Campus News

Faculty soloists take the stage for Thursday Scholarship Series finale

Ambartsumian
Levon Ambartsumian

The final concert in the 2016-2017 Thursday Scholarship Series brings together some of the Hugh Hodgson School of Music’s best instrumentalists, including faculty and students, to perform three concertos in Hodgson Concert Hall April 13 at 7:30 p.m.

The ARCO Chamber Orchestra and a graduate student wind ensemble will provide a lively backdrop for five faculty soloists to create the musical fireworks that will close out the concert series’ season.

The genesis for this performance began in a Sao Paolo airport, where Levon Ambartsumian, Regents’ Professor and Franklin Professor of Violin, and Jaclyn Hartenberger, UGA Wind Symphony conductor, were relaxing during their return to the U.S. after teaching in Brazil.

Their conversation turned to collaboration between their ensembles—Ambartsumian also directs ARCO—and the seed was planted. The combination of strings and wind ensemble would create some unique pairings, but before long they developed a program.

“All three works have one thing in common: a very unusual combination of instruments,” said Ambartsumian.

That commonality led to the naming of the program: “Keys, Winds and Strings: A Curious Collection of Concerti by Bach, Stravinsky and Schnittke.”

“It’s been a lot of fun to study and prepare these pieces because of the unique instrumentation,” said Hartenberger. “It will be a real treat to hear these underperformed pieces in this unconventional concert format.”

Bach’s Concerto for Flute, Violin, Harpsichord and Orchestra in A minor features Shakhida Azimkhodjaeva, violin faculty; Angela Jones-Reus, professor of flute; and Evgeny Rivkin, professor of piano, as soloists playing alongside ARCO.

Hartenberger argues that though this work’s pairing of instruments is not such a novel concept today, in its time it explored new sounds via instrumental pairings as much as the other works on the program.

Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments by Stravinsky is next on the program and is the first of two works that will feature a Hodgson School graduate student wind ensemble conducted by Hartenberger. Anatoly Sheludyakov, resident accompanist, will be piano soloist.

Stravinsky’s piece is another oddity of its time. Not only was it unusual to combine piano and winds in the music world of the 1920s, but the composition represented a departure from Stravinsky’s style that had created his most famous work, “The Rite of Spring.”

The final piece on the program is Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto No. 3 for Violin and Chamber Orchestra. Schnittke’s work was actually the first added to the program—an easy choice due to its unique combination not just between soloist and ensemble but within the ensemble. The concerto calls for 11 woodwinds, four strings and a violin soloist. Ambartsumian will return to the stage to take on soloist duties for the close of this unique concert.

“How many concerts feature three concerti?” said Hartenberger. “Talk about really showing off the ability of the HHSOM faculty. These works not only stretch the listener, but more so, stretch the ability of our featured soloists.”

Tickets to the concert are $20 each or $6 with a UGA student ID and can be purchased at pac.uga.edu or the PAC box office. Those unable to attend can watch the concert live on the Hodgson School’s website at music.uga.edu/streaming.