LSM Newswire

Monday, November 24, 2008

Pinchas Zukerman adds Royal Philharmonic Orchestra appointment to NAC Orchestra Music Directorship


Pinchas Zukerman to become Principal Guest Conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra while continuing as Music Director of the National Arts Centre Orchestra

Ottawa, Canada Pinchas Zukerman, Music Director of the National Arts Centre Orchestra, will join the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO) as Principal Guest Conductor from January 2009. The world-famous violinist, violist, conductor, pedagogue, chamber musician and mentor adds this prestigious new appointment in London, England, to his international soloist career and to his 16-week commitment to the NAC Orchestra in Ottawa, Canada, where he continues to live.

In March 2006, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra invited Pinchas Zukerman to play/conduct a concert at Cadogan Hall, London; the event was a huge success and led to a critically acclaimed RPO tour of the USA in January 2008 with Pinchas Zukerman conducting the Orchestra and performing the Beethoven or Bruch Violin Concerto in 22 concerts across the country.

Pinchas Zukerman will take his place alongside a plethora of esteemed conductors by joining the RPOs roster: Daniele Gatti, Music Director, Charles Dutoit, Artistic Director and Principal Conductor Elect from 2009, Leonard Slatkin, Principal Guest Conductor, and Grzegorz Nowak, Principal Associate Conductor.

Ian Maclay, Managing Director of the RPO, says:

The decision to offer Pinchas Zukerman the post was a unanimous one from the musicians of the RPO after a hugely successful tour of the USA in January of this year. Everyone was impressed by his musicianship, his commitment to the Orchestra and his constant striving for the highest possible results. We are thrilled to have him on board with his work with the Orchestra involving London and UK dates with emphasis on community work and international tours.

Pinchas Zukerman says:

It is an honour to become a part of the Royal Philharmonics storied history, joining such past luminaries as Sir Thomas Beecham, Rudolf Kempe and Antal Dorti. Our January tour gave me the opportunity to play 22 concerts in 11 states and was a joyous experience both personally and professionally. I look forward to working with these outstanding musicians as Principal Guest Conductor.

Recognised as a phenomenon for nearly four decades, Pinchas Zukerman recently turned 60 years of age; he is marking the milestone with an extensive schedule of concerts, events and educational activities across the globe during the current season, travelling to 17 countries, and performing in over 30 major cities.

Pinchas Zukerman was named Music Director of the National Arts Centre Orchestra in 1998. In addition to a busy performance schedule at the NAC, he has just returned from a Western Canada Tour with the NAC Orchestra, which received multiple standing ovations and rave reviews at every concert. The Performance and Education Tour, which was his eighth tour since becoming Music Director, included over 130 education events. Maestro Zukerman is the driving force behind the national role the NAC plays in education. He founded the NAC Summer Music Institute (SMI) in 1999 which now includes the Young Artists Programme, Conductors Programme and Composers Programme. Over ten years the SMI has provided training with an international faculty headed by Zukerman to 581 participants from 34 countries. In 2007, Pinchas Zukerman launched the Institute of Orchestral Studies, a season-long institute charged with developing highly talented musicians for orchestral careers. A pioneer of distance learning, he champions the NACs broadband videoconferencing programme known as Hexagon.

Prior to joining the National Arts Centre Orchestra, Pinchas Zukerman was Music Director of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra from 1980 to 1987, Music Director of the South Bank Festival in England from 1979 to 1981, Principal Guest Conductor of the Dallas Symphonys International Summer Music Festival from 1991-1995 and the Dallas Symphony from 1993 to 1995, and Artistic Director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestras Summer MusicFest, from 1996 to 1999.

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Friday, October 17, 2008

NACO, Oct. 21-22: Pinchas Zukerman and Jon Kimura Parker give preview of Western Canada Tour repertoire


NAC Orchestra led by Music Director Pinchas Zukerman with piano soloist Jon Kimura Parker gives Ottawa a preview of its Western Canada Tour repertoire on Oct. 21-22

Ottawa, Ontario The National Arts Centre Orchestra will set off on October 24 on a 20-day Western Canada Tour across four provinces and to Whitehorse the latter marking the ensembles first-ever trip to the Yukon. While on tour, Music Director Pinchas Zukerman and musicians will be involved in more than 130 activities in 26 communities, reaching some 8,000 participants. On Tuesday, October 21 and Wednesday, October 22 in Southam Hall, Pinchas Zukerman and guest pianist Jon Kimura Parker will give National Arts Centre audiences a preview of some of the repertoire they are taking on tour.

