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Why are string quartets so
popular?
“It’s the vehicle that most composers, over
the centuries, have used to write some of
their best and most personal works,”
ventures Robert Lehmann, violinist and
director of string studies at the University
of Southern Maine. “I think it is the most
pristine form of chamber music – the crown
jewel of chamber ensembles.”
Lehmann
and other members of the Meliora String
Quartet -- Yasmin Craig-Vitalius, violin,
Kimberly Lehmann, viola, and Jim Kennedy,
cello -- will perform quartets by Haydn,
Shostakovich, and Dvorak during their
concert on Friday, April 18, 20008. The
performance gets underway at 8 p.m. in
Corthell Concert Hall on the USM Gorham
campus. Tickets are $15 for the general
public, $10 for seniors, and $5 for
students. Call the Music Box Office at
780-5555 for reservations.
This concert is sponsored by WBRC Architects
and Engineers. A reception will follow in
the first floor lobby
The concert will open with “Quartet Op. 76
No. 3, the “Emperor,” by Franz Joseph Haydn.
Lehmann notes that the work gets its name
from the second movement, a set of
variations on “God Save the Kaiser” that
would eventually become the national anthem
of Germany.
“In addition to being the father of the
symphony,” he says, “Haydn was the father of
the string quartet. He emancipated the viola
and cello from the bass line and created a
true dialogue among equals.”
Next is Dmitri Shostakovich’s 20th century
work, “Quartet No. 8, Op. 110.”
“Much like Beethoven, Shostakovich turned to
the string quartet to express his deepest
thoughts and feelings,” continues Lehmann.
“The quartet has the subtitle ‘In memory of
the victims of fascism and war.’ It is
stark, powerful and achingly beautiful ….
Shostakovich personalized the anguish and
horror of war and communism by writing
himself into the quartet using a quotation
of the musical letters of his name in German
in the music – D, E-flat, C, and B-natural.”
The final piece is “Quartet No. 11, C Major,
Op. 61.” Although most audiences will be
familiar with the famously popular
“American” string quartet inspired by
Dvorak’s American sojourn, the C Major
quartet is probably the least performed.
“That’s probably due to its length (40
minutes) and its virtuosity,” notes Lehmann.
“It’s a wonderful work that needs to be
heard more often. The jewel is the slow
second movement in which he writes some of
his most complicated rhythmic counterpoint
interweaving lyrical melodies of great
beauty.”
The Meliora String Quartet, formed in 2006,
brings together four of the top musicians in
Southern Maine for the sole purpose of
performing chamber music repertoire at the
highest level. Citing a shortage of
opportunities to hear music from this vast
and brilliant repertoire, the Meliora String
Quartet’s mission is to bring both familiar
and lesser known works of note to audiences
in Maine. The quartet unites four
individuals, each well established as
performer and teacher, into a cohesive
entity driven by their love of the
repertoire and desire to communicate this
excitement through performance.
Biographies
Robert Lehmann was born and raised in Mexico
City. He is a graduate of the University of
the Pacific and the Eastman School of Music,
and a 2008 recipient of a doctorate in
violin performance from Boston University.
He is Director of String Studies, Associate
Professor of Music and Artist Faculty in
violin and viola at the University of
Southern Maine School of Music. He conducts
the Southern Maine Symphony Orchestra, the
Portland Youth Symphony Orchestra, the North
Shore Philharmonic, the Portland Chamber
Orchestra, and the White Mountain Bach
Festival. He has been a frequent guest
conductor of the Portland Symphony Orchestra
as well as other professional orchestras
around the world, and is in great demand as
a violinist, teacher, adjudicator and
conductor.
Yasmin Craig Vitalius received her Bachelor
of Arts in Music from Stanford University in
1997 and her Masters of Music in Violin
Performance from the Eastman School of Music
in 2001. Between her degrees, she received a
Fulbright Fellowship in which she studied
Turkish Folk music and played with the
Bilkent Symphony Orchestra in Ankara,
Turkey. In 2003 she was the recipient of the
National Association of Music Teachers' STAR
award for achievement in teaching. In the
spring of 2004, she completed her fellowship
with the New World Symphony in Miami Beach,
Florida culminating in performances at the
Academy of Santa Cecilia in Rome, and
Carnegie Hall in New York City. She began
her violin studies at the age of 6 and has
received teacher training with the Suzuki
Association of the Americas. Yasmin is a
member of the Portland Symphony Orchestra,
the Portland Ballet Orchestra and PORTOpera.
