Subscribers receive exclusive benefits
Transcription
Subscribers receive exclusive benefits
For 24 years the Orchestra of New Spain has provided Dallas, and other New World cities, with the great, often profound, always entertaining music of the little known Spanish 18th century. Our revelations have a parallel in the renowned Meadows Museum where Algur Meadows’ explorations of Spanish visual art with the eminent art historian William Jordan, brought to our city what has become the most significant collection of Spanish art outside of Spain. May we invite you to join us as we confirm our past discoveries and begin a new exploration. Early in our journey we observed the centrality of theater in the artistic life of Spain. The villancicos we sang in those early Guadalupe Cathedral Christmas concerts, and the tonadillas we featured in so many Meadows Museum concerts existed in their original presentations as theatrical works. It took an understanding of how baroque music and theater developed together to draw us into a 2002 collaboration with Booker T Washington High School for the Arts and its theater program for our first staged work, followed in 2006 by a collaboration with SMU’s Theatre Department presenting Lope de Vega. At the Boston Early Music Festival only three months ago the measure of our artistic development came to the fore as I witnessed the Festival’s period production of Handel’s Almira. During the performance, and even more as I listened to Stage Director Gilbert Blin’s discussion of the concepts behind it, I realized how similar had been the means to our successful baroque production in the hands of Gustavo Tambascio. Sebastián Durón’s Cupid’s New Arms of Love in our theater was truly a world class event, a uniquely faithful gesamtkunstwerk of a Spanish stage work of 1711, setting a very high bar for what we have now decided will be an annual staged production in the Dallas Arts District’s City Performance Hall. Thus on Valentine’s night, February 14, 2014, we return to that venue with a multi-faceted production of the work of Manuel de Falla and Federico Garcia Lorca danced by Daniel de Cordoba’s Bailes Españoles and Delilah Buitron’s Flamenco Festival and their celebrated guests. You’ll be treated to a spectacular evening of music and dance of early 20th century Spain. As you peruse the contents of this brochure note the variety of what we offer, to you, and to those around you who may have missed out. It’s your opportunity to share. — Grover Wilkins 3d Educational Outreach The young people in these pictures are some of the benefactors of the Orchestra of New Spain’s educational efforts. Having begun in 1996, these activities took a quantum leap in 2010 when we opened a door to IberAmerica with the beginning of our Bolivian educational program. It was prompted by a fortuitous meeting in Sao Paulo (2009) with the remarkable violinist and educator, Rubén Darío. That same summer we received a request from Dallas ISD to create a Summer Strings Camp. Now we dedicate three weeks of each summer to intensive classes and rehearsals with more than 300 children on two continents. What an adventure we are undertaking! Cover portrait of Mariana Marquez © Reproducción, Biblioteca Nacional de España We reach hundreds more each year through in-school concerts and our City Performance Hall productions. These activities target minority populations with engaging and educational programs based on our concert programming. Encourage your school music teacher to contact us directly or go to www.dallasartspartners.org/ArtBiz/Programs. For students in DISD orchestral programs we provide the annual Summer Strings Camp, a one-week program of intensive instruction with ONS musicians and select DISD music teachers. Since 2011, we have grown from 90 students to an expected 250 students for June 16-20, 2014, charging only $25 for the week. Contact your school music teacher or us directly. Once again in 2014 we will journey to Bolivia with a small contingent from the Orchestra of New Spain to teach and concertize with students in three of the villages of musicrich Chiquitania. Support a musician in this effort. 25th Concert Season ORCHESTRA OF NEW SPAIN Thr, Oct 10 | 8 pm | Latino Barroco City Performance Hall | Dallas Arts District The Latin-Baroque Fusion Ensemble Rumbarroco and the Orchestra invite you to experience Latin American and Spanish music from the Renaissance on, highlighting IberAmerica’s African and indigenous roots. Music from Venezuela, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Portugal and Argentina. Songs, dances, joropos, plenas, tangos, and villancicos. Dancing allowed only in the aisles! $25/Students $10/Family Plan Fri, Nov 22 | 7 pm | Requiem for a fallen leader Christ the King Catholic Church | Preston & Colgate Fri, Nov 8 | 6:30 pm Home and Garden I at Margo and Jim Keyes On this emblematic date the full Orchestra and Chorus present the 1765 Requiem Mass of Francisco Courcelle, written on the occasion of the death of Austrian Emperor Francis I. This lyrical, moving work recognizes the profound loss of a great leader today just as it did 250 years ago. Admission complimentary. Suggested $10 donation. As