Showing posts with label San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2013

November 9, 2013 - Fellow Travelers


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

Fellow Travelers

8pm, Saturday, November 9, 2013
Old First Presbyterian Church, 1751 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, CA
Mark Alburger and John Kendall Bailey, conducting



Program

Davide Verotta

   Invitation

              Davide Verotta, Piano
       
 
Philip Freihofner
     Filled with Moonlight

              Philip Freihofner, Oboe
              Davide Verotta, Piano
       

David Sprung
     Haiku for Tenor, Wind Quintet, and Piano (2013)

             Michael Desnoyers, Tenor
          

Lisa Scola Prosek   
     The Lariat
            I. El Vaquero
            II. Las Otno Ayam

                 Desirae Harp, Soprano

Eduard Prosek       
     The Curse (2013)

               Eduard Prosek, Voice and Guitar

Mark Alburger   
     Double Piano Concerto ("Fellow Travellers"), Op. 204 (2012)
         I.  Allegro troppo

               Eytan and Gabriel Schillinger-Hyman, Piano

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA

Mark Alburger                    Music Director and Conductor
Erling Wold                        Associate Music Director
John Kendall Bailey                    Associate Conductor
Martha Stoddard                    Associate Conductor

Flute       
Bruce Salvisberg

Oboe
Phil Freihofner
Peter Lemberg

Clarinet
Rachel Condry
Michael Kimbell

Bassoon
Michael Cooke
Michael Garvey
Lori Garvey

Trumpet
Eduard Prosek

Horn
Brian Holmes
Jan Pusina

Soprano
Desirae Harp

Tenor
Michael Desnoyers
Mark Alburger

Baritone
Eduard Prosek

Guitar
Eduard Prosek

Harp
Samantha Garvey

Piano
Miles Graber
Davide Verotta

Percussion
Victor Flaviano

Violin I
Monika Gruber

Violin II
Harry Bernstein

Viola
Nansamba Ssensalo

Cello
Ariella Hyman

Bass
John Beeman

MARK ALBURGER (b. April 2, 1957, Upper Darby, PA) studied with Gerald Levinson and Joan Panetti at Swarthmore College (B.A.), Karl Kohn at Pomona College, Jules Langert at Dominican University (M.A.), Tom Flaherty and Christopher Yavelow at Claremont Graduate University (Ph.D.), and Terry Riley.  He is Founder and Music Director of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra and The Opus Project, Conductor of San Francisco Cabaret Opera / Goat Hall Productions, and Instructor in Music Literature and Theory at Diablo Valley College.  As Editor-Publisher of 21st-Century Music Monthly Journal (21st-centurymusic.com and 21st-centurymusic.blogspot.com), Alburger has interviewed many composers, including Charles Amirkhanian, Earle Brown, George Crumb, Alan Hovhaness, Steve Mackey, Meredith Monk, Pauline Oliveros, and Steve Reich.  He has recently updated and expanded the articles on John Adams and Philip Glass for Grove Online and The Grove Dictionary of American Music, Second Edition.  Alburger has been the recipient of many honors, awards, and commissions -- including yearly ASCAP Standard Awards; grants from Meet the Composer, the American Composers Forum, MetLife, and Theatre Bay Area; funding from the Marra, Zellerbach, Hewlett, and Getty Foundations; and performances by ensembles and orchestras throughout the United States.  Alburger's concert and dramatic compositions combine atonal, collage, neoclassic, pop, and postminimal sensibilities -- often in overall frameworks troped on pre-existent material.  His complete works (220 opus numbers to date, including 16 concerti, 23 operas, nine symphonies, the 12-hour opera-oratorio The Bible, and Day 1-3 of The Decameron) are being issued on recordings from New Music.  500+ videos of his music may be found on the DrMarkAlburger YouTube channel, as well as on many other websites.

DOUBLE PIANO CONCERTO ("FELLOW TRAVELLERS"), Op. 204, was written for and is dedicated to Eytan and Gabriel Schillinger-Hyman in thanks for their wonderful work with the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra over several years.  The piece is mapped over Francis Poulenc's Double Piano Concerto, taking in interlopers from Japanese, Hispanic, minimalist, and rock-n-roll traditions.  The first movement features a Dorian pentatonic scale (D E F A B).

PHILIP FREIHOFNER  has been a regularly performing member of SFCCO since 2004. He has a Bachelor's degree in Music from UC Berkeley.

FILLED WITH MOONLIGHT was written to fulfill a commission for a new duet for oboe and piano by the ensemble Dolci.  Oboist Ted Rust and pianist Viva Knight premiered the work December, 2012.  The music takes inspiration from the novel Blackberries in the Dream House, by San Francisco poet Diane Frank, a romance set in 1850's Japan.  In designing the musical world of this piece, the sources included elements of Japanese music and esthetic theory, of Poulenc's fabulous chamber works for winds and piano, and of the Koto work of Jazz pianist McCoy Tyner.

EDUARD PROSEK is a 22-year-old Californian native now residing in Brighton, UK.  His debut EP California (2012) gained him a strong online following, with its title track receiving over 40,000 YouTube views.  Following this initial interest, Prosek's cover of Paul Simon's Homeward Bound was chosen as the soundtrack to a major TV advertisement for Cathedral City last year in the UK taking Prosek to a national audience.  His latest release, Willow Tree, showcases his impressive abilities as composer and arranger.  A full UK tour and album are set for release in 2014.

    THE CURSE is the second track on Prosek's newest EP, Willow Tree, released September, 2013.

        We're all born innocent, it's how you lose it,
        that keeps me interested in you
        and you speak so softly I don't catch a thing but,
        when you take a breath, the angels sing.

        So I'll take it as it comes, win or lose I'd
        rather nothing at all, then to choose
        between the one I love, or my instincts
        so I'll keep my mouth shut, and keep listening.

        She's a blessing but, just like any curse she's
        so beautiful it, makes it so much worse.
        She's a blessing but, just like anything you
        never have enough, and when you do it's all too much

LISA SCOLA PROSEK is  a  graduate of  Princeton  University  with  a  degree in  Music  Composition,  her teachers  include  Edward  Cone,  Milton  Babbitt,  Lukas  Foss,  Margherita  Kalil,  and  Gaetano  Giani- Luporini. Scola Prosek has composed and premiered seven operas with librettos in Italian and English.

