Midsummer’s Music Festival’s Door County Memories – Reflections by Zachary Preucil

This may be the first year that I will be performing with the Midsummer’s Music Festival, but it is also my twenty-first June spent in the beautiful Door Peninsula.

 

I was only a seven-and-a-half-month-old baby during the premier season of MMF in 1991, and although I obviously do not remember a thing, it marked the beginning of an annual tradition for me as I grew up with my parents performing in the festival each year: driving up north from Chicago right after school let out (or, in some lucky years, a few days before), getting to be cared for by my favorite babysitter (often one of my mother’s violin students), and experiencing all of my favorite Door County traditions, from golfing at the Red Putter in Ephraim to eating at the “Goats on the Roof” restaurant in Sister Bay. Probably my fondest memories of those early years are of the annual party for the musicians thrown by Jim and Jean Berkenstock at their charming Gills Rock home, which normally consisted of an abundance of fantastic cooking, animated conversation, and wheelbarrow rides for the children given by none other than Jim himself. After the evening’s activities had died down, and the musicians were having one last piece of cherry pie, I would often take out my miniature-sized cello and play whatever pieces I had been working on lately. My renditions were always greeted with enthusiastic applause, and although I knew little of what the professional music world was really like, the warmth and encouragement I received from my parents and their colleagues inspired me enormously. I was just a beginner, but I was making music just like they were, and to my six-year-old mind that seemed pretty cool.

When I was eight, I composed a short trio for a fine arts competition sponsored by the Parent Teachers Association, and it advanced to the Illinois State Level where it received honorable mention. When my mother told Jim about it, he suggested that a performance of my piece be given during a children’s concert at the Miller Arts Center in Sturgeon Bay. The performance was a great success and was even broadcast on a local television station. As every year went by, I wrote a new piece for the same competition, and every summer between 1999 and 2004, these pieces were subsequently performed by the Midsummer’s Music ensemble, first as part of the outreach concerts for children or retirees, and then as un-programmed “preludes” at one of the concert series. The continued support of my compositional efforts from the audience and the musicians was indeed quite meaningful to me. Here I was, just a kid dabbling in a complex art, and they clapped with the same enthusiasm they had for Beethoven or Brahms. As a gesture of gratitude for their support, the first year I was in high school (and therefore no longer eligible for the fine arts competition I had participated in previously), I wrote “Up the Door Peninsula,” a quintet which depicted several locations throughout Door County and was once again performed during the MMF season.

During these years, the musical experiences I had in Door County enriched my personal growth as a musician. Having my compositions performed as preludes at concerts meant I would have to bite the bullet and listen to the rest of the program, something which isn’t always easy for a ten-year-old. Unsurprisingly, some of those first years found me drifting off into daydreams, drawing detailed pictures on the program, or reading a book in whatever room was serving as the backstage that evening. But as I grew older, I began to become attracted to the tones emanating from the stage which I had recently been standing on myself. I noticed the musicians interacting with each other, marveled at their focus and intensity, and felt the pull of the music drawing me closer into the mass of sonority which they were producing. I began to discover that a concert is not merely entertainment, but an intellectual and emotional experience. By the time I entered high school, and began to become serious with my cello studies, I had already learned much about the awe of a live performance – to let the sounds of music pour out of one’s very being, channeled through an instrument and sent spiraling out into that eternal silence of a concert hall. During my high school years, I encountered all of the usual stressors an aspiring musician might face – all-state auditions, the ugliness of musical politics, making the decision to pursue music as a career, and the resulting uncomfortable doubts if one has really made the right choice. But every June as I returned to Door County, I was reminded once more of where my passion for the art began – here, in the rolling meadows, bubbling brooks, and majestic harbors that gleam red-orange in the dusk.

Now, as I look back on two decades of Junes spent in the peninsula, I feel forever indebted to the musical and personal experiences I have had here. Throughout the ups and downs of attending summer music programs, taking auditions, and ultimately attending the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, I was always sustained by the knowledge that there is a place where music is brought to life in its most innate form, a place where musicians are comrades as opposed to competitors, and a place where you can sit in the back of a rustic gallery and listen to the strains of genius as the sun sinks into the harbor and the wind whispers in the softly swaying trees. That place is Door County.

