally, and responding with repertoire that reflects that.  Like me, Dios — I’m a crazy mutt of Jewish-American and Peruvian-Chinese heritages who is hearing-impaired.  You can’t get more Berkeley than that!

SS: Any words of wisdom for young composers?

GF: Work hard.  Don’t pray to false gods. Try a lot of things at least once.  Know more than just classical music. Stay up on current events.  Travel.  Volunteer.  Stick with your instrument, or pick up a conducting baton.  And learn to speak well so you can render composers/artists less scary to the general public!

SS: What do you do for fun?

GF: I love to cook and collect cookbooks of all kinds.  I also enjoy making my own face creams, soaps, etc.  I love video/computer games, and spend way too much on history books.  I used to train in Aikido but my new hobby is Taiko drumming!

Simon Says:
Like a cork tossed on a stormy sea, your small but unsinkable San Francisco Chamber Orchestra is riding out this recession with big plans, overflow audiences, appealing programs, great reviews, and a determination to expand our first-class and admission-free performances to more audiences around the Bay Area.

We’re very excited about our upcoming 2009-10 season, and hope to see you often at one of our concerts.

For those of you with an adventurous spirit (and ear), please join our Commissioning Circle to help us bring exciting new music to our ever-expanding audiences… and get a chance to meet Gabriela Frank up close and personal at one of upcoming house concert events.

Musically yours,

Ben Simon

Category : Simon Says | Blog