Excerpts from THE LARIAT, a new opera by Scola Prosek, based on Jaime De Angulo’s 1927 novella, with a poetic libretto in Esselen by Louise Miranda Ramirez, Tribal Chair of the Ohlone Costanoan Esselen Nation, sung by Desirae Harp.  The work will premiere in 2014, at the Center for Contemporary Opera in New York, and in 2015 with the San Francisco International Arts Festival.  The piece is made possible by a grant from Theatre Bay Area.

Bear, you have taken my love Koltala name yukla nish kolo! I cannot live without him, Eni anpapiake cha’a  anhuyake huniki! Creator, take me too. Las Otno Ayam yukla nicha.

Louise Miranda Ramirez is Esselen, Chumash and Yaqui. She is an enrolled member of the Ohlone/Costanoan-Esselen Nation, from the Greater Monterey County and the current Tribal Chairwoman.  Her goal as a linguist is to work to return the Esselen language, which she says, “Has been sleeping for over 100 years.” Supported by the California Indigenous Language Survival (ACILS), she attended the Breath of Life Program and Language is Life Conference. ACILS supports research, for California Indian Languages with no speakers that is held at the University of Berkeley. In collaboration with linguist David L. Shaul she worked at reviving the Esselen Language and created a dictionary translated from oral stories and prayers. She has subsequently made pamphlets and books in the Esselen language.

Desirae Harp (Ashi Akxi, The Esselen Girl) is a descendant of the Mishewal Wappo Tribe and Dine Nation and is a multi-talented singer and songwriter. Her songs include themes that focus on decolonization of mind, body and spirit. She sings with numerous groups including Audiopharmacy and is a community activist and mentor for urban youth programs throughout the bay area. She is also a co-founder of the Mishewal Wappo Language Revitalization Project. She is currently attending San Francisco State University.

DAVID SPRUNG (b. Jersey City, NJ) was raised in New York City. An honors graduate from Queens College, where he studied composition with Vittorio Rieti and Luigi Dallapiccola, Sprung also has a Master’s Degree in Composition from Princeton University, where his mentors were Roger Sessions and Milton Babbitt.  He has had a dual track career as educator and performer, having served on the faculties of Queens College, City College of New York, Wichita State University, Sonoma State University and California State University, East Bay where he now holds the title of Professor Emeritus of Music.  Additionally, Sprung has been a prominent French horn player, having played principal horn with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Wichita Symphony, Chautauqua Symphony, and most recently, the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, and the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra.   Formerly, he was a member of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra.  Since retiring from active teaching and playing, he has been devoting himself to composing and conducting.

Composed in 2013 and being performed for the first time, the texts for HAIKU come from the collection Japanese Haiku (1956, Peter Pauper Press). In a prefatory note, translator Peter Beilenson notes: “There are only seventeen syllables in the haiku; the first and third lines contain five, the second seven. There is almost always in it the name of the season, or a key word giving the season by inference ….. But there is also, in a good haiku, more than a statement of feeling or a picture of nature: there is an implied identity between two seemingly different things.”  The mood of the music is intended to reflect these ideas, although with elaborations using text repetitions and complementary thematic material.   For the entire set, there is a high degree of musical integration; motives and other musical gestures recur throughout, as a means of providing stylistic unity.

                  I
 IN THESE DARK WATERS
    DRAWN UP FROM
    MY FROZEN WELL….
GLITTERING OF SPRING
                Ringai

                    II
STANDING STILL AT DUSK
    LISTEN… IN FAR
    DISTANCES
THE SONG OF FROGLINGS!
                Buson

        III
I DREAMED OF BATTLES
    AND WAS SLAIN…
    OH SAVAGE SAMURAI!
INSATIABLE FLEAS!
                Kikaku

        IV
ARISE FROM SLEEP, OLD CAT,
    AND WITH GREAT YAWNS
    AND STRETCHINGS…
AMBLE OUT FOR LOVE
                Issa

        V
DARTING DRAGON-FLY…
    PULL OFF ITS SHINY
    WINGS AND LOOK…
BRIGHT RED PEPPER-POD
                Kikaku
       
                           VI
[Reply: follows V without pause]
BRIGHT RED PEPPER-POD…
    IT NEEDS BUT SHINY
    WINGS AND LOOK…
DARTING DRAGON-FLY!
                Basho

        VII
A WHITE SWAN SWIMMING…
    PARTING WITH HER
    UNMOVED BREAST
CHERRY-PETALED POND
                Roka

        VIII
ROARING WINTER STORM
    RUSHING TO ITS
    UTTER END…
EVER-SOUNDING SEA
                Gonsui

        IX
AH! I INTENDED
    NEVER NEVER
    TO GROW OLD…
LISTEN: NEW YEAR’S BELL!
                Jokun

DAVIDE VEROTTA was born in a boring Italian town close to Milano and moved to the much more exciting San Francisco in his late twenties. He studied piano at the Milano and San Francisco Conservatory, and privately with Julian White, and composition at San Francisco State University (MA) and the University of California at Davis (PhD), as well as having a parallel-track academic life in mathematics as a professor at the University of California at San Francisco.  He is actively involved in the new music scene in the San Francisco Bay Area (as soloist, chamber player, member of  SFCCO, National Composer Association, SF,  Irregular Resolutions, co-organizer of the Festival of Contemporary Music).  He teaches piano and composition privately and at the Community Music Center in San Francisco. Recent compositions include works for orchestra with the Berkeley Symphony, chamber opera, dance, piano solo, percussion, and various chamber ensembles.  Upcoming in Spring 2014 is the "tone poem" Il Ponte, for piano, percussion and strings.  For more information, please visit his web site at davideverotta.com.

INVITATION is a short piece for piano, that is the introduction of a large work for piano, percussion, strings,and voice, Il Ponte -- which will be presented in the Bay Area in the Spring of 2014.  As the title indicates the piece represents an invitation to the player and the audience, a luring to enter a different place, leaving behind for a while normal everyday realities.