 

Note from Kathleen Pearson, Executive Director: Zachary will be performing with Midsummer’s Music on Program D, Summer Evening Magic. This program features the music of Kennan, Hofmann, Grieg, and Svendsen. The performances will be on Tuesday, June 28 at the Woodwalk Gallery in Egg Harbor; Thursday, June 30 at the historic Fish Creek Town Hall; and Tuesday, July 5 on Rock Island (the Rock Island event is sold out). Tickets are available at 920-854-7088 or via our website at www.midsummerSmusic.com. We hope you can join us and see Zachary’s professional debut with Midsummer’s Music Festival!

Rustic Door County Barns Featured During Midsummer’s Music Chamber Music Festival!

 

Lachner Nonet at Corner of the Past

Midsummer’s Music wraps up their second program – Haunting Recollections – tonight at the Woodwalk Gallery in Egg Harbor.

 

As I write this, Jim Berkenstock is addressing the audience. This beautiful gallery, in a converted barn, offers excellent acoustics. Tonight we have the gentle sound of falling rain accompanying our musicians. This is a perfect way to end this program. In fact, this program was performed in three barns and has been renamed to “Barnegie Hall.”

Last night we performed at Sister Bay Historical Society’s Corner of the Past, again in a barn. The entire property is rich with historic outbuildings and the barn was no exception. It was fun to see our musicians enter the barn for the first time. Not sure what to expect, they were instantly smiling at the unique antiques and remarked how wonderful the acoustics were. It was a great evening and we look forward to performing there again.

Schulhoff Concertino at Corner of the Past

Friday night’s concert was at the Hardy Gallery in Ephraim. While we can’t officially call it a barn, it’s a restored warehouse and has the look and feel of a barn. The Hardy has sentimental meaning to us since that is the very first venue we ever performed in. The weather was perfect and we were able to watch the sunset during intermission.

The music for this program was outstanding. Flutist Jean Berkenstock was absolute perfection. During the Schulhoff Concertino she alternated between flute and piccolo without missing a beat. Beautiful! And bassist Jason Heath went all out during this piece – a rare opportunity for the bass to be featured. Violist Sally Chisholm gave another exceptional performance. It’s so nice to have them all back with Midsummer’s.

Mozart’s Quintet in A Major featured clarinetist Todd Cope whose animated style adds so much to the performance. Our string quartet – violinists David Perry and Stephanie Preucil, cellist Walter Preucil, and violist Sally Chisholm – was fantastic. Mozart would have been so proud to hear his music

Clarinetist Todd Cope. Photo by Bill Jacobs.

played so beautifully. In fact, I’m listening to our talented ensemble perform this piece at this very moment!

The finale was Franz Lachner’s Nonet in F Major. All I can say is, “Wow!” It’s a rare opportunity to have so many musicians on stage at one time – a sort of mini-orchestra. This piece featured flutist Jean Berkenstock, oboist Tim Sawyier, clarinetist Todd Cope, bassoonist Jim Berkenstock, hornist John Fairfield, violinist David Perry, violist Sally Chisholm, bassist Jason Heath, and cellist Walter Preucil. Phenomenal is the only word I can use to describe this performance.  And, I’m happy that I’ll be hearing/seeing it again in just a few minutes.

Our next program – French Affections – starts on Thursday, June 23 at Shepherd of the Bay in Ellison Bay and features the music of Turina, Gieseking, and Saint-Saens. For more information, call 920-854-7088 or visit www.midsummerSmusic.com.

 

 

 

Enthusiasm Rises for Door County’s Midsummer’s Music Festival’s Musicians!

Artistic Director Jim Berkenstock. Photo by Bill Jacobs

June 9th was the first full day of rehearsal for our Midsummer’s Music band of musicians here in Door County.

 

We did some rehearsing earlier in the week in the Chicago area, but the first phalanx of our group is here and hard at work – six hours today – more tomorrow. One of the things that I enjoy most about what I do in putting together the musical part of our season is the enthusiasm each player brings to our enterprise.

Part of it stems from the opportunity to play chamber music. For instrumental musicians, chamber music is about the most enjoyable and rewarding kind of music to play. Each player has a unique part, and each a say in shaping the way the music is played. With no conductor imposing an interpretation, it is up to the musicians to develop a consensus. Working in a collegial way among great musicians is quite stimulating.

