WSU Symphony Orchestra to feature faculty soloists

Wichita State University flutist Frances Shelly and harpist Ann Glasmann will be the featured soloists in the season’s first concert by the WSU Symphony Orchestra at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 22, in Miller Concert Hall.

The program, which includes music by Mozart, Tchaikovsky and Michael Abels, will be led by Mark Laycock, WSU director of orchestras.

Frances Shelly

Frances Shelly

Shelly’s performing career spans more than 35 years and includes solo, orchestral and chamber music concerts throughout the United States and Europe. She is principal flute of the Wichita Symphony Orchestra, having appeared as featured soloist on several occasions.
 

Glasmann was spotlighted on the National Public Radio program Performance Today in a WSU recital honoring harpist Marcel Grandjany’s centennial year of birth, 1991. A member of the WSU faculty since 1989, she has also served as principal harp of the Wichita Symphony Orchestra.

The two will perform Mozart’s Concerto for Flute and Harp in C Major. Comte de Guines (1735-1806) commissioned the double concerto for himself and his daughter, a harpist to whom Mozart gave composition lessons. Thought to have been premiered in Paris in 1778, Laycock called the concerto a “dazzling, virtuosic showpiece for the two solo instruments.”

The concert will also include Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, a monumental work unified by a haunting opening theme, at one time identified by the composer as a musical representation of Fate. This motto undergoes transformations, emerging in the finale as a triumphal march. Laycock said Tchaikovsky’s lush orchestration and melodic invention are particularly evident in the inner movements: an exquisite andante and an elegant waltz.

Michael Abels’ “Global Warming” will open the program. Composed in 1991 near the end of the Cold War, the piece is a musical salute to improved international relations. Abels employs elements of folk music, especially lilting melodies from Ireland and the Middle East, to create an exhilarating celebration of the similarities between musical cultures, said Laycock.

More about WSU Faculty Artists

The Washington Post recently described Shelly’s playing as “powerful and evocative.” Originally from Dearborn, Mich., she earned her bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees in flute performance from the University of Michigan. After graduation she was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in West Berlin, Germany. While in Europe her teachers included James Galway, Jean-Pierre Rampal and Frans Vester.

Shelly performs extensively with the Lieurance Woodwind Quintet. With Steven Egler, professor of organ at Central Michigan University, she has commissioned and premiered several new works for flute and organ, and the Shelly/Egler Duo has performed throughout the U.S. Recordings of the duo and the quintet are on the Summit and Morning Star Record Labels. Other recent collaborations include an intercontinental tour with New York Metropolitan Opera mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato.

Glasmann received her training at Bowling Green State University, where she studied with Ruth K. Inglefield. As the recipient of two Ruth Lorraine Close Fellowships, she spent three summers enrolled in the Cours d'été de Gargilesse, France, in advanced studies with Pierre Jamet. She participated in the eighth and ninth International Harp Competitions in Israel and at the first and second Concours International Marie-Antoinette Cazala in France. Glasmann has premiered several new works for harp and diverse instruments at WSU, including works by Dean Roush, Marilyn Shrude and Paul Elwood.

Laycock is an associate professor of music at WSU, where he holds the Ann Walenta Faculty of Distinction Endowed Professorship. In 2007, he was recognized with the College of Fine Arts Excellence in Teaching Award. This season, he will conduct the Wichita Grand Opera production of “The Mikado” as well as the February concert of the Newton Mid-Kansas Symphony Orchestra. His work as guest conductor, clinician and adjudicator spans 18 states, including the leadership of all-state orchestras in Alabama, Iowa, Maryland, Nebraska and Washington.

Tickets are available through the Fine Arts Box Office at 978-3233. The concert will also be simulcast on WSU Internet Radio at http://wsuir.wichita.edu.