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Events

Fourth and Final Concert Set for May 15

“Sweet Simplicity” promises to be another one-of-a-kind concert experience. Despite the threat of snowfall from an early spring storm, conductor Thomas Heuser and fifteen string players gathered—with masks and social distancing—to rehearse and perform the works of four diverse composers at the Reising Stage Event Center in Durango. The results will be broadcast live with Maestro Heuser as your host on Saturday, May 15th at 7:30pm MT. The concert will remain available for several weeks after the broadcast for on-demand viewing.

Watch the live broadcast here with your digital access: www.sanjuansymphony.org/live.

Next Wednesday, May 12th, you will receive a direct link to the free Musically Speaking lecture by Dr. Heuser, featuring special guest composer Stacy Garrop from her home in Chicago.

 

Youth Orchestra Concert Will Live Stream on Sunday, May 2

The San Juan Symphony Youth Orchestra students have been safely rehearsing at the La Plata County Fairgrounds throughout the 2020-21 season. Since live audiences are not permitted at this time. the SJS will live-stream the Youth Orchestra year-end concert from the stage at the Community Concert Hall this Sunday, May 2. The concert will begin at 1:30 pm and may be accessed for free at https://vimeo.com/536552714.
The Junior Orchestra under the direction of Molly Jensen will perform the Radetzky March by Johann Strauss, Aragonaise from Carmen by Georges Bizet, Balletto from Ancient Airs & Dances by Ottorino Respighi, and Gliere’s Russian Sailors’ Dance.
The Youth Orchestra under the direction of Sayra Siverson will perform Bizet’s Carmen Suite No. 1, American Landscape by Soon Hee Newbold and selections from Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story.
The SJS Youth Orchestra Program is generously sponsored this season by Alpine Bank, Ballantine Family Fund, Durango Friends of the Arts, Durango Joe’s, LPEA, La Plata Cares/Local First, and New Mexico Arts.

New Videos Posted; Final Concert of 2020-21 Set for May 15 Release

As part of the final chapter of this Essential 35th Season, the San Juan Symphony is thrilled to release new videos by our musicians, plus the details of our fourth live broadcast. Right now, more than 350 website users have access to a trove of beautiful music, available on-demand with their online membership. Viewers from around the Four Corners and from coast to coast have tuned in for our live-streamed concerts this season, expanding the reach of our organization at a time when we are all craving connection.

 

Our fourth and final concert will be recorded on April 18th at the Reising Stage Event Center in Durango and released during a live-stream event on Saturday, May 15th, at 7:30pm MT, only at www.sanjuansymphony.org. The program is called “Sweet Simplicity” and features a physically- distanced San Juan Symphony string orchestra conducted by Music Director Thomas Heuser, performing the music of William Grant Still, Stacy Garrop, Benjamin Britten, and Claude Debussy’s Sacred and Profane Dances with SJS Principal Harpist Anne Eisfeller as soloist.

 

The videos produced by the musicians of the San Juan Symphony have been such an uplifting part of this virtual season, and we are delighted to share two new video projects. The first is a lively performance by the Petroglyph String Quartet, featuring Michael Allerheiligen and Yakima Fernandez on violin, Karl Winkler on viola, and Anastasia Nellos on cello. Their latest video is a “Mini-Program” with three works: a short Divertimento by Mozart, a wonderful arrangement of Rossini’s Largo al factorum from The Barber of Seville featuring some brilliant cello playing, and an evocative arrangement by Karl Winkler of Duke Ellington’s Mood Indigo.

 

The second newly-released video features our Principal Percussionist James Doyle and his wife Tracy Doyle, our SJS piccolo player who is also Director of the School of Music at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington. The Doyle Duo has recorded a breathtaking performance of Kembang Suling by Gareth Farr for flute and marimba. Written in 1996, Farr describes his work as capturing “three musical snapshots of Asia,” with musical styles and influences from the island of Bali, Japan, and the complex musical language of Southern India.

 

Please do not hesitate to contact the San Juan Symphony via email or through our website if you have any questions about your website access. We look forward to seeing you “live” for our final subscription broadcast on Saturday, May 15th at 7:30pm MT. Stay tuned for more details in the coming days and weeks! Thank you for your continued support of the San Juan Symphony.

