Message from the President
The Portsmouth Symphony Orchestra’s 27th season offers all of us much to look forward to, including three Main Stage performances, two Holiday Family Pops! concerts and the return of the Family Matinees chamber music series.
As part of the PSO’s mission to entertain, educate, and encourage the audiences of today and tomorrow, this year we’re also expanding our focus on educational programming. In addition to our small ensemble school visits, we’re pleased to be offering our Explore + Learn concert for students in May 2025 as part of The Music Hall’s School Day Series.
As the only symphonic music program of its kind within an hour of Portsmouth, Explore + Learn offers the musicians and audiences of the future an opportunity to discover a love and appreciation for classical music and the wide array of instruments that work together to create it.
Each season, the PSO relies on the collective financial support of our generous corporate sponsors, committed individual donors, community partners, and of course you, the audiences who purchase tickets and attend our performances. Thank you!
As a non-profit, the PSO is governed by a dedicated board of directors, many of whom are also musicians who perform alongside their talented colleagues under the inspirational baton of Music Director, John Page. If you share our love of classical music and want to lend your time and talents to the PSO as we navigate towards a bright future, I encourage you to consider joining our board of directors. You can always learn more from me or another of our board members, a list of which you can find at the end of this program.
If this is your first PSO concert, welcome! If you are an annual subscriber, thank you for your continued support. We’re pleased to welcome you back.
On behalf of everyone at the PSO, thank you for being part of our community of classical music lovers and for your ongoing support.
David Young
President of the Board of Directors
Message from the Music Director
The 2024-2025 Main Stage season is one of musical contrasts and partnerships.
We’ll open our 27th season in October with two musical portraits that reflect the stark contrasts of human experience: Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 in E minor, Op. 93 and Copland’s Lincoln Portrait.
In March, we’ll perform two works by Brahms and Dvořák, professional contemporaries and friends who regularly invited one another’s reflections of their work. As part of this concert, we’re honored to welcome Boston Symphony Orchestra cellist Roric Cunningham as the featured soloist for Dvořák’s Cello Concerto, the first movement of which Cunningham first performed on The Music Hall stage as the 2017 winner of the PSO Young Artist Competition.
The season will close with two pieces that borrow from and amplify the natural world, Respighi’s neo-baroque piece The Birds and Mahler’s Symphony No. 1. This concert will also feature a performance by the 2025 Young Artist Competition winner.
We’ll be returning to both Portsmouth High School and to York Community Auditorium in December to perform our Family Holiday Pops! concerts. This year we’ll be shaking up the focus of our blend of seasonal music, but you can trust it will continue to delight audiences of all ages and put your whole family in the holiday spirit!
Knowing that chamber music is a wonderful way for people of all ages to experience the delights, joys and range of emotions that classical music can evoke, we’ll also be continuing our Family Matinees series. Part entertainment, part relationship-building events, these concerts help to break down the invisible barrier between audience and musicians. They also provide an opportunity for younger members of the audience to ask questions about how an instrument works, about what sort of career the musicians have, and even share that the concerts have inspired them to pick up an instrument or attend future concerts.
And of course, we’ll be connecting with students across the Seacoast with our Explore + Learn concert in partnership with The Music Hall in and through our school outreach concerts and workshops.
We have a wonderful season ahead and I look forward to sharing more music together.
I’ll see you in the concert hall,
John Page
Music Director
Program Listing
Gli uccelli, P. 154 (The Birds)
| Ottorino Respighi | ||
Viola Concerto in A Minorwith Hana Jang, viola
| William Walton | ||
—Intermission— | |||
Symphony No. 1 in D Major “Titan”
| Gustav Mahler |
Artist Biography
Hana Jang, viola
Sixteen-year-old Jang began her musical studies in Geneva, Switzerland before continuing at the National University of Singapore YST Conservatory. She currently studies with Mai Motobuchi at the New England Conservatory and Roger Ellsworth at St. Paul’s School.
She previously led the New Hampshire All-State Orchestra, Singapore National Youth Orchestra, and AMIS International School Honors Orchestra. Jang has performed throughout the United States, France, Switzerland, Portugal, and Singapore. She co-founded the JANG Trio, performing regular community outreach concerts, and has participated in prestigious festivals including Greenmountain, Encore, MusicAlp, Les Arcs, and Verao Classico.
