The concert was in Juneau Douglas High School’s auditorium. It was a busy night at the high school, with two basketball games and then the homecoming dance. The Symphony cut the intermission short in hopes of getting the concert done before the music of the dance seeped into the concert hall. And, for the record, we didn’t hear any dance music until the last notes of Dvorák were over.
What made the concert particularly interesting was the Alaska premiere of Lowell Liebermann’s Clarinet Concerto with guest clarinet soloist Jon Manasse, who spoke about the piece with conductor Kyle Wiley Pickett before the performance. There’s a snippet of the conversation on the video.
The program note on the Clarinet Concerto, written by the composer says:
The Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, Op.110 was written for clarinetist Jon Manasse, and commissioned by a consortium of orchestras, and organizations composed of the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, Bozeman, Juneau, Las Cruces, North State (CA), and Roanoke symphony orchestras, Erie and Evansville philharmonic orchestras, The Chappaqua Orchestra, Hanson Institute for American Music at the Eastman School of Music, Buffet Crampon USA, Vandoren Paris, River Concert SEries at ST. Mary’s College of Maryland & The Chesapeake Orchestra and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
The model of a number of small groups and communities grouping together to do something that none of them could do alone is one that probably could well be used for a lot of other projects.
It was a good evening, I enjoyed the music, and there were parts of the new piece that particularly appealed. I had a sense of water in many spots and I liked the way the orchestra and the soloist were so closely connected. But a friend with us talked about how beautifully the piccolo dueted with the clarinet and how good the first french horn was, but that was way beyond my abilities to discern the subtleties. (The symphony picture was while they were tuning up.)
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