Alexander Tutunov

Alexander Tutunov

WEEKEND: Gershwin, ‘Scheherazade,’ Beethoven all come together in Port Angeles Symphony concert Saturday

PORT ANGELES — This is “a dazzling showpiece … a spectacular fusion,” maestro Jonathan Pasternack says.

Inside a single work, we hear the blues.

We hear dance music from the Roaring Twenties.

Then some New Orleans ragtime, a bit of klezmer and unmistakably honky-tonk piano.

We even hear flavors borrowed, Pasternack adds, from Rachmaninoff and Ravel.

It could only be “Rhapsody in Blue,” George Gershwin’s 1924 score. It’s one of three works to come alive in the hands of the Port Angeles Symphony in its season-opening concerts at the Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center on Saturday.

But wait. A Russian pianist is coming to town to play “Rhapsody,” that most American of works.

Alexander Tutunov, principal guest artist with the 66-piece Port Angeles orchestra, is his exuberant self when acknowledging the irony.

The native of Belarus, a graduate of the Moscow Conservatory, also points out some connections: Gershwin’s parents, Morris Gershovitz and Rose Bruskin, were immigrants from Russia.

They came to Brooklyn, N.Y., which happens to be conductor Pasternack’s birthplace.

Tutunov first performed “Rhapsody in Blue” in the 1980s when he was a teenager, growing up in the Soviet Union.

“It was a little bit brave,” he recalls.

Gershwin was considered jazz, jazz was American and hence capitalist music — “considered not cool. In theory, you could be expelled from the conservatory,” Tutunov says.

The pianist did graduate, magna cum laude, from Moscow’s Central School of Music; he also won the Russian National Piano Competition and completed a doctorate in concert performance at the Belarusian State Conservatory.

He later migrated to the United States, where he teaches at Southern Oregon University in Ashland — and travels the world, teaching and performing.

Tutunov has been coming to Port Angeles since 1998 to play Beethoven, Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev and Chopin.

Saturday’s performances — the 10 a.m. public rehearsal and the 7:30 evening concert — mark the second time Tutunov has come here to play Gershwin.

Back in the winter of 2001, he joined the Port Angeles Symphony for the Concerto in F, a work Gershwin played for the first time at New York City’s Carnegie Hall in 1925.

“I don’t know how and why,” Tutunov says, “but I love these rhythms.”

“Rhapsody in Blue” is but a third of the symphony’s offerings. Pasternack will lead the orchestra in Beethoven’s “Leonore” Overture No. 3, a piece the conductor said has “an epic breadth.”

Listen, he added, for the overture’s coda, which he calls triumphant and optimistic.

Also on the itinerary is “Scheherazade,” Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s most famous piece of music.

Inspired by stories from the Orient collected in “The Thousand and One Nights,” the work provides virtuosic writing for every section in the orchestra, Pasternack says.

Saturday’s performances are the first of five Port Angeles Symphony Orchestra concerts in the 2015-2016 season.

To find out more about it and the Dec. 12 performance — to feature the music of Tchaikovsky, Grieg and other masters — see PortAngelesSymphony.org.

More in News

Kelly and Dan Freeman of Port Ludlow examine a 1958 Edsel on display during Friday evening’s 29th annual Ruddell Cruise-In at Ruddell Auto in Port Angeles. The event featured hundreds of antique and vintage automobiles from across the region as well as food, music and other activities. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Classic show

Kelly and Dan Freeman of Port Ludlow examine a 1958 Edsel on… Continue reading

Sequim School District officials report it could take upwards of 2 1/2 years to break ground on a new elementary school. Voters approved a $146 million, 20-year construction bond in a Feb. 11 special election that includes a new elementary school, renovated high school and more. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim schools eye bond timeline

Bigger projects may be 2 years away

Sequim volunteer Emily Westcott has led the flower basket program along Washington Street since 1996. This year she’s retired to focus on other endeavors, and the city of Sequim and the Sequim School District will continue the partnership. Westcott is still seeking donations for downtown Sequim Christmas decorations through the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim flower basket program shifts to city, school partnership

Westcott retires, plans to keep decorating downtown for Christmas

Clallam first in state to implement jail healthcare program

County eligible to apply for Medicare reimbursement for services

Writers to converge in Port Townsend to work on craft

Free readings open to the public next week

Firefighters extinguish blaze in fifth-floor hotel room

Firefighters from East Jefferson Fire Rescue and Navy Region… Continue reading

Mowing operation scheduled along Lake Crescent on Tuesday

Work crews from the state Department of Transportation will… Continue reading

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: County commissioners set to meet next week

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Peninsula Behavioral Health head discusses the fallout from federal bill

Anticipated cuts to Medicaid could devastate rural communities like Clallam County, leading… Continue reading

Tool library to open in Port Townsend

Drills, saws and more available to borrow

Fire restriction implemented on federal lands

Olympic National Forest and Olympic National Park have restricted campfires… Continue reading