Conductor and Music Director Mark Russell Smith leading The Quad City Symphony Orchestra through its paces

 

DAVENPORT, IOWA (October 25, 2019) — War affects the individual human being in a multitude of complex ways. Yet it holds universal commonalities, the likes of which are explored next weekend in the Quad City Symphony Orchestra’s (QCSO) Masterworks II: Conflict performances dealing with the emotional influence of war and conflict on the human experience.   A National Piece of Mourning   Up first in Masterworks II is Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings. Written in 1936, the piece was premiered just two years later by the NBC Symphony Orchestra via a radio broadcast.   “Barber’s Adagio for Strings has become our national piece of mourning,” said QCSO Music Director and Conductor Mark Russell Smith. “It’s often played at funerals. It’s a powerful, reflective piece just for strings.”   The piece is as timeless as it is powerful. The recording of its 1938 debut was selected in 2005 for preservation in the National Recording Registry at the United States Library of Congress.   “Adagio for Strings is probably the most famous work of this program, at least to people’s ears,” said QCSO Executive Director Brian Baxter. “It’s hard not to feel like you want to cry at the end of it. Not because it’s completely sad, but because of how it captures this sound and beauty so effortlessly. It’s just gut-wrenchingly beautiful.”   Honoring Walt Whitman   The second piece of Masterworks II continues QCSO’s tribute to legendary American poet and essayist Walt Whitman. Reflecting on Whitman’s poem The Wound-Dresser, American Composer John Adams reimagines Whitman’s time as a hospital volunteer during the Civil War.   “What Adams is trying to do with the music is reflect the text,” Baxter said. “Whitman’s poem is so graphic in that he doesn’t cover up what’s happening in war. There’s all this horrible loss and death. Yet the beauty in his words is stunning.”   Whitman certainly doesn’t hold back in describing the brutality of war and conflict. In one stanza he writes:   “I dress the perforated shoulder, the foot with the bullet-wound, Cleanse the one with a gnawing and putrid gangrene, so sickening, so offensive, While the attendant stands behind aside me holding the tray and pail.”   Adams channels it all, writing a piece for chamber orchestra paired with a baritone singer. Vocalist Paul Max Tipton will help sing the piece to life during next weekend’s performances.   “Paul’s voice works perfectly for The Wound-Dresser. He’s very expressive and offers a great sound that will blend well with the orchestra,” Baxter said.   While the first half of the Masterworks II program reflects on the small yet critical moments within war and conflict, the second half takes a grander approach, promising to overwhelm the audience with unanticipated candor and authenticity.   A Symbol of Resistance   Last but certainly not least is Dmitri’s Shostakovich’s Symphony N° 7. A Russian composer, Shostakovich wrote the piece in 1941 during WWII and dedicated it to city of Leningrad where he was born.   “Shostakovich’s Symphony N° 7 is unique in that it was written during a war,” Smith said. “It was written under the most incredible circumstances when Leningrad was under siege by the Nazis.”   Germany invaded Leningrad in 1941, beginning an 872-day-long siege. The city was completely isolated from food and other resources, resulting in the death of more than one million Soviet citizens.   It is said these dire, horrific conditions inspired Shostakovich to write a symphony that would later become a symbol of resistance for the Allied forces.   “It was a really potent artistic weapon unlike anything else that I know,” Smith said. “It wasn’t just an artistic reflection of something that went by; it played an active role in WWII in the morale of audiences and troops.”   Shostakovich’s Symphony N° 7 premiered in March 1942 in the Russian city of Kuybyshev and was broadcasted across the entire Soviet Union. In June 1942, the piece was performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra, making its way across the pond to New York City just a month later.   All the while Shostakovich and his popularity surged. He found himself featured on TIME Magazine, an acknowledgement of the historic value of what he had created.   A Multilayered Symphony   Symphony N° 7 consists of four movements, each capturing a distinct sentiment. The first details an invasion, beginning rather cheerfully but then transitioning into a march-like tempo.   “People talk about the invasion theme in the first movement. That march uses this melody from Franz Lehár’s The Merry Widow, which is said to have been Hitler’s favorite opera,” Baxter said.   The second movement is the symphony’s shortest, often described as playful and quiet. The third movement is much more frantic in comparison, quickly growing in intensity and ferocity.   Finally, the last movement hints at victory, though leaves the listener wondering if the cycle of conflict will simply resume.   “Shostakovich’s Symphony N° 7 is epic. It’s one of the biggest symphonies you can perform,” Baxter said. “This is a piece I find really overwhelming. It’s big, loud, and impressive. It’s the full force of what the orchestra can do.”   The Toll of War and Conflict   For as long as human beings have existed, so has war. A disaster at its core, warfare leaves little behind other than loss and devastation.   Yet the human spirit persists. Despite the loss and devastation, somehow there is hope.

EVENT DETAILS

The QCSO is performing Masterworks II: Conflict on Saturday, November 2, at 8PM at the Adler Theatre in Davenport, Iowa, and Sunday November 3, at 2PM at Centennial Hall, Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois. Tickets can be purchased online at QCSO.org, by phone at 563.322.7276, and in person at the QCSO Box Office located at 327 Brady Street in Davenport. Tickets will sold at the venue beginning 90 minutes before the performance  

ENRICH YOUR EXPERIENCE

  FILM SCREENING WITH MARK RUSSELL SMITH Join the QCSO and Maestro Mark Russell Smith for a screening of the 2016 Documentary Leningrad & the Orchestra that Defied Hitler, which tells the story of the remarkable performance of Shostakovich’s 7th Symphony, featured on Masterworks II: Conflict, at the Philharmonic Hall in Leningrad in 1942 in the midst of the siege of the city. Before the film, the Maestro will present on this historic Symphony.   INSIDE THE MUSIC Join QCSO Music Director Mark Russell Smith in an exploration of the Masterworks programs on the Thursday evening preceding each Masterworks concert. Doors open at 4:45PM. Free Admission. Cash Bar. Hosted at the Adler Theatre.   CONCERT CONVERSATIONS One hour prior to each Masterworks performance, concert goers are invited to attend informal pre-concert conversations to hear about the works being presented. Hosted by Kai Swanson. Sponsored by Chris Connoly, Wells Fargo Advisors.   AFTERGLOW Mingle with Maestro Mark Russell Smith, guest artists, and members of the QCSO immediately following the Saturday Masterworks performances. Free Admission. Cash Bar. Hosted at the Hotel Blackhawk.

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