Sublime, powerful, and all-embracing: We're presenting Bach's Mass in B Minor

Our 2023-24 classical series concludes IN MAY with a Magnificent choral masterpiece!

Johann Sebastian Bach’s Mass in B minor is widely recognized as one of the supreme triumphs of Western classical music. Heroic in its scope and articulation, this piece was crafted as an ideal representation of the Mass, rather than being designed for practical use. Described by one music historian as the “greatest musical masterpiece of all times and nations,” the Mass in B minor encapsulates Bach’s musicianship and his profound sense of the sacred. On May 4 and 5, Santa Cruz Symphony will join forces with Cabrillo Symphonic Chorus and four stellar vocalists to bring you the brilliance and theatricality of this magnum opus.

Bach’s masterwork offers a perfect showcase for the vocal power and harmonic expression of Cabrillo Symphonic Chorus, under the direction of Cheryl Anderson, and our four guest soloists. Prepare to be transported, both spiritually and emotionally, by the sublime voices of contralto Sara Couden, soprano Hera Hyesang Park, bass-baritone Christian Pursell, and tenor Andrew Stenson. Under the direction of Maestro Daniel Stewart, these singers will join forces to create a thrilling conclusion to our 2023-24 classical concert series.

We invite you to share this unforgettable performance with us!

Good Times Santa Cruz featured the Bach B Minor Mass concert in a recent article. You can read it here!


Saturday, May 4 at 7:30 PM
Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz
Pre-concert talk at 6:30 PM

Sunday, May 5 at 2:00 PM
Henry J. Mello Center in Watsonville
Pre-concert talk at 1:00 PM

You asked for her, and she's back! Destiny Muhammad's inspired jazz will thrill you again. 

Award-winning jazz harpist Destiny Muhammad is back by popular demand, presenting a fabulous recital for Santa Cruz Symphony. Our 2023-24 Recital Series continues on Sunday, April 21 with Textures, Colors, Tones: Sketches in Jazz, performed by Destiny and her trio. Destiny created this program as a tonal tapestry in tribute to the legacy of the late African-American improvisational quiltmaker and fabric artist Rosie Lee Tompkins. The New York Times called her fabric creations “one of the century’s major accomplishments.” You can learn more about the recital program here.

Destiny Muhammad will rock the rafters with a trio of phenomenal musicians: Leon Joyce, Jr. on drums and percussion, Sundra Manning on piano, and Arthur "Chico" Lopez on upright bass. Destiny and her trio will be joined by two incredible poets and spoken word artists. Devorah Major, San Francisco Poet Laureate Emeritus, will speak the energy of Rosie Lee Tompkins. Enid Pickett, Healdsburg Jazz Festival Poet Laureate, will speak the energy of Effie Mae Howard.

We know you'll love this inspiring afternoon of storytelling through jazz!  



WHEN:
Sunday, April 21 at 2PM
WHERE: Samper Recital Hall at Cabrillo College
TICKETS: 831-479-6154 or cabrillo.edu/vapa


Leon Joyce, Jr.’s drumming and percussion savvy are in international demand. A consummate professional, Leon has worked with a variety of top artists worldwide, including Ramsey Lewis, Nancy Wilson, Scott Hamilton, Smokey Robinson, Norman Connors, Billy Harper, James Carter, Clark Terry, Conti Condoli, and Ellis Marsalis, among others. As an instructor, Leon has led clinics around the United States with various educational institutions and music programs. His musical career began in high school and was shaped in the US Marine Corps, where he served, trained, and performed as a drummer and percussionist for over 20 years. Leon is a regular with the Leon Joyce Trio, Quartet, and Quintet, Jamie Davis, Nicolas Bearde, The Destiny Muhammad Trio, and guitarist Calvin Keys. He has appeared at many jazz festivals internationally, including Montreaux and Lugano Jazz Festivals, Villingen Swing/Jazz Festival, the Monterey Jazz and Blues Festival, the JVC Jazz Festivals, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and many more.

