BILLY THE KID

  • HIGDON: Peachtree Street from "City Scape"
    *Sponsored by the New Music Society
  • RACHMANINOFF: Piano Concerto No. 3
    -- Henry Kramer, piano
  • COPLAND: Billy the Kid

We kick off our season celebration of American composer Aaron Copland with his dramatic musical story of legendary outlaw Billy the Kid. Copland's music mirrors the plot, taking us through scenes of wagons, a frontier town, a nighttime card game, and a heart-pounding gunfight. We pair this with Rachmaninoff's 3rd Piano Concerto, welcoming back last season's guest artist and fan favorite, the brilliant Henry Kramer. Opening the concert is Jennifer Higdon's tribute to America's bustling main streets, Peachtree Street, promising a unique and unforgettable experience.

Peachtree Street is sponsored by the New Music Society. Become a New Music Society member to support the creation and performance of new music.


Henry Kramer

Henry KramerPraised by The Cleveland Classical Review for his "astonishingly confident technique" and The New York Times for "thrilling [and] triumphant" performances, pianist Henry Kramer is developing a reputation as a musician of rare sensitivity who combines stylish programming with insightful and exuberant interpretations. In 2016, he garnered international recognition with a Second Prize win in the Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels. Most recently, he was awarded a 2019 Avery Fisher Career Grant by Lincoln Center – one of the most coveted honors bestowed on young American soloists.

Kramer began playing piano at the relatively late age of 11 in his hometown of Cape Elizabeth, Maine. One day, he found himself entranced by the sound of film melodies as a friend played them on the piano, inspiring him to teach himself on his family's old upright. His parents enrolled him in lessons shortly thereafter, and within weeks, he was playing Chopin and Mozart.

Henry emerged as a winner in the National Chopin Competition in 2010, the Montreal International Competition in 2011 and the China Shanghai International Piano Competition in 2012. In 2014 he was added to the roster of Astral Artists, an organization that annually selects a handful of rising stars among strings, piano, woodwinds and voice candidates. The following year, he earned a top prize in the Honens International Piano Competition.

Kramer has performed "stunning" solo recital debuts, most notably at Alice Tully Hall as the recipient of the Juilliard School's William Petschek Award, as well as at Amsterdam's Concertgebouw. At his Philadelphia debut, Peter Dobrin of The Philadelphia Inquirer remarked, "the 31-year-old pianist personalized interpretations to such a degree that works emerged anew. He is a big personality."

A versatile performer, Kramer has been featured as soloist with orchestras around the world, including the Bilkent Symphony Orchestra, Belgian National Orchestra, Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra, Hartford Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony and the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestras, among many others, collaborating with conductors such as Marin Alsop, Gerard Schwarz, Stéphane Denève, Jan Pascal Tortelier and Hans Graf. He has also performed recitals in cities such as Washington (Phillips Collection), Durham (St. Stephens), Hilton Head (BravoPiano! festival), and Seattle (Emerald City Music and the Seattle Series) and made summer appearances at the Anchorage, Lakes Area, Rockport, and Vivo music festivals. Appearances in the 2022-23 season include a debut with New York's Salon Séance, recitals with Newport Classical, Ravinia, Toronto's Koerner Hall, Vancouver Chamber Music Society, and additional appearances in Seattle, Chicago, Detroit, Ithaca, and Montreal. Highlights of the current season include performances with the Adrian Symphony and Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, a return to the Phillips Collection, further appearances with Salon Séance, and recital debuts with Cecilia Concerts in Halifax, Chapelle Historique du Bon-Pasteur in Montréal, Bargemusic, Northwestern University's Winter Chamber Music Festival, and Music Mountain Summer Festival together with the Borromeo String Quartet.

His love for the chamber music repertoire began early in his studies while a young teenager. A sought-after collaborator, he has appeared in recitals at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the Mainly Mozart Festival, the Mostly Mozart Festival, and La Jolla Music Society's Summerfest. His recording with violinist Jiyoon Lee on the Champs Hill label received four stars from BBC Music Magazine. This year, Gramophone UK praised Kramer's performance on a recording collaboration (Cedille Records) with violist Matthew Lipman for "exemplary flexible partnership." Henry has also performed alongside Emmanuel Pahud, the Calidore and Pacifica Quartets, Miriam Fried, as well as members of the Berlin Philharmonic and Orchestra of St. Luke's.

Teaching ranks among his greatest joys. In the fall of 2022, Kramer joined the music faculty of Université de Montréal. Previously, he served as the L. Rexford Whiddon Distinguished Chair in Piano at the Schwob School of Music at Columbus State University in Columbus, Georgia. Throughout his multifaceted career, he also held positions at Smith College and the University of Missouri Kansas City Conservatory of Dance and Music.

Kramer graduated from the Juilliard School, where he worked with Julian Martin and Robert McDonald. He received his Doctorate of Musical Arts from the Yale School of Music under the guidance of Boris Berman. His teachers trace a pedagogical lineage extending back to Beethoven, Chopin and Busoni. Kramer is a Steinway Artist.

Program Notes

"City Scape"

"City Scape" is a metropolitan sound picture written in orchestral tones. Every city has a distinctive downtown skyline: That steely profile that juts into the sky, with shapes and monumental buildings that represent a particular signature for each city. The steel structures present an image of boldness, strength, and growth, teeming with commerce, and the people who work and live there. This is the first movement, "SkyLine".

