Posts tagged soloist
Guest Artist: Hélène Wickett

Hélène Wickett, piano

Hélène Wickett, piano

Hélène Wickett has regularly appeared as soloist with major orchestras and in solo recital throughout Europe and the Americas as well as being active as a chamber musician. Her London Wigmore Hall debut took place in 1985, Kennedy Center in 1986, Paris Opéra Comique and Rome Villa Medicis in 1993.

Ms. Wickett has appeared with the Cleveland Orchestra, BBC Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, Göteborg Symphony, San Francisco Symphony, Stockholm Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra, Residentie Orchestra of the Hague, Pittsburgh Symphony, Oslo Philharmonic, St. Louis Symphony, Graz Philharmonic, Dallas Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony, National Chamber Orchestra, Marseilles Opera Orchestra, New Jersey Symphony, Florida Orchestra, Alabama Symphony, Milwaukee Symphony, National Chamber Orchestra, New Mexico Symphony, San Diego Symphony, Reno Chamber Orchestra, Aalborg Symphony and the Irish Radio Television Orchestra among many others, with conductors Raymond Leppard, Paavo Berglund, Christoph von Dohnányi, Hans Vonk, George Cleve, Edo de Waart, Nicholas McGegan, Joseph Silverstein, Peter Erös, Eduardo Mata, Bernhard Klee, Mehli Mehta, Janos Fürst, Murry Sidlin, Michael Lankester and Michael Tilson Thomas. 

She has played solo recitals in virtually every major western musical capital. Winner of the Pro Musicis Foundation Award, she made her New York debut under their auspices in 1980. Through the Pro Musicis Foundation she also has played in many non-traditional venues such as hospitals, maximum-security prisons, drug rehabilitation centers and mental institutions for diverse audiences with limited access to live classical music. 

Born in Palo Alto, California to an American father and Austrian mother, she began piano and violin lessons at age 4, played her first solo recital at 6, made her orchestral debut at 8 and won the San Francisco Symphony Youth Auditions at age 11, making the first of numerous solo appearances with that orchestra. She entered Stanford University at age 16, after having lived in Paris for several years to study theory and composition with Nadia Boulanger. Her piano teachers were Alfred Brendel, Robert Casadesus, Elena Hitchcock, Benjamin Kaplan, Abram Chasins and Geneviève Joy. 

Ms. Wickett has performed some 70 concertos with orchestra as well as most of the chamber music repertory. A violin student of Henryk Szeryng, Stuart Canin, Jacob Krachmalnick, and Naoum Blinder, she also plays viola and harpsichord. She is principal violist for Symphony Parnassus. She has also studied voice in Vienna and is fluent in six languages.   

Guest Artist: Hope Briggs, soprano

HOPE BRIGGS, a native of New Jersey, drew a rave review from Opera News for her San Francisco Opera debut as the Duchess of Parma in Busoni’s Doktor Faust “… Hope Briggs was stellar, delivering one of the evening’s highlights with her lusciously intoned, lovelorn aria.” 

Most recently, Ms. Briggs sang the role of Lucinda in Opera San Jose's workshop of Jake Heggie's newest opera, Intelligence, and made her debut with Reno Chamber Orchestra in Beethoven's Ah! Perfido. She also appeared as Marschallin in excerpts of Der Rosenkavalier with Fremont Symphony Orchestra, performed Bruckner’s Te Deum with Oakland Symphony, returned to Baton Rouge for Opéra Louisiane’s 10th Anniversary Gala, and made two important role debuts: Nedda in I Pagliacci with Festival Opera and the title role in Joplin’s Treemonisha with Mississippi Symphony Orchestra. She also sang Cio Cio San in Madama Butterfly with Opéra Louisiane, debuted at Carnegie Hall with the New England Symphonic Ensemble, and sang Verdi’s Messa da Requiem with the San Francisco Choral Society at Davies Symphony Hall.

​In 2021, she will perform the role of Madame Lidoine in Dialogues des Carmélites with Berkeley Chamber Opera as well as a solo recital with St. Ignatius Parish's Virtual Virtuoso Concert Series. In 2022 she will perform the soprano solos in Paul Moravec’ oratorio Sanctuary Road with Oakland Symphony. 

​As a critically acclaimed Verdi soprano, Ms. Briggs is known for the depth and beauty of her voluptuous voice. Ms. Briggs is hailed as “an artist of vocal sensitivity, theatrical wisdom, and integrity.” Her commanding stage presence and moving interpretations have brought her to great success singing the title role in Aida with Nevada Opera, Sacramento Opera and Cedar Rapids Opera and Leonora in Il Trovatore with El Paso Opera, Opera Roanoke and Festival Opera of Walnut Creek as well as Amelia in Un Ballo in Maschera with Festival Opera of Walnut Creek.