DONATIONS:

Archangel
(Contributing $1000 +)
Mark Alburger
Alexis Alrich
Lisa Scola Prosek
Sue Rosen
Erling Wold

Angel
(Contributing $500-$999)
Adobe, inc
John Beeman
Michael & Lisa Cooke
Anne Dorman
David & Joyce Graves
Ken Howe
Anne Baldwin
Hanna Hymans-Ostroff
Anne Szabla
Davide Verotta

Benefactor
(Contributing $100-$499)
Christopher & Sue Bancroft Kenneth & Ruth Baumann
Susan M. Barnes
Marina Berlin & Anthony Parisi
Bruce & Betsy Carlson
Patrick & Linda Condry
Rachel Condry
Connie & George Cooke
Steven Cooke
Patti Deuter
Thomas Goss
James Henriques
Marilyn Hudson
John Hiss & Nancy Katz
Susan Kates
Ronald Mcfarland
Ken & Jan Milnes
James Schrempp
Martha Stoddard
James Whitmore
Vivaty, Inc

Donor
(Contributing $50-$99)
Paul & Barbara Boniker
Mark Easterday
Sabrina Huang
Donna & Joseph Lanam
Harriet March Page
Larry Ochs
CF Peters
Barbara & Mark Stefik
Roberta Robertson

Patron
(Contributing up to $49)
Susie Bailey
Schuyler Bailey
Harry Bernstein
Joanne Carey
Hannes & Linda Lamprecht
Elinor Lamson
Anthony Mobilia
Deborah Slater

To make a tax-deductible donation, please send a check made out to:
Erling Wold's Fabrications
629 Wisconsin Street
San Francisco, CA 94107

Please include a note saying you want the money to go to the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra.


Saturday, May 4, 2013

May 4, 2013 - Moving Day


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director


Moving Day

8pm, Saturday, May 4, 2013
Lick-Wilmerding High School Auditorium, San Francisco, CA
Mark Alburger, John Kendall Bailey, and Martha Stoddard, conducting



Program


Harry Bernstein   
Sonata for Flute, Oboe, and Piano (2003)
I. Playful, Vigorous



Plan B for 


String Quintet (2013)

 
John Beeman   


Sprites (2013)


Davide Verotta



Dances for Orchestra (2013)
     


                     I. Lullaby


                    II. Paidushko



                    III. Pyrrixios
                    IV. Syxnyse
                    V. Halay Halaylar

Intermission

Michael A. Kimbell
Time Does Not Move (2006) (Keller)
   
Michael Cooke   
Incomplete Thoughts: A Passacaglia    (2013)

Martha Stoddard   
Gait Changes (2013)


SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA

Mark Alburger                    Music Director and Conductor
Erling Wold                        Associate Music Director
John Kendall Bailey                    Associate Conductor
Martha Stoddard                    Associate Conductor

Flute       
Bruce Salvisberg
Harry Bernstein

Oboe
Phil Freihofner

Clarinet
Michael Kimbell
Rachel Condry

Bassoon
Michael Cooke

Trumpet
Cindy Collins

Horn
Priscilla Nunn

Trombone
Alex Bond

Narrator
Emmanuel Williams

Piano
Allan Crossman
Davide Verotta

Percussion
Victor Flaviano
Anne Szabla
Mark Alburger

Violin I
Monika Gruber

Violin II
Alise Ewan

Viola
Raphael Gold
Harry Bernstein

Cello
Ariella Hyman

Bass
John Beeman

HARRY BERNSTEIN has been involved in San Francisco Bay Area music for many years as a composer, performer and teacher. He began his musical training on the trumpet, later learning the recorder as well as the Baroque the modern flutes. More recently, his life has been altered by the invasion of a viola. This occurred a few years after Bernstein began his association with City College. Why take up a stringed instrument in one's fifties? In his case, he took on the challenge of learning the viola in order to explore both orchestral and chamber music, and to learn how to write more effectively for strings.  Not long after earning a D.M.A. in early music performance from Stanford University, he moved 30 miles north to San Francisco where he has lived ever since. He has studied composition with Jerry Mueller and has written vocal and instrumental music.  Bernstein is co-founder of the Golden Age Ensemble, a duo presenting varied programs of instrumental and vocal music around the Bay Area and is a partner in Micro Pro Musica Press, SF, which offers music engraving, arranging and transcription services. He is currently active with the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra (flute), the Bay Area Rainbow Symphony (viola), and that unpredictable composers' circle known as Irregular Resolutions. Bernstein is an instructor in both the Music and Older Adults Departments at City College of San Francisco, and also teaches privately.

"SONATA FOR FLUTE, OBOE, AND PIANO in 2003 for a concert by Irregular Resolutions. We built a program around a cellist and also multi-instrumentalist Nik Phelps, of the Sprocket Ensemble, who could play flute, oboe, clarinet, and trumpet. The trio is of humorous intent, even though it is hard to play a wind instrument with your tongue in your cheek (not at all chic)!  There are short contrasting sections, with the winds sometimes playing 'against' the piano, and occasional quotations of other music, which come to a head with a virtual quotation duel."

The string quintet movement, PLAN B, was the piece that came up after the original plan to write a quartet, a sextet and another "ette,” as yet unnamed, failed to materialize within the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra time restraints—probably due to a lack of “etiquette” on my part. Plan B arose because of my enjoyment of playing string quintets and sextets in recent years. There are three short sections, each one a little faster than the last. The first section is slow, with a touch of Cole Porter world-weariness; the second has elements of tango and the third takes on something of the mood of swing.

JOHN BEEMAN studied with Peter Fricker and William Bergsma at the University of Washington where he received his Master’s degree.  His first opera, The Great American Dinner Table was produced on National Public Radio.  Orchestral works have been performed by the Fremont-Newark Philharmonic, Santa Rosa Symphony, and the Peninsula Symphony.  Beeman has attended the Ernest Bloch Composers’ Symposium, the Bard Composer-Conductor program, the Oxford Summer Institutes, and the Oregon Bach Festival, and has received awards through Meet the Composer, the American Music Center and ASCAP.  Compositions have been performed by Ensemble Sorelle, the Mission Chamber Orchestra, the Ives Quartet, Fireworks Ensemble, Paul Dresher, the Oregon Repertory Singers and Schola Cantorum of San Francisco.

Sprites are immense, but brief, flashes of red light that appear above thunderstorms.  This unusual weather phenomenon was only first documented in 1989.  Blue jets, similar optical phenomenon, are cones of blue light shooting above the clouds.  The cause of these flashes, though not yet determined, may be connected with electrical discharges from storms.  SPRITES (2013) was inspired by these unusual weather events.

