Don’t let a little rain keep you away. Join us today, Sunday, January 16th, at 2pm in English, 3:30 in Spanish. We’re in the Brown Education Center Auditorium at the Houston Zoo.
ROCO and The Church of St. John the Divine present Amahl and the Night Visitors
January 6, 2011, at The Church of St. John the Divine
Performances at 6pm and 8pm (45-minuntes in length)
“Night of Lights with Elegant Bites” reception between performances
Tickest are $20 and $10 for students. Children 5 and under are free.
Tickets at www.rocobackup.wpenginepowered.com and in the SJD Bookstore
ROCO to Premiere NANO Symphony
Molecules are motifs in nanosymphonyNew compositions to debut at Rice’s Buckyball Discovery GalaHOUSTON – (Oct. 5, 2010) – Rice University composer Anthony Brandt has compressed an entire evening at the symphony into a six-minute opus — a “nanosymphony” — as part of Rice University’s Year of Nano celebration. The River Oaks Chamber Orchestra will premiere the piece Sunday at Rice’s Buckyball Discovery Gala. The gala begins the Week of Nano, the highlight of a yearlong celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Nobel Prize-winning discovery of the buckyball, the nickname for the carbon-60 molecule, at Rice.Brandt, an associate professor of composition and theory at Rice’s Shepherd School of Music, thought of atoms as notes and molecules as motifs when he wrote the nanosymphony. “When I was asked to do this, I almost immediately saw what I wanted,” Brandt said. “I wanted to write a complete symphony orchestra concert with a tuning segment, an overture, a modern piece, a piano concerto, the intermission, a symphony on the second half and an encore — all in about the length of a commercial pop song. “It’s a complete evening’s worth of music on the scale of a single piece.” Brandt’s mini-masterpiece is one of two commissioned for the Buckyball Discovery Gala. The other, a musical tribute to Richard Smalley, who was a University Professor and the Gene and Norman Hackerman Chair of Chemistry at Rice until his death in 2005, was written by Houston composer Todd Frazier and will feature a narrative by former Rice President Malcolm Gillis.The discovery of the buckyball led to a Nobel Prize for the team of Smalley, Robert Curl and Sir Harry Kroto, along with graduate students Sean O’Brien and Jim Heath. What they found on a summer day in 1985 laid the groundwork for the still-growing field of nanotechnology.The musical works’ genesis goes back to Smalley himself, said Wade Adams, director of Rice’s Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology. “I had wanted something like this for a long time, since it was a conversation — actually, an argument — between Rick Smalley and my wife, Mert, that turned Rick on to the emotional power of music. I had conversations with people at the Shepherd School several years ago, and I was delighted when Tony and Todd stepped up to write these fabulous pieces.”Brandt took his cues from the nature of nanotechnology as he scaled down the elements of a night at the concert hall. “I needed some special strategies to make this work,” he said. “Usually, a lot of the impact of music is its staying power — the repetition of ideas, getting familiar with them. I can’t give you the chance in this piece. I don’t have the time.” Brandt’s work is based on a central motif, which is modified throughout the composition. Altering a single note changes its character in the same way replacing a single atom changes the chemical composition of a molecule. “This will be challenging to hear on first listening, because it’s so embedded in the way the piece is put together. But it’s a metaphor for how nanotechnology works,” he said. “Essentially, there’s only one theme, manifested in a different way in each movement.”The 12 elements in Brandt’s musical table came together nicely — but for one. “I wanted there to be a ‘modern’ piece as a movement of the composition, but it took me a long time to figure out how to do it. I went through a whole catalog of possibilities and finally got to the point where the modern piece was the only one I hadn’t written,” he said. “Then it hit me. That section (which lasts only 15 seconds) would be made up of one ‘molecule’ from each movement. It’s the most ‘nano’ of the whole piece. “The movement occurs early, where you’d typically put a modern piece on a concert. As a result, most of it looks ahead to things that haven’t happened yet. So its gaze is more toward the future than the past, which is also a wonderful metaphor for nanotechnology as a whole,” Brandt said.Frazier, a Juilliard alumnus and director of both Young Audiences of Houston and The Methodist Hospital’s Center for Performing Arts Medicine, whose works include an oratorio about Thomas Jefferson, spent months researching Smalley’s life and achievements before writing a note of his nine-minute contribution. “My challenge for this composition was the same as for Jefferson,” he said. “I had to decide what to leave out. There were so many directions in which it could go and so many angles to illuminate.” Knowing