Jon Kimura Parker, one of Canadas best known and most popular pianists, guarantees a definitive interpretation of Tchaikovskys iconic Concerto for Piano No. 1 in all its romantic ardour. Maestro Zukerman will also lead the Orchestra in the soaring melodies of Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 5.

There are free pre-concert talks at 7 p.m. both nights with William Littler, music columnist of the Toronto Star, hosted by Jill LaForty, Radio Music Producer of CBC Radio entitled Tchaikovsky, the Loved and Hated.

The NAC Orchestra musicians are joined by the five participants in the 2008-09 NAC Institute of Orchestral Studies. These apprentices have been selected by audition to rehearse, perform and be mentored by the NAC Orchestra musicians during five separate weeks throughout the season. They will join the Orchestra on tour for performances in five of the cities where the NAC Orchestra performs.

Concertgoers are invited to remain in Southam Hall after the concerts on October 21 and 22 for a post-concert talkback during which Jon Kimura Parker will interview the IOS apprentices.

Follow the NAC Orchestras Western Canada Tour online at www.NACOtour.ca where there are tour blogs, audio clips, a photo gallery, and more.

The National Arts Centre Foundation gratefully acknowledges support for the Western Canada Tour from Presenting Partner EnCana, Signature Education Partner Agrium, and the NAC Friends, a generous group of supporters including True Energy Trust and SaskTel and a number of individual donors who have made the Western Canada Tour possible.

The extraordinary career of internationally acclaimed pianist Jon Kimura Parker has taken him from Carnegie Hall and Londons Royal Festival Hall to Baffin Island and Zimbabwe. In recent seasons, he has performed as guest soloist with the New York Philharmonic, The Cleveland Orchestra, The Philadelphia Orchestra, the Warsaw Philharmonic and the NHK Tokyo Orchestra.

Jon Kimura Parker has a long history with the National Arts Centre Orchestra including a 1998 tour in Canada and a 1996 tour in the Eastern U.S. This season, he is the NAC Orchestras first artist-in-residence appearing in concert and in recital, and playing an integral role in education outreach. The Vancouver-born musician is an Officer of The Order of Canada, this countrys highest civilian honour.

Tickets for these Mark Motors Audi Signature Series concerts on Tuesday, October 21 and Wednesday, October 22 at 8 p.m. are on sale now at $19.00, $39.00, $49.00, $59.00, $69.00 with box seats at $86.00 (GST and Facility Fee included) at the NAC Box Office (Monday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.), and through Ticketmaster (with surcharges) at 613-755-1111. Ticketmaster may also be accessed through the NACs website at www.nac-cna.ca.

Half-price tickets for students in all sections of the hall are on sale in person at the NAC Box Office upon presentation of a valid student ID card. Live Rush tickets (subject to availability) for full-time students (aged 13 to 29) are $11 at the NAC Box Office from 2 p.m. the day before the concert to 6 p.m. the day of, upon presentation of a valid Live Rush card.

Groups of 10 and more save 15% to 20% off the regular price of tickets to NAC Music, Theatre and Dance performances. To reserve your seats call 613-947-7000 ext. 384 or email grp@nac-cna.ca.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

National Arts Centre Orchestra Western Canada Tour, Oct. 24-Nov. 12


Canadas National Arts Centre Orchestra led by Music Director Pinchas Zukerman embarks on Western Canada Tour, Oct. 24 to Nov. 12, 2008, including over 130 educational events

OTTAWA, CANADA Canadas National Arts Centre Orchestra, with Music Director Pinchas Zukerman as conductor and violin soloist, will head to Western Canada for its 2008 tour from October 24 to November 12. The Western Canada Tour, with pianist Jon Kimura Parker, composer Alexina Louie, and guest conductors James Judd and Boris Brott, will include 13 orchestral concerts in 10 cities from Victoria to Whitehorse to Winnipeg spanning four provinces plus the Orchestras first-ever visit to the Yukon. In addition, the Orchestra will reach thousands of young people through events ranging from masterclasses with Pinchas Zukerman and Jon Kimura Parker to student concerts with the full Orchestra. In total, there will be more than 130 education activities in 26 cities and communities during the 20-day tour.

