The San Francisco Symphony and Michael Tilson Thomas will present new episodes of their acclaimed Keeping Score television series on New York's WNET/THIRTEEN on Saturday, June 25 at 2:00 p.m. and Saturday, July 2 at 2:00 p.m. In a year marking the centenary of both the death of Gustav Mahler and the birth of the San Francisco Symphony, the Orchestra's Keeping Score project focuses on the enigmatic composer with two one-hour documentary-style episodes, two live-performance programs (full details follow), new Mahler-related content at http://www.keepingscore.org and a 13-part national radio series. The Keeping Score project is a natural outgrowth of the San Francisco Symphony's almost century-long commitment to make classical music more accessible and meaningful to people of all ages and musical backgrounds.
"
Gustav Mahler was a visionary musician," said
Michael Tilson Thomas, Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony. "In his compositions he made reference to many styles, building his huge symphonies from materials abstracted from songs, dances and marches from many cultures. His symphonies, or worlds, as he called them - represent the many ways that people make music and why they make music. In Keeping Score: Mahler, we walk in his footsteps, visit the places and sounds that influenced his life."
"There is no better team right now to bring the music and life story of
Gustav Mahler to a global audience than
Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco Symphony, and SFS Media," said John D. Goldman, President of the San Francisco Symphony. "With MTT and the Orchestra firmly established among the leading interpreters of Mahler's music, we hope that this collective passion for the works of Mahler, and our commitment to sharing music with the widest possible audience, helps inspire the next generation to appreciate and embrace some of the most powerful music ever written. These programs will be a fitting capstone to the decade-long Mahler project that MTT and the SFS have undertaken, and we hope they serve as a lasting inspiration for audiences throughout the world."
Unlike any other orchestra initiative in scope or complexity, the national Keeping Score program provides innovative, thought-provoking classical music content via integrated multimedia including public television, public radio and interactive web content at www.keepingscore.org, and materials, training, and lesson plans for teachers using Keeping Score content and media. More than six million viewers have tuned into the critically-acclaimed episodes of Keeping Score on PBS, with previous programs about composers Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Stravinsky, Copland, Berlioz, Shostakovich, and Charles Ives. The Keeping Score: Mahler television episodes, concert programs and online interactive content is designed to engage, educate and entertain viewers of all musical backgrounds, from classical music enthusiasts to those experiencing Mahler's compositions for the first time. The two new documentary episodes and both concert programs are offered in high definition and surround-sound.
Keeping Score: Mahler is part of the San Francisco Symphony's commemoration of the centenary of Mahler's death and completes its ten-year exploration of the composer's music through its Grammy Award-winning Mahler recording cycle on SFS Media. The Orchestra recently concluded a three-week European tour performing Mahler's works in Prague, Vienna, Brussels, Luxembourg, Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, and Lisbon. MTT and the SFS were in Prague on the 100th anniversary of Mahler's death (May 18) for commemorative celebrations followed by a four-concert Vienna residency performing the works of Mahler at the Konzerthaus. The SFS was the only American orchestra invited as part of the city's celebration of Mahler. Keeping Score: Mahler was screened in Prague and Vienna as part of the commemoration.
Keeping Score: Mahler presents two one-hour documentary-style episodes and two live concert programs to air on WNET/THIRTEEN at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, June 25 and Saturday, July 2, 2011. The documentaries were shot on location in the Czech Republic, Austria, and New York, and along with concert footage shot in San Francisco reveal the life and music of this emotionally charged composer, providing viewers with an unprecedented journey through his music and the influences that shaped it. Each episode is followed by a one-hour San Francisco Symphony concert program. The first concert features a complete performance of Mahler's Symphony No. 1, Titan, and the second, A Mahler Journey, traces the origins and influences of his music in a variety of orchestral and vocal works. Producers/directors for the documentaries are David Kennard and Joan Saffa of InCA Productions, and the concert programs are directed by
Gary Halvorson. Full episode streaming begins at video.pbs.org in April 2011. The programs are presented nationally by KQED in San Francisco.