always the combination of home, tapas, wine and music offer an intimate evening among old and new friends. Address provided with ticket purchase. Attire: Casual Chic. $50 “Hallelujah! A fresh Christmas program” — Scott Cantrell, Dallas Morning News Sun, Dec 15 | 5 pm | Christmas at Christ the King | Preston & Colgate Join us for another fresh Christmas program! This year including two villancicos of Padre Soler edited in 1979 by Californian Frederick Marvin, whose ground breaking work has gone virtually unacknowledged. With Renaissance Spanish and 18th c. Iberamerican treats. Admission complimentary. Suggested $10 donation. Sun, Jan 19 | 6 pm The Annual Courcelle Dinner Place TBA In anticipation of this season’s staged production—The Rise of Flamenco— we’ll entertain you with our collaborators in the Dallas flamenco world. And of course a divine dinner and fine wine around our great entertainment. $125 Sat, Feb 8 | 6:30 pm the Meadows Museum In collaboration with the Museum’s exhibit Sorolla and America the Orchestra presents a preview of next week’s staged production in the visual context of the Falla and Lorca’s contemporary, Joaquín Sorolla, notably his flamenco infused Café de Novedades. Join us 2-5pm for a Symposium on Sorolla and America. Admission complimentary. (Limited seating, but assured in main hall for season subscribers.) Fri, Feb 14 & Sat, Feb 15 | 7:30 pm The Rise of Flamenco: Lorca, Falla, Sorolla, Andalusia 1920-39 City Performance Hall | Dallas Arts District Los Bailes espanoles de Dallas, and Dallas Flamenco Festival featuring Antonio Arrebola, Cristo Cortés, Delilah Buitron, Daniel de Córdoba, Mercedes Padron & Hailey Von Schlehenried. This fully staged production joins two of Dallas’ stellar flamenco companies with their international guest artists and the Orchestra in a celebration of flamenco and its surroundings in early 20th century Andalusia. Federico Garcia Lorca’s musical ear prompted his transcriptions of traditional Andalusian songs, before his writings condemned him to a martyr’s grave. Manuel de Falla traveled to Paris and London to share his Spanishness before it was accepted in Madrid with his ballet El corregidor y la molinera which, after revision, became El Sombrero de tres picos, 1917, produced by Serge Diaghilev with set design and costumes by Pablo Picasso. $60/$40/$25/Students $10/Family Plan Sat, Mar 29 | 7 pm Villa y Corte — Town and Court Zion Lutheran Church | Lovers Lane & Skillman As the Enlightenment was realized in Spain under the reign of the cosmopolitan King Carlos III, the theaters of Madrid saw an expansion of the popular tonadillas while the court reveled in the beauty of the newly discovered symphonic repertory of Luigi Boccherini played in the Summer Palace of Aranjuez. A splendid introduction to the contrast between town and court. $25/Students $10/Family Plan Thr, May 15 | Home and Garden II Programming is subject to change. Confirm concert information and time in advance at: www.orchestraofnewspain.org or call 214-750-1492. Place TBA For this concert we invite four of our musicians to dig into the repertory of the Spanish Enlightenment, to play works of the little known Italo-Spanish composer, Gaetano Brunetti. We’ll have just returned from Bolivia with photos and tales to tell. Join us for a relaxing evening to close our 25th Season. $50 Season Subscriptions Order online at OrchestraOfNewSpain.org PATRON – $670/PAIR 5 Regular Season Concerts for 2 2 Home & Garden Concerts for 2 Flamenco Priority seating for 2 Program Recognition $290 tax-deductible donation FRIEND – $320 5 Regular Season Concerts 2 Home & Garden Concerts Flamenco Priority seating Program Recognition $120 tax-deductible donation Cut along the dotted line and mail with your check today! Order Tickets Get your season tickets NOW! Order online or mail this form with your check to: ORCHESTRA OF NEW SPAIN 10260 N Central Epwy, Ste 276 Dallas, TX 75231-3440 Make checks payable to: Orchestra of New Spain PRIMO – $200 5 Regular Season Concerts 2 Home & Garden Concerts Flamenco seating FAMILY PLAN We love having kids at our concerts, especially those quietly ready for prime time! Two children (up to age 16) are FREE with each regular season concert ticket. Our Home and Garden concerts are intimate evenings of wine, tapas, exquisite ambiance and delightful company. And all that’s before the music! STUDENT SUBSCRIPTION – $25 Available to all high school and college students for 2 regular concerts and The Rise of Flamenco. ✁ Subscribers receive exclusive benefits including assured and preferential seating ✁ ✁ Yes! I would love to be a subscriber. ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ PATRON subscription – $670/pair FRIEND subscription – $320 PRIMO subscription – $200 STUDENT subscription – $25 $ $ $ $ ❏ FLAMENCO tickets – $60, $40, $25, $10 ❏ COURCELLE DINNER tickets – $125 ❏ DONATION please accept my contribution For credit card, mail this portion or call the Orchestra office at: 214- 750-1492 $ $ $ 4My TOTAL PAYMENT is ❏ VISA ❏ MasterCard ❏ Discover Credit Card # $ Exp. Date Name Spouse’s Name Address City Phone (HM/WK/Cell) E-mail (only for ONS updates) Price Qty Signature State Zip -