Sunday, January 19, 2020

Orchestra Miami to Honor Four Miami Women at Concert Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment


Orchestra Miami Celebrates the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment with a Concert Honoring Four Prominent Miami Women

In honor of the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote, Orchestra Miami presents Miami Mujeres, a concert celebrating Miami's unique history and the women who made it great.

Orchestra Miami to honor four prominent Miami women who have greatly contributed to Miami’s culture and heritage: Aida Levitan, Arva Moore Parks McCabe, Enid Curtis Pinckney and Ruth Shack.

(MIAMI, January 15, 2020) – Orchestra Miami will celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment which gave women the right to vote, by honoring four prominent women at a concert on February 8, 2020. The four honorees are Chairperson of U.S. Century Bank Aida Levitan, historian, author and preservationist Arva Moore Parks McCabe, Miami historian and first African-American President of the Dade Heritage Trust Enid Curtis Pinckney and former Miami-Dade County Commissioner and former President and CEO of the Miami Foundation, Ruth Shack. The honorees were selected for their service and contributions to the people of Miami and our collective society and culture.

The concert is called Miami Mujeres, and will take place on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020 at 8:00 PM, at the historic First Miami Presbyterian Church, home to Miami's oldest congregation, located at 609 Brickell Avenue. The concert is part of Orchestra Miami’s “Discover Miami Through Music” series, which presents appropriately themed concerts in Miami’s places of historic interest in order to give us an opportunity to learn more about our city and each other through music. Founded in 1896, The First Miami Presbyterian Church was the first formal Presbyterian congregation in Miami, founded two months before Miami became incorporated as a city. Henry Flagler became the church’s biggest benefactor. Of course, Mr. Flagler would not have come to Miami if Julia Tuttle hadn’t convinced him of Miami’s vast potential and persuaded him to extend his East Coast Railroad to Miami in 1896. As a result of this, Miami is the only major U.S. city to be founded by a woman.

The concert features compositions by four note-worthy women composers: Afro-Cuban composer, conductor, educator and arts advisor Tania León, Amy Beach, the first successful American female composer of large-scale art music and one of the first American composers to succeed without the benefit of European training, Florence Price, the first black woman to have a symphony performed by a major US orchestra (The Chicago Symphony) in 1933, and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Miami native and graduate of Gables High, and winner of countless honors and awards including the Pulitzer Prize. The 52 musicians of Orchestra Miami will be conducted by Orchestra Miami’s Founder & Artistic Director Elaine Rinaldi and features powerhouse Russian pianist Asiya Korepanova as the soloist on Amy Beach’s piano concerto.
 
As a tribute to each of the composers on the concert, Orchestra Miami will ask the four honorees to read a brief paragraph about each composer and be honored themselves at the concert. The four honorees will be Chairperson of U.S. Century Bank and Founder of ArtesMiami Aida Levitan, historian, author and preservationist Arva Moore Parks McCabe, Miami historian and first African-American President of the Dade Heritage Trust Enid Curtis Pinckney and former Miami-Dade County Commissioner and former President and CEO of the Miami Foundation, Ruth Shack.

The program includes music of a wide variety of styles from four major female composers. The concert begins with the exciting composition Ácana by Afro-Cuban composer Tania León, followed by the lushly romantic Concerto for Piano in C # Minor by Amy Marcy Beach, the first successful American female composer of large-scale art music and one of the most acclaimed composers of her era. Following intermission, the orchestra will perform the Concert Overture N. 2 by Florence Price. the first black woman composer to have a symphony performed by a major US orchestra. The Concert Overture is inspired by three spirituals: Go Down Moses, Ev'ry Time I Feel the Spirit, and Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen. The final piece on the program is the Symphony N. 1 (Three Movements for Orchestra) by Miami native and graduate of Coral Gables High School Ellen Taaffe Zwilich. The Symphony was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1983, making her the first female composer to win the prize.

“I’m so excited that Orchestra Miami is able to mark such a significant anniversary with this concert and honor four women which I admire greatly”, says Orchestra Miami Artistic Director Elaine Rinaldi. “As a Miami native and  conductor, this concert combines elements that are most important to me- love and pride for my city, gratitude for the women of the suffragette movement, gratitude to the women who came before me in fighting for equality and rights for women and gratitude for the women who preserve and protect our heritage for future generations. We would not be who we are today without their sacrifices.”

Following the concert, there will be a reception for the honorees in the church reception hall. VIP tickets, which include the post-concert reception and a reserved seat, are $60 per person. General admission seating for the concert only is priced from $5 to $40. Limited free parking is available at the church parking lot; spillover parking is available at the Bank of America parking garage adjacent to the church. Tickets and complete information can be found at www.OrchestraMiami.org or by calling (305) 274-2103.

No comments:

Post a Comment