 

 

Ore House Offers Delicious Take Out Menu for March 6th Concert Night

Enjoy a delicious surf and turf take out dinner from the Ore House in Durango as you watch the San Juan Symphony’s “Joys of Bach and Bologne” virtual concert on Saturday, March 6th from the comfort of your own home. Visit www.orehouserestaurant.com, then choose Steakhouse Take Out. Place your order and choose a pick-up time. In the comments section, please add a note that you are a San Juan Symphony pass holder, and Ore House will provide a complimentary bottle of wine which pairs with your entree(s). You are also welcome to call the Ore House at 970.247.5707 after 3 pm Wednesday through Saturday to place your order over the phone.
San Juan Symphony digital pass holders may access the live concert feed as early as 7 pm MT on March 6th by logging into www.sanjuansymphony.org. Passes may also be purchased on this site. The concert will be available on demand after the live release.

Next SJS Concert Scheduled for March 6th

Our next virtual concert will be released live on Saturday, March 6th at 7:30pm MT. We are delighted to present “The Joys of Bach and Bologne,” a beautiful program recorded just last weekend in the wonderful acoustics of the Community Concert Hall at Fort Lewis College. The high-definition recording will be released during the live event on March 6th through our website, hosted by music director Thomas Heuser and broadcast from the Rochester Hotel in downtown Durango directly into households everywhere.

Now is the time to check your website credentials at www.sanjuansymphony.org. Make sure you know your username and password, or make updates as needed, and while you’re visiting, check out some of the new individual musician recording projects that have been posted! The concert itself will be in the “Live Events” section of the website, exclusively for subscribers, at www.sanjuansymphony.org/live.

“The Joys of Bach and Bologne” has been generously sponsored by Durango Coca Cola, Durango Land and Homes, and the Symphony’s season sponsor, the Community Foundation Serving Southwest Colorado. The Symphony is still operating on a concert-by-concert basis, with the fourth and final concert of the season planned for release in mid-May; details about the season finale will be announced during the upcoming March broadcast.

The program on March 6th includes what is likely the orchestra’s first presentation of music by Joseph Bologne, whose Second Symphony will provide an upbeat overture. Also known as the Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Joseph Bologne flourished during the time of Mozart, but his career has been overlooked for centuries. A virtuoso violinist, composer, and a cunning swordsman, Bologne became Colonel of the first all-Black regiment in Europe during the French Revolution. The complexities of his life story and his experiences overcoming racial discrimination add to our appreciation for his music during a season that has explored a number of Black composers.

Another composer receiving her San Juan Symphony debut is Hanna Benn, whose artistic output spans a huge range of genres and styles. As a composer and vocalist, her portfolio includes both pop albums and avant-garde theater projects. Her music is both lyrical and mystical, combining the nuances of medieval chant with the intricate textures of Stravinsky. Benn is highly in demand as a woman composer and composer of color whose voice is incredibly important in the current conversation about inclusivity and diversity in the arts. The Symphony will perform Benn’s evocative Where Springs Not Fail for String Orchestra, a work from 2015 whose title draws its inspiration from the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins.

Rounding out the program will be the timeless music of Johann Sebastian Bach. The great German composer created countless masterpieces during the Baroque Period, and yet his music still contains an astonishing freshness and originality. The Symphony will perform his Concerto for Oboe and Violin in C Minor, a brilliant work conceived around 1720. The featured soloists are Rebecca Ray, Principal Oboist of the San Juan Symphony, and Lauren Avery Heuser, Concertmaster of the San Juan Symphony. The two solo parts combine and overlap in fabulous contrapuntal displays, along with a contrasting slow movement of heartfelt lyricism.

Please do not hesitate to contact the San Juan Symphony via email or through our website if you have any questions about your website access. We thank you for your continued support!

SJS Continues Virtual Season on March 6

During this Essential 35th Season, virtual concerts of the San Juan Symphony have been viewed hundreds of times around the country. We proudly produced two beautiful concert recordings in 2020 that were archived for on-demand viewing, along with many hours of individual videos made by the musicians of our professional regional orchestra. Website membership options include a $99 Season Pass or $25 Weekly Access, and currently more than 300 households and 150 students can enjoy access to www.sanjuansymphony.org.

In our next virtual installment, coming up on Saturday, March 6th at 7:30pm MT, the San Juan Symphony presents “The Joys of Bach and Bologne.” The concert will be recorded in the wonderful acoustics of the Community Concert Hall at Fort Lewis College; after many months exploring alternate venues, the Symphony is thrilled to return to the Concert Hall for a program of uplifting splendor. The high-definition video and audio recording will be released during a live-streamed event on our website, hosted by music director Thomas Heuser and broadcast from the Rochester Hotel in downtown Durango directly into households everywhere.

