September 6, 2018
The latest edition of my classical music newsletter for Pacific Symphony.
Contents:
Pacific Overtures. September, 2018.
Dennis Kim is the new concertmaster of Pacific Symphony, named in April to the position after a long search, replacing Raymond Kobler, who retired in 2016 after 17 years with the orchestra. Kim just moved to Irvine the other day, but already looked like a local as he waited for a reporter to arrive: athletic shorts, a logo T-shirt and neon-colored running shoes. Sitting on a bench outside a coffee and bagels place, he was checking his cell phone, just like natives everywhere. The only thing that gave him away as a foreigner was the logo on the shirt. It belonged to the Toronto Blue Jays.
Born in Korea, Kim moved to Toronto when he was three months old, grew up and learned to play the violin there. He’s moved here from Buffalo, where he served as concertmaster of the Buffalo Philharmonic for the last three years and drove regularly to Toronto (90 minutes away) to teach there at the Royal Conservatory of Music, his alma mater. He starts his new job in September. You’ll see him in the first chair for the annual Tchaikovsky Spectacular on Sept. 8, at Pacific Amphitheatre, and then at the opening concerts of the indoor season Sept. 27-29, at Segerstrom Concert Hall. In the latter concerts, the audience will get to hear Kim as a soloist in Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante, K. 364.
I’ll try this once I master the regular trombone.
Book review: “Famous Father Girl” by Jamie Bernstein. Pacific Symphony Blog, Aug. 1, 2018.
My latest newsletter for Pacific Symphony, with concert info, an interview of our program annotator, a visit to the Bernstein exhibit at the Skirball, a book review, listening and more.
Pacific Overtures. August, 2018.
A couple of interesting additions to the series form the 19th century, one by a woman.
Anton Urspruch: Symphony in E-flat (1882). Pacific Symphony Blog, July 24, 2018.
Emilie Mayer: Symphony No. 7 in F minor (1856). Pacific Symphony Blog, July 20, 2018.
Kent Nagano conducts the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra.
Chick Corea, piano; Ron Carter, bass; Billy Cobham, drums; Bill Watrous, trombone. The song is “Nancy with the Laughing Face” by Jimmy Van Heusen and Phil Silvers. Watrous was a huge hero of mine in my trombone-playing teens and early 20s. His technical prowess was beyond words.
Does this make you want to buy it?