The Western Canada Tour 2008 will see the National Arts Centre Orchestra performing concerts led by Pinchas Zukerman in Vancouver (Oct. 25 and 27 at 8 p.m.), Victoria (Nov. 1 at 8 p.m.), Calgary (Nov. 7 at 8 p.m.), Regina (Nov. 8 at 8 p.m.), Saskatoon (Nov. 9 at 7:30 p.m.) and Winnipeg (Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.). Guest conductor James Judd will lead concerts in Prince George (Oct 28 at 8 p.m.), Whitehorse (Oct. 29 at 8 p.m.) and Kamloops (Nov. 2 at 8 p.m.). There will be student matinees led by the NAC Orchestras Principal Youth and Family Conductor Boris Brott in Whitehorse (Oct. 30 at 10 a.m.); at CFB Edmonton (Nov. 4 at 1:15 p.m.) as part of an innovative day in residence both on the military base and at the Kipnes Centre for Veterans; and in Spruce Grove (Nov. 5 at 10:30 a.m.). Pinchas Zukerman and members of the NAC Orchestra will perform chamber music at the Banff Centre (Nov. 6 at 8 p.m.).

The NAC is donating the performances of the artists and the NAC Orchestra in Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Victoria to help host orchestras in those cities with their fundraising, and in Regina in honour of that orchestras 100th anniversary season.

The National Arts Centre Foundation gratefully acknowledges support for the Western Canada Tour from Presenting Partner EnCana, Signature Education Partner Agrium, and the NAC Friends and Trailblazers.

A distinguishing feature of any National Arts Centre Orchestra tour is educational outreach to children and youth. These outreach activities are opportunities for Music Director Pinchas Zukerman, guest artists and musicians of the Orchestra to step off the stage and into schools and classrooms to teach, encourage and inspire students, and to leave a real and lasting imprint.

The education events on the Western Canada Tour will include instrumental masterclasses for advanced students led by Pinchas Zukerman, Jon Kimura Parker and musicians of the NAC Orchestra; student open rehearsals with the NAC Orchestra; instrumental clinics in high schools; school concert-demonstrations by NAC Musician in the Schools ensembles in French immersion schools and by teaching musicians with the NACs Music Alive Program (formerly Music Ambassador Programme) in Alberta and Saskatchewan; sectional rehearsals with youth and community orchestras; composition lectures/masterclasses and pre- and intermission-concert chats with NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie; and pre-concert lobby performances by local youth choirs and instrumental ensembles. An additional special project is Music Connections - Winnipeg, a 9-week in-school program that integrates Aboriginal and Western cultural traditions and culminates with a live performance by up to 90 participating students with a brass octet from the NAC Orchestra on November 12 at 1 p.m. (location to be determined). Over 50 partners are engaged in helping to present these outreach activities.

In addition, the five participants in the NAC Orchestras 2008-09 Institute of Orchestral Studies will join the Orchestra on tour to perform in Vancouver, Calgary, Regina, Saskatoon and Winnipeg. These students, selected by audition, will be rehearsing and performing with the NAC Orchestra during five separate weeks throughout the season.

NAC educational resources to be distributed on the Western Canada Tour consist of the Vivaldi and the Four Seasons Teacher Resource Kit, the Lets Go Mozart Teacher Resource Kit, and the Introducing Beethoven student newspaper guides. Schools involved in the student matinees on tour, the Music Connections Winnipeg project, and the Music Alive Program will be supplied with the relevant resources.

The Western Canada Tour website to be found at NACOtour.ca will include a tour blog, audio clips, a photo gallery, and more.

Pinchas Zukerman said: It is wonderful to be traveling again to the West Coast with the NAC Orchestra. As Music Director, one of my favourite aspects of going on tour is the pleasure of performing for other communities and giving them a feel for what we do at home. We also look forward to our many educational activities which not only utilize the excellent players in our orchestra, but also our Artist-in-Residence Jon Kimura Parker, and NAC Award Composer, Alexina Louie. We hope the communities we meet enjoy these concerts and activities, and that we will see them again in Ottawa!

The National Arts Centre belongs to all Canadians... and its extremely important to us that we make a real contribution to communities across the country, said Peter Herrndorf, NAC President and CEO. NAC Orchestra performance and education tours provide opportunities for Canadians to hear our musicians in concert halls and in classrooms, while enriching our collaborations with Canadian artists, educators and partners on a national level.

Christopher Deacon, Managing Director of the Orchestra added: We are grateful for the opportunity to assist some of our fellow Canadian orchestras with their fundraising efforts this season by donating the services of Pinchas Zukerman and the NAC Orchestra in Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina and Victoria. This, and the on-going education initiatives that begin during the tour and continue into the future, are ways that we are able to leave a lasting imprint after we tour.

