Overture Magazine: 2017-2018 Season January-February 2018 | Page 25

TCHAIKOVSKY PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 About the Artists Marin Alsop For Marin Alsop’s bio, please see pg. 7. Gabriela Montero Gabriela Montero’s visionary interpretations and unique improvisational gifts have won her a devoted following around the world. Anthony Tommasini remarked in The New York Times, “Montero’s playing had everything: crackling rhythmic brio, subtle shadings, steely power…soulful lyricism…unsentimental expressivity.” Recent performance highlights include recitals at Avery Fisher Hall, the Kennedy Center, Wigmore Hall, Vienna Konzerthaus, Berlin Philharmonie, Leipzig Gewandhaus, Sydney Opera House, Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Tokyo Orchard Hall and at the Edinburgh, Salzburg, Lucerne, Ravinia, Tanglewood, Saint-Denis, Aldeburgh, Cheltenham, Rheingau, Ruhr, Bergen, Istanbul and Lugano festivals. Montero has also been invited to perform with many of the world’s most respected orchestras, including the Royal Liverpool, Rotterdam, Dresden, Oslo, Netherlands Radio and Malaysian philharmonic orchestras; Chicago, Houston, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Atlanta, Toronto, Sydney and RTÉ National symphony orchestras; the National Arts Centre Orchestra of Canada, Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, NDR Sinfonieorchester Hamburg and Zürcher Kammerorchester; the Cleveland, City of Birmingham Symphony, Philharmonia and Komische Oper Berlin orchestras; and the Vienna Symphony. In addition to her interpretations of the core piano repertoire, Montero is also celebrated for her ability to improvise, composing and playing new works in real time. She says, “I connect to my audience in a completely unique way— and they connect with me. Because improvisation is such a huge part of who I am, it is the most natural and spontaneous way I can express myself.” Whether in recital or following a concerto performance, Montero regularly invites her audiences to choose themes on which she improvises. Montero is also an award-winning and bestselling recording artist. Her most recent album featured Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, her own composition, Ex Patria, and her signature improvisations, winning Montero her first Latin Grammy® for Best Classical Album (Mejor Álbum de Música Clásica). Previous recordings include Bach and Beyond, which held the top spot on the Billboard Classical Charts for several month and garnered her two Echo Klassik Awards. She also received a Grammy® nomination for Baroque in 2008 and in 2010, released Solatino, an album inspired by her Venezuelan homeland. Montero debuted as a composer in 2011 with Ex Patria, a tone poem for piano and orchestra and her emotional response to Venezuela’s descent into lawlessness, corruption and violence. Her piece had its world-premiere tour in October of that year with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields and, in 2015, was recorded and released internationally with the YOA Orchestra of the Americas and conductor Carlos Miguel Prieto. She recorded her first full-length composition, her Piano Concerto No. 1, with the YOA and Prieto in July of last year for ARTE. A staunch advocate of human rights, Montero was recently named an Honorary Consul by Amnesty International and was also selected as a nominee for Outstanding Work in the Field of Human Rights by the Human Rights Foundation. She was invited to participate in the 2013 Women of the World Festival and has spoken and performed twice at the World Economic Forum. She was also awarded the 2012 Rockefeller Award for her contribution to the arts and was a featured performer at Barack Obama’s 2008 Presidential Inauguration. Born in Venezuela, Montero gave her first public performance at the age of five. At eight, she made her concerto debut in her hometown of Caracas, which led to a scholarship from the government to study privately in the U.S. She continued her studies under Hamish Milne at the Royal Academy of Music in London, graduating with the highest honors. She currently resides in Barcelona with her husband and two daughters. Gabriela Montero last appeared with the BSO in February 2017, performing Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 24, K. 491, Markus Stenz, conductor. About the Concert RUMANIAN FOLK DANCES Béla Bartók (arr. Arthur Willner) Born in Nagyszentmiklós, Hungary, (now Romania), March 25, 1881; died in New York City, NY, September 26, 1945 The folk music of Hungary and its adjoining neighbors was the soul of Béla Bartók’s creative voice throughout his career. B eginning in 1906, and usually in the company of his fellow composer Zoltán Kodály, he annually roamed the countryside, painstakingly noting down or recording on a primitive Edison recording machine the melodies he heard the peasants sing. Like other nationalist composers in other lands, Bartók believed that the future of a distinctive Hungarian music lay in recovering its authentic past before the modern world swept it away forever. The town where Bartók was born lay on the border of Romania, and in fact today it falls within Romanian territory. And so the collection of Romanian folk melodies became an early passion; eventually Bartók was to transcribe some 3500 authentic Romanian folk tunes. In 1915 he took seven Romanian fiddle tunes and arranged them as Rumanian Folk Dances for piano solo, then in 1917 transformed them into the version we hear tonight for string orchestra. The suite comprises seven very brief dances: “Stick Dance,” “Waistband Dance,” “On the Spot,” “Hornpipe Dance,” “Rumanian Polka” and two concluding “Quick Dances.” Played one after another without pause, they last just six minutes. Most are vivacious JA N – F E B 2018 / OV E R T U R E 23