Monday, July 31, 2006

Ravinia Festival on MySpace


Created in March of 2006, Ravinia's MySpace profile has gathered thousands of friends from across the globe. Ravinia's Myspace webpage has been linked to many MySpace pages of artists that have been featured at the festival, including: Renee Fleming, Joshua Bell, Buddy Guy, Patti LuPone, Emerson String Quartet, Cheap Trick, Deborah Voigt, and Elvis Costello.

The MySpace service has provided Ravinia with access to millions of Rock & Roll bands, chamber music ensembles, and individual performing artists. Many users (there are currently 97 million) have discovered Ravinia through MySpace and utilized the opportunity to send promotional materials to the festival for review.

Special promotions, offered exclusively to MySpace members, have provided the opportunity to bring listeners to Ravinia for the first time to see performances by Lalah Hathaway, Blondie, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The MySpace webpage provides users with easy access to Ravinia's performance calendar and blog. MySpace users also have the ability to leave messages and comments regarding the festival and its performances.

The Ravinia MySpace page can be found at the following address:

www.myspace.com/raviniafestival

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

From the archives...

1936 program from George Gershwin's only Ravinia performance; autographed by George Gershwin and conductor, Isaac Van Grove.


Photograph of Igor Stravinsky and former Music Director, Seiji Ozawa at Ravinia in 1965; autographed by Igor Stravinsky.


1949 performance program from the "Million dollar trio's" only Ravinia performance; autographed by Artur Rubinstein, Jascha Heifetz, and Gregor Piatigorsky.


Photograph from Janis Joplin's only Ravinia performance, to an audience of more than 18,000, in 1970.


Invitation to Ravinia Park's opening day on Monday, August 15, 1904.


Photograph of Aaron Copland rehearsing for his final Ravinia performance, in 1968


-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Ravinia Gala 2006: "Who could ask for anything more?"



The Women's board of Ravinia hosted the festival's annual Gala Benefit Evening on Saturday, July 15, 2006, which celebrated the 70th anniversary of Gershwin's only Ravinia performance.



The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Audra McDonald, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Andrew Litton, and Hershey Felder headlined the evening, and Gershwin's Cuban Overture, Rhapsody in Blue, and Porgy and Bess were featured.



There were 1,100 guests in attendance at the sold-out Gala, and the benefit evening raised approximately $750,000.



Audrey Rubinstein (Women's Board chairman), Gail Hodges (Gala co-chairman), Welz Kauffman (President and CEO of Ravinia Festival) , Becky Murray (Gala chairman)

-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Thursday, July 20, 2006

5 things found on the lawn...



My favorite polka-dot flip-flops, a citronella candle, and a sign professing my undying love for Steve Miller are just a few of the things I accidentally left behind on the lawn last time I came to a concert at Ravinia with my friends. My list might sound odd to you, but it seems much stranger things have been left by others.

Of course, the morning after a concert the park staff always finds the usual keys, cell phones, sunglasses, and blankets, but sometimes they come across something a little more unusual.

This season alone the staff has found a whole salmon, a baby stroller, a pair of socks, women's undergarments, and an engagement ring. As Facilities Manager Jim Schmitz said, "It has been a fantastic journey in the land of garbage collection." And if anyone out there misplaced a salmon, it's being held in the lost and found.

-Shannon Rego, Communications Intern

Sunday, July 16, 2006

Ravinia Festival Family Space

The Community Outreach & Education department at Ravinia Festival hosts a family space for children and adults to experience the music first hand. Watch as kids get to try out the instruments at an instrument petting zoo, take part in arts & crafts and listen to a story by the Kohl McCormick Storybus.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

International Stars at Ravinia

This week of performances at Ravinia opened with Ladysmith Black Mambazo, an acappella chorus from South Africa, who gained worldwide prominence after being featured on Paul Simon's 1986 album, Graceland. The audience was charmed by the traditional Zulu musical styles presented by the charismatic ensemble, and their encore presentation featured a joint performance with the opening act, Sweet Honey in the Rock.

Taiwanese-born violinist Cho-Liang ("Jimmy") Lin performed a diverse program of music for violin and piano on Tuesday evening with the French pianist Andre-Michel Schub. The music of Mozart and William Walton was featured, as well as the Chicago premiere of Bright Sheng's Three Fantasies. Sheng's composition was inspired by Tibetan and Kazakhstani folk songs and music that he heard in a dream.

The Israeli duo of conductor Yoel Levi and violinist Itzhak Perlman took the pavilion stage on Wednesday evening to perform for a sold out Ravinia audience. Mozart's Fifth Violin Concerto was passionate and full of energy, there wasn't an inch of free space surrounding the pavilion; hundreds left their picnics on the lawn to catch a glimpse of the classical music star. Mr. Perlman returns to Ravinia this evening to conduct the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in an all-Beethoven program featuring the Polish-born pianist Emanuel Ax.

-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

James Conlon: Celebrity

Chicago entertainment jounalist, Terry Armour, featured Music Director, James Conlon, in his Chicago Tribune Sunday entertainment feature (7.9.2006). Describing Conlon's new haircut, Armour says "You may notice that James Conlon's once long locks are much shorter." He explains the surprise hairstyle: "Filmmaker Kenneth Branagh asked Conlon to cut his hair for his walk-on part as a soldier in Branagh's adaptation of Mozart's The Magic Flute." Conlon was recently on location in England, where he conducted the movie's score.