that Brandt “really responded to the interpretation of the science embodied in music,” Frazier highlighted Smalley’s humanity. “The more people I talked to about nanotechnology and the buckyball, the more I realized the event of the discovery was exciting and special and could be shared across any discipline. Everyone could participate in that ‘Aha!’ moment, and that needed to be captured.” Frazier’s piece also details the discovery’s aftermath, highlighted by Smalley’s testimony before Congress in 1999, where he used his own cancer, which ultimately took his life, as an example of what nanotechnology could someday cure.The compositions were commissioned by gala co-chairs Anne and Albert Chao and Reinnette and Stan Marek and will get a second performance Oct. 16 at 7:30 p.m. at Zilkha Hall at Houston’s Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, 800 Bagby St. They will be performed by Musiqa, which Brandt co-founded and serves as its musical director. Gillis will again narrate Frazier’s tribute. The gala will be held at the Hyatt Regency Downtown and precedes the four-day Buckyball Discovery Conference, which will draw top scientists from all over the world to Rice to discuss the past, present and future of nanotechnology. Lockheed Martin is the primary sponsor of Year of Nano events.Tickets for the gala are available at http://buckyball.smalley.rice.edu/gala/.Register for the Buckyball Discovery Conference at http://buckyball.smalley.rice.edu/registration/.A high-resolution version of this image is available here: http://www.media.rice.edu/images/media/NEWSRELS/1005_recycle.jpg
Rice UniversityOffice of Public Affairs / News & Media RelationsNEWS RELEASECONTACT: Mike WilliamsPHONE: 713-348-6728
E-MAIL: mikewilliams@rice.edu
Announcing our 2010-2011 Season
2010-2011 Season Schedule
ROCO IN CONCERT – the full 40-piece chamber orchestra with guest artists in concert
- Season Opener, featuring JoAnn Falletta conducting Mendelssohn’s Symphony #3, Ligeti’s Concerto Romanesc, and the world premiere of Scott McAllister’s Rhapsodie for String Bass and Chamber Orchestra performed by ROCO principal bass, Sandor Ostlund
Saturday, Oct 16, 5pm at The Church of St. John the Divine, with ROCOrooters*Tickets are $25, $10 for students with valid student ID
Sunday, Oct 17, 7 pm, at First Presbyterian Church of Kingwood
- Conductorless Valentine’s Concert is filled with romance and surprises: Haydn’s Surprise Symphony #94, Dvorak Serenade, and some surprise pieces
Saturday, Feb 12, 5pm, at The Church of St. John the Divine, with ROCOrooters*Tickets are $25, $10 for students with valid student IDSunday, Feb 13, 5pm Valentine’s Concert and Dinner at The Houstonian Hotel
- Season Finale featuring Robert Moody conducting Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7, Symphony No. 1 by Dean Jose Antonio Bowen from SMU Meadows School of the Arts, and the Copland Clarinet Concerto, performed by principal clarinet, Nathan Williams
Saturday, Apr 9, 5pm at The Church of St. John the Divine, with ROCOrooters*
Tickets are $25, $10 for students with valid student IDSunday, Apr 10, 6:30, at Bayou Bend Collection and GardensTickets are $25, $10 for students with valid student ID
*ROCOrooters music education/childcare program runs during and after each concert at The Church of St. John the Divine. Register online at rocobackup.wpenginepowered.com.
ROCO “MUSIC TASTINGS” – fun, interactive evenings of delicious music paired with fine food and drink
- Tuesday, Sep 21 – Beer & Brass at St. Arnold Brewery, featuring a trombone trio led by Brian Logan, 6-8 pm, $20 per person. ROCO will launch a Call for Amateur Musicians to sign up for the ROCO Pro-Am Chamber Music Program at this event.
- Sunday, Oct 10 – ROCO welcomes back Alastair Willis, who will conduct the world premiere of original compositions by Anthony Brandt and Jefferson Todd Frazier at the Buckyball Gala celebrating Rice University Smalley Institute’s “The Year of NANO” 7:00-9:00 pm at the Hyatt Downtown.
ROCO SOLO – individual ROCO musicians in solo concerts
Dowling Music presents ROCO in The Recital Room: a series of Sunday afternoon concerts by ROCO soloists. All performances are 2:15-4pm, at The Recital Room at Dowling Music, 2615 Southwest Freeway #220. Admission is free, and families are welcome.
- Sunday, September 26 – Richard Belcher, cello
- Sunday, November 14 – Jennifer Keeney, flute
- Sunday, January 23 – Matthew McClung, percussion
- Sunday, February 27 – Danielle Kuhlmann, horn
- Sunday, March 27 – Amy Thaiville, violin
- Sunday, April 24 – Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
Additional information, schedule updates, and tickets are available at www.rocobackup.wpenginepowered.com
Calling all amateur musicians!
ROCO is launching a Pro-Am Chamber Music Program. This program is for all of you who used to play an instrument: Dust it off and sign up for regular rehearsals and professional coaching by ROCO musicians. Pro-am musicians will be organized in chamber music groups: trios, quintets, etc. No auditions are required – just sign up.