It also has to do with being a part of something important in Door County. Making exquisite music amongst so much beauty is more than doubly rewarding. The air, the water, the beautiful flowers and scenery all underscore the pleasure of playing in so many fantastic homes, churches, and galleries. However, probably the best part of it all- and I’ve heard this said by so many of my colleagues- is the response we all experience from our audiences. Door County audiences really enjoy good music well presented and they know how to show it. In part, it might be because we have such great receptions after our concerts where audience members and musicians get a chance to converse. It breeds a kind of friendly informality and sense of camaraderie that is infectious.

At the core of all this is the program itself – those three or four pieces on a given night that musicians have labored over, staff and volunteers have prepared for, and audience members have committed time and money for. It’s hard, as a musician, to put yourself before an audience with the idea that you are going to play something that others will find

Violinist David Perry. Photo by Bill Jacobs.

pleasing while hoping they will want to return to hear more in the future. It is also a bit concerning to try to figure out which works should comprise such a program, given all the expectations implied. And with the program planning done so far in advance, it leaves a very long time for your humble artistic director to dangle in the land of apprehension.

I’m always glad to hear a kind word or two of approval from an audience member after a concert. It’s even quite reassuring when someone says, “I really liked these two numbers but I’m not so sure about the third.” I’ll take sixty-six percent – it’s way better than I did in baseball. But all that comes after the rehearsals and at least one performance. The only bit of relief I get from that interminable purgatory between first putting a program on paper and hearing the audience’s applause is the occasional comment from a colleague who is studying his or her part. I had such an incident just about a week ago. I was talking to our wonderful first violinist David Perry about some rehearsal issues when he said, “Jim, you know that Rabl piece we’re doing? It’s a real sleeper!” Now I hasten to say, I don’t think he meant it would cause snoring. It was actually David’s droll kind of compliment. I don’t think David had ever heard of the composer, Walter Rabl, before, and he was trying to say I had found something that was really worth bringing out of the shadows. It seemed he was enjoying working on it and listening to a recording of it. He has no idea how

Clarinetist Todd Cope. Photo by Bill Jacobs.

reassuring his words sounded.

I had a similar experience when I read an email from our clarinetist, Todd Cope. He said how much he was looking forward to doing the Mozart Clarinet Quintet. Now, a few more people have heard of Mozart than Rabl, but Todd’s excitement told me his performance was really going to be special. We aren’t performing the Rabl for a couple of weeks, but you can hear why Todd is excited this weekend when he presents his favorite Mozart along with works by Erwin Schulhoff (a composer who died in a Nazi concentration camp) and Franz Lachner (a close friend of Schubert).

We help kick off Fyr-Bal weekend on Friday evening at the Hardy Gallery in Ephraim. Saturday is our first-ever performance at the Sister Bay Historical Society, and Sunday we are at Woodwalk Gallery south of Egg Harbor. This is lively, engrossing music worth everybody’s commitment. Find out why Todd, David, and the rest of us are raring to go.

Please call 920.854.7088 or visit www.midsummerSmusic.com for information or reservations.

 

Reprinted with permission from the Door County Advocate – Door County Now.

Midsummer’s Music Classical Music Concert at Björklunden, Baileys Harbor, Door County!

Midsummer’s Music presents the final concert tonight, June 14, in the ‘Youthful Exuberance’ program at Björklunden in Baileys Harbor.

 

This is one of our favorite places to perform,” explains Executive Director, Kathleen Pearson. “It’s a beautiful spot and the ambiance reflects the history and tradition of this retreat. It has clearly become one of the favorite venues for our audience members.”

Björklunden Vid Sjön, a 425-acre estate on Lake Michigan in Door County, Wisconsin, serves as Lawrence University’s northern campus, hosting retreats and seminars for Lawrence students throughout the academic year and adult continuing-education seminars during the summer. The Björklunden lodge hosts many musical events that are open to the public and the facilities, including lodging, are available for use by private, public, and corporate groups for conferences, meetings, and special events. The historic Boynton Chapel is available for small weddings, baptisms, and family services, and tours are offered during the summer season.

