Melodic Master Meet composer-in-residence Paul Schoenfield. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News T he music of former Detroiter Paul Schoenfield will be played by an array of instrumentalists at this year's Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival. The Temple Beth El Chapel, on June 25, will be the setting for an all- Schoenfield concert featuring pianist James Tocco, violinist Juliette Kang, cel- lists Nathaniel RoSen and Debra Fayroian, clarinetist Laurence Liberson and the Claremont Trio. This year's composer-in-residence's pieces also will be played at five other fes- tival venues (see accompanying schedule). "Most of the pieces that will be played are older works," says Schoenfield, 54, who spends part of the year in the United States and part of the year in Israel. "Except for Sparks of Glory, they are heavily rooted in folk music and do not give the full range of my work." "The Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano is kind of a klezmer piece, while Carolina Reveille was written for some- one who wanted music based on the song 'Carolina in the Morning,' " says Schoenfield, who writes when he is commissioned to do a piece. "Three Country Fiddle Pieces for Violin and Piano is very fast and diffi- cult to play [in comparison to] Cafe Music for Violin, Cello and Piano, which is based on jazz in the 1920s. British Folk Songs for Cello and Piano was written in memory of a teacher, and Sparks of Glory comes from the title of a book by Moshe Prager, a World War II European journalist who moved to Israel and wrote stories of heroism from the concentration camps. Schoenfield began musical training at the age of 6, eventually studying piano with Julius Chajes, Ozan Marsh and Rudolf Serkin. With enough credits and high SAT scores, he left Detroit's Cass Technical High School a year early and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in music from Carnegie Mellon University. He went on to earn a doctorate in music from the University of Arizona. "Most kids take some kind of musical instrument, so I took piano," Schoenfield says about his entry into music. "We had a piano in the house and I took to it. I really was torn between mathematics and music and actually I still am. I keep up with math as much as I have time for." Schoenfield's early work was accompa- nying people in Detroit, and then he moved on to other performances, more writing and teaching at the University of Toledo. For a time, he lived on a kib- butz, which, he says, suited his personal- ity as a strong socialist. "As a full-time composer, I take the orders that come in the order that they come," says Schoenfield, who is married to a physician and has three children who all have studied music. "I've only turned down a few things. I work all day and do a lot of my writing just going for walks and hearing things. I work out the [melodies] sitting at the piano." Among those who have commis- sioned his work or awarded grants to him are Chamber Music America, the Classical Conductor Philip Greenberg brings his baton home. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News ED hilip Greenberg, music director and conductor of the Savannah Symphony in Georgia, returns home for two engagements important to him — the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival and the Michael Bistritzky Memorial Concert. Greenberg, who grew up in Michigan and served as assistant con- ductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra from 1974-1978, is debut- ing with Great Lakes for two programs and saluting an influential person in his career for the another. One of Greenberg's Great Lakes con- ducting performances, June 23 at the Seligman Performing Arts Center at Detroit Country Day School, will be with Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings, violinists Ida and Ani Kavafian and pianists James Tocco, Ruth Laredo and Seymour Lipkin, and include works by Nielsen, Schoenfield, Bach and Mozart. At 3 and 4:40 p.m. Sunday, June 24, he'll conduct Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings in family concerts at the Wildlife Interpretive Gallery at the Detroit Zoo, where zoo director Dr. Ron Kagan will narrate the piece Tyrannosaurus Sue, a Cretaceous Concerto, written by Bruce Adolphe. To these summer programs, Greenberg brings experience as music director-conductor of the Royal Music Festival in Cahors, France, and artistic director-conductor of the Crested Butte (Colorado) Summer Music Festival. On June 18 at the Birmingham Unitarian Church for the Bistritzky con- cert, Greenberg will conduct 50 musi- cians from major orchestras around the country, including Cleveland Orchestra violinist Judy Berman Fried, Dallas Symphony cellist Daniel Levine, and Toledo Symphony cellist Loraine Messick Rockefeller Fund, American Composers Forum, Soli Deo Gloria of Chicago and the Opera Theatre of St. Louis, which asked for a full-length folk opera, The Merchant and the Pauper, to a libretto by Maggie Stearns. The composer, who keeps the Sabbath and studies Talmud with a learning part- ner, has done only a few pieces- related to Judaism. His current workload includes a cello concerto and string quartet. "My most recent recording came out last January," Schoenfield says. "It has a number of chamber pieces and was a joint project with Decca and Innova Recordings." ❑ As part of the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, an all- Schoenfield concert will take place 8 p.m. (7 p.m. preview) Monday, June 25, at Temple Beth El. Schoenfield pieces also will be played 8 p.m. (7 p.m. preview) Thursday and Friday, June 21 22, at St. Hugo's Chapel; 8 p.m. (7 • p.m. preview) Saturday, June 23, at Seligman Performing Arts Center at Detroit Country Day School; 7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 21, at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in East Lansing; 8 p.m. Friday, June 22, at Kerrytown Concert House in Ann Arbor; and 11:30 a.m. Sunday, June 24, at the Detroit Institute of Arts. (248) 559-2097. tk - Schoenfield. He'll feature works by Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich and Vivaldi. "Michael Bistritzky, who recently passed away, was the conductor of the youth orchestra out of which almost every professional Detroit musician came for 30 or 40 years, and many musicians in town for the festival will be soloing for the memorial," says Greenberg, 54, who played violin with the Mumford High School Orchestra, Detroit High Schools Honors Orchestra and the All-City Orchestra conducted by Bistritzky. "The memorial concert reads like a Who's Who of the orchestra world. I've conducted the Moscow Philharmonic, Danish Radio Orchestra and famous orchestras all over the world, but I don't know of any orchestra that's been put together that's this illustrious as far as orchestras represented." Greenberg, who earned a bachelor's degree in violin performance at Indiana University and the first master's degree in conducting granted by the University of Michigan, served as concertmaster and CONDUCTOR on page 78 jfi 6/8 2001