“How Many Maestros Does It Take
to Screw in a Light Bulb?"
April 22, 2010, Round Rock, TX—If you have ever wondered about the punch-line to the joke “How many maestros does it take to screw in a light bulb?,” you are in luck. For one week in May, orchestra conductors from all over
The Round Rock Symphony’s concert on May 22 will feature four masterpieces from different periods from the classical to the twentieth century: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s The Magic Flute Overture, Ludwig van Beethoven’s Coriolanus Overture, Antonín Dvořák’s “New World Symphony,” and Aaron Copland’s
“Conducting the music of four hugely famous composers like these is a great honor and a daunting task, akin to handling paintings by Delacroix, Degas, Van Gogh, and Dali,” says Maestro Silas Huff, music director of the Round Rock Symphony. “We will survey the last 200 years of history through majestic, moving, and joyful music—it’s the best way to reflect on history and the human condition.”
Tickets for this concert range in price from $15 to $20 (all RRISD students and any child 12 & under is free), and may be purchased by cash or credit card at the door, or via credit card online at www.RoundRockSymphony.org. The box office opens one hour before the performance.
The concert will be the culmination of a week-long workshop for professional and aspiring orchestra conductors, with the venerable
“The art of conducting is very cerebral, but also relies on a person’s ability to express ideas with the hands, face, and torso,” says Maestro Huff. “Conductors often are very talented musicians who have little training in the art of moving a baton through space and communicating with the body. This workshop will fill in some of those gaps.” In addition to music and conducting techniques classes taught by
Participant Joseph Choi, Associate Conductor of the Owensboro Symphony Orchestra (KY) says, “The Repertoire for this workshop consists of pieces that are in constant demand for workshops and auditions, and we can use this time to brush up our skills, meet other conductors, and recharge our conducting batteries for the coming season.”
“I was inspired by
Paul Davis, Conductor of the
The public is invited to watch the final workshop session of the week, during which participants take turns conducting the Round Rock Symphony in a rehearsal of Dvořák’s “New World Symphony.” Each conductor will have the opportunity to create music, hear feedback from
To learn more about the event visit www.RoundRockSymphony.org, or contact the Symphony at (512) 264-5368 or info@RoundRockSymphony.org.
The Round Rock Symphony, a start-up non-profit corporation, needs angels to support it. Music lovers who want to support the Round Rock Symphony by sponsoring or underwriting a concert, or by advertising in a playbill are invited to contact the Symphony at (512) 264-5368 or info@RoundRockSymphony.org. To learn more about supporting the Round Rock Symphony, call or visit www.RoundRockSymphony.org/support.htm.
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