The performance features the following program:

Romanesque, (1910) for Flute, Viola, and Piano by Reynaldo Hahn, (1875-1947)

Prélude, Récitatif, et Variations, Opus 3 for Flute, Viola, and Piano by Maurice Duruflé, (1902-1986)

Jugend (Youth), Opus 139 for Flute, Clarinet, Horn, and Piano by Sigfrid Karg-Elert, (1877-1933)

Quartet in C Minor, Opus 15 for Violin, Viola, Cello, and Piano by Gabriel Fauré, (1845-1924)

 

The entire program will hold the audience captive, however, the Quartet in C Minor by Fauré will take your breath away,” says Ms. Pearson.

Björklunden is located at 7590 Boynton Lane in Baileys Harbor.

Advance reservations can be made by calling 920-854-7088 or at www.midsummerSmusic.com. Tickets will be available at the door for $25 per adult. Youth 17 and under are free.

Historic Ephraim Moravian Church Hosts Midsummer’s Music Classical Concert in Door County!

Ephraim Moravian Church. Photo by Paul Burton

Midsummer’s Music Festival returns to Door County’s historic Ephraim Moravian Church tonight, Sunday, June 12, as the second concert in their 2011 summer festival.

 

We love performing in Ephraim Moravian Church,” says Artistic Director, Jim Berkenstock. “Not only is it rich in history, but it has wonderful acoustics. Our musicians really enjoy playing here.

The Ephraim Moravian Church was founded by Reverend Andreas Iverson, an immigrant Moravian evangelist. Born in Norway, Iverson felt called to ministry as a young adult and he was trained and ordained as a Lutheran minister at the Norwegian Mission Society. It was here that he learned about the Moravian faith, to which he eventually gravitated and served as a minister for many years.

In February of 1853, he and a few others walked north over the ice from Green Bay to the wilderness area that later became Ephraim. After exploring the horseshoe-shaped bay and forested land, Iverson used a $500 loan to buy 425 acres of government land for his parishioners. His home was the first constructed in the village (it remains, in original condition, now operated as a museum by the Ephraim Historical Foundation). Church services and school classes were held in the Iverson home until the construction of the church began in 1857. Designed by Iverson and built by him and the congregation, work was halted several times by lack of funds. When completed and the doors opened on December 18, 1859, it became the first church on the Door County peninsula.

The church was originally located on the shore (paintings done by Iverson himself show it right next to the water), but it was moved to its present location on the hill in 1883. Ephraim Moravian Church remains the historical center of the village, and along with the Bethany Lutheran Church (founded in 1882), the twin white steeples form the distinctive and often photographed view of the Village of Ephraim.

Midsummer’s Music will present the music of Hahn, Durufle, Karg-Elert, and Faure in this wonderful church,located at 9970 Moravia Street in Ephraim. The concert begins at 7:30 PM. Tickets are just $25 per adult. Youth 17 and under are free.Parking is available on the street or in the lower and upper parking lots behind the church.

For more information, visit www.midsummerSmusic.com.

Midsummer’s Music Festival Chamber Concerts with the Preucil Family in Door County!

The Preucil Family. Front L-R: Zachary, James, Walter. Back L-R: Anthony and Stephanie

Cellist Walter Preucil has performed with Midsummer’s Music Festival since the very first concert 21 years ago. His wife, violinist Stephanie Preucil, joined the ensemble the following year. Now, 21 years later, two of their three boys will be performing with us this summer!

The following article was written by Gary Jones and published in the Peninsula Pulse last summer.

 

If it weren’t for the Eastman School of Music,” Walter Preucil said, “our family wouldn’t exist!

Careers have many times been built around a music school experience, but a family that grew out of one is less common. Such is the case with cellist Walter and violinist Stephanie Preucil, both who have been with the Midsummer’s Music Festival (MMF) since its inception and have been bringing their three musician sons Zachary, Anthony, and James with them each summer to Door County.

In the 1950s both Walter’s parents and mine attended the Eastman School of Music in New York,” Stephanie said. “They met and married, and 30 years later, Walter and I met at Eastman and married.

The director at Eastman acknowledged our upcoming wedding at graduation,” Walter added, “and commented that a strong force was getting even stronger!

Stephanie’s parents were Gladys and Alex Kanack, owners of the String House – an instrument dealership now run by Stephanie’s brothers. Her parents performed in several orchestras, as well as taught.

