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FSYO's Touring Orchestra Plays Hangzhou - Zhejiang Concert Hall

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Music Director and Symphonic Orchestra Conductor, Hanrich Claassen will lead FSYO's Summer 2019 Touring Orchestra for a performance at the prestigious Forbidden City Concert Hall. 

Located in the heart of the city, the Zhejiang Concert Hall is one of the top 3 venues in Hangzhou. The hall has an excellent acoustic for both orchestra and choirs with a recently finished refurbishment of both interior and exterior. The modern and well-equipped Zhejiang Concert Hall seats 646 and has hosted over 150 concerts.

Date/Time: Friday, July 5, 2019, 7:30 pm

Location: Zhejiang Concert Hall - 31 Su Guang Rd, Hangzhou

Admission: Single concert tickets range from $14.50 to $40.50. Tickets can be purchased at the box office on the day of the concert.

FSYO's Touring Orchestra Plays Shanghai - Shanghai City Theatre

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Music Director and Symphonic Orchestra Conductor, Hanrich Claassen will lead FSYO's Summer 2019 Touring Orchestra for a performance at the prestigious Forbidden City Concert Hall. 

Shanghai City Theatre, located in the bustling west urban area of the city, is celebrating its 10 year anniversary this year. The venue has a very spacious stage and well-equipped facility that makes it one of the most favorite halls for many world-class orchestras.

Date/Time: Sunday, Jul 7, 2019, 7:30 pm

Location: Shanghai City Theatre, No. 4889 Dushi Road, Shanghai

Admission: Single tickets can be purchased at the box office on the day of the concert.

FSYO Goes to China - Summer 2019

CHINA Tour STD

Thank you from Carnegie Hall

Thank You Post Card

 

As we look forward to 2019, Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras would like to take a moment to thank you for your support during 2018. Thank you for investing in the lives of talented musicians and contributing to a summer filled with unforgettable memories.

This summer, FSYO embarked on our week-long summer tour stopping to perform at the Sottile Theatre at the College of Charleston and Carnegie Hall in New York City. While in Charleston, a few students developed an understanding of the hard work that goes into promoting a concert by performing small sets around town. In New York, FSYO was invited to perform at Carnegie Hall in part with Distinguished Concerts International New York. DCINY is an organization that is passionately committed to maintaining the highest standard of professional performance experience.

The Carnegie Hall concert had over 2,500 in attendance and produced a sensational report from New York Concert Review. "All the principal players (in fact, all the players) were first-rate, with burnished, plush strings and confidently played winds." - Frank Daykin for New York Concert Review

"The concert [Carnegie Hall] itself was a whirl, it only felt like moments before we were being led offstage, just having performed the concert of a lifetime," said Emily Schenck, FSYO Alumna. "It was a life-changing experience and we were all so thrilled to have taken part in this event!"

You have truly made a difference.

Thank you to all of our season sponsors, donors, families, in-kind sponsors, and wonderful young musicians! 

New York Concert Review Inc. - FSYO at Carnegie Hall

Distinguished Concerts International New York (DCINY) presents Song/Play in Review

FLORIDA SYMPHONY YOUTH ORCHESTRAS; HANRICH CLAASSEN, SYMPHONIC CONDUCTOR AND FLORIDA SYMPHONY YOUTH ORCHESTRAS MUSIC DIRECTOR DISTINGUISHED CONCERTS ORCHESTRA AND DISTINGUISHED CONCERTS SINGERS INTERNATIONAL CRISTIAN GRASES AND FRANCISCO J. NÚÑEZ, COMPOSERS/CONDUCTORS STERN AUDITORIUM AT CARNEGIE HALL, NEW YORK, NY

Distinguished Concerts International New York (DCINY) continued to celebrate its tenth anniversary with the final concert before autumn: “Song/Play,” a treasure trove of music made by youths of all ages and stages of musical development and education. Their Premiere Project also produced notable two world premieres on this occasion. The presence of over 350 singers in the massed choirs, mostly domestic, but some from as far away as China, Finland, and Ireland, and their families in the audience guaranteed an exciting, supportive atmosphere.

The afternoon began with a ravishing display by the Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras and their uncommonly musical, lyrically sensitive conductor, Hanrich Claassen. All the principal players (in fact, all the players) were first-rate, with burnished, plush strings and confidently played winds. The first work was Reflections on the Hudson by a San Francisco-based composer, Nancy Bloomer Deussen, whose work was previously unknown to me. As with most good program music, it portrays the composer’s inner feelings while contemplating the great river, without slavishly illustrating it in music. Its gauzy meditative quality was beautifully rendered by the group, and the middle “busy” section had some nice imitative counterpoint.

The Symphonic Dances, Op. 64, by Edvard Grieg, based on Norwegian folk melodies, followed. These well-known works had dozens of mature details all fantastically worked out by  Mr. Claassen and his team. They gave a truly “hot” reading of music from a “cold” climate. No. 2, Allegretto grazioso was my personal favorite, but all four were excellent. These students are so lucky to have such guidance at this stage in their lives. The look of ecstatic listening and participation on the face of the first cellist, Maxwell Remmer, was priceless. The rapture that younger players have immediate access to has not been bred out of them by routine. May it never be! After intermission, two composer/conductors, both of whom I have reviewed previously in these pages: Cristian Grases and Francisco Núñez, each with a world premiere. Mr. Grases was given a really young choir to work with. His work, La Cigarra y La Hormiga, set a fable about a carefree partying cicada and an industrious ant (like Aesop’s ant and grasshopper) in a sort of cantata form, with all movements flowing right into each other. Mr. Grases wisely mixed rhythmic speech with well-crafted homophonic vocals to get the large amount of text covered expeditiously. The work, based on pan-Latin dance influences, could have used more variety at times, and it seemed too long. The clever instrumentation was a little too heavy, sometimes covering the large children’s choir. The message is a good one: the ant is generous with her food when the cicada comes over in the cold of winter. Each learns something from the other: that a satisfying life is neither “all work” nor “all play.” Then it was Mr. Núñez’s turn with a mostly older (high school age) group: a selection of his choral music, also including his premiere: Liminality, a complex four-movement work about an abstract idea, standing on the “threshold” of a new state of being but not quite “in” it yet. The third section, My Shadow, My Soul was gorgeous, with a wonderful soprano soloist from inside the choir. Naturaleza was a hymn to the beauty of the earth. Forever Is My Song imitated an indigenous Philippine musical gong, the kulintang. The day closed with the rousing Es Tu Tiempo, an exhortation to remember to dream and dare, sung by slightly “older” young people to those coming after them. Mr. Núñez’s use of percussion and the orchestra is inventive and satisfying, though he also over-orchestrated just a bit, leading to some balance and understandability issues. The DCINY orchestra was its usual fine self.

“Take a chance to dream.” Good advice indeed.

Original article by Frank Daykin can be found here.  

by Frank Daykin

 for New York Concert Review; New York, NY

 

  1. Road to Carnegie Hall - 2018 Summer Tour
  2. FSYO's Summer 2018 Touring Orchestra plays College of Charleston Sottile Theatre
  3. FSYO's Touring Orchestra Plays College of Charleston Sottile Theatre - June 2018
  4. FSYO Tour Map

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Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) charitable organization. Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras is funded in part by United Arts of Central Florida, your local agency for the arts. FSYO projects are funded in part by Orange County Government through the Arts & Cultural Affairs Program.

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Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras is a proud member of the League of American Orchestras and the Edyth Bush Institute.

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