Tuition is $125 for the season, which will be collected once you are assigned to a group. The program will run throughout the 2010-2011 season, with group rehearsals and coaching sessions approximately monthly. All this will lead up to a Pro-Am concert/jam session in the spring of 2011.
Sign up in person at Beer & Brass, Tuesday, September 21st, at St. Arnold Brewery.
or Sign up now!
JoAnn Falletta Returns for 2010-2011
We’re delighted to announce that JoAnn Falletta will return as guest conductor for our 2010-2011 Season Opener, October 16-17. The New York Times calls Ms. Falletta, “one of the finest conductors of her generation.”
The Season Opener program will include ROCO’s own principal bassist, Sandor Ostlund, who will premiere an original composition created especially for him by composer, Scott McAllister.
Subscriptions to the Saturday Concert Series at St. John the Divine are available now at http://www.rocobackup.wpenginepowered.com/.
>Voices of the Bayou: An Interview with Janice Van Dyke Walden about the Buffalo Bayou Project
>Transcript of Conductor, Robert Moody’s interview with Janice Van Dyke Walden at the ROCO Season Finale at Bayou Bend, April 18, 2010
Tell us, what is the Buffalo Bayou Project?
For me, the Buffalo Bayou Project started as just the documentary, in the traditional sense of one film. But over the last two years, it has grown to become a full educational program, including the documentary and a series of shorter videos.
What motivated you to do this commission?
A year and a half ago we thought by this time we’d have the film wrapped up, so this started as just one of the production commitments. But, as we got into learning about Buffalo Bayou, we found we had a lot more to learn, so the Suite has carried its own as a creative force. All along we’ve wanted the film to have a score with distinction, a musical representation of the bayou. And, we certainly got that.
What do you see happening today that make our connection with the bayou all the more important?
Well today, we spend our days in air conditioning under fluorescent lights in front of computer screens, or behind a steering wheel commuting a couple of hours a day. Our children are no less confined, scared of the “bogey-man”, learning in class rooms with no windows and in the case of public schools, generally learning just to take the test. There is no room for exploration. And, so it is no wonder that we have become disconnected from nature, which nurtures us, and actually has tremendous healing powers.
So, here is Buffalo Bayou, right in our own back yard, coursing through our city. What a natural asset we have, and one we can learn from. I see a growing desire in many Houstonians to live more responsibly according to the laws of nature. That’s encouraging.
How can people be involved?
There are two ways people can be involved. One, we can become more bayou-centric in how we live. That means, in every lifestyle choice we make – how we build our house, how we plant and take care of our lawn, what car we drive and how we use water – we should consider, how will this impact the bayou? Because we all live in a watershed and our daily choices impact it.
Secondly, there is only so much you can put in a film. And the film will develop a narrative that excludes many other interesting stories. Houstonians have so much to say about this great bayou that affects our lives, and each person has their own story, their own memory; their own perspective. So, as part of the Buffalo Bayou Project we’re developing “Voices of the Bayou”, a kind of audio almanac where people can record their own memories or stories about Buffalo Bayou. If you are interested in contributing a story, email us at esmp@neosoft.com, and we’ll be in touch with you.
>Houston Chronicle: Buffalo Bayou gets a soundtrack
>Read Tara Dooley’s excellent story about Brad Sayles’ Buffalo Bayou Suite:
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/6951386.html
>Brad Sayles on The Buffalo Bayou Suite
>
-Brad Sayles 2010
Photos © Janice Van Dyke Walden
>New Kristin Wolfe Jensen CD Released!
>

>Audience Texts at Conductorless!
>We love hearing from you during our concerts. At the Take 5 break during our Feb 13th concert, you texted these messages to us:
“I love the balance of the group. My heart follows every note.”
“Amazing job! Happy Chinese New Year!!”
“LOVED Simone. Bravo! And conductorless format is very interesting, it’s much more intimate.”
“Wow to those magic fingers of Simone!!!! That was outstanding.”
“Fantastic. Good pairing of the Jacobs and Shuo – both interesting and refreshing.”
“Dinnerstein’s performance was spectacular”
“Great concert (once again!). The pieces are well chosen and well executed and Simone’s piano interpretation was superb!”
“Shuo was awesome! Dinnerstein dynamic! ROCO is a wonderful night out, thank you.”
“Awesome—I don’t hear Bach played that often and Simone was marvelous.”
“You have no idea how hard it is to just listen to Beethoven’s 5th without “conducting” myself. Simply marvelous.”
Thanks!