Walter’s and my parents knew each other at Eastman,” Stephanie said. “I might never have met Walter if my mom had not told me to introduce myself!

My father William was on the faculty at the University of Iowa,” Walter said, “and my mother Doris founded and directed the Preucil School of Music.

Violist William and violinist Doris, along with their children William, Jr., Anne, Jeanne, and of course, Walter, presented chamber music concerts around the country as the “Preucil Family Players.” The parents and brothers have all played with the Peninsula Music Festival (PMF), and the men have appeared with the PMF as soloists.

The musicians who perform in the Midsummer’s Music chamber ensemble “are like a family,” Walter said. “We look forward to meeting the challenges of the festival each year and being together.

Stephanie Preucil in 2008. Photo by Gene Purdue.

Door County is a perfect place for this kind of thing,” Stephanie said, “a lot of interest, the warmth of the people who are so welcoming to the performers, and we play better because of that.”

One of the challenges of the festival, Walter noted, is the fact that the ensemble performs the world’s greatest masterpieces at peak performance. “We only enjoy playing at the highest level,” he said, “or it’s not fun!

The changing venues during the concert season, including private homes as well as public places that sometimes serve as improvised concert halls, require the musicians to make adjustments depending upon the space and acoustics – “spontaneous changes in bowings and articulation every night,” Walter said. Occasionally he has to make a modification because the close quarters have put an audience member in the pathway of his bow!

And the lighting is unpredictable, often changing during the concert itself. “Sometimes the sun might be in my eyes,” Stephanie said, “and sometimes there’s a shadow on my page.”

Just as a family recognizes every member, a chamber ensemble is “a time for individual exposure in a collective way,” Stephanie said. “I’m the only one on my part.

Walter Preucil in 2009. Photo by Bill Jacobs.

Walter likes the individuality of the performance, too. “I get to shape an ending,” he said, recalling one piece in particular in this season’s repertoire, “independently, using my experience and education, not following a conductor’s demands. That was fun! I could do it differently every night.

The Preucils in the past have brought an additional family touch to the concerts. Their oldest son Zachary (now 19) is a composer and beginning at age eight, would create pieces that were performed as preludes at MMF concerts.

Because chamber music was historically performed in homes, the varied intimate concert spaces are traditionally appropriate, and audiences respond well to the immediacy of performances, a closeness that allows them not only to hear nuances of sound but also to see and almost literally touch the musicians.

The Preucils perform with symphony orchestras and chamber ensembles in addition to MMF. Stephanie presently is a member of the Champagne Players. Walter has been a member of the Lyric Opera of Chicago orchestra since 1988, playing on a cello made by Giovanni Fiorillo in 1781. Stephanie, Walter, and pianist William Koehler have appeared together as the Classic Arts Trio for 20 years.

Both of the Preucils teach as well as perform. Stephanie and Walter are on the faculty of the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. In 2006 Stephanie received the Illinois ASTA Most Outstanding Studio Teacher Award. She has taught violin privately since age 14 and currently instructs 45 – 50 students each week.

Stephanie likes working with students to reach their potential as musicians, and as she uses the Suzuki instructional method, “helping them become a good person through the study of music.”

Students who begin lessons as three-year-olds, Walter added, “have a mother and a father and a teacher, the three adults influencing them throughout their lives, and the teacher is the first adult influence outside the family.

It’s rewarding to see my three-year-olds one day play senior recitals,” Stephanie said. “After 15 years of instruction, I have given them wings to go off to college!

It seems that the Preucil’s children, too, will have wings in the music world. Zachary is going to be a junior at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, a cellist like his father, and this past summer he was a student at the Aspen Music Festival School.

Zachary and Anthony Preucil watch performance in 2009.

Zachary practices four to six hours a day, without being nagged, his mother said, and the effort has paid off, as he has played principal cello in honors orchestras and successfully auditioned for exclusive music programs, such as the Bowdoin International Music Camp and the Quartet Program.

He always has an audition coming up!” his father said.

Anthony, 13, is a violinist like his mother. And following his older brother, he seems destined for success as he plays first violin in youth orchestras (often the youngest among the musicians) and has served as concertmaster.

