BEETHOVEN 5

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BEETHOVEN 5

Friday, September 22, 2023 at 7:30 pm

Sunday, September 24, 2023 at 2:30 pm

ALLEN-BRADLEY HALL

Ken-David Masur, conductor

Dashon Burton, bass-baritone

DANIEL KIDANE

Be Still

ELEANOR ALBERGA

The Soul’s Expression

George Eliot: “Blue Wings”

Emily Brontë: “The Sun Has Set”

George Eliot: “Roses”

Elizabeth Barrett Browning: “The Soul’s Expression”

Dashon Burton, bass-baritone

FRANZ SCHUBERT

Entr ’acte No. 2 in D Major from Rosamunde, D. 797

FRANZ SCHUBERT

IIIb., Romanze from Rosamunde, D. 797

Dashon Burton, bass-baritone

FRANZ SCHUBERT/orch. Max Reger

Du bist die Ruh’, D. 776; Opus 59, No. 3

Dashon Burton, bass-baritone

FRANZ SCHUBERT/orch. Max Reger

Erlkönig, D. 328; Opus 1

IN TERMISSION

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN

Dashon Burton, bass-baritone

Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Opus 67

I. Allegro con brio

II. Andante con moto

III. Scherzo: Allegro

IV. Allegro

The 2023.24 Classics Series is presented by the UNITED PERFORMING ARTS FUND and ROCKWELL AUTOMATION

The length of this concert is approximately 1 hour and 50 minutes.

Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra can be heard on Telarc, Koss Classics, Pro Arte, AVIE, and Vox/Turnabout recordings. MSO Classics recordings (digital only) available at mso.org.

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Guest Artist Biographies

DASHON BURTON

Hailed as an artist “alight with the spirit of the music” (Boston Globe), Dashon Burton has established a vibrant career appearing regularly throughout the U.S. and Europe. Highlights of his 2023.24 season include multiple appearances with Michael Tilson Thomas, including with the San Francisco Symphony, the New World Symphony, and the San Diego Symphony. Burton also performs Bach’s Christmas Oratorio with the Washington Bach Consort, sings Handel’s Messiah with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Philadelphia Orchestra, and performs the title role in Sweeney Todd at Vanderbilt University. With the Cleveland Orchestra, Burton participates in a semi-staged version of Mozart’s The Magic Flute, and he joins the Milwaukee Symphony and Ken-David Masur for three subscription weeks as their artistic partner.

A multiple award-winning singer, Burton won his second Grammy Award in March 2021 for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album with his performance featured in Dame Ethyl Smyth’s masterwork The Prison with The Experiential Orchestra (Chandos). As an original member of the groundbreaking vocal ensemble Roomful of Teeth, he won his first Grammy Award for their inaugural recording of all new commissions.

His other recordings include Songs of Struggle & Redemption: We Shall Overcome (Acis); the Grammy-nominated recording of Paul Moravec’s Sanctuary Road (Naxos); Holocaust, 1944 by Lori Laitman (Acis); and Caroline Shaw’s The Listeners with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra. His album of spirituals garnered high praise and was singled out by The New York Times as “profoundly moving…a beautiful and lovable disc.”

Burton received a Bachelor of Music degree from Oberlin College and Conservatory and a Master of Music degree from Yale University’s Institute of Sacred Music. He is an assistant professor of voice at Vanderbilt University’s Blair School of Music.

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Program notes by Elaine Schmidt

DANIEL KIDANE

Born 1986; Great Britain

Be Still

First performance: 19 January 2021; Manchester, United Kingdom

Last MSO performance: MSO Premiere

Instrumentation: percussion (crotales); strings

Approximate duration: 8 minutes

Born to a Russian mother and an Eritrean father, Daniel Kidane grew up in Britain. Although Kidane’s official bio says that he began his musical studies on the violin at age eight, he has said in interviews that his first music-making experiences were actually on the recorder as a young boy. He sang in the English National Opera’s children’s chorus, later choosing to focus on composition when he entered the Royal Northern College of Music, from which he graduated in 2012. He also traveled to his mother’s homeland to study at the St. Petersburg Conservatory.

