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GRACE LYDEN Festival Focus writer Grammy Award-winning singer Syl- via McNair has spent the last three decades performing with nearly every major opera company and symphony orchestra in the world. But until she was 20 years old, her plan was to be a professional violinist. “When I was younger, my main focus in musical training was violin and pia- no,” she says. “One of my dreams as a kid was to grow up and play in the Cleveland Orches- tra. Once I was old enough to real- ize there was life outside of Ohio, I added the Chicago Symphony to my list of goals.” While studying violin at Wheaton College, McNair’s teacher recommended she take sing- ing lessons to learn how to breathe with a piece of music. “I realized after about a year that I was enjoying the connection to words, which you don’t have as a violinist,” she says. “I love words. I love a great lyric. Even as a young singer, I loved the com- munication that was available to me.” McNair changed majors, went to graduate school at Indiana University to study opera, spent the summer of 1979 as a student at the Aspen Mu- sic Festival and School (AMFS), and in 1982, she won the National Metropoli- tan Opera auditions. “I’ve been running around the world ever since,” she says with a laugh. McNair will return to the Festival to perform a special event at 8 pm Monday, August 5, in Harris Concert Hall. The evening is a celebration of the contributors to the Great American Songbook, such as Gershwin, Rodg- ers, Bernstein, and Sondheim. After almost twen- ty years perform- ing opera, McNair started to question whether she wanted to spend the rest of her career be- ing away from her family for six to ten months of the year. She loved travel- ing all around Europe but found it to be a hard and stressful life. “I saw that twenty-year flag coming up, and I thought, this is twenty more years than I ever dreamed I would get, but there’s a lot of other music I really love and want to make time to do,” she says. LAURA E. SMITH Festival Focus writer Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) spent much of his life in the small fishing town of Aldeburgh, located north- east of London. The town’s character and charm, as well as the shadow side of small-town life, are central to his masterwork Peter Grimes, called by New Yorker critic Alex Ross “an opera of staggering dramatic force that is soaked in Aldeburgh to its bones.” The Aspen Music Festival and School (AMFS) will present a semi-staged production of Peter Grimes at 8 pm this Saturday, July 27, in the Benedict Music Tent. The performance will feature a heavyweight cast of pro- fessional singers, including Anthony Dean Griffey as Pe- ter Grimes, reprising this lead role he sang at the Met- ropolitan Opera to great acclaim in 2008, and another Met favorite, Susanna Phillips, who comes to Aspen in between performances as the Countess in the Marriage of Figaro in Santa Fe. Also in the cast are the bright young talents from the Aspen Opera Theater Center (AOTC). The produc- tion is directed by the director of the AOTC, Edward Berkeley. Many consider Grimes to be Britten’s finest work, in- cluding the AMFS’s Music Director Robert Spano, who will conduct the performance. He unabashedly calls it “the pinnacle of [Britten’s] creative genius.” The New York Times’s Anthony Tommasini, in a review of the Met’s 2008 production, even more boldly proclaimed it one of “the true operatic masterpieces of the twentieth century.” Audiences agree. When the opera premiered in June of 1945, it was immediately hailed as both a critical and popular success. Ticket sales exceeded those of Singer Sylvia McNair (above) will perform the music of Gersh- win, Rodgers, Bernstein, and Sondheim in her concert at the Aspen Music Festival and School on Monday, August 5. Sylvia McNair Sings Broadway, Show Tunes Buy tickets now! (970) 925-9042 or www.aspenmusicfestival.com AMFS Music Director Robert Spano (above) will conduct Britten’s Peter Grimes at 8 pm this Saturday in the Benedict Music Tent. F ESTIVAL F OCUS ‘Peter Grimes’ Offers ‘Staggering Drama’ YOUR WEEKLY CLASSICAL MUSIC GUIDE Supplement to The Aspen Times Vol 24, No 6 Monday, July 22, 2013 See MCNAIR, Festival Focus page 3 PHOTO COURTESY OF RHONDA ELY See GRIMES, Festival Focus page 3 I learned how to do opera, but when I’m singing the Great American Songbook and musical theater, I feel like I’m just doing me. Sylvia McNair Singer and AMFS alumna ALEX IRVIN / AMFS Get to know AMFS faculty and students! Alan Fletcher hosts new “Side-by-Side” weekly talk show on Grassroots TV. Sundays at 6:30 pm Mondays at noon Tuesdays at 6:30 am Saturdays at 8:30 am

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GRACE LYDENFestival Focus writer

Grammy Award-winning singer Syl-via McNair has spent the last three decades performing with nearly every major opera company and symphony orchestra in the world. But until she was 20 years old, her plan was to be a professional violinist.