Multi-instrumentalist MICHAEL COOKE is a composer of jazz and classical music. This two-time Emmy, ASCAPLUS, and Louis Armstrong Jazz Award winner can be heard on soprano, alto, and tenor saxophones, flute, soprano and bass clarinets, bassoon and percussion. A cum laude graduate with a music degree from the University of North Texas, he had many different areas of study; jazz, ethnomusicology, music history, theory and composition. In 1991 Cooke began his professional orchestral career performing in many north Texas area symphonies.  He has played in Europe, Mexico, and all over the United States.  Cimarron Music Press began published many of Cooke's compositions in 1994. After relocating to the San Francisco Bay Area, he has been exploring new paths in improvised and composed music, mixing a variety of styles and techniques that draw upon the creative energy of a multicultural experience, both in and out of America.  In 1999, Cooke started the jazz label Black Hat Records (blackhatrecords.com) and is currently on the Board of Directors of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra. The San Francisco Beacon describes Cooke's music as "flowing out color and tone with a feeling I haven't heard in quite a while. Michael plays with such dimension and flavor that it sets (his) sound apart from the rest." Uncompromising, fiery, complex, passionate, and cathartic is how the All Music Guide labeled Cooke's playing on Searching, Statements, and The Is. His latest release, An Indefinite Suspension of The Possible, is an unusual mixture of woodwinds, trombone, cello, koto and percussion, creating a distinct synergy in improvised music.

"INCOMPLETE THOUGHTS: A PASSACAGLIA was born out of the news that the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra would not have our customary three bassoons.  I stopped the piece on which I was working, and came up with another: a contempoary passacaglia where the bass line was in one time and the other instruments in others.  I was thinking to use either multiple conductors or metronomes with earpieces.  Desiring inspiration, I looked though some of my incomplete compositions for a bass line, and found something useable in a draft of an opera from many years ago.  The figure went through some modifications and was given a lazy lilt in 7/8.  I wanted to layer fragments of music on top, which were inspired by scraps of music not yet finished and other incomplete utterances.  As I felt the work should be written in a stream-of-conscious-manner, an interruption motif came into being as a way to switch thoughts.  While I eventually decided that the original idea of multiple times might be hard to pull off, I came up with other ways to have multiple times.  In the end, I hope to have created a thought-provoking work that is more than the collection of Incomplete Thoughts that began it."
   
MICHAEL A. KIMBELL (b. 1946) studied composition with John Davison, Alfred Swan, Robert Palmer, and Karel Husa, and received his DMA in composition from Cornell University in 1973.  Ten of his orchestral compositions have been performed by the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra and San Francisco Sinfonietta.  His Arcadian Symphony won the 1998 Southern Arizona Symphony Competition and was also performed by the San Jose Mission Chamber Orchestra.  Kimbell's Poème for Violin and Harp has been performed in Austria and Germany and at the 2011 World Harp Congress in Vancouver.  Other chamber works as well as songs and the short opera The Hot Iron have received numerous performances.

TIME DOES NOT MOVE features the poem Die Zeit geht nicht by Gottfried Keller (1819-1890), the greatest German-Swiss writer of the 19th Century.  The complete poem (English version by Edith and Michael Kimbell) is spoken in melodrama fashion.  The music incorporates an 1821 Swiss folksong melody by Wilhelm Müller, variously titled “Ich stand auf hohem Berge” (“I stood on a high mountain”) and “Im Krug zum grünen Kranze” (“In the Jug and Green Garland”).  The melody appears very gradually, first as melodic fragments, then as a fugue based on the second phrase of the melody, and finally in full quotation by the flute.

MARTHA STODDARD earned her Bachelor of Arts degree at Humboldt State University and her Master of Music degree from San Francisco State University, where she studied flute, conducting and composition.  She was named Program Director for the John Adams Young Composers Program at the Crowden Music Center in 2012 and has held the position of Artistic Director of the Oakland Civic Orchestra since1997. She is Associate Conductor of the San Francisco Composers’ Chamber Orchestra and Director of Instrumental Music at Lick-Wilmerding High School.  Other activities include operatic engagements as Musical Director for Lisa Scola Prosek's Belfagor and Trap Door, John Bilotta's Trifles, Mark Alburger's Job: A Masque, and the collaborative Dieci Giorni, which premiered in San Francisco in 2010.  In August, 2012 she conducted the premiere of Scola Prosek's Daughter of the Red Tsar, featuring tenor John Duykers.  A three-time recipient of AscapPlus Awards, her music has been performed in San Francisco through the American Composers Forum, by the Sierra Ensemble, Avenue Winds and in the UK by flutists Carla Rees and Lisa Bost.  She has had performances by the San Francisco Choral Artists, Schwungvoll!, the Community Women’s Orchestra, Oakland Civic Orchestra, Womensing, Bakersfield Symphony  New Directions Series, in the Trinity Chamber Concert Series and the New Music Forum Festival of Contemporary Music.  Recent commissions include Points of Reference, Outbursts: an Homage to Brahms, Orchestral Suite for the Young of all Ages, and Trio for Clarinet, Cello, and Piano.  Stoddard is a featured performer on alto flute in John Bilotta’s Shadow Tree (Capstone Records CPS-8787), and as conductor for Janis Mercer’s, Voices (Centaur Recordings, CPS 2951). 

"The idea for GAIT CHANGES (2013) came to me as I was walking the loop around the top of San Bruno Mountain.  While walking I  imagined different rhythmic patterns associated with  my footsteps. To these patterns  I  infused  melodies themselves over undulating rhythms, noting the changes in gait with different interludes and musical character.  I specifically crafted a soloistic piano interlude for my friend and mentor, Allan Crossman, whose love of walking is often conveyed in his own compositions which I have been privileged to conduct."

DAVIDE VEROTTA was born in a boring Italian town close to Milano and moved to the much more exciting San Francisco in his late twenties.  He studied piano at the Milano and San Francisco Conservatories, and composition at the San Francisco State University and University of California at Davis.  He is actively involved in the new music scene in the San Francisco Bay Area. [Don't miss the 11th Festival of Contemporary Music, of which I am one of the organizers!  With more than 30 composers it is coming up in June,  July and August http://newmusicforum.com.] He teaches piano and composition privately and at the Community Music Center in San Francisco.  Recent compositions include works for orchestra with the Berkeley Symphony, chamber opera, dance, piano solo, percussion quartet, and various chamber ensembles.  For more information, please visit davideverotta.com.

