Vol. XXIII No. 2
October 2007

Conductor On the Trail of Musical Excitement

Currently dividing her time between London and Washington, D.C., the conductor Anne Manson is clearly a woman on the go. Her personal demeanor, like her conducting, exudes a sense of purpose and intensity befitting someone who has caught international attention as a musical trailblazer: the first woman ever to conduct at the Salzburg Festival, one of just a handful of women to serve as music director of a major American symphony orchestra, and a passionate champion of contemporary and unduly neglected music.

Anne Manson (Photo by Nick White)

Since making her New York debut with the Juilliard Orchestra in an all-Ives program for the 2004 Focus! festival, Manson has conducted at Juilliard several times and returns this month for a Juilliard Orchestra concert on October 11 at 8 p.m. in the Peter Jay Sharp Theater. The diverse program—emblematic of Manson’s penchant for the new and unfamiliar—includes recent works by Zhou Long and Jennifer Higdon, alongside Bartok’s The Miraculous Mandarin and Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 25 in C, K. 503.

The concert opens with Zhou’s The Rhyme of Taigu (2003), whose title refers to a large Chinese drum called dagu. The work uses percussion instruments to reconstruct the drum ceremonies of the Tang Dynasty. “This particular piece by Zhou Long actually reminds me a lot of Bartok,” Manson said in a recent telephone interview. “It’s a drumming tradition that originated in China but you see, when you listen, that bits sound a lot like Bartok and specifically like Miraculous Mandarin. So I was interested to put them on the same program.”

Commissioned by the Women’s Philharmonic, Jennifer Higdon’s Fanfare Ritmico (1999) has been warmly received by audiences throughout the country. In a review of its New York premiere on an American Composers Orchestra concert in April 2000 that also included works by Copland, Sessions, and Antheil, Barry L. Cohen of New Music Connoisseur wrote that Fanfare Ritmico “drew the most enthusiastic applause of the afternoon and demonstrated just how uneventful it has become to have a good, independent selection by a woman nestled in among three male heavyweights.” John Rockwell of The New York Times praised the work as “full of percussive boldness and ingenious rhythmic interplay.”

Manson, 46, takes a special pleasure in introducing audiences to new pieces music—especially at Juilliard. “I find contemporary music very exciting, discovering new works and playing them for people. I also find it very exciting to discover non-contemporary works that are not well known,” Manson says.

Manson recalls leading Ives’ rarely performed Fourth Symphony at the 2004 Focus! festival concert. “It was an amazing experience. I had never done it before, and I thought I might never get another chance.” She continues, “I was and still am occasionally overpowered by the young musicians I meet at Juilliard. In the Ives symphony, there’s a quotation from a Christmas carol played by a trombone. The first time I heard it, I wondered if I had ever heard such a beautiful sound on the trombone.” Manson pauses, then adds: “And every time he played it, I thought the same thing. I think working with young people reminds us of why we do this.”

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Event Information
Juilliard Orchestra

Peter Jay Sharp Theater
October 11, 8 p.m.

Anne Manson, conductor

Event Calendar