West Virginia Selected as the National Symphony Orchestra’s 2010 American Residency State
12/08/2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

December 3, 2009

 

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

of

THE JOHN F. KENNEDY CENTER

FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS

WEST VIRGINIA

TO HOST THE

2010 AMERICAN RESIDENCY

April 5 – 13, 2010

 

American Residencies are Sponsored in Part by The John F. Kennedy Center

Through a Grant from the U.S. Department of Education

 

Chamber Music and Outreach Events

are made possible in part by the

Abe Fortas Memorial Fund

of the Kennedy Center

 

Charleston, WV. The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has accepted the invitation from the West Virginia Division of Culture and History to make West Virginia the site of the National Symphony Orchestra’s 2010 American Residency. Between April 5 and April 13, 2010, the members of the Orchestra will participate in approximately 150 education and performance activities throughout the state.

 

The announcement took place today in Charleston, at the state capitol building. Participants included West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin III and West Virginia Division of Culture and History Commissioner Randall Reid-Smith, as well as two representatives from the NSO and the Kennedy Center: NSO Orchestra Manager Cynthia Steele and Patricia O’Kelly, Managing Director of NSO Media Relations.

 

“Hosting the National Symphony for its American Residency program is an honor for West Virginia,” said Governor Manchin. “We are so proud of our state’s musical heritage and an opportunity like this one to enhance concert experiences and give our students additional musical education will reinforce the importance of music and the arts in our state.”

 

The impetus for the invitation from West Virginia came from the West Virginia Division of Culture and History. The Division will coordinate all Residency activities. The Appalachian Education Initiative, the West Virginia affiliate of the Kennedy Center Alliance for Arts Education Network will coordinate education and outreach programs. American Residencies are sponsored in part by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts through a grant from the U.S. Department of Education, as it has been since 1994. Since 2006, the chamber music and outreach performances have been supported by the Kennedy Center Abe Fortas Memorial Fund for chamber music and by a major gift to the fund from the late Carolyn E. Agger, widow of Abe Fortas.

 

There will be a total of seven orchestral concerts in the state, including one NSO Young People’s Concerts in Charleston. Dozens of educational and outreach activities and other events are being planned.

 

The repertoire for West Virginia’s full orchestral concerts will include Three Dance Episodes from Leonard Bernstein’s On the Town. Mozart’s Symphony No. 38 (“Prague”) will follow, and the program will conclude with Dvořák’s Symphony No. 8. These programs will be led by the NSO’s Principal Conductor Iván Fischer.

 

The Young People’s Concert in Charleston – called Sounds Historic – will be led by NSO Associate Conductor Emil de Cou.

 

“On behalf of the National Symphony Orchestra, it gives us great pleasure to accept the invitation of the West Virginia Division of Culture and History, to make the state our home for the 2010 American Residency,” said Orchestra Manager Cynthia Steele. “The American Residency is one of the signature projects of the National Symphony Orchestra and our musicians are incredibly committed and generous with their time and talents.”

 

“We are particularly pleased with the way the National Symphony Orchestra will interact with our teachers, students and artists while in West Virginia,” added Commissioner Randall Reid-Smith. “The Orchestra will invite up to six students to Washington to participate in their Summer Music Institute next June, and will award a Teacher Fellowship to one West Virginia teacher, custom designed to further that teacher’s career goals. Finally, the NSO will commission a chamber work from a West Virginia composer. This intensive involvement will only add to West Virginia’s national reputation as a leader in arts education programming.”

 

 

What Is an American Residency?

 

In 1992, the National Symphony Orchestra of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts began a project unique throughout the world: The American Residencies. The Orchestra accepts one invitation each year, making a state or a region the focus of a host of activities.

 

The goals of the Residency are:

·         to share all elements of classical instrumental music throughout a given region;

·         to explore the diversity of musical influences within the state,

·         and to give the region a musical voice in the nation's center for the performing arts through training programs, career development opportunities, and commissions.

 

Because of the generous support of many organizations—principally the Kennedy Center and the U.S. Department of Education—all proceeds from any ticket sales resulting from these events remain within the state to support local arts organizations.

 

Since its inception in 1992, a hallmark of the project has been its responsiveness to the artistic and educational wishes of each state. Each state prepares a list of requests, ranging from in-school appearances to workshops for teachers to full orchestral concerts, and prioritizes them for the National Symphony Orchestra, with the Orchestra then fulfilling as many of those requests as logistics, scheduling and budgetary limitations allow.