Sundra Manning is a Grammy-nominated pianist, keyboardist, Hammond B3 Organ player, and producer. Respected for her wide-ranging musical versatility, Sundra brings a funky, fresh, and gritty approach to her playing that is emotional, unique, and special. Sundra has recorded, written, and performed around the world with many artists such as Larry Graham with Prince, Sheila E., Lalah Hathaway, Raphael Saadiq, Peter Tork of The Monkees, Bobby Womack, Meshell Ndegeocello, Ledisi, Michael Franti and Spearhead, MC Hammer, Walter Hawkins’ Love Center Youth Ministry, Jody Watley, Jubu and Legally Blynd, The Braxton Brothers, Martin Luther, Peabo Bryson, Maysa Leaks, Pete Escovedo, Miguel Migs, EnVogue, Avery Sunshine, Anessa Strings, Nona Hendryx and Black Women Rock. She has written and produced music for several major films and television networks including Sony Pictures, Warner Pictures, HBO Films, and Bose Corp.

Bay Area native Arthur "Chico" Lopez is a sought-after jazz bassist. Proficient on both upright acoustic and electric bass, he brings his unique passionate precision to both instruments. Chico Lopez has enjoyed collaborating and performing with Clifford Brown aka ‘CB3’ (the grandson of jazz trumpet legend Clifford Brown, Jr.), Doug Ellington (the grandson of Duke Ellington), and jazz harpist Destiny Muhammad and The Destiny Muhammad Trio. His bevy of performance venues include SFJAZZ (the largest non-profit jazz presenter in the world), the Sundays in the Redwoods concert series in Oakland, the famed Yoshi’s Jazz Club, the Healdsburg Jazz Festival, and the San Jose Jazz Festival.

A California granddaughter of immigrants, both documented and undocumented, devorah major is San Francisco’s third Poet Laureate. A baker of pies and a lover of jazz, her poetry has carried her to many countries where she has performed with and without musicians. In 2022, she received Italy’s Regina Coppola International Literary Award. Published by Willow Press, her seventh book of poetry, Califia’s Daughter, was a Willow Press Editor’s Choice. Individual poems can be found in numerous magazines and anthologies including Callaloo, The New Black Fire, and Bum Rush the Page. She will put down her pen to march, act, and call for justice.

A northern California resident, Enid Pickett has been a Fulbright teacher in several countries, an advisor on issues of human rights, a jazz singer, and is now a celebrated poet. She has served on the Advisory Board of Learning for Justice, a Southern Poverty Law Center publication, as a Diversity Trainer for the NEA’s Human and Civil Rights Department, and as a Special Education and General Education teacher. She has appeared onstage with many poets and artists both as a singer and a poet and spoken word artist. The 2018 Poet Laureate for the Healdsburg Jazz Festival, Enid has published one volume of poetry, Through the Eyes of Enid, with a second volume expected to be published this year.


While certainly inspired by Alice Coltrane, Muhammad brings her own unique touch to the strings, as well as a contemporary melodic style that is exacting, whether she is working solo or accompanied. -Downbeat  


Festivals Rebroadcast Is This Sunday April 7th!

Our Festivals concerts on March 23/24 were incredible! If you missed the Festivals concerts, or just want to relive this performance, you can listen to the concert rebroadcast.

At 4 PM on Sunday, April 7 go to KAZU.org's online or HD classical station to experience the entire program performed by the Santa Cruz Symphony!

Learn more about our concert rebroadcasts and how you can listen to them here.



Textures, Colors, Tones: Sketches in Jazz with Destiny Muhammad

Can colorful quilts inspire jazz? They can if Rosie Lee Tompkins created them!

Jazz harpist Destiny Muhammad is back by popular demand, presenting a fabulous recital for Santa Cruz Symphony. Our 2023-24 Recital Series continues on Sunday, April 21 with Textures, Colors, Tones: Sketches in Jazz, performed by Destiny and her trio: Sundra Manning on piano, Leon Joyce, Jr. on drums and percussion, and Arthur Chico Lopez on upright bass. Created by Destiny, this program is a tonal tapestry in tribute to the legacy of the late African-American improvisational quiltmaker and fabric artist Rosie Lee Tompkins, whose work The New York Times called “one of the century’s major accomplishments.”