​Other career highlights include Donna Anna in Don Giovanni and The First Lady in Die Zauberflöte at Frankfurt Opera, the Duchess of Parma in Busoni’s Doktor Faust at Staatstheater Stuttgart, the role of Paula in the world premiere of Hector Armienta’s River of Women/Rio de Mujeres with Theater Artaud San Francisco, Donna Elvira with Opera San José and Opera Company of Brooklyn, Serena in Porgy and Bess with Tulsa Opera and New Orleans Opera as well as the title role in Suor Angelica with Pacific Repertory Opera and Opera Company of Brooklyn.

Ms. Briggs is featured nationally on PBS performing the role of Emma Hyers in the multi-award-winning documentary film, Voices for Freedom, The Hyers Sisters' Legacy. She is also featured as a soloist on IDAGIO Global Concert Hall Series in Masters of the Spiritual

On the concert stage, Ms. Briggs has performed:  Verdi’s Messa da Requiem, Mozart’s Coronation Mass and Requiem, Vivaldi’s Gloria, Villa-Lobos's Bachianas Brasileiras, Rachmaninoff’s Vocalise, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, Dvorak’s Stabat Mater, Hanna in scenes from The Merry Widow with Pacific Symphony Orchestra, Hailstork’s I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes with the San Antonio Symphony and Samuel Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 (Marin Theater Company, Redwood Symphony and Symphony Parnassus).

As a featured soloist, Ms. Briggs’ numerous performances include The Opening Night Gala Concert with Oakland East Bay Symphony, The Symphony Parnassus at Herbst Theater, The Wondrous Sounds of Christmas at the San Francisco Symphony, Hope Briggs and Friends: A Musical Valentine at San Francisco’s Herbst Theater, and the world premiere of Marion J. Caffey’s Three Mo’ Divas at the Lyceum Theater. A highly-acclaimed recitalist, she has performed for Oberlin Conservatory, African-Americans for Los Angeles Opera, Madewood Music Festival, Afrosolo Music Festival at the Yerba Buena Performing Arts Center, Concerts at the Abbey in Seattle, and Caio Melissa in Spoleto (Italy). By special invitation, Ms. Briggs performed for Jessye Norman at Alliance Française Trophée des Arts Gala and Rev. Billy Graham at the Billy Graham Crusade.

Hope Briggs is a Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions National Finalist, Metropolitan Opera International Vocal Competition Award Winner, and recipient of an Encouragement Award from the Licia Albanese Puccini Foundation. Hope Briggs is also an ABC KGO-TV 2012 African American Salutes Honoree, Marion Anderson Historical Society Scholar, and a 2013 Heritage Keeper Award Recipient from Friends of Negro Spirituals. Ms. Briggs is featured on PBS nationally performing the role of Emma Hyers in the documentary film: Voices for Freedom - The Hyers Sisters' Legacy.

Tickets for the Nov. 7 concert are $25 for adults; $20 for seniors and $10 for students 26 and under with I.D. www.brownpapertickets.com/event/5234819

Playful Prokofiev with violinist Pierce Wang on Jan 26
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Violinist Pierce Wang looks forward to mixing up some mischief when he performs the Prokofiev Violin Concerto No. 1 with Symphony Parnassus at its Jan. 26 concert.

“When I get to express this ‘devilish’ side, it’s really fun for me,” he says, “where I get to be different characters in the music.”

He especially loves the humorous, “twisted giddiness” of the concerto’s fast and furious middle section. “It has so many really fantastically funny moments,” he says. “There’s a part where it sounds like a bumble bee and is really nasty in such a funny way.”

Pierce joins Maestro Stephen Paulson and the Parnassus orchestra in a concert that also includes “Psalm Without Words,” by composer-in-residence Preben Antonsen, and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4 in F Minor. The 3 p.m. concert is at Taube Atrium Theater, 4th floor, 401 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco.

Pierce, 16, will be familiar to fans of Symphony Parnassus; two years ago, he performed the Conus Violin Concerto with the orchestra. He returns as a 2019 winner of the Symphony Parnassus / San Francisco Conservatory of Music Concerto Competition.

Pierce, who lives with his parents Evan and Karen Wang in the East Bay city of Fremont, is in the middle of his junior year with Stanford Online School, and he is also in the SFCM Pre-College Program, where he studies violin with Alena Tsoi-Barantschik.

He keeps himself busy with music and coding, sharing computer projects with his brother Austin, 21, who studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Pierce also has another brother, Ryan, 23. Both brothers play guitar and Ryan also plays piano.