Beyond music, she excels academically as a member of the Classics Honor Society and received Magna Cum Laude in the National Latin Exam. Fluent in English, French, Korean, and Spanish, with proficiency in Chinese, German, Italian, Latin, and Greek, Jang is dedicated to exploring connections between music, international relations, and cultural diplomacy. Jang will attend the renowned Heifetz International Music Institute this summer.
Musicians
Violin I
- Zoia Bologovsky
Concertmaster - Nicole Wendl
Assoc. Concertmaster - Tim Arnold
- Sai-Ly Acosta
- Rachel Swanson
- Lorna Ellis
- Onur Dilisen
- Susan Holcomb
- Megan Fedor
- Ashley Freeman
- Li-Chen Huang
Violin II
- Ashley Offret*
- Susan Streiff**
- Abigail Sykes
- Paul Pinard
- Jill Good
- Lauren Alter
- Diana Bourns
- Becca Bannon
- Travis Laughlin
- Kristin Sullivan
- Samuel Lyons
- Evelyn Laux
Viola
- Theresa Jaques*
- Karen McConomy**
- Jan Heirtzler
- Ken Allen
- Wendy Keyes
- Maggie Chutter
- Thalia Dain
- Caroline Drozdiak
- Sally Wituszynski
- Jonathan Byrne
Cello
- Gary Hodges*
- John Acosta**
- Zach Larson
- Molly Hutchinson
- Fay Rubin
- Lauren Wool
- Kari Jukka-Pekka Vainio
- Melissa Ambrose
- Kurt Villiard
- Chloe Jaarsma
Double Bass
- Robert Hoffman*
- Volker Nahrmann
- David Hirsch
- Joe Annicchiarico
- Joel Johnson
- Nathan Therrien
Flute
- Aubrie Dionne*
- Erin Dubois
- Kylie Elliott
- Bri Mercier
Piccolo
- Erin Dubois
- Kylie Elliott
- Bri Mercier
Oboe
- Sarah Krebs*
- Camden Ward
- Izumi Sakamoto
English Horn
- Jill Hoffmann
Clarinet
- John Ferraro*
- Santiago Baena Florez
- Elizabeth Gunlogson
- David Young
Eb Clarinet
- David Young
Bass Clarinet
- Elizabeth Gunlogson
Bassoon
- Melissa Grady*
- Nicholas Pitcher
- Rick Shepard
Contrabassoon
- Rick Shepard
Horn
- Orlando Pandolfi*
- Susan Williams*
- Dirk Hillyer
- Gray Ferris
- Kathleen Keen
- Angela DiBartolomeo
- Tracey Vigneau
- Hannah Messenger
Trumpet
- Adam Gallant*
- Mark Zielinski
- David Shepherd
- Greg Bechtold
Trombone
- Brandon Newbould*
- Ben Sink
Bass Trombone
- Phil Hyman
Tuba
- Crystal Metric*
Timpani
- Timur Rubinshteyn*
- Spencer Wiles
Percussion
- Mike Williams*
- Alyssa Ostrowski
- Michael Shun
Celesta
- Seth Hurd
Harp
- Sorana Scarlat
Perform with the PSO
The Portsmouth Symphony Orchestra seeks classical musicians in the community to audition for a place in the orchestra.
We invite all musicians, from professionals and educators to devoted amateurs and highly accomplished students, to audition for a place in the orchestra. We are actively seeking experienced string players.
Program Notes
"The Birds"
Ottorino Respighi
From Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons to Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony, composers have been drawn to the idyllic sounds of bird calls echoing in the forest.
These sounds are celebrated in shimmering sonic technicolor in Ottorino Respighi’s 1928 suite for small orchestra, The Birds (Gli uccelli). In the five-movement suite, Respighi transcribed four distinct bird songs into musical notation, and simultaneously paid homage to existing music from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The intimate classical orchestra is augmented by bright, colorful tonal splashes from the harp and celesta.
Frequently, Respighi drew inspiration from the music of Baroque composers. In so doing, he embraced his native Italian musical culture and revealed some long-neglected musical treasures. His transcription of Monteverdi’s lost opera, Lamento d’Arianna, was premiered by the conductor, Artur Nikisch, in Berlin in 1908. In the subsequent years, the three suites of Respighi’s Ancient Airs and Dances, composed between 1917 and 1932, recast a collection of Baroque lute pieces.
The Birds opens with a Prelude, based on a harpsichord piece by the Italian opera composer and virtuoso keyboardist, Bernardo Pasquini (1637-1710). After an initial statement of the stately theme, we are introduced to the suite’s musical “characters” with a sudden, sunny chorus of bird calls. Listen carefully, and you may also hear the fluttering of wings, pecking beaks, and scratching feet.
The second movement, La colomba, depicts the dove. A serene melody in the oboe evokes the clear, white bird which has long been a symbol of peace. It is a lush adaptation of music by the French lutenist and composer, Jacques Gallot (c. 1625–c. 1695).
Soon, the tranquility is shattered rudely by the exuberant clucking of the hen (La gallina). The hen’s incessant and comic commentary is joined by clownish interjections by the clarinet, oboe, and bassoon and a final blast from the trumpet. This music was adapted from a piece by the great French composer, Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764).
Next comes the nightingale (L’usignuolo), a mystical bird with rich poetic associations which date back as far as Homer’s Odyssey. Hazy, veiled low strings open the door to a magical, nocturnal soundscape. The solo flute initiates a dreamy woodwind conversation, interspersed with plaintive horn calls. The harp and celeste evoke twinkling starlight. The source for this music is the anonymous folksong, Engels Nachtegaeltje, which was transcribed by the Dutch recorder virtuoso, Jacob van Eyck (c. 1590-1657).
The final movement returns to the music of Pasquini with the call of the cuckoo (Il cucù). The cuckoo’s rhythmic, persistently repeated falling major third echoes cheerfully throughout the orchestra. The suite’s avian adventures come to a close with a return of the stately theme of the Prelude.
Colorful, atmospheric, and cinematic, The Birds seems to have anticipated lushly beautiful Hollywood film scores to come.
Notes by Timothy Judd
Viola Concerto in A Minor
William Walton
William Walton’s Viola Concerto puts the lie to the assumption that a composer must be able to play an instrument to truly understand it. Walton, the son of a choirmaster, was a singer first and never really mastered performance of any instrument. Yet his understanding of the viola’s musical characteristics — its deep, soulful sound and introspective nature — is evident from this concerto, one of the major solo works for the instrument.
Walton was in his late 20s when he wrote the concerto, and it is one of his first works as a mature composer. After singing and studying music at Oxford from 1912 to 1918, Walton left the university without a degree and was taken in by the wealthy Sitwell family. Under their patronage he composed his first popular piece, Façade (1922), a setting of instrumental music combined with Edith Sitwell’s poetry, followed by a comic overture, Portismouth Point (1926). The music world took notice of the young composer, and in 1928 conductor Thomas Beecham suggested Walton write a concerto for violist Lionel Tertis.
Walton, who was a great admirer of Prokofiev, responded with a work that was influenced by the Russian composer’s Violin Concerto No. 1 in its combination of lyricism and modern harmonies. Tertis, however, did not appreciate its “modernist excesses” and rejected it. So violist and composer Paul Hindemith premiered the piece in London in October 1929, to moderate success. Tertis later performed the piece as well, explaining “I had not learnt to appreciate Walton’s style.” By 1960 Walton felt a need to reorchestrate the work, dropping some woodwinds and brass, adding a harp, and assigning some themes to different instruments. Though he did not withdraw the earlier version, he expressed a preference for the later one, and it is this version that is performed in today’s concert.
The first movement, Andante comodo, begins with a lyrical melody in the viola that suggests both major and minor harmonies. The second theme, viola above a pizzicato accompaniment, is more restless, leading to a forceful climax punctuated by the brass. The recapitulation finds the opening theme now played by oboe and flute, with a viola obbligato in counterpoint, and the section ends in hushed tones.