The Keeping Score web site, www.keepingscore.org, is designed to give people of all musical backgrounds an opportunity to explore the music and life of composer
Gustav Mahler in depth, and at their own pace. The site offers an interactive area which traces the musical influences found in Mahler's works. Extensive audio and video material explores the composer's scores and pertinent musical techniques as well as the personal and historical stories behind them. The site is designed to particularly appeal to high school, college and university music appreciation students and their teachers, and its interactive learning tools offer a unique and in-depth online learning experience. Keepingscore.org includes groundbreaking and user-friendly interactives and content on all of the composers featured in the series. The site also includes a historical timeline that takes users deeper into the seven individual composers' political, social, and cultural milieus, as well as downloadable lesson plans created by teachers who have experienced the Keeping Score Education program.
Keeping Score's new radio series, 13 Days When Music Changed Forever, debuted this spring with 13 one-hour episodes that explore composers, compositions or musical movements that changed the way people heard or thought about music. Each program will explore the historical backdrop and musical precursors to the revolutionary change, as well as examine the aftershock and the lasting influence of that moment in music history. Producer
Tom Voegeli and host
Suzanne Vega return to join
Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony. The team collaborated on the Peabody Award-winning The MTT Files and American Mavericks radio programs, some of the most listened-to classical music programs of all time. Script writers include acclaimed music writers Justin Davidson,
Tim Page, and Pierre Ruhe, among others.
Keeping Score: Mahler has been released on DVD and Blu-Ray High Definition formats through SFS Media, the San Francisco Symphony's own label. The two-DVD set features one disc containing the two concert performances, with Tilson Thomas leading the San Francisco Symphony in Mahler Symphony No. 1 and "A Mahler Journey," and one disc with the 1 hour, 53-minute theatrical version of the documentary, which encompasses both the "Origins" and "Legacy" segments. Both the documentary and the concert performances are captured in full HD, with the San Francisco Symphony the first orchestra to distribute its product on Blu-Ray disc. DVD sales are available at the San Francisco Symphony's online store at www.sfsymphony.org/store and retail outlets worldwide. The programs will also be available in download-to-own channels such as iTunes, Zune, and others.
Lead funding for Keeping Score is provided by the Evelyn & Walter Haas, Jr. Fund with generous support from Nan Tucker McEvoy, The James Irvine Foundation, The
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Marcia and
John Goldman, Ray and Dagmar Dolby Family Fund, the National Endowment for the Arts, William and Gretchen Kimball Fund, Lisa and John Pritzker, Mrs. Alfred S. Wilsey, Koret Foundation Funds, Lynn and Tom Kiley, Anita and Ronald Wornick, Roselyne Chroman Swig, Margaret Liu Collins and Edward
B. Collins, the Acacia Foundation, Matt Cohler, The Bernard Osher Foundation, Betty and Jack Schafer, Felipe R. Santiago and Barry T. Joseph, Mary C. Falvey, Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation, Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Hays, Mark Heising and Liz Simons, David and Janyce Hoyt, Laurence and Michèle Corash, Helen Berggruen, and others.
Founded in 1911, the San Francisco Symphony (SFS) celebrates its Centennial Season in 2011-12 and is widely considered to be among the country's most artistically adventurous and innovative arts institutions. The Orchestra's distinguished history is marked by artistic excellence, innovative programming, broad educational initiatives, and acclaimed recordings and media projects. Now in their sixteenth season together, Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas and the SFS have formed a musical partnership hailed for its revitalization of the classical music experience, performing and presenting more than 220 concerts annually for an audience of 600,000 in its home of Davies Symphony Hall, in other Bay Area venues, and through an active national and international touring program. The Orchestra reaches millions more around the world with its music through its Keeping Score project, educational websites and recordings. The first Orchestra to feature national symphonic radio broadcasts in 1926, the SFS remains a leader in the field of electronic media with endeavors such as the Grammy Award-winning Mahler recording cycle for the Orchestra's own SFS Media label on SACD, the Peabody Award-winning American Mavericks and The MTT Files radio series, and the Emmy Award-winning PBS/KQED Public Television production of the SFS' Sweeney Todd in Concert. The Orchestra's commitment to education, begun in 1919 with the development of Concerts for Kids, is today recognized nationally and internationally for programs including Keeping Score, Adventures in Music, the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra, Music for Families, and www.sfskids.org. For additional information, please visit www.sfsymphony.org.