DANCES FOR ORCHESTRA (2013) is the orchestral version of Dances to Mytilini, a quartet inspired by the folkloric traditions of the eastern Balkans and Turkey. The piece, about twice the length of the quartet, is organized in a cycle of five dances that metaphorically depicts a geographical and episodic journey. The geographical journey starts in Rumania and descends to the final destination, Mytilini, through Bulgaria, Thrace, and Attica.  The five episodes correspond to early life (a lullaby dance), early adulthood (the quick-paced Paidushko), war (Pyrrixios) followed by confusion and dismay (Syxnyse), and finally by a joyful, exuberant ending, Halay Halaylar.


DONATIONS:

Archangel
(Contributing $1000 +)
Mark Alburger
Alexis Alrich
Lisa Scola Prosek
Sue Rosen
Erling Wold

Angel
(Contributing $500-$999)
Adobe, inc
John Beeman
Michael & Lisa Cooke
Anne Dorman
David & Joyce Graves
Ken Howe
Anne Baldwin
Hanna Hymans-Ostroff
Anne Szabla
Davide Verotta

Benefactor
(Contributing $100-$499)
Christopher & Sue Bancroft Kenneth & Ruth Baumann
Susan M. Barnes
Marina Berlin & Anthony Parisi
Bruce & Betsy Carlson
Patrick & Linda Condry
Rachel Condry
Connie & George Cooke
Steven Cooke
Patti Deuter
Thomas Goss
James Henriques
Marilyn Hudson
John Hiss & Nancy Katz
Susan Kates
Ronald Mcfarland
Ken & Jan Milnes
James Schrempp
Martha Stoddard
James Whitmore
Vivaty, Inc

Donor
(Contributing $50-$99)
Paul & Barbara Boniker
Mark Easterday
Sabrina Huang
Donna & Joseph Lanam
Harriet March Page
Larry Ochs
CF Peters
Barbara & Mark Stefik
Roberta Robertson

Patron
(Contributing up to $49)
Susie Bailey
Schuyler Bailey
Harry Bernstein
Joanne Carey
Hannes & Linda Lamprecht
Elinor Lamson
Anthony Mobilia
Deborah Slater

To make a tax-deductible donation, please send a check made out to:

Erling Wold's Fabrications
629 Wisconsin Street
San Francisco, CA 94107

Please include a note saying you want the money to go to the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra.

Special thanks to Lick-Wilmerding High School, for providing concert and rehearsal space.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

October 15, 2011 - The Dark Serenade


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

Dark Serenade

8pm, Saturday, October 15, 2011, Old First Church, San Francisco, CA
8pm, Sunday, October 16, 2011, Chapel of the Chimes, Oakland, CA
Mark Alburger, John Kendall Bailey, and Martha Stoddard, conducting

Program

Phil Freihofner - Carmilla
   Lisa Scola Prosek, Soprano

Lisa Scola Prosek - The Goldfish Pond
   John Duykers, Tenor

Davide Verotta - Facing Chaos

David Graves - Amaranthine Silence

Mark Alburger - Regime Change (Solomon Suite)
   Lisa Scola Prosek, Soprano
   Olivia Flanigan, Contralto

Loren Jones - Graveyard 

**

SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 15, 2010

CONTACT:
SFCCO (707) 474-7273
mus21stc@gmail.com

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA PRESENTS

"THE DARK SERENADE"

8:00PM, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15,
OLD FIRST CHURCH,
1725 SACRAMENTO STREET (AT VAN NESS), SAN FRANCISCO, CA

AND

8:00PM, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16,
CHAPEL OF THE CHIMES
4499 PIEDMONT AVENUE, OAKLAND, CA

SAN FRANCISCO, OAKLAND, AND WORLD PREMIERES OF WORKS BY
PHILIP FREIHOFNER, DAVID GRAVES, LOREN JONES, LISA SCOLA PROSEK, DAVIDE VEROTTA, AND MARK ALBURGER

SAN FRANCISCO, May 15, 2011 -- The days are growing shorter, the economy is not improving, and it's time for The Dark Serenade. Join the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra, on either side of the Bay -- at 8pm, October 15 (Old First Church, San Francisco) or 16 (Chapel of the Chimes) -- in a haunted landscape of works by Philip Freihofner, David Graves, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, Davide Verotta, and Mark Alburger.

Freihofner sets the mood in Carmilla, a beautiful post-minimalist setting of Irish writer Sheridan Le Fanu's short story of vampires and women, featuring Lisa Scola Prosek. This talented soprano-composer will then showcase her own luminous Night at the Kremlin excerpt entitled The Goldfish Pond, where world-renowned tenor John Duykers will hold forth as Winston Churchill on Stalinesque situations.

Keeping to matters historically ominous, Verotta's Facing Chaos illuminates a passage from Seneca the Younger's Thyestes ("Trembling are our hearts, lest all things fall shattered in fatal ruin . . .") in a juxtaposition of aggressive Indian talas with plangent basal melodies. Such contrasts are perhaps even more extreme in the grave Graves Amaranthine Silence, where animated contrapuntal complexities are counterpoised with various pre-recorded "silences" from gardens, restaurants, and parking garages.

Alburger's Regime Change takes the terror of Ancient and Contemporary civilizations through a kaleidoscope of found musics, sung by Scola Prosek and contralto Olivia Flanigan, as a prelude to Jones's signature over-the-top outpourings in Graveyard, where the orchestra will be augmented by bouzouki and tombstones. In the spirit of Erling Wold's In the Stomachs of Fleas, resoundingly presented a few concerts back, be prepared for Haloweenic smoke-and-mirrors. Fog. Strobe lights. Maybe even a small explosion....

Be afraid. Be amazed. And prepare for The Dark Serenade.


TICKET INFORMATION
Tickets for the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra's The Dark Serenade -- on Saturday, October 15, 8:00 p.m., at Old First Church (1725 Sacramento Street @ Van Ness), San Francisco; and on Sunday, October 16, 8;00 p.m., at Chapel of the Chimes (4499 Piedmont Avenue), Oakland -- are $17 general, $14 students and seniors. Tickets for 10/15 are available through the OFC Box Office at (415) 474-1608 and for both concerts at the door. For more information, please call Old First Church Box Office, the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra (707- 474-7273), or visit the organizations' respective websites at www.oldfirstconcerts.org and www.sfcco.org. Tickets are also available at www.ticketweb.com. Other links to the show may be found at myspace.com/sfcco, sfcco.blogspot.com, and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com.