ROCO
>Rest in peace, Beth Newdome
>
We are mourning the loss of violinist, Beth Newdome, who lost her battle with cancer on February 13, 2010. Beth played with ROCO during Season 4.
We are repeating her obituary announcement from the Feb 16, Mansfield News Journal.
MANSFIELD ~ A painter paints pictures on canvas. But musicians paint pictures on silence. ~ Leopold Stokowski
Beth Newdome was an artist. She learned the integral difference of playing music and playing an instrument. In her hands, her violin gave voice to joy and sorrow, tears and laughter, interpreting emotion in a way words fail. Her upbeat personality made her a friend to many, and coupled with her talent on the violin, a much sought-after violin soloist.
A world-class violinist, Beth fought with cancer for over five years, and passed away Saturday, February 13, 2010.
Born February 6, 1964 in Mansfield, Beth was the daughter of William Peter Newdome, Sr. and Elva (Welday) Newdome. At the age of three, Beth started music lessons, studying under her mother Elva. She subsequently took lessons from Howard Beebe, Marya Giesy, and Michael Davis. While a student at Malabar High School, she played all four years with the Mansfield Symphony Orchestra.
While a grade school student, she was named “Outstanding Actress” at Hal McCuen’s Summer Theater.
Beth was the first student at the time to earn 12 years of consecutive Superior ratings in OFMC Junior Festivals, earning the 75 point cup, all the while winning auditions to solo with a number of orchestras including the Mansfield Symphony Orchestra, Kent State, Toledo and Columbus.
Named “Outstanding Girl” as a senior at Malabar High School, she was graduated in 1982. She excelled at swimming, winning numerous awards for her participation on Possum Run and Westbrook swim teams, specializing in relays and breaststroke.
“Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” (Berthold Auerbach) a high calling for any life, and Beth had the talent and determination to pursue her music professionally.
Beth was active with summer music camps throughout Ohio and in the Tangelwood Music Festival in Tanglewood, Mass.
She studied music at Eastman School of Music, in Rochester, New York, where she earned her Bachelor of Music Performance in 1986, studying under Charles Castleman. While at Eastman, she was a member of the Rochester Philharmonic.
She played under the tutelage of Max Rostal in Bern, Switzerland, Spoleto Opera Festival in Charleston, S.C., the Heidelberg (Germany) Music Festival, and Kent-Blossom Music Festival.
Just this past September, Beth traveled to Poland to participate with the World Orchestra for Peace.
She was a member of the Jacksonville (Fla) Symphony Orchestra, Columbus Symphony Orchestra, Dallas (Tx) Symphony Orchestra, and Atlanta (GA) Symphony Orchestra.
Beth was the principal violinist of the Georgian Chamber Players, and was the violinist of the Inman Trio with David Bjella and Brent Runnels. She lent her talents to the Iris Chamber Orchestra.
Beth took a one-year sabbatical from the Atlanta Symphony to teach violin at Stetson University in Deland, FL, and then returned to the Atlanta Symphony as Associate Concert Master. In August of 2002 she accepted a teaching position with Florida State University in Tallahassee as an Associate Professor of Violin. Each June she appeared with the Amelia Island Chamber Music Festival, and every August served on the violin artist faculty of the Aspen Music Festival. She was a frequent performer at Carnegie Hall.
She was a member of United Church in Tallahassee. Beth had been well rounded in her activities as an artist and in the sports of snow skiing, golfing, and tennis.
She is survived by her mother Elva Newdome of Mansfield; her sister Lynn Rose Newdome of Northampton, Mass.; her brother and sister-in-law William Peter Newdome, Jr. and Amy Newdome of Mansfield; an “adopted” sister and her husband Kristine & Alan Christiansen of Des Plains, Ill.; a niece Angela Ferrante; twin niece and nephew Ava Newdome and David Newdome; numerous aunts and cousins; and cherished friend Kenn Wagner.
Her father preceded her in death, as have numerous aunts, uncles and cousins.
The Newdome family will receive friends Saturday, February 20, 2010 from 10 a.m. to noon in the parlor of First Presbyterian Church, 399 South Trimble Road, Mansfield, where her memorial service will follow at 12 noon. The Rev. Dennis R. Allison will officiate. The Marion Avenue Snyder Funeral Home is privileged to serve the Newdome family.
Rather than flowers, the Newdomes suggest memorial contributions to Mansfield Symphony Orchestra, or Mansfield Symphony Youth Orchestra, or Mansfield Symphony Youth Strings, or First Presbyterian Church, and may be made at the church, through the funeral home.
Condolences to the Newdome family may be made online at: www.snyderfuneralhomes.com
There is nothing in the world so much like prayer as music is. –William P. Merrill. Play on Beth, play on.
What are you gonna do when the sun goes down? Get right back on that merry-go-round!