CONCERT REPERTOIRE

The National Arts Centre Orchestra will perform Alexina Louies Infinite Sky with Birds at every public concert. Vancouver-born Alexina Louie, one of Canadas most frequently performed composers, has been one of the NACs three Award Composers since 2002. Infinite Sky with Birds, which had its world premiere at the NAC in 2006, is one of the NAC Orchestra commissions she has composed during this period. Programmes will alternate between the soaring melodies of Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 5 and Mozarts masterful final Symphony (No. 41) known as the Jupiter. Some audiences will have the opportunity to hear Pinchas Zukerman, one of the leading string players in the world, as violin soloist in Mozarts Violin Concerto No. 3. Others will hear the internationally renowned Vancouver-born pianist Jon Kimura Parker performing either Tchaikovskys iconic Piano Concerto No. 1 or Beethovens Piano Concerto No. 4. In Calgary, the NAC Orchestra will combine forces with the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra to perform Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 5.

STUDENT MATINEES BRAVO BEETHOVEN!

The NAC Orchestra will again bring its highly successful recipe for interactive Student Matinees on tour to Whitehorse, Edmonton and Spruce Grove led by Principal Youth and Family Conductor Boris Brott. The Orchestra will present Bravo Beethoven! featuring Ottawa-based actor Peter Duschenes, the Artistic Director of Platypus Theatre, as co-host in the role of Beethoven. The matinees will also feature Victoria-born violinist Nikki Chooi, former student at the Victoria and Mount Royal College Conservatories and a participant in the NACs Summer Music Institute in 2004 and 2005 performing an excerpt from Beethovens Violin Concerto. Teachers will be given a teacher guide and class sets of student newspaper guides designed by the Ottawa Citizen to prepare for the matinees. Students will have the opportunity to sing and play along on recorders with the NAC Orchestra to Beethovens Ode to Joy.

MUSIC CONNECTIONS - WINNIPEG

Music Connections is a 9-week project involving up to 90 Grade 3 to 6 students from two inner-city Winnipeg schools Mulvey and Dufferin Schools that began on September 11, 2008 and culminates in a final shared performance with a brass octet from the NAC Orchestra on November 12 during which the children will perform and sing, and present creative responses to Vivaldis Four Seasons through dance, drama, music, visual arts and media. The partners involved are the NAC Orchestra, the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, the Wii Chiiwaakanak Learning Centre of the University of Winnipeg, the Winnipeg School Division and Learning Through the Arts of The Royal Conservatory (Toronto).

Teaching artists working with the students include Richard Dub of Saskatoon who taught them how to assemble, decorate and play the Native American flute; singer/songwriter and storyteller Joseph Naytowhow, of the Woodland Cree Nation from Sturgeon Lake SK, who helped prepare the children to sing his composition One People in English and in Cree; and Lacey Eagle, a young opera singer from Flin Flon MB. Beyond the 9-week project, the three local Winnipeg partners will work together to develop a sustainability plan to continue the music programs. In addition, portions will be documented on video and shown at the final performance on November 12th. And from August through December, a research team led by Ann Patteson of Learning Through the Arts will oversee an extensive research component.

MUSIC ALIVE PROGRAM

The NAC will launch the second phase of its highly successful Music Alive Program (formerly titled Music Ambassador Programme) in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Over the next three school years, 6 professional Alberta and Saskatchewan-based teaching musicians with connections to the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra and Edmonton, Red Deer, Regina and Saskatoon Symphony Orchestras will work with classroom teachers and students in 100 schools. The program provides opportunities for students and teachers, primarily in rural schools with limited access to live music and music education resources, to interact with orchestral music and musicians. It also assists generalist teachers in fulfilling provincial curricular objectives for the arts by providing accessible lesson plans. The 2008-09 season will be based on the music of Mozart using the NACs Lets Go Mozart! Teacher Resource Kit and student newspaper guides.

RICHARD LI YOUNG ARTIST

Included in the outreach on the Saskatchewan portion of the NACO Western Tour will be up to 10 performance/presentations and teaching sessions by Saskatchewan-born trumpeter Amy Horvey in her capacity as the recipient of the Richard Li Young Artist Chair for the 2008-2009 season. This honour is awarded annually to an exceptional young Canadian musician under the age of 35 who aspires to, or is in the early stages of, an orchestral career. From Nov 9 to 17, Horvey will visit Regina, Waldeck, Cabri, Vanguard, Swift Current and the University of Saskatoon. The Richard Li Young Artist Chair was established thanks to the generosity of Hong Kong-Canadian businessman Richard Li.