###


CALENDAR EDITORS, PLEASE NOTE:

OLD FIRST CONCERTS AND CHAPEL OF THE CHIMES PRESENT

Saturday, October 15, at 8:00 p.m.
Old First Church
1725 Sacramento Street at Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
(415) 474-1608

Sunday, October 16, at 8:00 p.m.
Chapel of the Chimes
4499 Piedmont Avenue
Oakland, CA

THE DARK SERENADE
San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra,

Program:

Mark Alburger - Regime Change
Philip Freihofner - Carmilla
David Graves - The Amaranthine Silence
Loren Jones - Graveyard
Lisa Scola Prosek - The Goldfish Pond from Night at the Kremlin
Davide Verotta - Facing Chaos

Tickets: $17 general, $14 students and seniors, available for October 15 through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608, for both concerts at the door, and at www.ticketweb.com.

More information at sfcco.org, sfcco.blogspot.com, and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com

Saturday, February 28, 2009

February 28, 2009 - Free-for-All (But for You, $15)


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
January 18, 2009 SFCCO (707) 451-0714 mus21stc@gmail.com

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA PRESENTS
"FREE-FOR-ALL (BUT FOR YOU, $15)"
8:00PM, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, OLD FIRST CHURCH,
1725 SACRAMENTO STREET (AT VAN NESS), SAN FRANCISCO

SAN FRANCISCO AND WORLD PREMIERES OF 11 WORKS, BY
JOHN BEEMAN, MICHAEL COOKE, PHILIP FREIHOFNER, GARY FRIEDMAN, DAVID GRAVES, LOREN JONES, LISA SCOLA PROSEK, DAVID SPRUNG, CLARE TWOHY, DAVIDE VEROTTA, ERLING WOLD, AND MARK ALBURGER

SAN FRANCISCO, January 18, 2007 -- Hiya friends, Music Director Mark Alburger here, with the largest set of new and pre-owned new-music premieres from the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra, here at Old First Church (1725 Sacramento Street at Van Ness) at 8pm on February 28.

Let's just take a look at the extras of this beautiful new program by composers John Beeman, Michael Cooke, Philip Freihofner, Gary Friedman, David Graves, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, David Sprung, Clare Twohy, Davide Verotta, Erling Wold, and Mark Alburger.

In String Theory, Cooke cooks up a drive-in pasta house of quantum mechanics and general relativity, featuring graphical notation and improvisation for the entire 23-piece ensemble. In similarity and contrast, Freihofner's What Are You Going to Dream Tonight is a compact dream-deal of free writing for mixed quartet of oboe, clarinet, electric keyboard, and viola. Continuing in the economical use of forces is the Wind Sextet of Friedman, and John Beeman's Adago, after which David Graves and Clare Twohy team up for a fire sale in the collaborative Fireproof Winds.

In another joint-deal Scola Prosek presents a Serenade for Trumpet, based on a melody by her soloist son Eduard and the drive-in movie side of film noir. Jones takes up related cinematic connections by taking on all customers in February's Children, with added options of electric guitar and bass, harp, synthesizer, and three percussionists.

Sprung's sprung Serendipities is an ambitious deluxe package for double-dealing large ensemble, followed by the add-on, hallucinogenic Yanitl, from wheeler-dealer Verotta. And to sew up the deal, we take to the back seat (although taking a back seat to none) in Wold's bawdy-improper Two Waltzes for Lynne and Alburger's deliciously inappropriate Sex and the Orchestra.

It's a beautiful program, friends, with chords to match. Free-for-All (But for You, $15)!

***



TICKET INFORMATION

Tickets for the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra's "Free-for-all (but for you, $15)" on February 28, at 8:00 p.m. at Old First Church, 1725 Sacramento Street (at Van Ness), San Francisco are $15 general, $12 students and seniors. Tickets are available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608 and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Church Box Office, or the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra at (707) 451-0714, or visit the organizations' respective websites at www.sfcco.org and www.oldfirstconcerts.org. Tickets are also available at www.ticketweb.com. Other links to the show may be found at myspace.com/sfcco, and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com.

###

CALENDAR EDITORS, PLEASE NOTE:
OLD FIRST CONCERTS PRESENTS
Saturday, February 28, at 8:00 p.m. Old First Church
1725 Sacramento Street at Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
(415) 474-1608

FREE-FOR-ALL (BUT FOR YOU, $15)
San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra

Program:

Mark Alburger Sex and the Orchestra
John Beeman Adagio
Michael Cooke String Theory
Philip Freihofner What Are You Going to Dream Tonight?
Gary Friedman Romance for Wind Sextet
David Graves / Clare Twohy Fireproof Winds
Loren Jones February's Children
Lisa Scola Prosek Serenade for Trumpet
David Sprung Serendipities
Davide Verotta Yanitl
Erling Wold Two Orchestral Waltzes for Lynne

Tickets:$15 general, $12 students and seniors, available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608, at the door, and at www.ticketweb.com.

More information at sfcco.org and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com

***


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

Free-for-All (But for You, $15)

8pm, Saturday, February 28, Old First Church, San Francisco, CA
Mark Alburger, David Sprung, Martha Stoddard, and Erling Wold, conducting

Program

Phil Freihofner - What Are You Going to Dream Tonight

Davide Verotta - Yanitl

John Beeman - Adagio

Gary Friedman - Romance for Wind Sextet

Lisa Scola Prosek - Serenade for Trumpet



David Sprung - Serendipities

Intermission


Erling Wold - Two Orchestral Waltzes for Lynne
I. Ludmilla Waltz
II. Empress Waltz

Mark Alburger - Sex and the Orchestra, Op. 171
I. Happy Funeral Music (The Little Death)
II. Downfall (Detumescence)

Michael Cooke - String Theory

David Graves / Clare Twohy - Fireproof Winds

Loren Jones - February's Children
***

Rehearsal pictures may be found at

markalburger2009.blogspot.com

dated February 19, 22, 26, and 27.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

June 7, 2008 - Variations on the Ghost of Sousa...


