George Rothman To Lead Riverside Symphony In Concert On 2/12
RIVERSIDE SYMPHONY with Alan Kay, clarinet Friday, February 12, 2010, at 7:30pm
Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center Single Tickets: $50 & $35, Students ½ price at box office (day of concert) For tickets, call Riverside Symphony at 212-864-4197. Group rates available.
www.riversidesymphony.org
RICHTER String Symphony No. 63 in B flat
BUSONI Concertino for Clarinet and Chamber Orchestra
BIGGS Symphonia brevis (World Premiere)
MOZART Symphony No. 36 in C Major, "Linz"Hayes Biggs's Symphonia brevis to be Premiered on Riverside Symphony Program Devoted to Classicism Program will span three centuries of works defining-or defined by Classicism
Music Director George Rothman will lead Riverside Symphony in the second concert of the orchestra's 29th season on Friday evening, February 12, at 7:30 p.m. at Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall. The program, titled "Classics Revisited," will trace classical form from Symphony No. 63 in B flat by the formidable Mannheim School composer Franz Richter to Symphonia brevis, a Riverside Symphony commission by the esteemed New York-based composer Hayes Biggs.
Alan R. Kay, the orchestra's brilliant principal clarinetist, will be showcased in Ferrucio Busoni's rarely performed gem, Concertino for Clarinet and Chamber Orchestra, which, in the waning months of The Great War, represented an emotional respite for the fin-de-siècle Italian composer. Concluding Riverside Symphony's exploration will be Mozart's glorious Symphony No. 36 in C Major "Linz."
This concert is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York State Council on the Arts.
Alan R. Kay, clarinet. In addition to serving as Riverside Symphony's principal clarinetist since the orchestra's founding, Alan R. Kay is a member of Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and performs frequently as principal clarinet with the American Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra of St. Luke's and the American Ballet Theater. A founding member of the chamber ensembles Windscape and Hexagon, he appears often as a guest with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Mendelssohn, Rossetti, Mirò, and Shanghai Quartets. His honors include the C.D. Jackson Award at Tanglewood, a Presidential Scholars Teacher Recognition Award, Juilliard's 1980 Clarinet Competition and the 1989 Young Concert Artists Award with the piano and wind sextet Hexagon featured in the prize-winning documentary film, "Debut." Alan Kay, in his role as artistic director of the New York Chamber Ensemble, is known for the popular series of thematic programs performed by the ensemble at the Cape May Festival, the group's summer home. A champion of new music, Kay has premiered solo works commissioned by Orpheus from Charles Wuorinen and Paul Moravec. Recognized as a virtuoso of the wind chamber music repertoire, Alan Kay has recorded with Hexagon, Windscape and the Sylvan Winds. He is currently a faculty member at the Manhattan School of Music, The Juilliard School and Stony Brook University.

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