CONCERT TOUR SCHEDULE

Oct. 25 and 27 at 8 p.m.: Programme 1 (two nights)

Vancouver, BC Orpheum Theatre, presented by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 7:05 p.m. pre-concert talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie

Oct. 28 at 8 p.m.: Programme 2

Prince George, BC Vanier Hall, presented by the Prince George Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by District 57 Tapestry Singers and a post-concert Q & A with guest conductor James Judd and soloist Jon Kimura Parker

Oct. 29 at 8 p.m.: Programme 2

Whitehorse, Yukon Territories Yukon Arts Centre presented by Yukon Arts Centre

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by the Whitehorse Suzuki Strings.

Oct. 30 at 10 a.m.: Student Matinee

Whitehorse, Yukon Territories Yukon Arts Centre, presented by Whitehorse Concerts

Nov. 1 at 8 p.m.: Programme 3

Victoria, BC Royal Theatre, a Gala fundraiser for the Victoria Symphony and the NAC Orchestra presented by Eric Charman

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by Viva Choirs and an intermission talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie

Nov. 2 at 8 p.m.: Programme 2

Kamloops, BC Sagebrush Theatre, presented by Kamloops Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by the Kamloops Thompson Honour Choir.

Nov. 4 at 1:15 p.m.: Student Matinee

Edmonton, AB Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Field House, presented by CFB Edmonton in collaboration with Guthrie School (located on the Base)

Nov. 5 at 10:30 a.m.: Student Matinee

Spruce Grove, AB Horizon Stage, presented by City of Spruce Grove

Nov. 7 at 8 p.m.: Programme 4 (Finale combined with the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra)

Calgary AB Jack Singer Hall, presented by the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by the Arioso Choir of the Mount Royal College Conservatory and an intermission talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie

Nov. 8 at 8 p.m.: Programme 4

Regina SK Conexus Arts Centre, presented by the Regina Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance and an intermission talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie

Nov. 9 at 7:30 p.m.: Programme 5

Saskatoon SK TCU Place, presented by the Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 6:45 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by the Saskatoon Strings and an intermission talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie

Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.: Programme 4

Winnipeg MN Centennial Concert Hall, presented by the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra

Includes a 7:15 p.m. pre-concert lobby performance by St. James-Assiniboia Childrens Choir and an intermission talk by NAC Award Composer Alexina Louie.

REPERTOIRE

Programme 1

LOUIE: Infinite Sky With Birds

MOZART: Concerto for Violin No. 3

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5

Programme 2

LOUIE: Infinite Sky with Birds

MOZART: Symphony No. 41

BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 4

Programme 3

LOUIE : Infinite Sky with Birds

MOZART: Concerto for Violin No. 3

MOZART: Symphony No. 41

Programme 4

LOUIE: Infinite Sky with Birds

TCHAIKOVSKY: Concerto for Piano No. 1

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5

Programme 5

LOUIE : Infinite Sky with Birds

BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 4

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5

Pinchas Zukerman and the National Arts Centre Orchestra

Pinchas Zukerman has for four decades been recognized internationally as one of the worlds greatest string players. His discography contains over 100 titles, and has earned him 21 Grammy nominations and two Grammy awards. Since his appointment as Music Director of the National Arts Centre Orchestra in 1998, he has taken an interest in virtually every aspect of Ottawas artistic community while continuing his international career. He is the driving force behind the national role the National Arts Centre plays in education and community outreach, and in the use of new technology to reach Canadians from coast to coast. This includes the creation in Ottawa of the NAC Summer Music Institute which over ten years has provided training from an international faculty to 581 instrumentalists, conductors and composers from 34 countries.

Touring is an important part of the mandate of the National Arts Centre Orchestra which has visited, in its 39-year history, 112 cities in Canada, and 122 cities internationally. The Western Canada Tour is Pinchas Zukermans ninth tour with the National Arts Centre Orchestra, and eighth since being appointed Music Director in 1998. In 1999 he led the coast-to-coast Canada Tour, followed by Tour 2000 to Israel and Europe, the Atlantic Tour 2002, the United States and Mexico Tour 2003, the British Columbia Tour 2004, the Alberta-Saskatchewan Tour in 2005 and the Quebec Tour in 2006. As guest conductor and soloist in 1990, Zukerman led the Orchestra on a European Tour.

