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TICO Pops Concert

By
David Amos  
San Diego Jewish Times,  July 14, 2006

There is something about the hot summers that lends itself to music of a lighter fare. This is not only a local condition, but a worldwide tradition. Theater plays are more likely to be comedies, and we frequently see Broadway shows and musicals. The heavy stuff is usually relegated to the winter season. Could it be because the friendly outdoors competes with our leisure times, and performing organizations have to present more popular programming in order to compete with summer outdoor leisure activities, and attract the more casual listener?

 It could be. And in orchestral music this is even more evident. Just check out the options: Starlight, San Diego Symphony Summer Pops, and so on.

And so it is with the Tifereth Israel Community Orchestra. Now in its 33rd year of existence, TICO also presents a summer pops concert, which, to no one’s surprise is well attended and enjoyed.

For this summer, TICO will present two pops concerts. The first, on Sunday, July 16, is an outdoor program at the Allied Gardens Recreation Ground, on Greenbrier Ave., off Waring Road. The music starts at 7 p.m., and is free. The second program will be at Tifereth Israel Synagogue’s Cohen Social Hall, the orchestra’s home base, on Sunday, July 30, at 3 p.m. For the latter, there is an admission charge, and it is best to call the synagogue’s office at 619-697 6001 for reservations, group prices, directions, or any other information about either concert.

There is a great variety of music for both programs. Guest soloists include three outstanding musicians from the Orquesta de Baja California, a professional ensemble that has performed in New York’s Lincoln Center, and in many parts of Mexico. The OBC is planning a tour of Europe in the summer of 2007, with concerts in Paris, London, culminating with two programs in Scotland’s prestigious Edinburgh Festival.

 For the upcoming TICO concerts, OBC guests will include its concertmaster, Ondrej Lewit, Principal Second Violin Jorge Soto, and clarinetist Alexandre Gourevitch. The violinists will play solos and duets by Dvorak and Sarasate, and Gourevitch will perform a virtuoso Klezmer clarinet work by the Russian composer Vyacheslav Grokhovsky.

Gourevitch has been a frequent performer in San Diego, including recent appearances at the San Diego Jewish Arts Festival. For the TICO programs, he will play the Suite on Jewish Themes by Grokhovsky. He has just arrived from a Klezmer concert in Moscow, which has attracted some of the finest interpreters of this genre from all over the world. (Would you believe, a Klezmer concert in the Kremlin?)

Gourevitch has been promoting Jewish music his entire life. His versatility allows him to play classical music, with all the disciplines that it implies, and instantly switch to Klezmer and Jewish folk music, with its expressive flexibility and freedom of improvisation. His creative brand of playing has emerged into a style, where the sound of the clarinet and the human voice practically become one single musical entity.

These two concerts will also feature other interesting attractions: Three Sousa marches, highlights from The Sound of Music, two patriotic medleys, themes from the various Star Trek television series and films, and a special arrangement of famous tunes by Irving Berlin, specially prepared for TICO by Shelly Cohen. Mr. Cohen, a friend and supporter of TICO, was for many years the assistant director of NBC’s Tonight Show, and arranged much of the music we heard played by Doc Severinsen and the Tonight Show Band.

TICO’s own harpist, the multi-talented Sylvia Lorraine Hartman, will sing the popular Habanera, from Georges Bizet’s opera Carmen. Many of you have heard Sylvia’s unusual versatility and talent, when, as a featured soloist, she performed music for piano and orchestra by De Falla, sang arias by Handel and Menotti, played the timpani, conducted the orchestra, and covered a variety of percussion instruments, all at an amazing level of musicianship. She is also an organist and a choir director.

* * *

 Here is an insightful remark by Henri Frederic Amiel:

 “Mozart has the classic purity of light and the blue ocean, and Beethoven, the romantic grandeur which belongs to the storms of air and sea. And while the soul of Mozart seems to dwell on the ethereal peaks of Olympus, that of Beethoven climbs shuddering the storm beaten sides of a Sinai. Blessed be they both! Each represents a moment of the ideal life, each does us good. Our love is due to both.”