Destiny and her trio will be joined by two incredible poets and spoken word artists. Devorah Major, San Francisco Poet Laureate Emeritus, will speak the energy of Rosie Lee Tompkins. Enid Pickett, Healdsburg Jazz Festival Poet Laureate, will speak the energy of Effie Mae Howard. You can learn more about these featured performers here.

Rosie Lee Tompkins (1936–2006) is the art pseudonym of Richmond, Calif.-based Effie Mae Howard. This remarkable artist used brilliant colors, geometric shapes, and traditional materials to create dazzling, jubilantly creative, inherently subversive quilts. Her works have been compared with modernist paintings and have been added to the permanent collections of many museums, including the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City and the Oakland Museum of California. More than 500 works by Ms. Tompkins reside at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Destiny Muhammad and her trio will take us on a soul-stirring journey inspired by Rosie Lee Tompkins' life and enduring artistic perspective.  


WHEN: Sunday, April 21 at 2 PM
WHERE: Samper Recital Hall at Cabrillo College
TICKETS: 831-479-6154 or cabrillo.edu/vapa


Destiny Muhammad is known as the Harpist from the Hood, a noteworthy musician with an eclectic style that aligns with jazz but ranges from “Celtic to Coltrane,” as she describes it. A favorite of the San Francisco Bay Area music scene, she is known for her work with Azar Lawrence, Omar Sosa, and John Santos. She has curated concerts for Grace Cathedral Christmas Concert Series, SF JAZZ, and SF Symphony SOUNDBOX. A series guest performer with NEA Jazz Master Reggie Workman, she has shared the stage with jazz masters Denise Perrier and Blue Note artist Ambrose Akisemuire.

Destiny has headlined the Healdsburg Jazz Festival and Butchertown Jazz Fest and was the Healdsburg Jazz Festival 2023 Black History Month Artist in Residence. A Guest Workshop Presenter for Amateur Music Network, a collaborator with Santa Cruz Symphony, and Harp Ambassador for Awesome Orchestra Collective and The Marcus Shelby New Orchestra, she is an ASCAP Songwriter Awardee and a California Arts Council Legacy Fellow. 


"When one contemplates the great musicians of Jazz, a list of harpists does not immediately come to mind, but that is destined to change with Sound Sculptress, Destiny Muhammad."

– San Francisco Examiner

Superb orchestration and virtuoso playing: a review of Santa Cruz Symphony’s “Festivals” by Martin Gaskell

Professor Martin Gaskell

The Santa Cruz Symphony was in a festive mood this last weekend for concerts that included some very demanding virtuoso playing by the orchestra. The penultimate pair of concerts of the 2023-24 regular season opened and closed with music inspired by festivals.

The concert began with California composer José González Granero’s joyous 2017 Matsuri Overture. This was inspired by Japanese festivals (Matsuri means “Festival” in Japanese), but this lively overture could fit a wide range of festivals around the world. It is very well composed from its overall structure down to small-scale details and the orchestration is superb. Granero packs just the right amount of material into a running time of a little under six minutes.

The overture starts with an energetic orchestral tutti that, not knowing otherwise, one could well believe had come from Stravinsky’s Petrushka in the second half of the concert. However, the music quickly moves on to a cheerful pentatonic melody for the woodwinds. We get a counter melody for the horns, lively passagework for the violins, a broad theme for the strings and woodwinds, moments of calm, exciting crescendi, and, towards the end, a chorale for the brass. Granero describes himself as a Spanish-American composer and the overture is not particularly Japanese. Yes, there are pentatonic melodies, but pentatonic melodies are common around the world (think of “Amazing Grace,” for example.) However, one specifically Japanese touch in the performance was the use of large taiko drums. Maestro Daniel Steward chose to have these placed up front on the left and right sides of the orchestra to give an antiphonal effect. The sound of large taiko drum can reputedly rival the decibel level of a jet engine and be heard many kilometers away, but Maestro Stewart was careful not to allow the taiko drums to overpower the orchestra. The drums added to the clear, powerful, and effective ending of the overture. This drew immediate enthusiastic applause from the clearly very satisfied audience and had people leaping to their feet.

