News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Yevgeny Kutik Performs World Premiere Of Joseph Schwantner's Violin Concerto In Detroit Symphony Orchestra Debut

Led by Leonard Slatkin, the orchestra's program also includes Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 and the world premiere of Samuel Adler's Mirror Images.

By: Sep. 30, 2021
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Yevgeny Kutik Performs World Premiere Of Joseph Schwantner's Violin Concerto In Detroit Symphony Orchestra Debut  Image

Russian-American violinist Yevgeny Kutik gives the world premiere of Joseph Schwantner's Violin Concerto in his Detroit Symphony Orchestra debut on October 15 and 16, 2021 at Orchestra Hall (3711 Woodward Ave.).

Led by Leonard Slatkin, the orchestra's program also includes Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 and the world premiere of Samuel Adler's Mirror Images. The October 16 performance will also be broadcast on the Detroit Symphony Orchestra's free Live from Orchestra Hall webcast series. Viewers may tune in to watch live at www.dso.org.

Kutik and Schwantner have been longtime collaborators and friends. His Violin Concerto was adapted especially for Kutik from a preexisting work, The Poet's Hour, composed in 2010 as a short soliloquy for violin and strings. The Poet's Hour was commissioned by the Seattle Symphony to commemorate Gerard Schwarz's retirement as the orchestra's musical director.

Schwantner explains, "While composing the piece for Seattle, I had always planned to later expand and re-imagine the music as part of a larger scale work for violin and orchestra. When Gerard also performed the music with his All-Star Orchestra and violinist, Yevgeny Kutik, I was enthralled with Yevgeny's masterful and nuanced performance and realized I had found 'the' soloist to premiere this new expanded work. Yevgeny Kutik brings a dramatic and an emotional arc to his impressive technique and captivating musical personality, and that vision remained in my mind's ear all during the writing of the concerto."

This performance (and recording, released on DVD in 2014) was Kutik's first encounter with Schwantner's music. Kutik says, "I was immediately blown away by the depth of color in his music and the special immediacy of thought and communication found throughout. For my Meditations on Family project, I was grateful that Joe agreed to write a short piece, his powerfully beautiful, Daydreams for violin, glass harmonica, and vocal quartet (2018). I'm truly honored and delighted to be giving the world premiere of his monumental new Violin Concerto. The music draws upon themes from The Poet's Hour and spending time with this piece has been like spending time with a dear old friend and catching up after years apart. And, as with a friend after years apart, the music now has with it so many more layers of perspective, power, depth, and emotion. One just wants to keep talking and listening, losing track of time."

Schwantner's Violin Concerto is the latest in a series of concertos including a Percussion Concerto for Christopher Lamb, principal percussionist of the New York Philharmonic; a Piano Concerto for Emanuel Ax; and one for guitarist, Sharon Isbin. Leonard Slatkin has conducted the premiere performances of many of his works with support that extends back to when he served as the Saint Louis Symphony's first composer-in-residence.

About Yevgeny Kutik: Yevgeny Kutik has captivated audiences worldwide with an old-world sound that communicates a modern intellect. Praised for his technical precision and virtuosity, he is also lauded for his poetic and imaginative interpretations of standard works as well as rarely heard and newly composed repertoire.

A native of Minsk, Belarus, Yevgeny Kutik immigrated to the United States with his family at the age of five. As a follow-up to his 2014 album, Music from the Suitcase: A Collection of Russian Miniatures (Marquis Classics), in 2019 Kutik launched a new commissioning and recording project titled Meditations on Family via Marquis Classics. He commissioned eight composers to translate a personal family photo into a short musical miniature for violin and various ensemble, envisioning the project as a living archive of new works inspired by memories, home, and belonging. Each track was released digitally weekly, and the full EP CD, produced by four-time Grammy winner Jesse Lewis, was released on March 22, 2019. Strings Magazine featured Kutik and Meditations on Family as its cover story for the March/April issue. Kutik's other recordings include his debut album, Sounds of Defiance (Marquis 2012), and Words Fail (Marquis 2016), both released to critical acclaim. His next album, The Death of Juliet and Other Tales, is slated for release in Fall 2021 on Marquis and includes music by Prokofiev and folk music that inspired Prokofiev.

In February 2021, Kutik launched Finding Home: Music from the Suitcase in Concert, a five-episode docu-recital series filmed at the Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport, MA, based on Kutik's 2014 album Music from the Suitcase (Marquis Classics). Each 30-40-minute episode features music performances, including works from the album, interwoven with Kutik's personal narrative storytelling, as Kutik explores anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union, his family's months as "stateless" refugees, the amazement and challenges of starting a new home in the United States, his teachers and mentors, and lessons for the future. Episodes are available to stream at www.musicfromthesuitcase.com/watch-episodes

In 2019, Yevgeny Kutik made his debuts at the Kennedy Center, presented by Washington Performing Arts, and at the Ravinia Festival. Recent performances include appearances with the Dayton Philharmonic, La Crosse Symphony, El Paso Symphony, Huntsville Symphony, New Bedford Symphony, the Cape Town Philharmonic in South Africa, Morris Museum, Honest Brook Music Festival, and the Boston Conservatory at Berklee. Upcoming performances in 2021-2022 include appearances with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Greensboro Symphony Orchestra, Huntsville Symphony, Traverse Symphony Orchestra, and Minnesota Sinfonia.

Passionate about his heritage and its influence on his artistry, Kutik is an advocate for the Jewish Federations of North America, the organization that assisted his family in coming to the United States, and regularly speaks and performs across the United States to both raise awareness and promote the assistance of refugees from around the world.

Yevgeny Kutik made his major orchestral debut in 2003 with Keith Lockhart and The Boston Pops as the First Prize recipient of the Boston Symphony Orchestra Young Artists Competition. In 2006, he was awarded the Salon de Virtuosi Grant as well as the Tanglewood Music Center Jules Reiner Violin Prize.

Yevgeny Kutik began violin studies with his mother, Alla Zernitskaya, and went on to study with Zinaida Gilels, Shirley Givens, Roman Totenberg, and Donald Weilerstein. He holds a bachelor's degree from Boston University and a master's degree from the New England Conservatory and currently resides in Boston. Kutik's violin was crafted in Italy in 1915 by Stefano Scarampella. For more information, please visit www.yevgenykutik.com.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos