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Season 2019-2020 2019-08-11T15:41:01+00:00

Ticket sales are now active for all shows in our season.

A 10% discount is available for sales of season tickets (buying all four shows) when purchased at the Elsinore Ticket office.

Elsinore Ticket Office 503-375-3574

Sunday, November 17  3 pm  A Leonard Bernstein Celebration

Tuesday, December 24  12 noon Tuba Holiday

Sunday, January 26  3 pm Tales of Sorcery

Sunday, March 15  3 pm Walczyk: Symphony No. 5 – Freedom From Fear

Sunday, May 17  3 pm  de Meij: Symphony No. 3 – Planet Earth

NOV 17  3 pm  A LEONARD BERNSTEIN CELEBRATION

The Salem Symphonic Winds will celebrate Bernstein’s centennial with a performance of some of his most beloved works. Leonard Bernstein excelled as a composer, conductor, author, music lecturer and pianist. As a composer he wrote in many styles, including symphonic and orchestral music, film, opera, musical theatre and more. In this program we offer a sampling of his work in a diverse medium.

His first symphony was based on the Biblical story of the prophet Jeremiah, who warned his people of the coming destruction of Jerusalem. He was mocked by them for it and lamented when it came to pass. Profanation is the second movement, a scherzo which dramatizes the savage mockery that Jeremiah experiences from the priests of the Temple of Solomon when he warns them that their corrupt ways will bring about its destruction. Its opening liturgical melody evolves into a chaotic pagan celebration.

Bernstein’s operetta Candide is based on the French philosopher Voltaire’s satirical 1759 novella of the same name. The work follows Candide through a series of traumas that lead him from unbridled optimism to a resolution to focus on cultivation of his garden. The Candide Suite includes five movements representing his evolution: The Best of All Possible Worlds, Wesphalia Chorale and Battle Music, Auto-da-fe, Glitter and Be Gay and Make Our Garden Grow.

Bernstein wrote his only film score for the 1954 crime drama On the Waterfront, starring Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steiger and Eva Marie Saint. He was frustrated about how much of his writing was a victim of editing in the cutting room. His response was to create a suite representing the best of his scoring for the film — Suite from On The Waterfront.

The Symphonic Dances from West Side Story represent Bernstein’s consummate composition for musical theatre. They refine the power and drama of the musical to a magnificent 24-minute suite.

Bernstein was an American treasure. We are thrilled to share with you a sampling of the riches of his compositional legacy.

JAN 26  3 pm  TALES OF SORCERY

 Music has the power to transport us to magical places! This concert explores music that has ignited the imagination of audiences for generations.

The Piano Concerto in A Minor, Opus 16 by Edvard Grieg is one of his most popular works and among the most popular piano concerti ever written. Its power and lyricism transport audiences to the fjords of Norway through folk dances of his native country. Our piano soloist, Crystal Zimmerman, thrilled the audience in our performance of Tolga Kashif’s The Queen Symphony. She is back to bring the magic of Edvard Grieg’s concerto to its full potential. Buckle your seatbelts for a life changing performance of this beautiful piano concerto!

French composer Paul Dukas brought to life the story of a young apprentice to a powerful sorcerer in his programmatic work, The Sorcerer’s Apprentice. Based on a poem by Goethe, this vivid musical depiction of the story attracted the attention of Walt Disney, who cast Mickey Mouse in the role of the young apprentice in his 1940 cartoon masterpiece Fantasia.

For his musical inspiration, Michael Colgrass looked to the writings of Carlos Casteneda, who wrote of his studies with a Yaqui Indian shaman to learn mystical powers that had descended from the Toltecs. Winds of Nagual, A Musical Fable for Wind Ensemble on the Writings of Carlos Castaneda is an inventive suite of eight movements of some of the most creative musical scoring of the 20th century.

MAR 15  3 pm  SYMPHONY NO. 5 – FREEDOM FROM FEAR

We are pleased to bring to Oregon Freedom From Fear, a new symphony by local composer Kevin Walczyk, which was premiered by The University of Kansas Wind Ensemble and Jazz Ensemble in performances in Kansas and at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. In a rare fusion of wind and jazz ensembles, this four-movement piece flows among varied musical styles, including classical, Delta blues, jazz improvisation, Syrian folk music and the voices of soprano and boy soprano. Salem Symphonic Winds will be joined for the performance by the Salem Big Band and soprano soloist Clare Hudkins.

The work pursues a programmatic idea that centers on displaced peoples and the global concept of Freedom from Fear — one of the Four Freedoms Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke of in his 1941 United Nations inaugural address. FDR’s Four Freedoms became so emblematic of the United Nations that they were added to its Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This symphony is unified by the concept of Freedom from Fear as it impacts displaced peoples. The focus of the symphony’s four movements range from the experience of adoptees represented by the biblical story of Moses to the beacon of hope the Statue of Liberty offers the displaced: the Courage and Freedom from Fear to relinquish their homeland and start again, adopted by their new country.

Martin Ellerby’s Cane River Murals were inspired by the spirituality of the African House Murals by Clementine Hunter. Her nine murals depict the colorfully rich daily life of the Cane River Country’s Creole inhabitants in the early 20th century, near the Melrose Plantation in Louisiana.

This five-movement suite comes alive in a celebration of dance and color, but also encompasses a darker and more spiritual truth that their initial innocence somewhat shrouds. The five movements are:

Springtime Planting (Spiritual)

Wash Day (Scherzo)

Baptism, Wedding and Funeral (Triptych)

Honky Tonk (Blues)

Pecan Harvest (Celebration)

MAY 17  3 pm  CineSYMPHONY #3 – PLANET EARTH

 BY JOHAN DE MEIJ WITH THE FILM BY DYAN MACHAN

Featuring Bella Voce, The Premier Women’s Choir at Oregon State University, Sandra Babb Director

Johan de Meij’s Symphony #3 – Planet Earth was written as a sequel to Gustav Holst’s The Planets. De Meij’s symphony is an ode to Mother Earth in all its miraculous beauty and, like Holst’s work, it employs a full symphony and female choir.

The Symphony begins with a view of the ‘Lonely Planet’ from space, with angelic voices from the women’s choir and the dramatic sounds of planets and comets whirling around Earth. The fragility of the Earth’s natural beauty inspires poignant themes culminating in a hymn to Mother Earth (Gaia in Greek). Bella Voce, the premier women’s choir at Oregon State University, will join the Salem Symphonic Winds to bring this symphony to Salem.

The daily newspaper Trouw wrote: “On Thursday evening De Meij’s première was grandly performed by the North Netherlands Orchestra (NNO) and the North Netherlands Concert Choir, conducted by Otto Tausk. The NNO has a reputation in this field…. De Meij knows how to compose, and he knows how to produce an effect. The audience in De Doelen gave him an enthusiastic applause afterward… To quote the Dutch writer Annie M.G. Schmidt: ‘What a planet!’”

De Meij’s wife, Dyan Machan, has created a film to accompany the symphony that takes the audience from earth’s creation to the present day. The film utilizes breathtaking images of our planet and all of its treasures, combined with those of a beautiful young dancer representing Gaia, to intensify the dramatic power of the symphony.

When the film and symphony premiered together for the first time in 2018 in Visp, Switzerland, concertgoers wept and came back to see it again.

“The film gives the orchestral score a whole new dimension. The interaction between music and film make the concert an intense and unforgettable experience.”

— Anthony Fiumara – Composer, Professor of Composition, Academy of Music and Performing Arts, Tilburg, Music Journalist