"I had a great experience as a young person:' Slatkin said. "I appreciate it more now than I did when I was a kid. Meeting all these people, having them at our house, was wonderful. At the time, I didn't realize it. I was too young." A favorite family story involves Frank Sinatra singing the young Leonard Slatkin to sleep. "I don't remember it myself — I was 6 or 7 months old. But I do remember Uncle Frank was very good to our family." The Jewish presence in the film and recording industry in Hollywood was extensive, and Slatkin said he was always conscious of his ethnic heritage. Although he turned down the oppor- tunity to study for a bar mitzvah, he remembers the solemnity of his parents playing the Kol Nidre at temple on Yom Kippur and was moved by the experience of saying Kaddish for his father, who died when his older son was 19 years old. "As I get a little bit older, I do think a bit more about that part of my heritage and still embrace a great deal of the phi- losophy;' he said. "(Be the best person you can while you are here; try to make an impact on society and others. Those are the values that guide my life — that I try to instill in my son:' Slatkin's younger brother, Frederick, a cellist in New York, changed his last name to Zlotkin to more closely approximate the name of their paternal grandfather, who had arrived from Belarus in 1913. "We don't really know what our name was. Fred might be closer to it:' Leonard Slatkin said. Slatkin's diverse background gave him an eclectic musical appetite. As a teenager, he played glockenspiel in his high-school marching band and cocktail piano in a bar; in the 1960s, he worked part-time as a DJ at an underground radio station. "My background is quite diverse, in terms of the kinds of music I grew up with, so I was able to present a mixture — rock, jazz, classics, blues, gospel — whatever it happened to be he said. "I tried to find some kinds of ways to mix them up that made sense." America's Conductor The DSO's new, quintessentially American music director is a perfect fit with the wide-ranging mission of the DSO, according to board member Dr. Melvin Lester. "I was one of those who supported hir- ing an American conductor:' Dr. Lester said. "You need to look out the window and understand what the public wants. The Detroit Symphony is not just about traditional classical music. It's about Slatkin found that when "I conducted the DSO for the first time in 20 years, that there was a certain chemistry between us." The Detroit Sound Slatkin admits that his life will, as usual, be hectic, "but I thrive on it." jazz, pops, great youth symphony, young people's programming that's appealing to families. "Leonard is_ motivated; he's a self- starter, a risk-taker. He shows up at our committee meetings; he says, `What can I do? You want me to call somebody? Give me the name.' "He has all the qualities needed for the position:' Dr. Lester said. Although the Dec. 11 concert is Slatkin's first official appearance on the podium, the new music director has been in town, meeting the public and taking an active role in all aspects of planning. He has taken over hosting the DSO radio broadcasts, as well as a new project — a series of television programs set to debut Jan. 3 on Detroit Public Television. "He's so American; this guy;' said Cummings. "He even intends to throw out the opening ball at a Tigers game." 0 The "Leonard Slatkin Era" begins with performances of Carmina Burana Dec.11-14. Enter for your chance to win a four-pack of tickets to see Carmina Burana by being the first to correctly answer the following trivia question: "How many Grammys has Leonard Slatkin won?" Send entries to DSOdetroit® gmail.com with your name, address, phone number and SLATKIN/Jewish News in the subject line. All entries must be received no later than noon Monday, Dec. 8. As music director, Leonard Slatkin has the task of creating what he calls "a distinct sonic profile" for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. "I want people to be able to say, eventually, 'Aha, that's the Detroit Symphony,' not just by looking at them, but by identifying the sound," he told the Jewish News. The DSO has a step up on many other performing institutions, he said, because of "the lush and beautiful acoustics" of Orchestra Hall. In addi- tion, he is excited about the musicality and what might be called the group dynamic of the orchestra. "They are already distinctive, because of my various predecessors and the orchestra itself," he said. "Even without a music director for three years, they have kept a real watch on themselves." The orchestra's basic point of depar- ture must be the string section, he said. "Otherwise, you're a band. "Since I come from a background of string players, I am especially sensitive to string sonority. Next come the winds and percussion – consider how they blend in with the strings. I will be mess- ing around with the stage setup a little bit to see what we can do to achieve maximum sonic profile." In violin auditions last summer, Slatkin looked for musicians who, in addition to technical capability, would blend in with his vision of the total orchestral sound. "You build a sonic profile the same way you consider a visual profile; for example, the way your home is deco- rated," he said. "That's what I do with sound." - Diana Lieberman -ember 4 0 2008 C9