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 1, 2008

CONTACT:
SFCCO (707) 451-0714
mus21stc@aol.com

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA PRESENTS

VARIATIONS ON THE GHOST OF SOUSA DANCING

8:00PM, SATURDAY, JUNE 7,
OLD FIRST CHURCH,
1725 SACRAMENTO STREET (AT VAN NESS), SAN FRANCISCO

SAN FRANCISCO AND WORLD PREMIERES OF WORKS BY

ALLAN CROSSMAN,
GARY FRIEDMAN,
LOREN JONES, AND

A COLLABORATIVE COMPOSITION BY

MARK ALBURGER,
ALEXIS ALRICH,
JOHN BEEMAN,
HARRY BERNSTEIN,
MICHAEL COOKE,
DAVID GRAVES,
LOREN JONES, AND
ERLING WOLD

SAN FRANCISCO, May 1, 2008 -- Democrats against Republicans; Democrats against Democrats -- perhaps the best thing we can do in these contentious times is agree to disagree, and that's what the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra does best, as its members present, at 8pm on June 7 in Old First Church (1725 Sacramento Street, SF), Variations on the Ghost of Sousa Dancing, an evening of cheeky variance and the state of our unions.

The centerpiece will be an eight-composer collaboration, The Sousa Variations, based on John Philip Sousa's The Stars and Stripes Forever, which will be given a topsy-turvy treatment -- literally turned upside-down -- in Michael Cooke's Stripes and Stars. "I like it better inverted," notes the composer, and you may, too. Meanwhile, Loren Jones brings the march to Iraq with the addition of Middle Eastern modes and doumbek drum, in a work that he maintains was informed by a co-collaborator named John Philip Sousa Khan.

The conspiracy continues in David Graves's sepulchral Sousa Variance, a darkly meditative turn in tandem with Erling Wold's freshly-inspired On the Death of David Blakely. If some honor and tweak the music, others obliterate it, as Mark Alburger's double-homage to the March King and Charles Ives in Variations on Americana. And, for true mystery, marching orders by Alexis Alrich, John Beeman, and Harry Bernstein will sure to inspire.

America. Gotta love it. Or march out and leave it -- for Canada in the spirit of Coastal Ghost, where Allan Crossman provides northern chills and thrills on a Nova Scotian legend -- or even farther afield for China, in Gary Friedman's Olympian Concerto for Erhu and Orchestra.

As for those who stay, there's never a time to be satisfied with received norms, as Jones will remind us further in Haight-Ashberry and The Castro, two movements of his historic Dancing on the Brink of the World.

Maybe music can change the state of the universe... Can't we all... just... get along?

***

TICKET INFORMATION
Tickets for the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra's Variations on the Ghost of Sousa Dancing on June 7, 8.00 p.m. at Old First Church, 1725 Sacramento Street (at Van Ness), San Francisco, are $15 general, $12 students and seniors. Tickets are available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608 and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Church Box Office, or the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra at (707) 451-0714, or visit the organizations' respective websites at www.oldfirstconcerts.org and www.sfcco.org. Tickets are also available at www.ticketweb.com. Other links to the show may be found at myspace.com/sfcco, myspace.com/blackhatrecords, myspace.com/erlingwold, myspace.com/markalburger, and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com.

###

CALENDAR EDITORS, PLEASE NOTE:

OLD FIRST CONCERTS PRESENTS

Saturday, June 7, at 8:00 p.m.

Old First Church
1725 Sacramento Street at Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
(415) 474-1608

VARIATIONS ON THE GHOST OF SOUSA DANCING
San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra

Program:

Coastal Ghost (Allan Crossman)
Theme and Variations for Erhu and Orchestra (Gary Friedman)
Dancing on the Brink of the World: Haight Ashberry and The Castro (Loren Jones)

and

The Sousa Variations

an eight-movement collaboration consisting of

Variations on Americana (Mark Alburger)
Stripes and Stars (Michael Cooke)
Sousa Variance (David Graves)
Stars and Stripes for Desert (Loren Jones)
On the Death of David Blakely (Erling Wold)
and music of Alexis Alrich,
John Beeman, and
Harry Bernstein

Tickets:$15 general, $12 students and seniors, available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608, at the door, and at www.ticketweb.com.

More information and pictures at sfcco.org and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com

Saturday, March 8, 2008

March 8, 2008 - March Madness


SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director
March Madness
8pm, March 8, Old First Church, 1725 Sacramento Street (at Van Ness), San Francisco, CA
Mark Alburger, John Kendall Bailey, and Martha Stoddard, conducting


Program

Philip Freihofner - The Bell Field

Martha Stoddard - A Little Trip to Outer Space

Lisa Scola Prosek - Chain Saw

Alexis Alrich - Fragile Forests: II Cambodia

Intermission

Dan Reiter - Toccata and Fugue

Michael Cooke - Sun and Moon

Erling Wold - Mordake

***

SAN FRANCISCO
COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Mark Alburger, Music Director


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
February 10, 2008 SFCCO (707) 451-0714 mus21stc@aol.com

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA PRESENTS
"MARCH MADNESS"
8:00PM, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, OLD FIRST CHURCH,
1725 SACRAMENTO STREET (AT VAN NESS), SAN FRANCISCO

SAN FRANCISCO AND WORLD PREMIERES OF WORKS BY
ALEXIS ALRICH, MICHAEL COOKE, PHILIP FREIHOFNER,
MARTHA STODDARD, DAN REITER, AND ERLING WOLD


SAN FRANCISCO, February 8, 2007 -- Lunacy. Spaciness. Taking 20 years to write a piece. Thinking that music will save the planet. Having a face in the back of one's head. Suicidal thoughts.
Why do we do what we do? Because we can't do otherwise?
One thing's for sure: it's a crazy world. So come celebrate the craziness with Alexis Alrich, Michael Cooke, Philip Freihofner, Dan Reiter, Martha Stoddard, Erling Wold, and the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra as they present March Madness -- 8pm, Saturday, March 8, at Old First Church, 1725 Sacramento Street, in San Francisco.

Michael Cooke's Sun and Moon is a dizzying take on time and place, with members of the orchestra performing spacilly and spatially at the point-and-click discretion of Music Director Mark Alburger. Martha Stoddard, as Guest Conductor, will take the ensemble even farther out in A Little Trip to Outer Space where reality has lost its bearings.

The entire orchestra will evaporate in the clangor of metal as Philip Freihofner re-invents sanity in The Bell Field, while Dan Reiter's Toccata and Fugue will send minds reeling under the direction of Associate Conductor John Kendall Bailey toward a reckoning with Johann Sebastian Bach.

