Quantcast The Collegian
College Media Network

The Collegian

'America' is star of the show for college and community symphony

Betsy Woodruff

Issue date: 4/23/09 Section: Arts
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
The Hillsdale College and Community Symphony Orchestra spring concert will have an American theme, featuring Aaron Copeland's "Lincoln Portrait," selections from the work of Samuel Barber and a musical rendition of "Casey at the Bat." Both pieces will have a spoken element, which Pat Sajak, of "Wheel of Fortune" fame, will narrate.

The coincidence of the pieces' theme and the dedication of a statue of Abraham Lincoln on the same weekend pleased Associate Professor of Music James Holleman, he said, though he did not plan for it.

Sajak will also conduct "The Stars and Stripes," one of a repertoire of pieces he conducts.

Two winners of the concerto competition, junior Jessica Bastien and sophomore Josh Cook, will also perform on piano and violin, respectively. Bastien will perform a movement from Rachmaninoff's lesser-known "Piano Concerto No. 1" and Cook will perform a movement from Mendelssohn's "Violin Concerto in E minor."

Holleman thinks audiences will enjoy the concert.

"Everything in this concert is seven to eight minutes, but there are seven pieces," he said. "It should be very ADD-friendly."

Holleman also believes Sajak's presence will inspire the orchestra to perform particularly well.

"The moment he shows up on stage, they're going to play their most focused, highest level," he said.

Senior Sarah Paye, the concert mistress, thinks the pieces will be challenging.

"Some of the music is harder than what we're used to doing," she said. "One of the Barber pieces in particular is pretty difficult."

The pieces' modernity presents the orchestra with a unique challenge, she said.

"Twentieth-century music just doesn't work the same way as older music that we're used to performing," she said, noting its unusual rhythm and tonality. "It doesn't build audience expectations the way older music would."
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

The Collegian welcomes comments. We discourage drive-by attacks and idle chatter, and accept civil, original statements which contribute to the discussion at hand. You must sign your own name to your comment. If you impersonate someone else, we will delete your comment. Feel free to attack a person's argument, but not to attack any person, whether article author, editor, or another comment poster. Comments with excessive profanity, lies, misinformation, personal attacks or obscenity will be removed. So will comments which contribute nothing to public discourse, or are so riddled with spelling or grammar errors they are difficult to read.

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

Ryan James Littley

posted 5/17/09 @ 4:52 PM EST

Very wonderful write-up! I was actually at this! I didn't know that Pat Sajak was the surprise guest till I arrived. I was hoping to meet him afterwards, but got stuck in the flow of guests when the show was over. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement








Advertisement