Young Artists Run Riot

Young Artists Run Riot

Sarah Ioannides-project-Artist RunRiot

artist, Jillian Hoffman

Young Artists Run Riot

In celebration of the 100th Anniversary of the Rite of Spring, Ioannides launched a unique art & dance project for Spartanburg County together with Spartanburg Philharmonic’s performance of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring.

In a project led by Sarah Ioannides, several hundred works of art were created by teenage students throughout the Spartanburg County. The captivating artworks were exhibited at the Spartanburg Chapman Cultural Center in a juried art show, and will also be seen in public locations in the city’s center. Final participants in these exhibits include works from schools in the county including Landrum High School, Chapman High School, Boiling Springs High School, Chesnee High School, Spartanburg High School and Spartanburg High Freshman Academy and homeschoolers.

The purpose of this project was to introduce students to a work that conjures up great imagery, through its extraordinary sound world and captivating rhythms. As a work with primeval drama at its peak expressed without unspoken word, its power is to overpower. The expression is the very heart and soul of the earth, which encapsulates both life and destruction, and a work that has great capacity for healing too.

WORLD PREMIERE: Symphony Tacoma Celebrates Beethoven and His Legacy with ‘Ludwig and Beethoven’

Symphony Tacoma continues its celebration of Beethoven’s 250th birthday with Ludwig AND Beethoven on March 21, 2020 in the Pantages Theater.

The concert opens with Mozart’s longest and final symphony, No. 41 “Jupiter,” which is notable not only for its power and beauty, but also for its musical innovations and techniques that had previously been shunned. Beethoven was said to have been inspired by its five simultaneous melodies, or polyphony.

Next up is the world premiere of Composer in Residence David Ludwig’s The Bleeding Pines. Inspired by Beethoven’s “Choral Fantasy,” it is based on a play by poet Ray Owen that tells the story of North Carolina’s endangered Round Top Long Leaf Pine forest and one woman’s efforts to save that ancient tract of land from oblivion.

“That forest around Southern Pines is a mystical, spiritual place—a place where one feels the passing millennia in a single visit walking through woods and where the smell of the pines sits still in the air,” says Ludwig. “The tract of forest survives today because of the passionate work of Helen Boyd Dull and the continued efforts of conservationists who appreciate the timeless beauty of the trees.

“Owen and I have collaborated on multiple song cycles using his poetry, but this new oratorio is an opportunity to paint his story on the great canvas of the orchestra and chorus. That the premiere of this new work is taking place in Tacoma in the Pacific Northwest is meaningful, given how important the environment and the green life of trees is to people who live here.”

The 3rd annual Cascade Conducting Masterclass

Cascade Conducting 2020
February 2020

The 3rd annual Cascade Conducting Masterclass will take place June 14-21, 2020 at Pacific Lutheran University.  This year, a composition workshop, led by Symphony Tacoma composer-in-residence David Ludwig has been added.  The composers will work in collaboration with the conductors during the week and present their compositions, conducted by masterclass participants, on June 21st.  The repertoire for the conducting masterclass will include Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24, performed by Oksana Ezhokina, as well as Schumann “Rhenish” Symphony, De Falla, “Three-Cornered Hat,” Fanny Mendelssohn’s Overture in C, and Beethoven Contradances.  These works will be performed by the Cascade Conducting Orchestra, conducted by participants of the 2020 Cascade Conducting Masterclass on June 20th at 7pm.  This concert is free of charge.

Founded in 2017 by Sarah Ioannides, Teo Benson, and Paula Madrigal, Cascade Conducting presents an annual, week-long conducting masterclass directed by Ioannides at Pacific Lutheran University. This event includes seminars by top Northwest musical figures, quality podium time led by Ioannides with a 40 person orchestra comprised of 20 professional musicians, mostly from Symphony Tacoma, and multiple scholarships, including the “Orquesta Northwest Scholarship for an exceptional Latinx conductor.”  The program is designed to find balance between the demands of the business and the preservation of one’s individual musicianship as a necessity for achieving excellence.

Symphony Tacoma to Perform Beethoven’s “Eroica” Along with Two U.S. Premieres

The Suburban Times
January 20th, 2020

Symphony Tacoma is marking the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth by performing three of his works in its first two concerts of 2020, beginning with his Symphony No. 3 “Eroica” on Saturday, February 22, 2020 and two U.S. Premieres…

The first premiere, “Spheres” by Swedish composer, Simon Petersson, was conducted by Music Director, Sarah Ioannides, in Sweden in 2018. Narrative in nature, the work sparks the listener’s imagination to tell its story without visuals, with the title only providing a hint of its subject matter. The second premiere is Yaron Gottfried’s Electric Guitar Concerto, a beautiful classical piece featuring a non-traditional orchestral instrument. Gottfried is one of Israel’s most prominent contemporary musicians who bridges classical, contemporary and jazz music. His Electric Guitar Concerto uses presets with various styles of sounds to change the atmosphere and character of the music, presenting the electric guitar as a unique solo instrument within the classical acoustic world.

Symphony Tacoma to Receive a $10,000 Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts

January 2020

Symphony Tacoma has been approved for a $10,000 Art Works grant to support its Composer in the Community program.

The funding from this grant will allow Symphony Tacoma to bring award-winning composer David Ludwig to Tacoma for the program’s inaugural residency. Three of Ludwig’s works—including a world premiere—will be performed during the 2019-2020 season. In addition, Ludwig will engage the community by leading masterclasses, lectures and more, culminating in an open-to-the-public reading session in June where young composers will have their work performed by a professional orchestra. “We are immensely grateful to the NEA for their support and recognition of this new program with Symphony Tacoma,” says Music Director Sarah Ioannides. “The opportunity to bring renowned composer David Ludwig to work with aspiring musicians, composers and conductors in our region will undoubtedly inspire musicians, students and our symphony patrons in many ways. We are also honored to perform the world premiere of David’s composition, The Bleeding Pines that spotlights the importance of protecting our environment, as well as his revered Violin Concerto and Fanfare for Sam.”

“The arts are at the heart of our communities, connecting people through shared experiences and artistic expression,” said Arts Endowment chairman Mary Anne Carter. “The National Endowment for the Arts is proud to support projects like Symphony Tacoma.”