The assembled musicians will perform with masks and physical distancing in a reduced ensemble of between 10-15 musicians, in keeping with the organization’s self-imposed safety requirements during the time of COVID. The concert is sponsored by Coca Cola of Durango and Farmington, Durango Land and Homes, and the Symphony’s season sponsor, the Community Foundation Serving Southwest Colorado. The Symphony is still operating on a concert-by-concert basis, with the fourth and final concert of the season planned for release in mid-May. Details about the season finale will be announced during the upcoming March broadcast.

The program on March 6th includes what is likely the orchestra’s first presentation of music by Joseph Bologne, whose Second Symphony will provide an upbeat overture. Also known as the Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Joseph Bologne flourished during the time of Mozart, but his career has been overlooked for centuries. A virtuoso violinist, composer, and a cunning swordsman, Bologne became Colonel of the first all-Black regiment in Europe during the French Revolution. The complexities of his life story and his experiences overcoming racial discrimination add to our appreciation for his music during a season that has explored a number of Black composers.

Another composer receiving her San Juan Symphony debut is Hanna Benn, whose artistic output spans a huge range of genres and styles. As a composer and vocalist, her portfolio includes both pop albums and avant-garde theater projects. Her music is both lyrical and mystical, combining the nuances of medieval chant with the intricate textures of Stravinsky. Benn is highly in demand as a woman composer and composer of color whose voice is incredibly important in the current conversation about inclusivity and diversity in the arts. The Symphony will perform Benn’s evocative Where Springs Not Fail for String Orchestra, a work from 2015 whose title draws its inspiration from the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins.

Rounding out the program will be the timeless music of Johann Sebastian Bach. The great German composer created countless masterpieces during the Baroque Period, and yet his music still contains an astonishing freshness and originality. The Symphony will perform his Concerto for Oboe and Violin in C Minor, a brilliant work conceived around 1720. The featured soloists are Rebecca Ray, Principal Oboist of the San Juan Symphony, and Lauren Avery Heuser, Concertmaster of the San Juan Symphony. The two solo parts combine and overlap in fabulous contrapuntal displays, along with a contrasting slow movement of heartfelt lyricism.

Digital access to the San Juan Symphony is available anytime, and purchasing a Digital Season Pass is the single best way to support the Symphony in these uncertain times. For complete information please visit www.sanjuansymphony.org.

 

 

It’s San Juan Symphony Concert Week!

Our “Lyrical Threads” concert is set to go live on Saturday, November 14 at 7:30 pm.  If you have not yet purchased a digital pass to access the music, you may do so via the homepage on this website.

Maestro Thomas Heuser’s pre-concert talk is now available by following this link: https://vimeo.com/478152744

Pick up a Take and Bake meal to go from The Yellow Carrot for the complete concert experience.  Order by November 12 to pick up on November 14.  Yellow Carrot MENU Take & Bake

 

Live Concert Broadcasts Continue on November 14

Like orchestras and ensembles around the country and the world, the San Juan Symphony has been working overtime to navigate the challenges of the global pandemic. While some organizations have had to cancel entire seasons, fortunately the San Juan Symphony has endured and embraced a new format that relies heavily on technology. With a beautiful first production successfully streamed on October 3rd, the music is set to continue on Saturday, November 14th at 7:30pm MST with a Live Concert Broadcast—exclusively for website members—featuring a fantastic string orchestra program called “Lyrical Threads.”

Available now, audiences can purchase a Digital Season Pass to the Symphony for $99, which offers exclusive, year-long access to www.sanjuansymphony.org for the entire household. Weekly access is also available for $25 for the entire household. “Lyrical Threads” is one of four subscription concerts planned during this Essential 35th Season of the San Juan Symphony. The concert was conducted by Music Director Thomas Heuser on October 17th at the Reising Stage Event Center in Durango, with masks and physical distancing required for all involved.

The concert was professionally recorded by IlluminArts and Lightning Communications, thanks to generous sponsorship by the Connie Gotsch Arts Foundation of Farmington and our Durango friends Norman Broad and Carol Solomon. Heuser will be hosting the concert on November 14th as a live stream from the R-Space at the Rochester Hotel in downtown Durango. Restaurant Partner Yellow Carrot in Durango will be offering a Virtual Take & Bake Menu for concert night, and Heuser will also release another free Musically Speaking Pre-Concert Lecture on Wednesday, November 11th for historical context in advance of the live broadcast.