 

In-state activities typical of past Residencies include:

·         full orchestral concerts,

·         chamber music performances,

·         in-school ensembles,

·         lectures,

·         workshops for teachers,

·         workshops for students with disabilities,

·         pre-concert discussions,

·         concerts for students,

·         coaching sessions,

·         master classes,

·         music appreciation classes,

·         Suzuki Method and Alexander Technique workshops, and

·         artistic exchanges. (Past artistic exchanges have included meetings between an NSO violinist and an Athabascan fiddler and a school program shared by a string quartet and two Eagle River High School Salish-Kootenai drummers and dancers.)

 

In addition, organizations are welcome to submit new ideas for activities. For example: composition teachers in Maine and Kansas requested an NSO ensemble to perform their students' compositions, critiquing them from the point of view of professional instrumentalists, explaining what worked and didn't work in terms of instrumental writing.

 

 

The American Residencies

 

Alaska, 1992

Louisiana, 1994

Maine, 1995

Wyoming, 1996

Montana, 1996

Arizona, 1997

Alabama, 1998

Mississippi, 1999

Vermont, 2000

Oklahoma, 2001

South Dakota, 2002

North Dakota, 2003

Tennessee, 2004

North Carolina, 2005

Nevada, 2005

Nebraska, 2006

Kansas, 2007

South Carolina, 2008

Arkansas, 2009

West Virginia, 2010

 

 

To date, more than 2,000 educational, performance, and outreach events have taken place in more than a dozen states as part of the American Residencies. Approximately 385,000 people across the nation have attended American Residency events.

 

 

Residency Follow-Up Activities

 

As noted above, the 2010 American Residency does not end when the National Symphony Orchestra leaves West Virginia on April 13.

 

Summer Music Institute. Since 1992, the Kennedy Center/NSO National Trustees’ Summer Music Institute – a training program for young orchestral musicians (ages 14-21) from across the country – has welcomed students annually for four weeks of study, rehearsal and coaching sessions. As part of the American Residency, up to six students from West Virginia will be chosen to receive scholarships to the 2010 Summer Music Institute. Students are selected by taped audition. Applications are available from the Appalachian Education Initiative at www.aeiarts.org.

 

Teacher Fellowship. A West Virginia music teacher will be selected for an individually designed program to further the teacher’s professional development. The program will take place in Washington, D.C., under the auspices of the National Symphony Orchestra and the Kennedy Center.

 

Chamber Music Commission. A West Virginia composer will be selected to create a chamber music work to be premiered at the Kennedy Center.

 

The West Virginia Commission on the Arts will assist with coordination of all three activities.

 

 

The Schedule

 

Representatives from the National Symphony Orchestra are currently working with the West Virginia Division of Culture and History and the Appalachian Education Initiative to determine the complete Residency schedule, including outreach and educational events. The following schedule is confirmed.

 

 

WEST VIRGINIA RESIDENCY

Preliminary Schedule of Full Orchestra Concerts

 

April 5 – 13, 2010

 

All time periods not involving the full orchestra will be devoted to include education, outreach, and chamber music activities requested by organizations within West Virginia.

 

Full details of those activities will be announced when the schedule is complete.

 

Monday, April 5:         Travel from Washington, DC, to Morgantown

Tuesday, April 6:         Concert at Capitol Theatre, Wheeling

Wednesday, April 7:    Concert at Lyell B. Clay Concert Theatre, Morgantown

Thursday, April 8:       Education, outreach, and chamber activities.

Friday, April 9:            Concert at Glenville State College Fine Arts Auditorium, Glenville

Saturday, April 10:      Concert at Keith Albee Theatre, Huntington

Sunday, April 11:        Concert at Chuck Mathena Center, Princeton

Monday, April 12:       One NSO Young People’s Concert and one evening Concert, at Clay Center, Charleston

Tuesday, April 13:       Travel to Washington, DC.

 

 

PRESS CONTACTS:

 

For the National Symphony Orchestra:

 

Patricia O’Kelly         (202) 416-8443

pjokelly@kennedy-center.org

 

Emily Krahn               (202) 416-8447

erkrahn@kennedy-center.org

 

For the West Virginia Division of Culture and History:

 

Jacqueline Proctor     (304) 558-0220

Jacqueline.A.Proctor@wv.gov

 

For the Appalachian Education Initiative:

 

Lou Karas                  (304) 225-0101

lkaras@aeiarts.org




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