June 10, 2001
Notes from the Redwood Symphony
Symphony No. 1 "Titan"
Gustav Mahler
When Gustav Mahler died in 1911, at the age of fifty-one, his years cut short by heart disease, by most measures he had enjoyed an enviable life and career. He was respected as one of the most effective and innovative of opera conductors; his leadership of some of the world’s most admired symphony orchestras had set new artistic standards; his songs and his symphonies were beginning to enjoy a modicum of success in respected artistic circles; and he was married to one of the most attractive, talented, and vivacious women in Europe. But, that is a sadly incomplete picture. In point of fact, after ten years of leading the musical life of the world’s most important musical city, he was hounded out of his tenure as conductor of the court opera and the Vienna Philharmonic by an unrelenting anti-Semiticism of unprecedented virulence. The Viennese press attacked him without mercy, lampooning his conducting gestures and attributing every putative weakness to his Jewish background. His subsequent, brief career at the Metropolitan Opera and the New York Philharmonic had soon grown stale as he succumbed to his fatal illness. Those who did not appreciate and understand his music held the majority, and he was roundly ridiculed for its general incomprehensibility, eccentricity, and wildly personal nature. His beloved little daughter, Maria, had died at the age of four from diphtheria. And, the passion of his life Alma Schindler Mahler, had repeatedly betrayed him in more than one deeply wounding fashion. Taken altogether, his life was a series of contradictions: profound successes, abysmal disappointments, and little in between. Music lovers have long taken an inordinate interest in the personal lives of composers to seek meaning in the abstract art of music—usually without success. Art lives a robust life of its own in the psyches of its creators, but in the case of Mahler, his music clearly reflects the realities of his inner being more than in almost all major composers. It’s all laid out in the score. Even in death, the hatred, incomprehension, and derision that had dogged him were still visited upon him. In the commentaries on his passing, Viennese newspapers variously characterized him as “. . . [a] Nibelung dwarf who came to power from the darkness of the pariahs . . . ,” and his music as “. . . one gigantic weed in the symphonic garden, a weed from which a new cross beam for the temple of disgusting indecency may be carved.” There was much worse.
To be sure, after his death, especially in the immediate years after World War I, his music was championed by a few determined admirers, largely from German-speaking countries, chief among them the legendary Bruno Walter, a long-time protégé. And, for a while, there were a few festivals in Europe dedicated to his music, but they were soon infrequent. The advent of the Third Reich sealed the fate of his compositions, and they disappeared from the repertoire. After the Second World War, the situation was not much better, owing to, obviously, the survival of most of the artistic establishment who had long opposed him and his music in Austria and Germany. And to be sure, the radical, avant-garde musical æsthetics of post-war Europe had little time for personal, gigantic and embarrassing artifacts of late Romanticism. Times had changed. And then, beginning around 1960—the centenary of his birth–there began a total transformation of the stature of Mahler and his music. Leonard Bernstein was, perhaps, his most ardent champion, along with Georg Solti and Bernard Haitink, all of whom recorded cycles of Mahler’s works—aided by the advent of 33rpm records (Mahler’s works are long, you know.) New, up to date, editions of his works were published, a variety of books came out, and a new spate of Mahler festivals began. Few major composers have ever languished so long in obscurity or disrepute, only to rise up and take what appears to be a permanent place in the pantheon of the great. A younger generation of musicians finds it hard to imagine a musical world in which Gustav Mahler does not stand near their center.
But, what is the real nature of his music, its style, and its creator that had elicited so much incomprehension and condemnation on the one hand, and such approbation and popularity, now? There are many legitimate answers. It’s clear that we know the man through his music, and, indeed, his was a complex personality, but so are most top-echelon artists—Bruckner and his ilk excepted. Mahler was a man driven and dominated by his overt passions, there were few middle positions that he held. Possessed of deep fears and euphoric joys, he was acutely sensitive to the virtually kaleidoscopic fashion in which the world unexpectedly imposes itself upon us. The banal and the sublime juxtaposed—pathos to bathos–are familiar images. A well-known story recounted by Mahler from his childhood tells of his fleeing the house in despair from a typical battle between his brutish father and his mother, only to encounter the pedestrian scene of a barrel organist grinding out the utterly banal “Du lieber Augustin“ (The More We Get Together). His musical style, while not quite literally quoting familiar popular tunes, is characterized by musical motifs and themes that seem to be just that. He drew upon the commonplace, or its imitation, and used them as a musico-pyschological foil to place the listener in the purgatory of the disparity between the inner and the outer self. The sublimity and beauty of many of his slow movements is the other side—and he enjoyed interrupting one mood unexpectedly for the crashing in of the other—like his life. That accounts for some of the frequent moods of parody and burlesque.