“Lyrical Threads” features a chamber orchestra of San Juan Symphony string players. With strings in mind, Heuser created a program of intense emotion and lyricism, and selected a venue with reverberant acoustics to let the threads of the different melodies weave through the space. The concert includes George Walker’s heartfelt “Lyric for Strings,” the energetic Holberg Suite of Edvard Grieg, and as a cherry on top, the perennial audience favorite, Pachelbel’s Canon in D Major. As a moving tribute to the more than 200,000 American lives lost to COVID-19, the silhouetted SJS principal string quartet recorded Eleanor Alberga’s Remember at The Rim Studio in Durango, courtesy of Jonas and Moni Grushkin. Complete concert details and program notes can be downloaded at www.sanjuansymphony.org.

While the virtual season may seem like an unfortunate alternative to live music, it offers a unique opportunity to reach new audiences—particularly first-time listeners, families with young children, audiences in other parts of the country, and those who might have physical limitations to attending concerts. Aspects of the digital concert experience are likely to become lasting features of the Symphony even after concert halls reopen. However, the organization has made plans to continue with online concert productions through the spring of 2021.

The San Juan Symphony is actively seeking feedback and support from its Durango and Farmington communities. With some businesses unable to predict the depth of the downturn, individual donors are being asked to keep up their giving while our non-profit applies for state and federal funding. Purchasing a Digital Season Pass is the single best way to support the orchestra at this time. For complete information please visit www.sanjuansymphony.org.

 

San Juan Symphony Kicks Off Virtual 2020-21 “Essential” Season on October 3

Durango, CO: BLACK VOICES AND A BALLET FOR MARTHA Set for Saturday, October 3rd, 2020, 7:30 pm, Online Release

This year, more than ever, the San Juan Symphony believes music is essential!

Our virtual 35th season kicks off on Saturday, October 3 with an online performance of Black Voices and a Ballet for Martha at 7:30 pm. Video recording of the concert took place at beautiful Blue Lake Ranch in August with Thomas Heuser conducting. Maestro Heuser will also offer a “Musically Speaking” pre-concert talk on Wednesday, September 30, as well as live comments on concert night.

Aaron Copland wrote “A Ballet for Martha” in 1944. The wartime ensemble consisted of just 13 musicians, and the collaboration with Martha Graham resulted in Appalachian Spring, an iconic vision of American Shaker communities. The program also features music by Jessie Montgomery and Bruce A. Russell, two Black composers whose voices resonate with the racial justice movement and introduce a season-long conversation about diversity and inclusivity in the performing arts.

All musical content may be accessed via the San Juan Symphony website after purchasing a Digital Season Pass for $99 at www.sanjuansymphony.org. All concerts will remain accessible on the website as long as copyright regulations allow, usually at least a week.

Buy a pass now to access recent individual recording projects by members of the San Juan Symphony. We’re making music safely and behind the scenes until we can gather in person again.

San Juan Symphony Provides March 24 Update

Dear members of the San Juan Symphony community,

We continue to monitor the ongoing COVID-19 crisis in the United States. Given the indefinite postponement of our April concerts, we are now focused on this season’s remaining event, notably the San Juan Symphony Roaring Twenties Symphony Train & Spring Gala which was scheduled for May 3 at River Bend Ranch.

 

We are postponing this event until it is safe to gather again, perhaps in the fall.  We are grateful to lead sponsor Al Harper at the D&SNGR for working with us to reschedule. And, we are grateful to our honorary sponsors and table chairs who had already stepped up to lead this effort. We’ll call on you soon!

 

In the meantime, while you are enjoying quality time at home, please consider using the Amazon Smile link below to place orders for items you need.  Amazon will donate a portion of sales back to the San Juan Symphony when you use this link: smile.amazon.com/ch/23-7414147.

 

As the San Juan Symphony is a non-profit institution relying on both ticket sales and contributions, we ask you to consider donating the cost of your unused season tickets. Single ticket refunds for the April concert are now being processed by the Community Concert Hall in Durango and Henderson Hall in Farmington. If you choose to make your unused season ticket a tax-deductible donation, you do not need to do anything at this time.

 

If you purchased season tickets, you also have these two other options which can be arranged by leaving a message at the symphony office at 970-382-9753 or e-mailing: sanjuansymphony@musician.org:

– exchange your April tickets for credit on your account to a concert held at a later date;

– receive a full refund for the value of the April tickets.

 

We look forward to providing another update next week. Meanwhile please send any questions, comments or concerns to the San Juan Symphony at sanjuansymphony@musician.orgor by calling 970-382-9753.

 

We’re working behind the scenes at our homes to plan our exciting 2020-21 season. More information will be coming your way soon!

 

Sincerely,

Thomas Heuser, music director

Kathy Myrick, executive director

San Juan Symphony Board

 

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