After the applause had died down, Daniel Stewart returned to the podium to announce the provisional program for the concerts of the 2024-25 before continuing with the program. This is always a much-anticipated announcement. After this, the main work of the first half of the concert, Robert Schumann’s beautiful Cello Concerto in A minor, provided contrast and balance to both the Granero overture that preceded it and to Stravinsky’s wild Petrushka that was to come in the second half. The featured soloist was rapidly-rising star Gaeun Kim who, at the age of 20, has already garnered many prestigious international awards and performances with orchestras around the world.

Both Robert Schumann and his pianist/composer wife Clara famously eschewed empty virtuosity. (This caused their contemporary, piano legend Franz Liszt, to comment about Robert Schumann’s now famous piano concert to the effect that “the pianist doesn’t show up!”) Not surprisingly, therefore, Robert Schumann’s cello concerto is an expressive work in which soloist and orchestra are partners. The mood is often similar to Elgar’s cello concerto, something that is probably not coincidental since Elgar was a big admirer of Schumann’s orchestral music.

Despite the Schumann cello concerto not being an outwardly showy work, it is far from easy for the soloist; even a casual glance at Gaeun Kim’s fingers flying up and down the finger board made this clear. She played the hardest of passages flawlessly and with impeccable intonation. Importantly, she captured the full range of emotions in the music. The audience was very impressed with her skill and her musicality. It should be added that Kim’s demeanor matched the music perfectly. Her facial expressions reflected the emotions of the work but did not distract from the performance. (Incidentally, the orchestra is to be commended for the close-up, live video of soloists projected on a large screen above the orchestra at concerts. This allows the whole hall to see what the soloist is doing as well as to hear.)

I have attended a concert by another orchestra where a piano soloist was completely drowned out in many passages. This was not a problem with the Santa Cruz Symphony in last weekend’s concerts. Schumann’s orchestration is superb and lets the cello shine through. More importantly, Maestro Stewart took great care that the orchestra held back, especially when the solo cello was playing. This enabled Gaeun Kim to capture the emotional nuances of the concerto and communicate them to the audience without having to worry about being overpowered.

After the intermission the orchestra returned to the festival theme with Petrushka, the second of Igor Stravinsky’s three famous pre-World War I ballet scores. The last century saw a remarkable divergence of the academic study of music from the reality of 20th-century music. What was and is still talked about in academia was dissonant, atonal music with complicated rhythms (if any rhythm at all), but this is not what orchestras play and people listen to. Of the supposedly most important and influential composers one reads about in textbooks covering “20th-century music,” only Stravinsky has ever had significant concert programming and numbers of recordings being sold. He is also the only composer from the first half of the 20th century who makes it into lists of “classical” music radio listeners like to hear.

Stravinsky’s fame rests mostly on two ballet scores: his first ballet, The Firebird premiered in 1910 (played by Santa Cruz Symphony in October 2019), which was Stravinsky’s first and biggest success, and his third, The Rite of Spring from 1913. It is because of the remarkable savage rhythms and discords of the latter that Stravinsky has featured prominently in textbooks about 20th-century music. The savagery of the music led to an infamous riot at the first performance. (Thankfully, the October 2018 performance by Santa Cruz Symphony did not lead to a riot!)

Stravinsky’s first “modern” work, however, was not The Rite of Spring, but his second ballet, Petrushka, premiered in 1911. Stravinsky not only composed the music, but he also wrote the detailed plot. For copyright reasons he published a slightly revised version of the ballet in 1946. Like the majority of conductors, Daniel Stewart opted for this version. Since the fast-paced ballet is not long, he also, again like most conductors, opted to do the entire ballet score rather than the concert suite Stravinsky extracted from it.

With any music it often helps to know the story behind it. This is especially true of Petrushka where it especially helps to know the detailed story which Stravinsky tells so brilliantly in the music. For learning more about music the orchestra plays, I highly recommend planning to come to the orchestra’s concerts an hour early to hear Don Adkins’ entertaining explanatory pre-concert talks. On Sunday Don was in superb form and just hearing his pre-concert talk was almost worth the price of a ticket! Coming early to concerts also gives you time to read through the always informative detailed program notes that Don also writes.