Eight-year-old James, who has played violin for four years, is advancing to the second level youth string orchestra and now is working on beginning concertos.

However this musical family does have a life beyond the pursuit of making music. Stephanie competes in triathlons; Walt runs marathons, skis the Birkebeiner, and paddles in canoe races. And, as Stephanie laughed, they enjoy madcap sporting activities, once canoeing in concert attire from Nicolet Beach in Peninsula State Park to the Hardy Gallery in Ephraim for a concert performance. Another time they biked from MMF violinist David Perry’s house in Stoughton (near Madison) to their home in Schaumburg, Illinois – 115 miles in one day!

For more information about the Midsummer’s Music Festival concert series visit www.midsummerSmusic.com or call 920.854.7088.

Reprinted with permission from the Peninsula Pulse.

 

Midsummer’s Music Violist Places Second in Primrose International Viola Competition!

 

Elias Goldstein

The Primrose International Viola Competition announced that Elias Goldstein, who will be performing in the Midsummer’s Music Festival in Door County, Wisconsin this season, is the runner-up in the intensive competition held in Albuquerque, New Mexico this past weekend.

 

We couldn’t be more thrilled for Elias, or for his teacher, Sally Chisholm, who is also a member of Midsummer’s Music. This is a tremendous honor for both of them and something all of us celebrate,” said Jim Berkenstock, Artistic Director of Midsummer’s Music.

Founded in 1979, the Primrose International Viola Competition has established itself as one of the premiere instrumental competitions in the world. Over the last three decades The Primrose Competition has established an impeccable track record for identifying the talent of tomorrow and is respected for its integrity. Past-winners are currently engaged in the highest levels of professional artistic careers.

This year, the Primrose competition presented 29 quarter-finalists from 13 countries. The field was then narrowed to eight semi-finalists and ultimately three finalists. The rounds and scoring were open to the public and broadcast live over the internet to 12,000 visitors from 62 countries on six continents.

Sally Chisholm

Mr. Goldstein, who won $3,000 and a silver-mounted Arcos Brasil bow, is a Collins Fellow at University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he just completed his doctoral degree under the guidance of his professor, Sally Chisholm. “I remember the first lesson he had with me and how impressed I was with his playing,” said Ms. Chisholm when reached shortly after the competition results were announced. “I told him at that time I thought he was capable of winning the Primrose Competition some day. He is such a huge talent and a real gentleman. I greatly admire him and the way he conducts himself, both as a musician and as a person,” she continued. Another student of Ms. Chisholm, Vicki Powell was the third prize winner in the Primrose this year. Mr. Goldstein also was accorded the Director’s Award in the competition.

Dr. Goldstein is joining the string faculty this coming fall as professor of viola at Ball State University. He has appeared as a soloist with the DePaul Symphony Orchestra, where he won the annual concerto competition twice, and has performed as guest concertmaster with the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. He is the first prize winner of the Leonard Sorkin Memorial Violin Competition and is the former Wisconsin State Fiddle Champion. He was a winner of the Neale-Silva Young Artist Competition, and has since made solo recital appearances on Wisconsin Public Radio. He has played with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra in Norway and with members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He is a founding member and principal violist of the Advent Chamber Orchestra. He has also been a regular member of the Grant Park Symphony Orchestra in Chicago.

Mr. Goldstein will be performing with Midsummer’s Music Festival in Door County, Wisconsin, in two different programs. The first program, “Summer Evening Magic,” features concerts on June 28 at the Woodwalk Gallery, June 30 at the Fish Creek Town Hall, and July 5 on Rock Island. The second program, “Sonic Extravagance,” will be presented on July 14 at the Janning Residence in Sturgeon Bay, July 15 at Maronek’s Silver Poplar Studios in Ellison Bay, July 16 at the Dresselhuys “The Tree House” in Fish Creek, and July 17 at the Woodwalk Gallery in Egg Harbor.

Tickets are available at 920-854-7088 or online at MidsummersMusic.com. Reservations for some concerts are required.

Midsummer’s Music Festival Prepares for Opening Night in Door County!

Jim Berkenstock, Photo by Bill Jacobs

On Friday evening, June 10, we will be opening our twenty-first Midsummer’s Music season with a gala champagne toast and some wonderful music at Birch Creek.