By 2016, Kidane had received a commission from the BBC Philharmonic to create his “Sirens” as one of five short pieces that the orchestra performed to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. Various commissions followed, and his works began gaining a wider and wider audience, including his orchestral work, Woke, which received its premiere performance by the BBC Symphony Orchestra on the last night of the Proms in 2019.

Although the COVID-19 shutdown put a halt to live premieres of new works, several of Kidane’s pieces received online premieres while theaters were dark, including The Song of the Thrush and The Mountain Ash, written for the Huddersfield Choral Society.

Be Still, which was commissioned and premiered by the Manchester Camerata on 19 January 2021, is scored for strings and crotales, which are sometimes called antique cymbals.

Kidane wrote of the piece:

“Written towards the end of 2020, Be Still is a reflective piece on the year gone by. In a year where lockdowns became a thing, the idea of time became more apparent to me as everyday markers, such as meeting with friends and family, traveling, or attending concerts vanished.”

Kidane has said that he had the first lines of T.S. Eliot’s “Burnt Norton” (the first poem of his Four Quartets) in his thoughts:

Time present and time past

Are both perhaps present in time future, And time future contained in time past.

If all time is eternally present

All time is unredeemable.

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ELEANOR ALBERGA

Born 30 September 1949; Kingston, Jamaica

The Soul’s Expression

First performance: 22 July 2017; Wales

Last MSO performance: MSO Premiere

Instrumentation: strings

Approximate duration: 17 minutes

Jamaican-born, British composer Eleonor Alberga is the definition of a multifaceted musician. She was just five years old when she announced she wanted to become a concert pianist. By age 10 she was composing piano pieces, and at 19 she won the biennial Royal Schools of Music Scholarship for the West Indies, which allowed her to attend the Royal Academy of Music in London. From this point on, her musical interests began to compete a bit. She studied piano and singing at the Royal Academy of Music, becoming one of three finalists in the International Piano Concerto Competition in Dudley, England. Just a few years later, she landed a position at the London Contemporary Dance Theatre, where she became well known for her improvisations during ballet class. She was eventually commissioned to write works for the company, which led to her becoming the company’s musical director. In that position, she conducted, composed, and performed on many of the company’s tours. Alberga ended her performing career in 2001 to focus her energies on composition.

In Alberga’s music, one can hear elements of her Jamaican background, along with jazz influences, repeated rhythmic patterns, and a good deal of tonal writing. She began to incorporate increasingly atonal elements in her later works. Her works include orchestral, chamber, piano, vocal, and choral pieces, along with scores for film and stage.

The Soul’s Expression, written for baritone and strings, is built upon four poems by Victorian-era, British women:  Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s “The Soul’s Expression,” Emily Brontë’s “The Sun Has Set,” and “Blue Wings” and “Roses” by George Elliot (the pen name for Mary Ann Evans, the English novelist, journalist, poet, and translator who is well-remembered for her novels: The Mill on the Floss, Silas Marner, and Middlemarch). Within the piece, the four poems are separated by interludes that condemn evil, specifically evil words.

FRANZ SCHUBERT

Born 31 January 1797; Vienna, Austria

Died 19 November, 1828; Vienna, Austria

Despite his tragically short life, Austrian composer Franz Schubert produced an astonishing amount of work. Bridging the Classical and early Romantic eras, he wrote more than 600 secular vocal pieces, many of them Lieder (songs), including several song cycles. He completed seven symphonies and wrote a great deal of chamber music, as well as sacred music, operas, and incidental music.

Entr’acte No. 2 and Romanze from Rosamunde, D. 797

First performance: 20 December 1823; Vienna, Austria

Last MSO performance: MSO Premiere

Instrumentation: 2 flutes; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 2 horns; 2 trumpets; 2 trombones; bass trombone; timpani; strings

Approximate duration: 8 minutes

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Rosamunde, Fürstyn von Zypern (Rosamunde, Princess of Cyprus) is a play we would probably not remember had Schubert not written its incidental music. Schubert later used some of his Rosamunde music in other pieces, but the manuscript disappeared until Sir George Grove (Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians) and Sir Arthur Sullivan (the musical half of Gilbert and Sullivan) found the manuscript in a closet while researching Schubert. Rosamunde is the story of a princess raised as a peasant who manages to claim her throne. The lovely Romanze is sung by Rosamunde’s birth mother when Rosamunde returns to Cyprus. Although written for alto, the Romanze lends itself to the baritone voice as well.