A new pursuit for Pierce is conducting lessons. “It’s really hard but really fun,” he says. “I did it partly because a friend was doing it, and it’s really helping me grow in my appreciation for all kinds of music.”

Pierce is a member of the Bach Piano Trio, named not for the composer, but for their first coach, Tim Bach. The trio performed the Shostakovich Piano Trio No. 2 last year at the Fischoff Chamber Music Competition in Indiana.

He is, of course, studying new violin repertoire. Besides Prokofiev, he is learning pieces by Bach, Paganini, Saint-Saëns and perhaps the granddaddy of them all, the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto. “I’ve wanted to play it for a long time,” he says.

He started listening to the Prokofiev in a bid to expand his musical knowledge and became “obsessed” with the piece, asking his teacher to learn it. “I love going crazy with this piece. It’s so fun,” he says.

The concert with Parnassus will be his second time performing the Prokofiev concerto; in November, he played it with the Sonoma County Philharmonic. “I hope I can contribute something new to the piece for sure,” he says. “I hope the audience will be walking away from the concert smiling.”

Tickets for the Jan. 26 concert are $25 for adults; $20 for seniors and $10 for students 26 and under with I.D. www.brownpapertickets.com/event/4363762

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Cellist Hersh performs Bloch’s ‘Schelomo’ in Parnassus’ 30th season opener

On Sunday, November 17, cellist Alexander Hersh looks forward to performing Ernest Bloch’s “Schelomo: Rhapsodie Hébraïque for Violoncello and Orchestra” with Symphony Parnassus in the first concert of its 30th season.

“‘Schelomo’ is a great piece of repertoire that you grow up hearing a lot if you’re a cellist,” he said. “I’ve heard it my whole life, but I’ve never performed it with an orchestra, so this is exciting for me. It’s a fascinating work. It’s wondrously profound and very moving.”

Alexander finds playing this piece with a full orchestra to be both technically and musically fulfilling. 

“You learn a piece so much better when you play with an orchestra,” he said. “It’s so different than rehearsing with a piano, in how much more you have to project, not just volume, but your ideas. In a way, it teaches you the piece so much better because you have to be cognizant of so much more. It’s a thrilling experience.”

When he performs on the stage at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Alexander will celebrate deep family roots and a sense of music history: His father, Stefan Hersh, a violinist, and uncle, Julian Hersh, a cellist, both graduated from the conservatory where their father (and Alexander’s grandfather) Paul Hersh is currently a professor of viola and piano.

Another local connection is the composer: Bloch, a Swiss-born American whose music reflects Jewish cultural and liturgical themes, was the first artistic director for the San Francisco Conservatory of Music from 1925-1930. He also taught at UC Berkeley from 1939 to 1952.

A 4th generation string player, Alexander traces his musical past back to his great grandfather, Ralph Hersh, who was a member of the WQXR and Stuyvesant string quartets and principal violist of the Dallas and Atlanta Symphony orchestras. His mom, Roberta, is also a professional violinist (now playing in the orchestra for “Hamilton” in Chicago); his dad performs all over and teaches at Roosevelt University.

Playing cello since he was 5, the now-26 Alexander grew up in Chicago, where he still lives, though he travels a lot to perform, mostly in New York and Philadelphia. In September alone, he did 11 concerts; in October, six concerts. A passionate chamber musician, Alexander is co-artistic director of NEXUS Chamber Music, a collective of international artists who present a two-week chamber music festival across the city of Chicago each August.

Already considered one of the most exciting and versatile artists of his generation, Alexander has performed as soloist with the Houston Symphony and Boston Pops, and has won many top prizes at competitions  worldwide, including the 2019 Astral Artists National Auditions, National Federation of Music Clubs Biennial Young Artists Competition, New York International Artists Association Competition, Friends of the Minnesota Orchestra, Ima Hogg Competition, Schadt String Competition, Artist Concerts Series National Solo Competition, and the Luminarts Classical Music Fellowship, to name a few.

He has both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music from the New England Conservatory of Music and did additional master’s training in Berlin.  

Alexander comes to the Bay Area at least twice a year. While here, he looks forward to seeing friends, hanging out with his grandfather and going to the Marin County Farmers Market. And practicing, of course. “I will mostly be practicing,” he said. “I have a really busy schedule, so I’m forever cramming for the next performance.”

Maestro Stephen Paulson, artistic director of Symphony Parnassus, will lead the orchestra in a concert that also includes Beethoven’s Overture to “The Ruins of Athens” and Nielsen’s Symphony No. 4, Opus 29.

Advance tickets for Sunday’s concert at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall), 50 Oak St., San Francisco, are available now from BrownPaperTickets. (Tickets are also available at the door.) Please note: The concert starts at 2 p.m.