Somehow, it just feels encouraging to say that we have “returned to normal” following the Covid-19 pandemic. But the fact is, the Knoxville art and music scene has not “returned” at all. Rather, we have “evolved” in much the same way that reacting to our health risks in public has evolved. While performance attendances have been inching back, most organizations agree that their audience demographic and attitudes have changed, requiring a re-thinking of how to market. Organizations that once relied on the time-tested solidity of physical tickets have embraced the idea of the e-ticket and smartphone wallets, a practice that will inevitably become common. Replacing the physical “program book” with access to a webpage for content information has met with a reluctant acceptance, although most agree that there are both pros and cons with the practice. And, audiences now make the decisions of whether to mask up—or not—given their individual needs and personal precautions.
Marble City Opera: Powerful Theatre in I Can’t Breathe
Knoxville Opera’s The Merry Widow
Its November performance at the Tennessee Theatre, the bubbly Franz Lehar operetta, The Merry Widow, was a co-production of KO and the University of Tennessee Opera Theatre. Led by director Dean Anthony, the cast included soprano Susannah Biller as Hanna Glawari, baritone Sean Anderson as Count Danilo, baritone Gary Simpson as Baron Zeta, soprano Donata Cucinotta as Valencienne, tenor John Riesen as the Count Camille de Rosillon, and tenor Gregory Sliskovich as Njegus.
The Amadeus Chamber Ensemble Expands Its Presence
Under the auspices of the Cathedral Concert Series at Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, the Amadeus Chamber Ensemble has filled an important niche in the Knoxville classical music scene—large scale choral and orchestral works— with two obviously popular and well-received concerts this past fall.
From the Arts Knoxville review of the October concert, “Verdi in the Cathedral”:
“Under conductor Brian Salesky, Sunday’s large scale performance of Verdi selections featured soloists, a full orchestra, and a 17-member Men’s Chorus. Soloists for the program were a quintet of singers, most of them familiar to Knoxville audiences through opera productions: soprano Rochelle Bard, mezzo-soprano Diana Salesky, tenor Aaron Short, baritone Christian Bowers, and bass David Crawford.”
In late September, ACE with chorus and orchestra offered up a program of Mozart choral works from the composer’s Salzburg days. In addition to Mozart’s ‘Coronation Mass’ (Mass in C Major, K. 317), Maestro Howard Skinner conducted Regina Coeli K. 108, with a nod to the later, more sublime Mozart via the motet Ave Verum Corpus.
KSO Concertmaster Series: “William Shaub and Friends” – Shostakovich Piano Quintet
Although I am at a loss to explain it, the pandemic—or the recovery from— has been especially hard on attendance at chamber music performances. A perfect example of this would be the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra’s Concertmaster Series which continues to offer superlative performances of major chamber music works at the Knoxville Museum of Art. In October, concertmaster William Shaub—along with with pianist Kevin Class, violinist Kyle Venlet, violist Katy Gawne, and cellist Andy Bryenton, presented a sublime take on Dmetri Shostakovich’s Piano Quintet.
Knoxville Symphony Chamber Orchestra: Caroline Shaw’s The Mountain That Loved A Bird
Maestro Aram Demirjian and the KSO were joined by narrator Laura Beth Wells in a poignant performance of Caroline Shaw’s The Mountain That Loved A Bird.
“…this cleverly orchestrated version of the now-classic children’s story by Alice McLerran succeeded in both dramatic storytelling and in musical performance, leaving many in the audience visibly moved by the story and music.”
Review in Brief: KSO and Laura Beth Wells Bring A Sunday Afternoon Audience To Joy and Tears
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Knoxville Symphony Orchestra: Grieg Piano Concerto and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4
There always seems to be an air of excitement around the first concert of the KSO’s Masterworks season—and this one was no exception.
“Maestro Aram Demirjian and the orchestra were picking up where they left off last May with its musical plan—exciting, unfamiliar pieces from contemporary composers mixed in with classics of the repertoire made fresh by young guest artists and an orchestra performing at the top of its form.”