Du bist die Ruh’, D. 776; Opus 59, No. 3

First performance: Unknown; first publishing was by Sauer & Leidesdorf in Vienna, 1826.

Last MSO performance: MSO Premiere

Instrumentation: 2 flutes; oboe; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 2 horns; trumpet; timpani; strings

Approximate duration: 5 minutes

When Schubert set this Friedrich Rückert poem to music, it did not yet have a title, so he used the first line of the poem, “Du bist die Ruh’,” (You are the peace) as the title. Rückert later gave the poem the title “Kehr ein bei mir” (Stay with Me). With this song, Schubert created a feeling of absolute calm.

Erlkönig, D. 328; Opus 1

First performance: 7 March 1821, Vienna, Austria

Last MSO performance: MSO Premiere

Instrumentation: flute; oboe; 2 clarinets; bassoon; 2 horns; timpani; strings

Approximate duration: 5 minutes

Erlkönig (Erl-king) is one of Schubert’s most famous Lieder. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s dramatic poem, which was also set by about 35 other composers, tells of a father racing by horseback to get help for his ailing son, who he cradles in his arms as he rides. The boy describes his fever-dreams to his father, one of which is of an Erl-king who wants to take the boy. The father finally arrives at his destination, only to find that his son has already died. Schubert’s setting not only captures the drama of the poem, but the voices of the father, his son, and the Erl-king. The racing figures in the accompaniment capture the motion of the running horse.

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN

Born 17 December 1770; Bonn, Germany

Died 26 March 1827; Vienna, Austria

Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67

Premiere: 22 December 1808; Vienna, Austria

Last MSO performance: 23 April 2017; Anu Tali, conductor

Instrumentation: 2 flutes; piccolo; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; contrabassoon; 2 horns; 2 trumpets; 3 trombones; timpani; strings

Approximate duration: 31 minutes

The opening bars of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 are among the most recognized bits of music in the symphonic repertoire. The entire piece is certainly well-loved by audiences around the world, and it remains one of the most often-played pieces in today’s orchestral repertoire. But the bold short-short-short-long theme that opens the piece and recurs throughout it seems to have been fated to take on a life of its own. Interestingly, Beethoven called the piece his Schicksalssinfonie (fate symphony), and German author E.T.A. Hoffman, who penned the story on which The Nutcracker ballet is based, referred to the theme as “fate knocking at the door.“

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Beethoven wrote his Symphony No. 5 between 1804 and 1809, working on it as Napoleon was waging war on Austria and the country was hoping and praying for victory. About 20 years later, having nothing to do with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5, American inventor Samuel Morse and several colleagues developed a code of short and long electrical impulses that could be transmitted by wire over great distances, assigning a short-short-short-long pattern of pulses to the letter V (the letter U is short-short-long). Fast forward a century to World War II, during which the Allied troops relied on Morse code to communicate. The short-short-short-long of the letter V led the Allies to adopt the opening bars of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 for all Allied radio broadcasts, as a “V for Victory” rallying cry in the most destructive war the world had ever known. For those in the Allied nations who had lived through the war, and certainly for those who had fought in the war or had lost loved ones to it, hearing Beethoven’s Napoleonic-era Symphony No. 5 remained a deeply stirring experience throughout their lives.

In 2022, shortly after the Russian military began its relentless war against Ukraine, orchestras around the world began performing Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 as a means of showing solidarity with Ukraine. Quite a few orchestras have performed the symphony on programs that also included Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov’s “Prayer for Ukraine,” which will be performed by the MSO on September 29 and 30.

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2023.24 SEASON

KEN-DAVID MASUR

Music Director

Polly and Bill Van Dyke

Music Director Chair

EDO DE WAART

Music Director Laureate

RYAN TANI

Assistant Conductor

CHERYL FRAZES HILL

Chorus Director

Margaret Hawkins Chorus Director Chair

TIMOTHY J. BENSON

Assistant Chorus Director

FIRST VIOLINS

Jinwoo Lee, Concertmaster, Charles and Marie Caestecker Concertmaster Chair

Ilana Setapen, First Associate Concertmaster

Jeanyi Kim, Associate Concertmaster

Alexander Ayers

Yuka Kadota

Elliot Lee**

Ji-Yeon Lee**

Dylana Leung

Allison Lovera

Lijia Phang

Yuanhui Fiona Zheng

SECOND VIOLINS

Jennifer Startt, Principal, Andrea and Woodrow Leung Second Violin Chair

Timothy Klabunde, Assistant Principal

John Bian, Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)