Farthest afield on earth will be Alexis Alrich's Fragile Forests: II Cambodia, where East and West consciousnesses collide in the loveliest possible manner. And, as a final coup-de-grace Erling Wold will evoke the diabolical in Mordake Suite No. 2, in hint of his mad opera to be premiered later in the year.

***

TICKET INFORMATION
Tickets for the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra's "March Madness" on March 8, at 8.00 p.m. at Old First Church, 1725 Sacramento Street (at Van Ness), San Francisco are $15 general, $12 students and seniors. Tickets are available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608 and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Church Box Office, or the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra at (707) 451-0714, or visit the organizations' respective websites at www.sfcco.org and www.oldfirstconcerts.org. Tickets are also available at www.ticketweb.com. Other links to the show may be found at myspace.com/sfcco, myspace.com/blackhatrecords, myspace.com/erlingwold, myspace.com/markalburger, and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com
###


CALENDAR EDITORS, PLEASE NOTE:
OLD FIRST CONCERTS PRESENTS
Saturday, March 8, at 8:00 p.m. Old First Church
1725 Sacramento Street at Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
(415) 474-1608

MARCH MADNESS
San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra

Program:

Alexis Alrich - Fragile Forests: II Cambodia
Michael Cooke - Sun and Moon
Philip Freihofner - The Bell Field
Dan Reiter - Toccata and Fugue
Martha Stoddard - A Little Trip to Outer Space
Erling Wold - Mordake

Tickets:$15 general, $12 students and seniors, available through the Old First Church Box Office at (415) 474-1608, at the door, and at www.ticketweb.com.

More information at sfcco.org and markalburgerevents.blogspot.com


Flute

Bruce Salvisberg
Harry Bernstein
Martha Stoddard


Oboe

Philip Freihofner
Sarah Rathke


Clarinet

Rachel Condry


Bassoon

Michael Cooke
Michael Garvey
Lori Garvey
Karla Ekholm


Trumpet

Josh Silva


Horn

David Sprung


Vocalist

Charya Burt


Piano

Alexis Alrich


Synthesizer

Erling Wold


Percussion

Victor Flaviani
Anne Szalba
Delphean Quan
Greg Simmons


Violin I

Monika Gruber
Clare Twohy


Violin II

Hande Erdem
Mari Morikawa


Viola

Charith Premawardhana
Katrina Wreede


Cello

Dan Reiter
Paul Rhodes
Beth Snellings


Bass

Richard Duke


Endowers

David Graves
Lisa Scola Prosek


Recording Engineer

Karen Stackpole


Rehearsal 1, February 28, 2008, Potrero Hill Neighborhood House Theatre, SF



Scola Prosek, Stoddard, Condry, Szalba, Salvisberg, Simmons, Freihofner, Rathke, Sprung, Erdem, Morikawa


Stoddard, Condry, Salvisberg, Szalba, Freihofner


Bernstein, Duke


Simmons, Salvisberg, Freihofner, Rathke, Sprung


Erdem, Morikawa, Condry, Silva, Wold, Premawardhana


Morikawa, Condry, Graves, Szalba, Ekholm, Sprung, Silva


Ekholm, Cooke, M. Garvey, L. Garvey, Duke


Sprung, Ekholm, Premawardhana, Cooke, M. Garvey, L. Garvey, Alrich


L. Garvey, Duke, Reiter


Sprung, Wold


L. Garvey, Rhodes, Kendall Bailey, Gruber, Premawardhana, Erdem, M. Garvey, Quan, Silva, Condry, Salvisberg, Cooke


Szalba, Simmons


Quan, Szalba, Simmons


Simmons, Quan, Szalba


Gruber, Salvisberg, Scola Prosek, Freihofner, Erdem, Morikawa, Simmons



Erdem, Szalba, Morikawa, Sprung, Silva, Ekholm, Premawardhana, M. Garvey


Szalba, Premawardhana, Simmons, Ekholm


Cooke, Wold, Rhodes, M. Garvey, Reiter, Snellings


Duke, Reiter, Stoddard


Silva, Alrich

Scola Prosek, Silva

Morikawa, M. Garvey, Premawardhana, L. Garvey, Erdem, Bernstein, Rhodes, Duke, Snellings, Reiter, Gruber, Kendall Bailey


Kendall Bailey, Simmons


Scola Prosek, Szalba, Wold


Erdem, Duke, Reiter, Stoddard, Rhodes, Gruber


Freihofner, Sprung, Wold, Condry, Silva, Erdem


Salvisberg, Freihofner, Simmons, Erdem, Gruber, Morikawa, Ekholm, Premawardhana, Cooke, Kendall Bailey


Wold, Scola Prosek

Rehearsal 2, March 2, 2008, Potrero Hill Neighborhood House Theatre, SF


Freihofner, Rathke, Sprung, Erdem, Twohy, Cooke, Wreede, M. Garvey, Premawardhana, Gruber, L. Garvey, Bailey


Tom Prosek, Flaviani

Rehearsal 4 (Dress), Old First Church, SF


Bernstein, Szalba, Salvisberg, Freihofner



Bernstein, Gruber, Alrich, Twohy, Flaviani, Erdem, Quan



Freihofner, Erdem, Rathke, Morikawa, Szalba, Ekholm, Premawardhana, Cooke



Freihofner, Condry, Sprung, Silver, Cooke, M. Garvey


Twohy, Alrich, Flaviani, Erdem, Freihofner, Quan, Morikawa, Szalba, Condry



Erdem, Spurng, Cooke, Morikawa, M. Garvey, Premawardhana



Alrich, Flaviani


Reiter, Duke


Twohy, Bernstein, Morikawa, M. Garvey, L. Garvey, Premawardhana, Rhodes, Snellings, Gruber, Bailey


M. Garvey, Erdem, Premawardhana, Duke, Reiter, Stoddard, Gruber


Salvisberg, Freihofner, Ekholm, Sprung, Cooke, Bernstein, Erdem, M. Garvey, Morikawa, Twohy, L. Garvey, Premawardhana, Rhodes, Snellings

Concert Warm-Up, March 8, 2008


Szalba, Salvisberg, Freihofner, Condry


Ekholm, Sprung, Silver


L. Garvey, Stackpole


Harriet March Page, Burt, Alrich


Flaviani, Burt, Salvisberg, Szalba, Freihofner


Wold, Bailey


Alrich, Quan



Alrich, Gruber, Twohy, Szalba, Morikawa, Cooke, Sprung, Premawardhana


Premawardhana, Reiter, Duke