Thursday, March 27, 2008

Greetings from Miami

Well I'm back in Miami with the Cleveland Orchestra for a one week concert tour and it's very nice to get out of Cleveland's weather for a few days! I'm happy to say that one of my listings went under contract just before coming down here and I just put a beautifully staged University Heights home on the market a week before leaving, so things are slowly improving. I even managed to get my taxes done before the tour!

We're playing this week with Costa Rican conductor Giancarlo Guerrero, who is a very affable and happy person so it's a pleasure to make music with him. He substituted for Lorin Maazel last year, conducting Maazel's Ring Without Words (an arrangement of Wagner's greatest hits from the Ring operas) and did a fine job. For this tour we are offering Fandangos, by Puerto Rican composer Roberto Sierra (which audiences are loving), the Tchaikovsky violin concerto with Midori as soloist, and Moussourgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition.
We started the tour in St. Petersburg (Florida, not Russia!!) and the rest of the concerts are in Miami at the new Knight concert hall. On Saturday the orchestra will have a joint rehearsal with members of the New World Symphony on Strauss' Ein Heldenleben. The New World Symphony is a professional training orchestra that is top-notch, so the rehearsal should be good and that means I have to practice my part or the students may give me a hard time! It should be a lot of fun. Before coming home this weekend we will make a stop in Columbus, Georgia where we will perform in the River Center for the Performing Arts.

I'm planning to see some properties in South Beach later today, so I'll keep you posted on what I find out. I hope the weather has improved in Cleveland and I promise to file an end-of-tour report.

1 comment:

Matthew Wengerd said...

Scott, it's nice to see you posting. I saw the Orchestra last year in Central Florida, but missed you this time. Please give my best to Kevin and keep posting about the Orchestra.

Have you seen Michael Hovnanian's blog about the CSO?