Jon Kimura Parker

The extraordinary career of internationally acclaimed concert pianist Jon Kimura Parker has taken him from Carnegie Hall and Londons Royal Festival Hall to Baffin Island and Zimbabwe. In recent seasons, he has performed as guest soloist with the New York Philharmonic, The Cleveland Orchestra, The Philadelphia Orchestra, the Warsaw Philharmonic and the NHK Tokyo Orchestra.

Jon Kimura Parker has a long history with the National Arts Centre Orchestra including a 1998 tour in Canada and a 1996 tour in the Eastern U.S. This season, he is the NAC Orchestras first artist-in-residence appearing in concert and in recital, and playing an integral role in education outreach. The Vancouver-born musician is an Officer of The Order of Canada, this countrys highest civilian honour.

Alexina Louie

One of the most frequently performed Canadian classical composers, Vancouver-born Alexina Louie is a two-time Juno Award-winner of international renown. She has been widely commissioned and performed by Canadas leading orchestras, ensembles and soloists, and has gained both personal acclaim for her compositions and recognition for Canadas new music abroad.

Alexina Louie is one of three recipients of the National Arts Centre Composers Awards ($75,000 each) through which she has written three compositions for the NACO and collaborated on a number of educational and outreach programs. She was Lead Composer of the NAC Summer Music Institutes Young Composers Programme in 2005 and accompanied the Orchestra on its BC Tour in 2004.

James Judd

Considered one of the pre-eminent interpreters of English orchestral music, British-born conductor James Judd is Music Director Emeritus of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, former Principal Guest Conductor of the Orchestre National de Lille in France and former Music Director of the Florida Philharmonic Orchestra where he spent 14 groundbreaking years including its first tour of the major concert halls of Europe. He has amassed an extensive collection of recordings on the Naxos label.

James Judd made his National Arts Centre Orchestra debut in May 2002 and has returned regularly since. He has led major orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic and the Israel Philharmonic; conducted in the Salzburg Mozarteum and Viennas Musikverein, and continues to conduct regularly with all of the major British ensembles.

Boris Brott

Boris Brott is one of the most internationally recognized Canadian conductors. He enjoys an international career as guest conductor, educator, motivational speaker and cultural ambassador. In May 2004, he was named to the newly created position of Principal Youth and Family Conductor of the National Arts Centre Orchestra, where for over 20 years he has regularly been conducting student matinees and concerts for young people. On tour, he has led the Orchestra in student matinees in the U.S. (2003), British Columbia (2004), Alberta-Saskatchewan (2005), and Quebec in 2006.

Mr. Brott is founding Conductor and Music Director of the New West Symphony in Los Angeles California. In addition he serves as Artistic Director of the McGill Chamber Orchestra in Montreal and is Artistic Director of the Brott Music Festival, established in 1988. In Canada, Mr. Brott had developed no fewer than six Canadian Orchestras. Internationally, he has served as Assistant Conductor to the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein, and as Music Director and Conductor for the Royal Ballet. In 1987, Mr. Brott became an Officer of the Order of Canada.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

NACO, Jan. 30-31: principal oboe Charles Hamann solos in Strauss's Oboe Concerto with Pinchas Zukerman

National Arts Centre Orchestra / News Release

January 22, 2008

For immediate release

NAC Orchestra principal oboe Charles Hamann solos in Strauss's Oboe Concerto with Pinchas Zukerman on the podium on January 30-31

"The concert should not be missed because this concerto is arguably the greatest concerto written for our instrument and takes pride of place on the program with arguably the greatest symphony Mozart wrote, along with a sparkling overture by Handel featuring the dancing lines of a pair of oboes." - Charles "Chip" Hamann, NAC Orchestra principal oboe and soloist in the Richard Strauss Oboe Concerto.

Ottawa, Canada - The National Arts Centre Orchestra's superb principal oboe Charles "Chip" Hamann steps to the spotlight to perform Richard Strauss's magnificent Oboe Concerto under the baton of Music Director Pinchas Zukerman in Ovation Series concerts on Wednesday, January 30 and Thursday, January 31at 20:00 in the NAC's Southam Hall. The programme opens with Handel's Entrance of the Queen of Sheba and closes with Mozart's final symphonic masterpiece, the "Jupiter" Symphony No. 41.

There will be pre-concert talks in French offered at the NAC both nights at 19:00 by Montreal musicologist Franois Tousignant entitled "Des musiques dmoniaques".

