Previewed by Daina Janitis

“In an orchestra, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Together, we can create something truly extraordinary.” – Yo-Yo Ma
And with the London Community Orchestra, you get COOKIES!!!
No, not the kind you have to accept, reject, or manage, the kind you can share with musicians and audience members at Dundas Street Centre United Church after each concert. Because, as all great musical experiences are, it’s a community event, one in which we are participants, even if we sit on the church benches and applaud our hearts out while some of London’s good people enrich our lives with exquisite music.

WE ALL share in the opportunity to quicken our minds and deepen our emotions.
Yes, this organization has been around for fifty-two years, encouraging talented non-professionals to endow their busy lives with the discipline and rewards of symphonic music. And in those fifty-two years, most of the faces have changed, but the quality of performance has evolved to make every season better than the last.
Len Ingrao has conducted LCO since 1998 and has built this city’s large symphonic ensemble to take on artistic challenges and share them graciously with Londoners- for a very reasonable ticket price.

(Pictured: London Community Orchestra Conductor, Len Ingrao,)
I’ll bet you know many of them.
Carolyn Martinelli, who has taught generations of young people at Catholic Central High School, has been a lovely concertmaster since 2005.

(Pictured: Carolyn Martinelli, London Community Orchestra, Concertmaster.)
Steve, who adds fire to the local community orchestra while completing his epidemiology degrees.
Ana, who is a dedicated therapist but still plays her violin in LCO.
Mary, the oboist and member of the FIRST London Youth Symphony over 60 years ago, who still often sets that tuning A for the community orchestra.
Some local music teachers and profs, continuing to aspire and learn with material they love.
And one of those teachers will be the soloist for the March 1st program – Brian Donohue.

(Pictured: Brian Donohue, London Community Orchestra Soloist.)
Brian is the kind of teacher who does the profession proud:
- He’s been a member of LCO for twelve years, while teaching at Sir Frederick Banting High School, conducting bands, starting a French horn choir, and teaching the board’s first Music and Math combo course.
- He’s always ready to help other musical ensembles with coaching and standing in when he’s needed- and devotes time to raising his three kids with his wife, Christine.
- To keep his musical skills growing, he has long-standing involvement in London community ensembles, including playing French horn with the London Community Orchestra and Encore: The Concert Band.
- He has taught private horn through Western University’s New Horizons Band program, which focuses on adult and lifelong learners returning to music—he really believes that music is for everyone.
- No, no gold medal in hockey – but he has won the Dawson Memorial Award in Music Education, Western Music Award in his final undergraduate year. Chamber of Commerce Award for excellence in Western’s Wind Ensemble, Kiwanis Music Award (festival recognition).
And he is performing music that he LOVES, from the “easy listening” Camille Saint-Saens.

(Pictured: Caricature of Camille Saint-Saens.)
Andromaque: Overture and Prelude to Act IV is a film score before there were films! S-S wrote it in 1902 for Sarah Benrhardt to bring the Trojan War story to life, politics, grief, unwanted suitors – daily stuff in Troy, 17th-century France, and in our current relationship with the US.
And the Morceau de Concert is going to be a showstopper. S-S originally wrote it for a horn that is no more … the “cor omnitonique,” with four pistons that promised to play easily in any key. The gadget did not survive, but the virtuoso showpiece it gives to a great horn player – with lots of dazzling acrobatics – will hold your attention on Sunday.
(Watch this video clip of Brian Donohue speaking about Sunday’s concert: https://www.facebook.com/reel/4436111049950652)
Speaking of virtuosi, the full orchestra will be giving us Franz Liszt and his Tasso: Lament and Triumph. Liszt was pioneering the symphonic poem by 1849 – telling a story in a single, continuous movement (so no more worries about when to clap!).

(Pictured: Caricature of Franz Liszt.)
The poem is apparently based on the tortured life of Torquato Tasso in the 16th century as he goes through instability in Ferrara, wanders – in a boat, I presume – on the lagoons of Venice, and finally receives recognition in Rome after his death. All of this tumult is conveyed by the constant transforming of a gondolier’s song that Liszt once heard in Venice.
And after the concert? COOKIES and the chance to tell the musicians what generous, inspiring Londoners they are!
IF YOU GO:
What: London Community Orchestra presents Romantic Echoes.
When: Sunday, March 1, at 3:00pm.
Where: Dundas Street Centre United Church, 482 Dundas Street, London, ON.
Tickets: https://www.lco-on.ca/eng/concert-season/tickets/
Previewed by Daina Janitis