Petrushka is a stock character in Russian puppet shows. The ballet is set in 1830 in and around a tiny puppet theatre at the pre-Lenten Maslenitsa carnival (the equivalent of New Orleans Mardi Gras) in St. Petersburg. The setting is the perfect vehicle for Stravinsky’s highly imaginative music that closely follows the action. A brief synopsis of the plot is that the story involves the relationships between three puppets: the awkward Petrushka, a beautiful ballerina, and a swash-buckling Moor. Petrushka is smitten with the ballerina (of course), but she’s interested in the handsome Moor. Petrushka foolishly gets himself chased and killed by the Moor. The other major character is a magician who is the operator of the tiny theatre. After Petrushka has had his head chopped off, the magician explains to the horrified crowd that he is only a puppet. However, after Petrushka has been dragged off stage, a ghost of Petrushka appears above the tiny theatre and scares the theatre operator. Stravinsky leaves us with the question that maybe Petrushka was a real person after all.

The story is very fast-paced and so is Stravinsky’s music. Foreshadowing The Rite of Spring, Stravinsky uses driving rhythms and strong discords, but unlike the later ballet which depicts a barbaric primitive rite, the story of Petrushka is lively and entertaining. What is more, unlike The Firebird and The Rite of Spring, Petrushka has tunes. Stravinsky has borrowed these from Russian folk songs, early 19th century waltzes by Joseph Lanner, music from Rimsky-Korsakov, a ribald French music hall song about a woman with a wooden leg with a rubber washer, and more.

The continually driving music is always changing as different characters come on and off stage. Consequently, there are abrupt cutoffs and tunes overlap. For example we hear the sound of an organ grinder (clarinets and bass clarinet) and a music box (celesta). In the ballet these accompany separate solo female dancers on stage. One very effective moment was when the magician first appears and the chaotic sounds of the carnival abruptly stop. After a short pause, the double bassoon, played by Susan Dias, plays an isolated low note. This produced chuckles from members of the audience who had incorrect ideas about what the sound signified! With discordant music, humor is good.

The tempo is fast for almost the entire ballet. This is virtuoso music, not just for individual players, but for the orchestra as a whole. Every player gets a thorough work out, especially the woodwinds and brass who are on the go all the time. As the conductor, Daniel Stewart skillfully navigated the orchestra through continually changing meters and measures where the accentuation was different what was implied by the printed meter. The players’ rhythms were always precise and the many entwined and juxtaposed parts were seamlessly and seemingly effortlessly joined. Despite the demanding parts, players were enjoying themselves. I particularly noticed some smiles in the second violins.

Because so many players do so much in Petrushka it is hard to single out individual people and at the end Daniel Stewart called out all of the principals and many others for special applause. The first player he called on was Ian Scarfe, who played the very demanding piano part. Stravinsky initially wrote the second of the four movements (or “Tableaux” as they are called) as a concert piece for piano and orchestra. Ian Scarfe was thus effectively playing the solo in a piano concerto! Unfortunately for pianists, when Stravinsky’s concert piece became part of a ballet, the piano, instead of being in the limelight up front next to the conductor as in the performance of a piano concerto, gets buried away in the back of the orchestra behind the harp. The result is the audience doesn’t readily appreciate the pianist during the performance.

A problem with doing the full ballet version of Petrushka, as opposed to the 1911 concert version, is the ending. Stravinsky ends the ballet enigmatically with a quiet pizzicato in the lower strings. This fits the story, but how does the audience know when the piece is over? Maestro Stewart solved this problem by waiting a few seconds and then giving a “thumbs up” of approval to the orchestra. The applause that followed never seemed as enthusiastic as the applause for José González Granero’s Matsuri overture, but perhaps a factor in this was the less satisfying ending of Petrushka which left us with the question about the reality of the hapless Petrushka. But don’t worry! No actual puppets were harmed in the concert!

~Martin Gaskell