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Music Festival: St. Louis Symphony Orchestra Returns to 51ԹϺ Davis, Performs with 51ԹϺ Davis Musicians

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St. Louis Symphony
St. Louis Symphony, courtesy

Symphony Gives Full Concert at Mondavi, also, Jan. 17

The 51ԹϺ Davis Department of Music’s Revision/s Festival has brought together eight emerging composers and top professional ensembles – including the – for a six-month-long collaboration culminating in three concerts Jan. 18, 19 and 20 on campus. The Jan. 18 concert is free. (Full schedule below)

The at the Mondavi Center Jan. 17.

This is the second collaboration among the St. Louis Symphony, the Mondavi Center and the 51ԹϺ Davis College of Letters and Science Department of Music. In 2013, the orchestra was in residence at 51ԹϺ Davis and performed works by music composition faculty members and worked with students.

St. Louis Symphony egghead walk 2013
People gather to listen during the first Egghead Music Walk at 51ԹϺ Davis in 2013, with St. Louis Symphony performing. The Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts commissioned six new works to go with the campus’s iconic Egghead sculptures, originally sculpted by founding art faculty member Robert Arneson. 51ԹϺ Davis Photo by Gregory Urquiaga.

 “We’ve called it the Revision/s Festival because this project gives us a chance to confront a big problem in contemporary music," said , a faculty member in the 51ԹϺ Davis music department. “Composers typically work alone, and one piece might take months to complete. Then, they're suddenly thrown into rehearsals, which is collaborative work, sometimes with a large number of people. However, it’s not unusual for a new piece to receive only one or two rehearsals right before the performance, which leaves little time to fix what’s wrong.”

Composers may only have a few days or even a few hours to make corrections and adjustments.

“There’s a disconnect between the solitary composing, where one person gets to make all of the decisions, and the communal work of rehearsal, where a group translates a score into live sound,” he said. “There's a lack of balance between the conception and execution. We're hoping that this festival gives us a model of a better way of making music.”

The composers wrote works, had run-throughs of their pieces with the ensembles, got feedback and had a relatively generous six weeks for revisions in preparation for the performances.

The composer fellows taking part are from around the country and include 51ԹϺ Davis graduate students Phil Acimovic and Chris Castro, and Laura Schwartz, who earned a bachelor’s degree in music from 51ԹϺ Davis in 2013.

The St. Louis Symphony (in a chamber orchestra configuration of 30 to 40) will perform works by Acimovic, Castro and two others. As part of being selected, the composers went to St. Louis in the fall for run-throughs of their pieces by the orchestra and received feedback from St. Louis Symphony music director David Roberston and players.

“Robertson has an extraordinary talent for helping young composers translate their works from page to stage,” said Don Roth, executive director of the Mondavi Center. “This is a once-in-a- lifetime opportunity for our students. The St. Louis Symphony residency represents at a very high level what our artist residency program is all about – moving beyond the performance hall to utilize these great musicians as teachers, role models and mentors.”

Festival lineup:

  • performing new works by festival fellows, Jan. 18 at 4 p.m., Mondavi Center. Free. 
  • , the music department’s professional contemporary music group, will play works by two fellows and other composers Jan. 19 at 7 p.m., . A pre-concert talk with the composers takes place at 6:15 p.m. Ticket purchase required.
  • San Francisco music duo the will play works by two more fellows, along with pieces by other composers, Jan. 20 at 2 p.m., Pitzer Center. Ticket purchase required.

Robertson will also conduct the in a side-by-side rehearsal with the St. Louis Symphony, and the at the Mondavi Center Jan. 17. Ticket required.

St. Louis Symphony Orchestra video:

- Contributed By Jeffrey Day, content strategist in the 51ԹϺ Davis College of Letters and Science. Full story is .

 

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