Arts 41Intertaini au -`•,.4",* •••*4\ . „ r . Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival_features world-class musicians and composers, and adds Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El to the lineup as narrator for "Peter and the Wolf” SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish. News lthough the Great Lakes Chamber Mdsical Festival (GLCMF) generally restricts its performances to world-class musicians and young chamber groups from throughout the world, this year brings an exception. In the tradition of featuring personalities from fields other than music as narrator for Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El, one of the three religious institutions sponsoring .the festival, has been invited to join the concert program. Syme will perform June 18 and 24 in the sev- enth season of the secular music event, which runs June 10-24 and also is sponsored by St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church and Kirk in the Hills Church as well as the Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings, a local musical ensemble that provides administration for the concerts. Pianist and native Detroiter James Tocco, who has been artistic director since the festival began, appears in seven of the 21 live performances sched- uled at the sponsoring religious institutions and other venues in the area. William Bolcom, a Pulitzer Prize-winning corn- . poser, pianist and University of Michigan professor who has performed at events sponsored by area Jewish organizations, will be at the keyboard and serve as composer-in-residence. "It's a great honor to be invited to be part of this festival because it's one of the major chamber • music festivals in the country," says Rabbi Syme, who was active in theater when he attended the University of Michigan and long ago performed with a young rock 'n' roll band. "Peter and the Wolf is a wonderful composition for adults and children alike, and I really want to do a good job. I remember hearing my father, Rabbi M. Robert Syme, narrate it when I was a child, and I've asked my brother David, a concert pianist, to help me prepare for this. "I think of this year's last festival performance, which will be at the temple, as a double pleasure because it comes when we will be celebrating the 150th anniversary of Beth El with a dinner and silent auction." This year's concerts feature several returning musicians, including violist Paul Biss, violinist Miriam Fried, pianists Ruth Laredo and Gilbert Kalish, cellists Paul Katz and Nathaniel Rosen, A 6/2 2000 78 N • • •• '‘Vift fts.s. •-**, William Bolcom and Joan Morris. Bolcom is a featured keyboardist and composer-in-residence for the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival. He's an artist in very high demand today within the classical music community. baritone Kurt 011mann and Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings. New to the festival are violinists Joseph Silverstein, Scott St. John and Eric Pritchard and the Artemis String Quartet. "Music programs sponsored by religious organi- zations usually have very interested audiences, and I like the opportunity to encourage young corn- posers," says Bolcom, whose compositions will be played throughout the festival and become the entire program June 19, when his wife, mezzo- soprano Joan Morris, will perform. Bolcom, who has launched 17 premieres in the