She also performs with the Improv String
Quartet, Maine Grand Opera, the Maine
Chamber Society, Maine Music Society and the
Atlantic Piano Trio. Yasmin is currently
serving on the Board of Directors of the
Maine Suzuki Association and the Portland
Symphony Orchestra. Yasmin teaches violin
through her home studio and is the Suzuki
violin instructor at L'Ecole Francaise du
Maine.
Kimberly Lehmann, originally from Sioux
Falls, South Dakota, received her Bachelor
of Music in violin performance from the
University of Minnesota and her Master of
Music in violin performance and literature
from the Eastman School of Music. Several
years ago, upon receiving an instrument from
her husband Robert’s grandmother, she fell
in love with the viola. She has been a
violinist in the South Dakota Symphony, the
Colorado Springs Symphony and the Boston
Philharmonic Orchestra. She is
concertmaster of the Maine Chamber Ensemble
and regularly performs on either violin or
viola with the Portland Symphony, PORTOpera,
Portland Ballet, and the Portland Chamber
Orchestra. Kim lives in Scarborough, Maine
with her husband Robert and sons Eric and
Alexander.
Jim Kennedy is principal cellist of the
Portland Symphony Orchestra. He is a
world-renowned performer and teacher who has
spent most of his long career as a featured
soloist and as principal cellist for
numerous orchestra and chamber music
ensembles throughout the world. Kennedy
maintains a regular touring and solo
performance schedule, most notably a recent
concert tour of France that included several
recitals in Paris and Normandy.
2008 Concerto/Aria Competition winners to
perform with orchestra
The
University of Southern Maine’s Southern
Maine Symphony Orchestra will present its
final concert of the season on April 19,
featuring the winners of the 2008
Concerto/Aria Competition. They are Jason
Giacomazzo of Augusta, saxophone; George
Eisenhauer of Camden, tenor; Micah Maurio of
Woodland, flugelhorn; and Ian Scott of
Madison, Wis., piano.
Judges were Charles Dimmick, concertmaster
of the Portland Symphony Orchestra; Lisa
Saffer, nationally known opera singer; and
Chiharu Naruse, faculty at the Portland
Conservatory, and a concert pianist.
The orchestra, conducted by Robert Lehmann,
will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday, April 19,
2008 in Gorham Middle School. Tickets are $6
for the general public, $3 for students.
Call 780-5555 for reservations.
The concert will open with Estonian composer
Arvo Part's “Third Symphony.” Pärt is often
identified with the school of composition
known as minimalism, more specifically,
"mystic minimalism" or "sacred minimalism"
along with contemporaries Henryk Górecki and
John Tavener. The spirit of early European
polyphony is a fundamental part of Pärt's
compositional style in his ‘Third Symphony’
of 1971. He immersed himself in early music,
re-investigating the roots of western music,
studied plainsong, Gregorian chant, and the
emergence of polyphony in the Renaissance.
“He was a very interesting character,” says
Lehmann. “He had three different
compositional styles over the years. The
most enduring style is the one that has made
him the most popular – a very tonal,
homogenous style deeply influenced by his
religious and spiritual beliefs. In this
work you will hear contemplation, a quest
for spiritual fulfillment, and a nod to the
music of the past.”
The second half of the program will feature
the winners of the Concerto/Aria Competition
who will perform the solo parts of a variety
of works with the full orchestra.
Jason Giacomazzo of Augusta, saxophone, a
student of Bill Street, will perform Jacques
Ibert’s “Concertino da Camera, for saxophone
and chamber orchestra.”
George Eisenhauer of Camden, tenor, a
student of Bruce Fithian, will perform
Lenski’s aria, from “Eugene Onegin” by Peter
Ilitch Tchaikovsky.
Micah Maurio of Woodland, flugelhorn, a
student of Betty Rines, will play the third
movement of Franz Joseph Haydn’s “Concerto
in C Major for cello and orchestra” arranged
for flugelhorn.
Ian Scott of Madison, Wis., piano, a
graduate student of Laura Kargul, will end
the concert with a performance of the first
movement of Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Concerto
No. 5, in E-flat Major, Op. 73, the
‘Emperor’.”
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