He loved passionately—life and people—but was driven by thoughts of death and its meaning, or lack thereof. And the latter was not a trivial endeavor. His library was full of difficult philosophical works on existence and its forms, and he conversed and corresponded with learned friends on the subject constantly. And while he could be the prisoner of his own irrational love, he was often blind to those who loved him deeply. He exalted humanity, but could be the cruelest of friend or musician. He once had to have a police escort home to escape a flute player whom he had treated viciously from the podium, whose friends planned to assault him in an alley. There are places in his music in which he clearly is possessed of an irrational fear of dæmonic forces that drive him into wild reaction. These elemental forces, complexities and contradictions filtered his perceptions of the world, shaped, and informed his art. It’s all there.
He composed only symphonies, songs, and orchestral song cycles—there are no works for keyboard, chamber music, or operas. His nine completed symphonies are large works, whose length is made possible by an innate mastery of musical architecture, an extension of tonality to its limits, and a constant delay of musical and psychological resolution. His melodies, as observed above, can seem trivial—or long, spun out affairs that seemingly take forever to reach conclusion. It is not without much exaggeration when pundits observe that almost all of his music appears to be based upon marches or waltzes—powerful musical imagery from his impressionable childhood. That, and a deep love/fear of nature constitute some of the surface imagery that is found throughout his art.
His first four symphonies are often grouped together, united by the important part that vocal solos and choral sections play in them. These four symphonies are closely associated with his many song settings of the poetry of Des Knaben Wunderhorn, and are rife with folk-like melodies. Des Knaben Wunderhorn (the Boy’s Magic Horn), an important document of early German romanticism, is a collection of hundreds of German folk poems and songs published very early in the nineteenth century by the poets, von Arnim and Brentano. The collection’s appeal is fostered by the variety of basic emotions and subject matter in it (children’s songs, soldiers, animals, love, death, nature–tragic to humorous) and their association with a burgeoning interest in simple reflections of the “folk.” Mahler, like almost all other German-speaking people, fell completely for them—it would be difficult, indeed, to over-emphasize their importance in his musical psyche. They fitted perfectly his predilection for simple reference to “nature and life” without the aid of high literary art. And by extension—regardless of the source of his extra-musical inspiration—Mahler is fundamentally a composer of songs. Song is his natural voice; it speaks directly from the core of his being, and a very useful way of considering his other focus—the symphony—is simply as the redoubled effort in resources writ large to sing his essential song. Thus, there should be no surprise at all in the symphonies—especially the first group of them—for him to marshal songs to join the unprecedented orchestral colors and forces of his large orchestras. Almost no resources were too unusual to help conjure his images in sound, and it must have seemed to audiences of the time that almost every resource was there!
Typically Mahler’s lifelong penchant was grandly to begin infatuations/commitments, and then to become disillusioned, then after a while dump the affair/job in frustration, and move on, apparently without regret. It nevertheless must have contributed to his inner turmoil. This flux of thought and behavior is reflected in his music, to be sure. This element is present in his compositions from the outset.
His first symphony—incidentally, not well received–was finished in 1888, when he was twenty-seven years old, and a busy young conductor for the Leipzig Opera. Then, as for the rest of his life, he had to squeeze his composing largely into the summer, between opera seasons. However dedicated he was to his compositions, he was always primarily known and hailed as one of the great conductors of his time. The first symphony incorporates two of his songs as essential elements; the work also initially and significantly he dubbed not a symphony, but variously as a “tone poem” and “symphonic poem.” Soon, of course, simply “Symphony No. 1” sufficed, but the ambiguity speaks clearly to all of Mahler’s music as bearing a deep inspiration in extra-musical imagery—not as just the musical architecture espoused by a significant body of composers of the genre. So, early on, the importance of imagery and song was fundamental in his approach to the otherwise august reputation of the symphony as an essay for orchestra couched in the musical abstraction of, say, the string quartet. The third movement of this first symphonic effort is a funeral march—not a typical preoccupation for a young composer in his twenties. And this one is right out of Des Knaben Wunderhorn—ostensibly an image familiar to most German and Austrians: a hunter’s funeral, with a procession of cute animals (ironically honoring their pursuer). A small Jewish klezmer band adds to the eccentricity of the whole. So, our young hero begins his career with death as a focus.
–Wm. E. Runyan
© 2023 William E. Runyan
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