Soloist Chip Hamann has been eagerly waiting 20 years for the opportunity to play the Strauss Oboe Concerto. He says: "All three of the composers on the programme (Haydn, Strauss and Mozart) were great masters of vocal music, and in particular, opera. It is no coincidence, I believe, that all three also wrote oboe concertos that are considered among the masterpieces in the genre. The Strauss is the grandest and most distinguished of these concerti, with the kind of soaring melodies and long lines you think of in his great operas. Yet this concerto looks backward towards Mozart and Handel in terms of the forces used in the orchestra and in the textures, harmonic language, and interplay between soloist and orchestra... It's definitely Mozart's voice finding its way into Strauss's world in terms of transparency, clarity and use of orchestral colour."

Recognized as one of Canada's foremost oboists, Chip Hamann has been principal oboe of the NAC Orchestra since 1995 after acting in the position from 1993. This month he had the honour of being invited to join the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of London as acting principal oboe on its 2008 North American tour led by Maestro Zukerman in cities across the U.S., including Chip's hometown of Lincoln, Nebraska! He participates annually in the Ottawa Chamber Music Festival, and has toured in Canada and in the United States with the National Arts Centre Wind Quintet. Charles Hamann's solo appearances include the Lincoln Symphony, Ottawa's Thirteen Strings, and Les Violons du Roy. He has appeared with NACO as soloist on many occasions.

In looking forward to the upcoming performance of the Strauss, Hamann adds: "To be able to collaborate with PZ on this piece is a special treat. He has such a way with the German Romantic tradition, and I can already see his sweeping gestures in the orchestral tuttis that will carry the orchestra and audience into Strauss's world... After our nearly ten years of making music together at the NAC, I'm sure there will be an instinctual understanding between us regarding how things should come together."

Tickets for these Ovation Series concerts on Wednesday, January 30 and Thursday, January 31 at 20:00 are on sale now at $19.00, $29.00, $49.00, $59.00, $69.00 with box seats at $83.00 (GST and Facility Fee included) at the NAC Box Office (Monday to Saturday from 10:00 to 21:00), and through Ticketmaster (with surcharges) at 613-755-1111. Ticketmaster may also be accessed through the NAC's website at www.nac-cna.ca.

Half-price tickets for students in all sections of the hall are on sale in person at the NAC Box Office upon presentation of a valid student ID card. Same-day Live Rush tickets (subject to availability) for full-time students (aged 13 to 29) are $10 at the NAC Box Office between 14:00 and 18:00 on the day of performance only, upon presentation of a valid Live Rush card.

Groups of 10 and more save 15% to 20% off the regular price of tickets to NAC Music, Theatre and Dance performances. To reserve your seats call 613-947-7000 ext. 384 or email grp@nac-cna.ca.

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Jane Morris

Communications Officer/Agente de communication

National Arts Centre Orchestra/Orchestre du Centre national des Arts

Telephone/Tlphone: 613-947-7000 x 335

Fax: 613-996-2828

www.nac-cna.ca

www.artsalive.ca

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s Hamann, hautbois solo de l'Orchestre du CNA, interprte le Concerto pour hautbois de StraussOCNA, les 30 et 31 janvier : Charle

Orchestre du Centre national des Arts / Communiqu

Le 22 janvier 2008

Pour diffusion immdiate

Charles Hamann, hautbois solo de l'Orchestre du CNA, interprte le Concerto pour hautbois de Strauss sous la direction de Pinchas Zukerman les 30 et 31 janvier

C'est un concert ne pas manquer, tant donn que ce concerto est sans doute le plus grand concerto crit pour notre instrument et qu'il a l'honneur de partager l'affiche avec ce qui est probablement la plus grande symphonie de Mozart et avec une brillante ouverture de Haendel o se dmarquent les lignes mlodiques dansantes d'une paire de hautbois.

- Charles Chip Hamann, hautbois solo de l'Orchestre du CNA et soliste du Concerto pour hautbois de Richard Strauss.

Ottawa (Canada) - Charles "Chip" Hamann, le superbe hautbois solo de l'Orchestre du Centre national des Arts (CNA), prend l'avant-scne pour interprter le magnifique Concerto pour hautbois de Richard Strauss sous la baguette du directeur musical Pinchas Zukerman, dans le cadre des concerts de la srie Ovation des mercredi 30 et jeudi 31 janvier 20 h la salle Southam du CNA. En ouverture du programme, on entendra l'Entre de la reine de Saba de Haendel, et les concerts se concluront par l'ultime chef-d'oeuvre symphonique de Mozart, la Symphonie Jupiter no 41.