On Wednesday, June 28, Maestro Conlon participated in an online chat hosted by Chicago Classical Music, the online classical music forum hosted by the Arts and Business Council of Chicago. He discussed in detail his "Breaking the Silence" series, a multiyear series of concerts that feature music suppressed by the Third Reich, and Shostakovich's Symphonies. Visit www.chicagoclassicalmusic.org to view a transcript of the chat.

-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Listen to Robert Greenberg Discuss Mahler

Listen to The Professor lecture on Mahler last year at Ravinia Festival.

Don't forget, Greenberg returns to Ravinia on July 22 & 23 to talk about Shostakovich. Be sure to catch these exciting and wonderful lectures!



Monday, July 10, 2006

Sibling Ivory: The 5 Browns




The 5 virtuoso siblings from Juilliard brought the exciting sound of 5 pianos to the Martin Theatre stage on Thursday night.

The talented group performed pieces from the classical repertoire, including works by: Gershwin, Ravel, Copland, Rachmaninoff, and Stravinsky. Desirae, Deondra, Melody, Gregory, and Ryan introduced themselves individually to the audience prior to performing their solo pieces and discussed the work they were about to perform using historical and personal anecdotes.

The Browns have 10 Steinway grand pianos in their home in Utah (5 in one room for rehearsal, and 5 others in idividual rooms), and 5 dedicated Steinway grand pianos that travel with them across the globe for performances. Their 5 dedicated pianos were in Philadelphia for an upcoming performance; thankfully, the local Steinway dealer graciously provided three extra grand pianos to make the performance possible.

Hundreds of anxious fans patiently waited for their chance to meet the Browns and get their autographs after the performance. Their second recording, "No Boundaries," has been #1 on the classical music charts for 13 weeks, and counting.

-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Friday, July 07, 2006

Robert Greenberg Back by Popular Demand


It's not your typical lecture. Get ready to laugh and be entertained on July 22 and 23 when renowned musicologist and lecturer Robert Greenberg will return to Ravinia to present a series of seminars on the music of Shostakovich and Mozart.

Dr. Greenberg returns by popular demand after delivering a series of acclaimed talks on Mahler last season and will present three different lectures over the course of the two days:

Saturday, July 22 from 3 to 5pm: "Ears Will Hear!: the Life and Symphonies of Dmitri Shostakovich"

Saturday, July 22 from 6 to 7:15pm:"Protest and Revelation: Shostakovich's Symphony No. 13, 'Babi Yar'"

Sunday, July 23 from 3 to 4:30pm: "Formal Behavior: Musical Structure in the Classical Era"

All of the talks will take place in the Martin Theatre and are FREE to any concert ticket holder (lawn pass or pavilion ticket).

Robert Greenberg combines humor and scholarship to produce captivating and theatrical talks that mesmerize audiences. He has performed, taught, and lectured extensively across North America and Europe. He is music historian-in-residence with San Francisco Performances, the city's premier presenter of chamber music, instrumental and vocal recitals, jazz, and contemporary dance. His music history lectures recorded by the Teaching Company are best sellers and have achieved international acclaim.

Ravinia is honored to bring Dr. Greenberg back during this Shostakovich and Mozart anniversary year.

Robert Goldberg
Associate Director of Community Outreach and Education, Programs

Thursday, July 06, 2006

4th of July

Highland Park's annual Fourth of July parade was a blast. With over 40 floats and hundreds of participants, a good time was had by all. Weeks of planning and preparation paid off with Ravinia winning a first place trophy in the float competition for the sixth consecutive year.



More than 5,000 plastic recorders were distributed to the children (and adults) of Highland Park. The sound of plastic recorders could be heard from the end of the parade route!



Our float displayed the theme of the parade, Community Commitment: Near and Far, by featuring our One Score, One Chicago program, which was designed to unite the citizens of our city in appreciation of a single provocative work of art. A child size piano was shadowed on the float by a full size grand piano, the use of pianos was motivated by this year's featured work for "One Score, One Chicago," Robert Schumann's Scenes from Childhood.



-Justin Brown, Communications Associate

Monday, July 03, 2006

Chicago Symphony Orchestra at Ravinia

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra began their 70th Ravinia Festival summer residency last week with a spectacular performance of Mahler's Third Symphony with mezzo-soprano Birgitta Svenden, who, the Chicago Tribune described as bringing "a stern, stoic dignity to Mahler's setting of Nietzsche's 'Midnight Song.'"

As a preview to the opening night performance, James Conlon participated in a live online chat featured on Chicago Classical Music's website. The chat featured an in-depth discussion of Conlon's inspired "Breaking the Silence" concert series. Conlon described the composers featured in this series as artists "whose life experiences were very different, but the fate of their music is all the same. For the most part, their music was prohibited after 1934."

Conlon was also asked to discuss Shostakovich's defiance of Stalin. In reference to his Ninth Symphony, Conlon had the following response: "From the first bars of the symphony, it was clear that Shostakovich walked away from the grandiose, and with his ever wry wit and irony 'disappoints' all of Stalin's expectations of a triumphant symphony that is full of praise. It is not so much about what Shostakovich did in this symphony as what he did not."

Chicago Symphony Orchestra performances at Ravinia continue this week with Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition on Friday night and Verdi's Requiem on Saturday night.

-Justin Brown, Communications Associate