After Anna Clyne’s Masquerade, guest pianist Charlie Albright thrilled the audience in the Grieg Piano Concerto in A minor. Demirjian followed with a substantial and brilliantly detailed Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4.
Review: KSO and Demirjian Find Freshness in Grieg and Tchaikovsky for Season Opener
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Marble City Opera: The Copper Queen
For its 2022 season-closer in June, Marble City Opera mined operatic gold with the stage premiere of The Copper Queen, music by Clint Borzoni and libretto by John de los Santos.
This intriguing work that featured parallel timelines in the past/present old west starred soprano Kathryn Frady and mezzo-soprano Sara Crigger, along with tenor David Silvano, Graham Anduri, baritone Daniel Spiotta, and bass-baritone Jacob Lay.
Review: Marble City Opera Finds Operatic Gold in ‘The Copper Queen’
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Knoxville Symphony Orchestra: Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 with Pianist Tanya Gabrielian; Brahms Symphony No. 2
This March Masterworks concert was a feast of musical emotions. In addition to Tchaikovsky and Brahms, the audience heard the Overture to The Boatswain’s Mate by English composer, Dame Ethel Smyth and a tribute to Ukraine via Melody in A minor, by the late Ukrainian composer, Myroslav Skoryk.
Gabrielian’s performance in the Tchaikovsky concerto: “…a performance that was at once bold, powerful, and satisfyingly assertive, defying those who might believe that this very, very familiar work does not deserve a fresh sense of adventure.”
The Brahms Symphony No. 2 received an equally brilliant interpretation from Demirjian and the orchestra: “On this occasion, this oh-so satisfying work making up the second half of the evening was treated to a superb performance by Demirjian and the orchestra with a rich sense of texture and an ever-moving palette of dynamics. The tight ensemble of KSO strings (Concertmaster William Shaub) was joined in the lush ebb and flow of a sunlit musical river journey by beautifully rendered woodwind and horn assertions (oboe Claire Chenette, flute Devan Jaquez, clarinet Gary Sperl, and horn Jeffery Whaley).”
Review: KSO Honors Ukraine’s Struggle; Brilliant in Tchaikovsky and Brahms
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KSO’s Concertmaster Concert: Schumann Piano Quintet in E-flat Major
This March concert at the Knoxville Museum of Art featured works by Carlos Simon and Debussy, but wrapped with a intensely satisfying take on the landmark Robert Schumann Piano Quintet in E-flat Major. Pianist Kevin Class joined violinist and concertmaster William Shaub with the ensemble consisting of violinist Sean Claire, violist Kathryn Gawne, and cellist Andy Bryenton.
“…it was in the third Scherzo movement that the ensemble found maximum fire and heat, characteristics that carried over into the finale and its magnificent wrap up of themes.”
Review in Brief: KSO’s 2022 Concertmaster Series Wraps with Splendid Schumann Quintet
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KSO and Violinist William Shaub in Barber’s Violin Concerto
The Masterworks concert for January featured KSO concertmaster William Shaub as concerto violinist in Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto.
“Shaub’s sensational performance beautifully fulfilled the concerto’s Jekyll and Hyde requirements for a soloist: a deep sensitivity for the sunny, vocal-like Romantic lyricism of the Allegro and Andante movements and a passionate and energetic virtuosity for the third Presto in moto perpetuofinale. Shaub’s tone in the Allegro was both luscious and clear, the lusciousness never becoming too dreamy. Equally appropriate, Demirjian and the orchestra radiated lyrical warmth, rather than wallowing in it.”
The concert also included Respighi’s The Pines of Rome that was a “… feast of dramatic sculpting by conductor [Demirjian] and a showcase of instrumental textures from the expanded orchestra.”
Review: William Shaub and KSO Warm a Cold Evening in Barber’s Violin Concerto
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