Des causeries d'avant-concert en franais, ayant pour thme Des musiques dmoniaques, seront offertes au CNA les deux soirs 19 h par le musicologue montralais Franois Tousignant.

Le soliste Chip Hamann attendait depuis vingt ans l'occasion de jouer le Concerto pour hautbois de Strauss. Les trois compositeurs au programme de ces concerts (Haydn, Strauss et Mozart) taient de grands matres de la musique vocale et en particulier de l'opra , fait-il remarquer. Selon moi, ce n'est pas par hasard que ces trois compositeurs ont galement consacr au hautbois des concertos qui sont considrs comme des chefs-d'oeuvre du genre. Le concerto de Strauss est le plus grand et le plus distingu de ces concertos avec ses mlodies exaltantes et ses longues lignes musicales qui rappellent ses grands opras tels Der Rosenkavalier, Daphn et Arabella. Et pourtant, ce concerto rappelle Mozart et Haendel sur le plan des effectifs orchestraux et des textures, du langage harmonique et des changes entre le soliste et l'orchestre... C'est vraiment la voix de Mozart qui se fraie un chemin dans le monde de Strauss et que l'on reconnat sa transparence, sa clart et son utilisation de la couleur orchestrale.

Reconnu comme l'un des plus brillants hautbostes du Canada, Chip Hamann occupe le poste de hautbois solo au sein de l'Orchestre du CNA depuis 1995, aprs avoir assum les mmes fonctions par intrim ds 1993. Ce mois-ci, il a eu l'honneur d'tre invit se joindre la tourne amricaine de janvier 2008 du Royal Philharmonic Orchestra de Londres, dans le poste de hautbois solo intrim sous la direction de Pinchas Zukerman. L'orchestre s'est produit notamment Lincoln (Nebraska), ville natale du hautboste! Il participe annuellement au Festival de musique de chambre d'Ottawa, et a fait plusieurs tournes au Canada et aux tats-Unis avec le Quintette vents du Centre national des Arts. Il s'est produit maintes fois comme soliste avec l'Orchestre du CNA, et a aussi t soliste notamment avec le Lincoln Symphony, Thirteen Strings d'Ottawa et Les Violons du Roy.

Je me sens tout spcialement privilgi de pouvoir collaborer avec Pinchas Zukerman pour interprter cette oeuvre , se rjouit-il en rfrence au Concerto de Strauss. Il a une faon particulire de diriger les oeuvres de la tradition romantique allemande, et je peux dj imaginer les gestes amples qu'il aura dans les tutti orchestraux pour transporter l'orchestre et l'auditoire dans le monde de Strauss... Depuis pratiquement dix ans, nous faisons de la musique ensemble au CNA, et je suis certain que nous trouverons instinctivement et d'un commun accord de quelle manire interprter cette oeuvre.

Les billets pour ces concerts de la srie Ovation des 30 et 31 janvier sont en vente maintenant au cot de 19 $, 29 $, 49 $, 59 $, 69$ pour une place dans la salle, et 83 $ pour un fauteuil dans les loges (TPS de 6 % et frais d'tablissement inclus), la Billetterie du CNA (du lundi au samedi de 10 h 21 h) et, par l'entremise de Ticketmaster (frais de service en sus), au 613-755-1111 ou en ligne, sur le site Web du CNA l'adresse www.nac-cna.ca.

Les tudiants peuvent se procurer des billets moiti prix pour toutes les sections de la salle en se prsentant en personne la Billetterie du CNA, munis d'une carte d'tudiant en rgle. Les billets Buzz en direct disponibles le jour mme (s'il en reste), rservs aux tudiant temps plein de treize vingt-neuf ans, sont vendus 10 $ la Billetterie du CNA, de 14 h 18 h le jour du concert seulement, sur prsentation d'une carte de membre Buzz en direct dment enregistre.

Les groupes de dix personnes et plus pargnent de 15 20 p. cent du prix courant des billets pour toutes les reprsentations de Musique, de Thtre ou de Danse du CNA. Rservations : 613-947-7000, poste 384, ou grp@nac-cna.ca . Il est encore possible de s'abonner en communiquant avec le Bureau des abonnements au 613-947-7000, poste 620.

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Jane Morris

Communications Officer/Agente de communication

National Arts Centre Orchestra/Orchestre du Centre national des Arts

Telephone/Tlphone: 613-947-7000 x 335

Fax: 613-996-2828

www.nac-cna.ca

www.artsalive.ca

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