In contrast to the metallic and concrete structures lay the parks….both large and small, filling acres or sometimes just a few square feet. Feeding this greenery and sometimes lush carpet are tributaries, hidden streams, small creeks and occasionally rivers. The waters represent constant change, under calm waters and over powerful currents, doing so with exquisite beauty. This is "river sings a song to trees".

The final movement, "Peachtree Street", is a representation of all those roadways and main arteries that flow through cities (Peachtree Street is the main street that runs through downtown Atlanta, the city of my childhood). Every main street that runs through a city is loaded with the energy and bustle of commerce, reflecting the needs and wants of its citizens through businesses. Because there is so much diversity in city streets, I’ve created a movement that explores the diverse sections of the orchestra, their relationships, and their combination in creating a larger voice.

This work was commissioned and premiered in 2002 by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Robert Spano, Music Director.

Jennifer Higdon


Piano Concerto No. 3
Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873 - 1943)

Sergei Rachmaninoff has been described as the composer who carried on where Tchaikovsky left off. He was not concerned with breaking new ground musically, feeling that the old forms brought him the direction he needed. As a Russian, he was possessed of a Russian temperament and outlook. His music was a product of that temperament and was certainly Russian music. On the other hand, he refused to produce works to any formula or preconceived theory. “ Music,” he said, “should be the expression of a composer’s complex personality.”

In comparison to earlier works, Rachmaninoff’s third piano concerto is a more loosely constructed composition, with a theme that makes a statement but seems to be less concerned with its development. In his own words, Rachmaninoff said that his third piano concerto “simply wrote itself.” He wrote to a friend “If I had any plan in composing this theme, I was thinking only of sound. I wanted to ‘sing’ the melody on the piano, as a singer would sing it – and to find a suitable orchestral accompaniment, one that would not muffle the singing.”

The new work was composed during the summer of 1909, and on a Sunday afternoon in November of 1909 he played the work himself with the New York Symphony Orchestra as his United States debut. Critics’ impressions were mixed. It was simply so different from previous offerings. Some said that it was too long, that it lacked rhythmic and harmonic contrast, that it was too melancholy and did not rise to a level of passion typical of Russian music. They struggled with its honesty and simplicity, its lack of attempt to impress, finally coming to the conclusion that it must be taken as “a purely personal utterance of the composer,” with the character of an impromptu, unstudied and informal. It reached its height of popularity when Vladimir Horowitz included it in his repertoire.

Rachmaninoff himself was a man who valued peace, avoided conflict, and got along well with his family, his friends and his public. He was a popular figure in the United States, who grew in fame and made money from his work. His death in 1943 at age seventy did not diminish the public’s interest in his music. It remains his personal monument.

Beryl McHenry


Billy the Kid Suite
Aaron Copland (1900 - 1990)

Aaron Copland was born in Brooklyn and grew up in his family's apartment over their general store on Washington Avenue. He went to school in Brooklyn and was the only musician in his family. His first exposure to composition was in high school, where he took lessons in the basics. It was enough to fire his imagination, and, when he graduated, he chose to go to Paris to study, staying four years and mastering the art of sophisticated composition. He was always interested in folk tunes and how they could be presented in fresh ways. In the mid-1930s he visited Mexico and adapted many of the tunes he heard into El Salon Mexico. This was so well-received that he was encouraged to do the same with American folk tunes. The perfect opportunity came when prominent director Lincoln Kirstein commissioned a suite of music for a ballet based on the young outlaw Billy the Kid. The result was an amazing evocation of the old west in America, incorporating old cowboy tunes, as well as original music, into a brilliant mix.

The suite of music that Copland pulled from the one-act ballet and adapted for orchestra was first performed in New York in 1941. "Street in a Frontier Town" is the most extensive section, where we first meet Billy as a boy of twelve. He and his mother encounter a street brawl which turns ugly, and Billy's mother is killed. Billy quickly grabs a knife from a cowhand's belt and stabs his mother's attackers. He runs away, beginning his brief career of crime, and the music describes crowd scenes, card games, gunfire, and reflective moments. In the section called "Running Gun Battle", Billy is ambushed by his former friend, Sheriff Pat Garrett. The music reflects a crowd of townspeople celebrating the outlaw's capture, complete with an out-of-tune piano. The ballet tells of his escape from jail and eventual death when he is once again caught by "the law." Copland chose to omit this ending from his orchestral suite.

The account of Billy's life is fictional, of course. The real Billy, Henry McCarty, who was born in New York as Copland was, headed west with his family in search of silver. His mother died of tuberculosis, not a gunshot, and his father abandoned him, after which he fell in with bad company and began his infamous criminal career. His life ended in a shoot-out at age 22. Legend has transformed him into a larger-than-life figure and the icon of the Old West we know.

Copland tells us he resolved to keep his music for the ballet simple - helping, but never pushing itself into the main event. Yet he clearly produced a work that has held its own as a beloved example of truly American music.

Beryl McHenry

Concert Information

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Saturday, October 12, 2024 at 7:30 PM

Dawson Auditorium, Adrian College

Dawson Auditorium, Adrian College

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