“When I was younger, my main focus in musical training was violin and pia-no,” she says. “One of my dreams as a kid was to grow up and play in the Cleveland Orches-tra. Once I was old enough to real-ize there was life outside of Ohio, I added the Chicago Symphony to my list of goals.”

While studying violin at Wheaton College, McNair’s teacher recommended she take sing-ing lessons to learn how to breathe with a piece of music.

“I realized after about a year that I was enjoying the connection to words, which you don’t have as a violinist,” she says. “I love words. I love a great lyric. Even as a young singer, I loved the com-munication that was available to me.”

McNair changed majors, went to graduate school at Indiana University

to study opera, spent the summer of 1979 as a student at the Aspen Mu-sic Festival and School (AMFS), and in 1982, she won the National Metropoli-tan Opera auditions.

“I’ve been running around the world ever since,” she says with a laugh.

McNair will return to the Festival to perform a special event at 8 pm Monday, August 5, in Harris Concert

Hall. The evening is a celebration of the contributors to the Great American Songbook, such as Gershwin, Rodg-ers, Bernstein, and Sondheim.

After almost twen-ty years perform-ing opera, McNair started to question whether she wanted to spend the rest of her career be-ing away from her family for six to ten

months of the year. She loved travel-ing all around Europe but found it to be a hard and stressful life.

“I saw that twenty-year flag coming up, and I thought, this is twenty more years than I ever dreamed I would get, but there’s a lot of other music I really love and want to make time to do,” she says.

LAURA E. SMITHFestival Focus writer

Benjamin Britten (1913–1976) spent much of his life in the small fishing town of Aldeburgh, located north-east of London. The town’s character and charm, as well as the shadow side of small-town life, are central to his masterwork Peter Grimes, called by New Yorker critic Alex Ross “an opera of staggering dramatic force that is soaked in Aldeburgh to its bones.”

The Aspen Music Festival and School (AMFS) will present a semi-staged production of Peter Grimes at 8 pm this Saturday, July 27, in the Benedict Music Tent. The performance will feature a heavyweight cast of pro-fessional singers, including Anthony Dean Griffey as Pe-ter Grimes, reprising this lead role he sang at the Met-ropolitan Opera to great acclaim in 2008, and another Met favorite, Susanna Phillips, who comes to Aspen in between performances as the Countess in the Marriage

of Figaro in Santa Fe.Also in the cast are the bright young talents from

the Aspen Opera Theater Center (AOTC). The produc-tion is directed by the director of the AOTC, Edward Berkeley.

Many consider Grimes to be Britten’s finest work, in-cluding the AMFS’s Music Director Robert Spano, who will conduct the performance. He unabashedly calls it “the pinnacle of [Britten’s] creative genius.” The New York Times’s Anthony Tommasini, in a review of the Met’s 2008 production, even more boldly proclaimed it one of “the true operatic masterpieces of the twentieth century.”

Audiences agree. When the opera premiered in June of 1945, it was immediately hailed as both a critical and popular success. Ticket sales exceeded those of

Singer Sylvia McNair (above) will perform the music of Gersh-win, Rodgers, Bernstein, and Sondheim in her concert at the Aspen Music Festival and School on Monday, August 5.

Sylvia McNair Sings Broadway, Show Tunes

Buy tickets now! (970) 925-9042 or www.aspenmusicfestival.com

AMFS Music Director Robert Spano (above) will conduct Britten’s Peter Grimes at 8 pm this Saturday in the Benedict Music Tent.

FESTIVAL FOCUS

‘Peter Grimes’ Offers ‘Staggering Drama’

YOUR WEEKLY CLASSICAL MUSIC GUIDE

Supplement to The Aspen Times Vol 24, No 6Monday, July 22, 2013

See MCNAIR, Festival Focus page 3

PHOTO COURTESY OF RHONDA ELY

See GRIMES, Festival Focus page 3

I learned how to do opera, but when I’m

singing the Great American Songbook and musical theater, I feel like I’m just

doing me.

Sylvia McNairSinger and AMFS alumna

ALEX IRVIN / AMFS

Get to know AMFS faculty and students!

Alan Fletcher hosts new “Side-by-Side” weekly talk show on

Grassroots TV.

Sundays at 6:30 pm Mondays at noon Tuesdays at 6:30 am Saturdays at 8:30 am

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Page 2 | Monday, July 22, 2013 FESTIVAL FOCUS: Your Weekly Classical Music Guide Supplement to The Aspen Times

GRACE LYDENFestival Focus writer

Nancy Allen always thought of herself as a musician. She was only 6 years old when she started playing harp, but she had already been playing the piano, so “it seemed smaller,” she says.

Allen’s mother was a pianist and public school music teacher who loved the harp and signed all three of her daughters up for harp lessons. But Allen’s own drive was what inspired her to pursue the instrument profes-sionally.

“I remember my mother drove me past the old Juil-liard School, and I must have been 12, and when I saw it, it looked so exciting that I said, ‘That’s where I’m go-ing,’” Allen says.

Allen did attend the Juilliard School, and she is now the head of its harp department. She is also principal harpist of the New York Philharmonic and on artist-fac-ulty at the Aspen Music Festival and School (AMFS). Al-len’s sisters are professional harpists as well, one for the Eugene Symphony in Oregon and the other for Ameri-can Ballet Theatre in New York.

Allen was accepted as an AMFS harp fellow at the age of 20, and she spent three summers playing in the Aspen Chamber Symphony. After her time as a student, she was hired for the artist-faculty, despite her young age and the fact that it was her first teaching job.

“I was so enamored with the Festival, and I never left,” she says. “I used to cry when I came over the moun-tains. I just loved it: the air and the flowers and all of

the music.”This year marks Allen’s thirty-eighth summer on the

artist-faculty in Aspen.During her time as a student, Allen was constantly

in awe of the famous artist-faculty, both for their mu-sical talent and down-to-earth personalities. Now, sit-ting in the same place where she sat as a student and still wearing sneakers and jeans at rehearsals, she can hardly believe she is one of them.

“It’s a little bit difficult to comprehend,” she says. “I don’t feel like I get older. I feel like I’ve just been there for a long, long time. I still feel like a student in my heart.”

AMFS student Grace Browning studied with Allen for her master’s at Juilliard and will enter her third year as principal harpist of the New World Symphony this fall. She says Allen teaches, “from the perspective of a musi-cian, rather than a technician.”

“I found that my ears received just as much training as my fingers,” Browning says. “Nancy has taught me how to teach myself, which is an invaluable skill to pos-sess as a professional musician.”

Katherine Siochi, also an AMFS student, has been studying with Allen for the past two years at the Juil-liard School.

“I am unbelievably grateful for her generosity with her time and genuine care for each of her students,” Siochi says. “This nurturing quality has helped me to thrive both as a musician and a person.”

Allen feels similarly close to her students.

“I have about 200 kids,” Allen says. “I feel like I have a lot of children because like children, students never leave you. They stay in touch, and it’s really a wonderful relationship.”

Allen’s daughter, Claire Solomon, celebrated her first birthday on Aspen Mountain and has been here every summer since. This year, she is a cello student at the Festival and will celebrate her 21st birthday in Aspen.

“It’s very special when we get to play together in the orchestra,” Allen says. “It’s something I dreamed of when she was born.”

Buy Music Festival tickets now: (970) 925-9042 • www.aspenmusicfestival.com

Nancy Allen Inspires Harp Students With Teaching

ALEX IRVIN / AMFS

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Monday, July 22, 2013 | Page 3Supplement to The Aspen Times FESTIVAL FOCUS: Your Weekly Classical Music Guide

MCNAIR: Concert on Aug. 5

AMFS Trustee Ann Friedman (above) and her husband, Tom, have pledged a $1 million chal-lenge to complete the capital portion of the Festival’s Where Dreams Begin campaign. Once the total raised for the capital project reaches $34 million, this gift will kick in to achieve the $35 million goal. Friedman’s parents, Matthew and Carolyn Bucksbaum, gave the $25 million lead gift to the $75 million campaign, the additional $40 million of which will endow student, artist-faculty, and artistic support.

the two operas being mounted concurrently at the same theater, La bohème and Madame Butter-fly. Leonard Bernstein débuted it at Tanglewood in 1946, and the buzz spread to America. Britten landed on the cover of Time magazine. His fame exploded.

The opera’s story, based on a poem published in 1810, lends itself to the heroic proportions of dra-ma common to opera. Britten discovered it while on a trip to California and immediately was drawn to it. He found the story a gripping realization of, as he said, “a subject very close to my heart—the struggle of the individual against the masses. The more vi-cious the society, the more vicious the individual.”

The opera opens with the title character, a gruff fisherman, on trial for the death of an apprentice. While acquitted by the judge, the townspeople re-main suspicious of Grimes, crowd the room, and treat him with hostility.

“Right away, the dynamic of Peter Grimes against society is set up,” says Asadour Santourian, AMFS vice president for artistic administration and artistic advisor. “Britten was attracted to this theme of the anti-hero.”

As the opera unfolds, Grimes’s rough ways and poor social skills leave him alienated from the larg-er community and cruelly driven to the edge, both literally and figuratively.

Britten’s music highlights the struggles with bril-liance.

AMFS President and CEO Alan Fletcher com-ments that Britten’s music “has the emotional pow-er and immediacy of folk music.”