Glenn Asch

Lisa Johnson Fuller

Paul Hauer

Hyewon Kim

Alejandra Switala**

Mary Terranova

VIOLAS

Robert Levine, Principal, Richard O. and Judith A. Wagner Family Principal Viola Chair

Georgi Dimitrov, Assistant Principal (2nd chair), Friends of Janet F. Ruggeri

Viola Chair

Samantha Rodriguez, Assistant Principal (3rd chair)*

Alejandro Duque, Acting Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)

Elizabeth Breslin

Nathan Hackett

Erin H. Pipal

Helen Reich

CELLOS

Susan Babini, Principal, Dorothea C. Mayer Cello Chair

Nicholas Mariscal, Assistant Principal *

Scott Tisdel, Associate Principal Emeritus

Madeleine Kabat

Shinae Ra

Peter Szczepanek

Peter J. Thomas

Adrien Zitoun

BASSES

Jon McCullough-Benner, Principal, Donald B. Abert Bass Chair *

Andrew Raciti, Associate Principal

Nash Tomey, Assistant Principal (3rd Chair)

Brittany Conrad

Teddy Gabrieledes **

Peter Hatch *

Paris Myers

HARP

Julia Coronelli, Principal, Walter Schroeder Harp Chair

FLUTES

Sonora Slocum, Principal, Margaret and Roy Butter Flute Chair

Heather Zinninger, Assistant Principal

Jennifer Bouton Schaub

PICCOLO

Jennifer Bouton Schaub

OBOES

Katherine Young Steele, Principal, Milwaukee Symphony League Oboe Chair

Kevin Pearl, Assistant Principal

Margaret Butler

ENGLISH HORN

Margaret Butler, Philip and Beatrice Blank English Horn Chair in memoriam to John Martin

CLARINETS

Todd Levy, Principal, Franklyn Esenberg Clarinet Chair

Benjamin Adler, Assistant Principal, Donald and Ruth P. Taylor Assistant Principal Clarinet Chair *

Taylor Eiffert*

Madison Freed**

E-FLAT CLARINET

Benjamin Adler *

BASS CLARINET

Taylor Eiffert*

Madison Freed **

BASSOONS

Catherine Van Handel, Principal, Muriel C. and John D. Silbar Family Bassoon Chair

Rudi Heinrich, Assistant Principal

Beth W. Giacobassi

CONTRABASSOON

Beth W. Giacobassi

HORNS

Matthew Annin, Principal, Krause Family French Horn Chair

Krystof Pipal, Associate Principal

Dietrich Hemann, Andy Nunemaker French Horn Chair

Darcy Hamlin

Kelsey Williams**

TRUMPETS

Matthew Ernst, Principal, Walter L. Robb Family Trumpet Chair

David Cohen, Associate Principal, Martin J. Krebs Associate Principal

Trumpet Chair

Alan Campbell, Fred Fuller Trumpet Chair

TROMBONES

Megumi Kanda, Principal, Marjorie Tiefenthaler Trombone Chair

Kirk Ferguson, Assistant Principal

BASS TROMBONE

John Thevenet, Richard M. Kimball Bass Trombone Chair

TUBA

Robyn Black, Principal

TIMPANI

Dean Borghesani, Principal

Chris Riggs, Assistant Principal

PERCUSSION

Robert Klieger, Principal

Chris Riggs

PIANO

Melitta S. Pick Endowed Piano Chair

PERSONNEL MANAGERS

Françoise Moquin, Director of Orchestra Personnel

Constance Aguocha, Assistant Personnel Manager

LIBRARIANS

Paul Beck, Principal Librarian, Anonymous Donor, Principal Librarian Chair

Matthew Geise, Assistant Librarian & Media Archivist

PRODUCTION

Tristan Wallace, Technical Manager & Live Audio Supervisor

Paolo Scarabel, Stage Technician & Deck Supervisor

* Leave of Absence 2023.24 Season

** Acting member of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra 2023.24 Season

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