Posts by George Stelluto
The PSO! Wow!
On a recent drive across the Midwest, I mused about PSO seasons past and future. The six-hour trek was rife with astonishing realizations about what we have become and are becoming. “Wow!” I thought, as I tried to sum it all up in my head, so many things: memories of patron reactions, the orchestra’s accomplishments,…
Read MoreFind Your Music
I had the pleasure of working with the San Diego Symphony this past December. A great orchestra full of wonderful players, some were former students from Juilliard and a joy to see again. The staff was friendly and efficient; the hall splendid, and San Diego itself, well … “Wow!” The San Diego Symphony’s marketing slogan…
Read MorePSO: 121 and Going Strong
The PSO’s 120th Season concluded this past July with its triumphant, debut performance at the Ravinia Festival near Chicago. A tribute to Leonard Bernstein, the program featured daughter Jamie Bernstein and outstanding young soloists from Chicago and New York, including our own favorite Harmony Zhu. A friend from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra said of the…
Read MoreSpring Surprises and Italian Beauty
For those of you who attended any of our performances or events this past month, you are well aware of the many vocal surprises we had both on and off stage in March. Chicago Lyric Opera soprano Kimberly McCord had to cancel her PSO debut at the last-minute due to health issues. I am happy…
Read MoreAmerican Classics: Miniatures
In this concert, Barber’s music explores universal undercurrents of American existence, while Copland’s convivial “Appalachian Spring” resonates with thoughtful simplicity – emanating from hard-won wisdom. This music hides the profound in the open. For, though we listen to these works, now so familiar and popular, we often forget to hear them – as I experienced…
Read MoreReflections on Lyle Lovett
This past Sunday October 26, Lyle Lovett performed at the Peoria Civic Center Theater under the auspices of the Peoria Symphony Orchestra. It was an immensely satisfying evening of great American music drawn from the varied cultures and history of the United States and performed exquisitely by Mr. Lovett and his exceptionally talented acoustic group. The…
Read MoreMahler Symphony #4: Your Inner Mahler
As I end the 2012-2013 Peoria Symphony Orchestra season, I enter into the dreamy, Freudian world of Mahler’s Fourth Symphony, perfect for the coming Spring. It is one of his most performed, most enjoyed, and most commented on symphonies. Some call it innocent, some sardonic, some say it is paradoxical, bittersweet, and yet childlike. It was…
Read MoreThe Incalculable Jimmy: James DePreist (1936-2013)
How does one measure a life upon passing? What is the formula for determining the value of existence? In this age of immediate, digital certainty, our popular culture gives us clear, perhaps misguided, factors – fame, wealth, power, achievement, conquest, glory. Saints and philosophers balance the equation with love, generosity, humility, service, integrity, wisdom. Poets…
Read MoreEPIPHANY
Today is the 12th day of Christmas, The Epiphany. The word epiphany has such wonderful connotations. It refers to a moment when something is revealed, something wonderful that changes one’s life. Whether great or small, these changes bring new perspective, new knowledge – wisdom. I usually send out holiday cards around this time of year…
Read MoreGustav Holst: The Planets
I am very excited to be conducting Holst’s The Planets once again – this time with the Peoria Symphony Orchestra on November 10. The project involves a new film commissioned by the PSO and created by the young, award-winning filmmaker Max Fedore and me. The project has given me an opportunity to look at Holst’s…
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