The New Yorker’s Ross elaborates, writing that the opera “bursts with folk song, operetta and vaude-ville tunes, and the vernacular punch of the Ameri-can musical.”

And music scholar Philip Gossett muses that, “There may be no solo as beautiful in all of opera as Peter’s soliloquy [‘Now the Great Bear and Ple-iades’].”

Ready to experience it yourself? Tickets are on sale, or use your pass for admission to this highlight of the summer.

GRIMES: Continued from Festival Focus page 1

Aspen Music Festival and School Box Office Hours

McNair decided to stop doing opera and switch her focus to musical theater, cabaret, and pop music.

“I’ve got to tell you, I’m having so much fun,” she says.

The August 5 concert will include a song that McNair and her pianist put together called “Sylvia’s Dilemma.” The piece is autobiographical and uses both opera arias and musical theater excerpts to tell the story of her departure from classical music.

Continuing in this vein, there will be songs devoted to hybrid artists, a term McNair uses for musicians who have had success in multiple genres. McNair con-siders herself to be a hybrid artist and will celebrate Leonard Bernstein in this

portion with a medley from West Side Story.

The program will also include “Sum-mertime” from Porgy and Bess, which McNair estimates she has performed a thousand times in the last thirty years. “And yet every time I do it, I can feel that tall cotton; I can feel the lullaby; I can feel the summer air,” she says. “I never ever get bored.”

McNair does not regret her years in the classical music world, but she does say that she is now in her “most honest place.”

“I learned how to do opera, but when I’m singing the Great American Song-book and musical theater, I feel like I’m just doing me,” she says. “It’s so au-thentic; it’s so real; it’s so who I am as a singer.”

Continued from Festival Focus page 1

Harris Concert Hall: 9 am through the intermission of the evening concert, daily.Wheeler Opera House: 9 am–5 pm daily.

GRACE LYDENFestival Focus writer

Lise de la Salle first performed at the Aspen Music Festival and School (AMFS) three summers ago, and she has been wanting to come back ever since.

“I had such an amazing experience the first time,” she says. “Everyone is there for the music, and it’s wonderful to be in such a beautiful and amazing place doing the thing I love most, which is music.”

The 24-year-old French pianist will return to the Festival to perform with the Aspen Chamber Symphony at 6 pm this Friday, July 26, in the Benedict Music Tent. Aspen alumnus Tomáš Netopil will conduct the program of Britten’s Young Apollo, Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major, and Mahler’s Symphony No. 4.

De la Salle made her concerto début at age 13 and came to international attention at age 16, when her Bach-Liszt album won Gramophone’s “Recording of the Month.” She has had engagements across North America and Europe, and the Washington Post once wrote of her performance, “For much of the concert, the audience had to remember to breathe.”

“Her style is so clear, and her musical ideas are so powerful,” Netopil says. Netopil was a student in the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen in 2003 and 2004 and was the Festival’s assistant conductor in 2005. He is now music director of the National Theatre in Prague, and as of the 2013–14 season, he is appointed Generalmusikdirektor of Theater & Philharmonie Essen.

The concert will open with Young Apollo, a work for piano, string orchestra, and string quartet that Britten wrote upon his arrival in the United States at the age of 25. De la Salle played the work for the first time in May with the Philharmonia Orchestra in London, and she says that although the piece is not often played, it is “a very fun piece to play and to listen to.”

“It’s not deep and dramatic, but it’s full of life, and it’s really sunny,” she says. “It’s just lots of energy and lots of humor.”

De la Salle likes the pairing of Young Apollo with Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23 because the first and third movements of the concerto are similarly full of life, humor, and energy, she says. The piece’s drama lies in its minor-key second movement.

“What I love in Mozart is that it’s really simple, but simple in a beautiful way,” de la Salle says. “Especially in

the second movement, there are very few notes, but with just a few notes, he can speak and express so much. It’s really powerful.”

Mozart is one of Netopil’s favorite composers.“For me, Mozart is the Bible,” he says. “After one or

two months practicing piano or violin, you are able to play this music because it’s simple, but then you can spend your whole life searching for the right style or your own style.”

De la Salle agrees that there is nothing easy about playing Mozart. In fact, she says the simplicity makes his music “dangerous.”

“It can be boring if it’s just the notes,” she says. “You have to feed every note and speak with every note. That’s why I love Mozart so much, because for me, every passage is a key passage.”

The pianist hopes to make the audience come alive with her performance of both works.

“For me, the most important thing is to move the audience,” she says. “I don’t really know what they’re going to think or feel or if they will see colors, but my main goal is to make them feel life through the music, because music is about life.”

Lise de la Salle to Play Mozart Concerto

PHOTO COURTESY OF LYNN GOLDSMITH

Friedmans Give $1M Challenge Gift