DPU Concerto Competition winners to take center stage Sunday

Tuesday, April 9, 2019
Concerto WinnersFollowing DePauw School of Music’s annual Concerto Competition, eight outstanding students — soprano Amalia Crevani ’21, pianist Tatsuya Katsuhara ’19, tenor David Young ’20, cellist Amelia Smerz ’20, violinist Katherine Allen ’19, percussionist Abigail Foehrkolb ’21, mezzo-soprano Connor Locke ’20 and saxophonist Lindsey Welp ’19 — were selected to perform as soloists with the University Orchestra on Sunday, April 14 at 4 p.m. Orcenith Smith will conduct.
Courtesy photo

In one of the DePauw School of Music’s most anticipated events of the year, winners of the schoolwide Concerto Competition will take center stage as soloists with the DePauw University Orchestra on Sunday, April 14.

The concert, conducted by the orchestra’s music director Orcenith Smith, will be given at 4 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium of the Judson and Joyce Green Center for the Performing Arts, 605 S. College Ave.

This year’s outstanding student soloists, in order of appearance: senior violinist Katherine Allen from Chicago, will perform Ravel’s bold “Tzigane”; junior Amelia Smerz from Downers Grove, Ill., will play Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E Minor (Mvt. IV); senior Lindsey Welp of Jasper, will perform Tomasi’s Concerto for Alto Saxophone (Mvt. I); junior Connor Locke, a mezzo-soprano from Riverside, Mo., will sing “Nobles seigneurs, salut!” from Meyerbeer’s “Les Huguenots”; and sophomore Abigail Foehrkolb, from St. Louis, will play Séjourné’s Concerto for Marimba (Mvt. I).

Tenor David Young of League City, Texas, will then present two songs from Richard Strauss’s “Vier Lieder,” and soprano Amalia Crevani, a sophomore from Milford, N.J., will follow with the enchanting doll song, “Les oiseaux dans la Charmille” from Offenbach’s “Les Contes Hoffmann.”

Sunday’s program will conclude with Tatsuya Katsuhara, from Tokyo, Japan, performing the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s majestic Piano Concerto No 1.

The annual contest, held in collaboration with the DePauw School of Music, includes two rounds of competition in late February. This year’s preliminary round, judged by DePauw music faculty, consisted of 36 entrants performing in the categories of voice, string instruments, brass, percussion and woodwinds. Those musicians selected for the final round performed again two days later adjudicated by judges from outside DePauw. Students who scored the highest total points in the final round were selected as winners.

General admission to the DePauw Concerto Winners’ Concert is $5. Tickets for seniors, children and all students, are free, thanks to season sponsors Judson and Joyce Green. To obtain tickets, visit depauw.edu/music.

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