That’s what the calendar and my schedule says. That’s also what the pile of music on my music stand in my practice room says. But as I write this, my first column of the season, it is May 26, just two weeks to D-day, and waves of pelting rain are blowing against the window, the trees are being buffeted to and fro, and it is only 46 degrees – and I am not even in Door County yet; I’m still in the Chicago area. I can only imagine what Door County must look like. I picture salt trucks coating the Sister Bay hill and On Deck Clothing removing shorts and T-shirts in favor of sweaters and parkas.

My brain says the season is imminent – practice, pack, and pray. My body says hibernate – eat rich foods and go to sleep. Fortunately, the weather forecast says it is going to be in the low 90s here on Memorial Day. That means it will be at least 50 degrees by that time in Door County, right?   As the old expression goes, “whether it’s cold, or whether it’s hot, weather is weather, whether or not,” and we are coming to Door County, weather or not!  In fact, we are so pumped up about this season and our opening night at Birch Creek, I know we are going be able to help warm things up and bring lots of sunshine.

Many years ago (over 20), I met with a fellow named Robert Hastings. Bob was one of the original owners of the Churchill Inn and later became the Executive Director of the Door County Chamber of Commerce. In addition to his interest in Door County business and tourism, Bob was a music lover. We talked about the concept of a chamber music festival in Door County starting in June. From that initial discussion, Midsummer’s Music was born. Little did I realize at the time how intrepid one would have to be to undertake such an enterprise. Of all the challenges I could envision, dealing with the elements was not among them.

All this comes to mind because we have termed our festival season this year “A Musical Journey.”  Every season is a journey for us because we crisscross the length and breadth of the county, playing in so many different venues. This season will take us from Green Bay all the way to Rock Island. However, the title also occurred to us because of the origins of the music we will be performing. Composers from Norway to Russia and Armenia to Spain will share their colorful palettes. Tchaikovsky sends us an Italian postcard, “Souvenir of Florence” for string sextet, in Russian handwriting.

I think of the early explorers of Door County. What must Marquette and Jolivet and LaSalle have had to deal with, and here we are travelling some of the same paths they did, even crossing Death’s Door Strait to a distant island. Although they must have endured some severe hardships, they also must have learned how enticing Door County can be when the sun finally comes out, the flowers bloom, and Midsummer abounds in all its glory.

We hope you will join us for the first phase of our Journey this year at Birch Creek on June 10th (for our Gala Opening), Sunday, June 12th at the Ephraim Moravian Church, or Tuesday, June 14th at Bjorklunden. We start and end this excursion each evening in France, interrupted by a visit to Germany and a side trip to Venezuela. For more information or to reserve tickets, please call 920.854.7088 or visit www.midsummerSmusic.com.

Reprinted with permission from the Door County Advocate – Door County Now.

 

Midsummer’s Music Sells Out Door County’s Rock Island Concert!

Cheers!

Last week there were just a handful of tickets left for the Midsummer’s Music cruise/dinner/concert to Door County’s Rock Island. Those tickets are now in the hands of some happy people!

As of this morning, Wednesday, June 1, the Rock Island event is sold out. A waiting list will be kept, however, there is another special event featuring the same program on Thursday, June 30. “For those who were unable to reserve tickets to Rock Island,” says Executive Director, Kathleen Pearson, “there are openings for the reception and dinner at the Whistling Swan, along with the concert in the historic Fish Creek Town Hall.”

While this event is different from Rock Island, of course, it offers another unique Door County experience. The evening starts off at the Whistling Swan Restaurant for wine and hors d’oeuvres. It’s a great opportunity to meet fellow music lovers and enjoy the surroundings. Folks will take a short stroll past quaint gift shops on the way to the concert at the Fish Creek Town Hall. Afterwards, we’ll return to the Whistling Swan for a delectable dinner featuring grilled salmon or roasted chicken breast.

Tickets for the Whistling Swan event are just $85 per person which includes tax. Reservations can be made by calling 920-854-7088 or on our website at Midsummer’s Music.com.

We look forward to seeing you this summer!

Pro Arte Quartet Celebrates 100th Anniversary in Door County!

