Acclaimed violinist Shaham set to play with Arkansas Symphony

Violinist Gil Shaham solos Feb. 20-21, 2021, with the Arkansas Symphony. (Special to the Democrat-Gazette/Luke Ratray)
Violinist Gil Shaham solos Feb. 20-21, 2021, with the Arkansas Symphony. (Special to the Democrat-Gazette/Luke Ratray)

Internationally acclaimed violinist Gil Shaham will join the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra and its Interim Artistic Director, Geoffrey Robson, Feb. 20-21, 2021, at Little Rock's Robinson Center Performance Hall.

Shaham, who will solo in Samuel Barber's Violin Concerto, is the biggest "name" on the 2020-21 Stella Boyle Smith Masterworks season, which the orchestra announced Tuesday in a gathering for patrons at its headquarters, Byrne Hall on the campus of St. John Catholic Center in Little Rock's Pulaski Heights.

Shaham, who regularly appears with the world's great orchestras -- including those of Berlin, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles Philharmonic and New York -- will be making his Arkansas debut.

"I am, of course, beyond thrilled that we will be collaborating with Gil Shaham, one of this generation's greatest violinists," said Robson, who when he's not on the podium plays in the orchestra's violin section.

Also on the program: Ethiopia's Shadow in America by Arkansas-born composer Florence Price and the Symphony No. 5 by Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky.

Aside from Robson, the rest of the six Masterworks programs will feature guest conductors, some of whom, though the orchestra is not naming which because of confidentiality issues, are candidates for the ASO's vacant music director position, vacated by the departure of Philip Mann after the 2018-19 season.

The orchestra's official statement: "All conductors for next season are hired to create exciting concerts for our orchestra and audience. ... Our search is designed to attract the best conductors possible for our community. Since no one wants to lose a contest, we are keeping the candidate names confidential." The pool under consideration could also include the guest conductors who will or who have already appeared on the podium during the current 2019-20 season. The orchestra is surveying patrons after each concert for their reaction to the conductor and "to let us know if they would like to see a conductor back."

Board Chairwoman Jan Hundley, who has been sitting on the orchestra's music director search committee with board members and orchestra musicians, cites the diversity of the guest conductors by gender, race and geography this season, "and next year will be just as good."

Prior to the actual beginning of the search, she said, an "artistic leadership task force worked hard" to establish the criteria for a new music director, including nailing down whether that's what the orchestra actually needs. She said the musicians, while they have been enjoying working with a series of varied musical viewpoints, ultimately want a consistent person on the podium.

One of the issues has been how many weeks the Arkansas Symphony would require of the music director's time each season. For the first time in the orchestra's more than 50-year history, the incoming conductor's contract won't require that he establish a local residence.

The rest of the 2020-21 Masterworks lineup (all concerts, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday at Robinson Center):

• Sept. 26-27: Violinist Tessa Lark plays Michael Torke's Michael Sky (Concerto for Violin & Orchestra); the program also includes Ozark Traveler by Jeremy Crosmer, a former Arkansas Youth Orchestra musician who is joining the orchestra's cello section full-time next season, and the Symphony No. 9, "From the New World," by Antonin Dvorak. Guest conductor Matthew Kraemer is the music director and principal conductor of the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra.

• Nov. 14-15: For the orchestra's annual "Beethoven & Blue Jeans" concerts. guest conductor Roderick Cox, winner of the 2018 Sir Georg Solti Conducting Award from the U.S Solti Foundation and former associate conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra, joins pianist Conrad Tao for Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 4. The program also includes Ludwig van Beethoven's Egmont Overture and the Symphony No. 2 by Johannes Brahms.

• Jan. 30-31: Pianist Martina Filjak, who previously soloed with the orchestra in September 2013 in Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1, plays Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21 with guest conductor Akiko Fujimoto, current associate conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra. The program also includes Symphonic Metamorphosis of a Theme by Carl Maria von Weber by Paul Hindemith and Death and Transfiguration by Richard Strauss.

• April 10-11, 2021: Stephen Mulligan, associate conductor of the Atlanta Symphony and music director of the Atlanta Symphony Youth Orchestra, will be on the podium; a soloist, that person's instrument and whatever piece is to be played are yet to be announced. The program includes John Adams' The Chairman Dances: Foxtrot for Orchestra, Maurice Ravel's Le Tombeau de Couperin and the 1919 Firebird Suite by Igor Stravinsky.

• May 1-2, 2021: Andrew Crust, assistant conductor of the Vancouver (Canada) Symphony, joins a violinist to be announced for Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto; the all-Russian program also includes the Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor by Alexander Borodin and the Symphony No. 9 by Dmitri Shostakovich.

Pops season

Arkansan Kris Allen, who won Season 8 of TV's American Idol, will be the "headliner" on the orchestra's "Home for the Holidays" program, Dec. 18-20 at Robinson. Christina Littlejohn, the orchestra's executive director, noted that most folks don't know that before he hit the "big time," he was a violist in the Arkansas Symphony Youth Orchestra.

"There's such a natural affinity, it just made sense for him to be with us for Christmas," she added.

The rest of the 2020-21 Acxiom Pops Live! Series (all at Robinson Center, conducted by Robson):

• Oct. 24-25: "Halloween Spooktacular."

• Feb. 6-7: Pianist Joseph Joubert and stars from the recent Tony Award-winning Broadway productions of Porgy and Bess and An American in Paris perform for a program titled "Fascinating Gershwin."

• May 8-9: The return of "Cirque de la Symphonie," featuring aerial flyers, acrobats, contortionists, dancers, jugglers, balancers and strongmen.

In addition, a special pops concert, March 13-14, 2021, titled "Music from Fantasy Worlds," features Robson conducting music from the Harry Potter films, The Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones and even video-game music.

Metro on 02/26/2020

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