Violinist David Perry, cellist Parry Karp, violinist Suzanne Beia (seated), violist Sally Chisholm

Midsummer’s Music is proud to present the Pro Arte Quartet on Wednesday, May 11 at Ephraim Moravian Church in Door County, WI, 7:30 PM. The legendary Pro Arte Quartet is the oldest continually active string quartet in the world. They are celebrating their 100th anniversary in 2011/2012. The program features the music of Barber, Schubert, and Mozart.

“A first-rate quartet . . . wonderfully personal, intense music performed with real devotion and accomplishment.” New York Times

In residence at UW-Madison since 1940, this extraordinary ensemble has been in continuous existence since its founding in 1911-12 by students at the Brussels Conservatory. Founding members included violinist Alphonse Onnou, who was the leader, Laurent Halleux (violin), Germain Prévost (viola), and Fernand Auguste Lemaire (cello).

The quartet made its début in Brussels in 1913 and soon became known as an exponent of modern music. In 1918 Fernand Quinet became the cellist, but in 1921 he was replaced by Robert Maas. That year, with the aid of Paul Collaer and Arthur Prévost, the Pro Arte Concerts began, in which performances were given of new works by, among others, Bartók (whose Fourth Quartet is dedicated to the Pro Arte), Casella, Honegger, Martin, Milhaud and Rieti.

The quartet performed with great success at the 1923 ISCM Festival in Salzburg, and the same year played new works commissioned by Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge at a concert in Rome. After touring Europe the quartet visited England for the first time in 1925; subsequent visits to England included annual series of a week’s performances in Cambridge (1932–8).  In 1932 the quartet was granted the title Quatuor de la Cour de Belgique, in recognition of its services to Belgian music.

1921 - 1940 Alphonse Onnou, Laurent Halleux, Germain Prévost, Robert Maas

The Pro Arte played their American debut in 1926, performing at the inauguration of the Hall of Music in the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.  They returned for thirty tours to the United States, as well as a tour of Canada, often under the auspices of the noted patron of chamber music, Mrs. Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge.

Their first visit to Madison was in 1938, where, two years later, the musicians were stranded by Hitler’s invasion of Belgium and the outbreak of World War II. Following their concert on campus, the University of Wisconsin chancellor offered a permanent home to the quartet – it was the first such residency ever in a major American university, and became the model on which many other similar arrangements were developed at other institutions. Onnou died in 1940, but the quartet continued until 1947 as quartet-in-residence at Wisconsin University, led first by Antonio Brosa and from 1944 by Rudolf Kolisch.  The Pro Arte became the faculty string quartet at UW-Madison in the late 1950s, an appointment that continues to the present day.

Today’s Pro Arte Quartet features cellist Parry Karp, violinist Suzanne Beia, and two of Midsummer’s musicians, violinist David Perry and violist Sally Chisholm. Guest violist, Catherine Consiglio, is featured in Mozart’s Viola Quintet in D Major, K. 593.

Tickets can be purchased at Midsummer’s Music or by calling 920-854-7088.

 


The legendary Pro Arte Quartet is the oldest continually active string quartet in the world. In residence at UW-Madison since 1940, this extraordinary ensemble has been in continuous existence since its founding in Belgium in 1912. The quartet’s residency at Madison was the first artist ensemble residency ever in a major American university, a model since emulated by most of the major string quartets in this country. Moreover, the Pro Arte has added immeasurably to the art of the string quartet, particularly as champion of the new music of its time — including new works of Bartók, Ravel and Bloch in an era when these composers were still alive, and, more recently, works of composers such as Samuel Rhodes, Fred Lerdahl, Tamar Diesendruck, Andrew Imbrie, Ralph Shapey, and Gunther Schuller.

The legendary Pro Arte Quartet is the oldest continually active string quartet in the world. In residence at UW-Madison since 1940, this extraordinary ensemble has been in continuous existence since its founding in Belgium in 1912. The quartet’s residency at Madison was the first artist ensemble residency ever in a major American university, a model since emulated by most of the major string quartets in this country. Moreover, the Pro Arte has added immeasurably to the art of the string quartet, particularly as champion of the new music of its time — including new works of Bartók, Ravel and Bloch in an era when these composers were still alive, and, more recently, works of composers such as Samuel Rhodes, Fred Lerdahl, Tamar Diesendruck, Andrew Imbrie, Ralph Shapey, and Gunther Schuller.