ICWF 2005: Conducting Academy

Concerts:
June 18, 2005

Beethoven Coriolan Overture
Schubert Symphony #5
Beethoven Triple Concerto
Georgy Valtchev, violin
Dimo Dimov, cello
Joel Fan, piano
Benjamin Loeb, conductor


June 24, 2005
Beethoven Egmont Overture
Matthew Hooper, conductor
Beethoven Symphony #8
Jason Raff, conductor
Schumann Symphony #2
Craig Burdette and Steven Radcliffe, conductors

June 25, 2005
Smetana Moldau
Matthew Hooper, conductor
Elgar Enigma Variations
Avlana Eisenberg, conductor
Brahms Symphony #2
Evan Rogister and David Stech, conductors


Participants:
StephenRadcliffe
Craig Burdette
David Stech
Evan Rogister
Johnny Ku
Matthew Hooper
Jason Raff
Avlana Eisenberg

Workshop Faculty

Rossen Milanov

Rossen Milanov has already been hailed as "one who bears watching by anyone who cares about the future of music". As Associate Conductor of The Philadelphia Orchestra, he regularly conducts concerts with that Orchestra, while also serving as Music Director of both the Haddonfield Symphony in New Jersey and New Symphony Orchestra in his native city Sofia, Bulgaria. Recently he was named Chief Conductor of the Bulgarian National Radio Symphony Orchestra.

Mr Milanov's 2003/04 season highlights included a week of Philadelphia Orchestra subscription concerts celebrating the 75th birthday of pianist Gary Graffman, with a programme featuring Ravel?s Left Hand Piano Concerto, Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony, and the first Philadelphia Orchestra performances of blue cathedral by Jennifer Higdon. In December, Mr Milanov conducted the orchestra's annual series of holiday concerts, and later in the season conducted a production of Puccini's La Boheme at the Curtis Institute. In the 2004/05 season, in addition to a busy schedule in Philadelphia including the world premiere of Nicholas Maw's English Horn Concerto, he will be making subscription debuts with the Indianapolis Symphony and Elgin Symphony, and will return to the Omaha Symphony and the Civic Orchestra of Chicago. He has been invited to open the 2005/06 season of The Hague Residentie Orchestra.

Mr Milanov studied conducting at the Juilliard School (recipient of the Bruno Walter Memorial Scholarship), the Curtis Institute of Music, Duquesne University, and the Bulgarian National Academy of Music, with teachers including Otto-Werner Mueller, Robin Fountain, and Vassil Kazandjiev. North American guest conducting appearances have included concerts and tours with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony, Colorado Symphony, Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, Civic Orchestra of Chicago, New World Symphony, Duluth-Superior Symphony, Juilliard Opera Center, and Curtis Opera Theater. He was Music Director of the Chicago Youth Symphony from 1997-2001, and has participated in numerous summer festivals, including Tanglewood and the Interlochen Arts Festival.

Mr Milanov retains a close association with his native city of Sofia in Bulgaria. As music director of the New Symphony Orchestra, the first privately funded orchestra in Eastern Europe, he has commissioned and premiered many new works, introduced American music to Bulgarian audiences, and made several recordings. In 2003 he led the New Symphony in a cycle of Brahms?s complete symphonies and concertos. He also conducted a recent production of Wagner's Flying Dutchman to much critical acclaim, and in 2001 accompanied the legendary Bulgarian bass Nikolai Ghiaurov in Mussorgsky's Songs and Dances of Death. Mr Milanov founded the Sofia-Mt Vitosha International Conducting Institute, a summer festival dedicated to the training of young aspiring conductors, and also received the Award for Extraordinary Contribution to Bulgarian Culture.

Benjamin Loeb

Benjamin Loeb, a native Texan, is an accomplished conductor, accompanist, soloist, arranger, and educator. He has been hailed in El Paso as “a walking genius of unique ideas for making concerts fun to perform and hear, as well as subtly exposing youngsters to the pleasures of good music, [El Paso, Inc.]” while his recent performance with the Greater Bridgeport (CT) Symphony Orchestra as a “double-threat” both playing and conducting Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue was called “a total triumph that triggered a well-deserved, spontaneous standing ovation. Loeb and the GBS captured every ounce of imagination and emotion Gershwin packed into his ground-breaking musical portrait. [Connecticut Post]”

Other widely varied projects range from concerts of Beethoven and Bruckner Symphonies to recordings with Yo-Yo Ma of Italian 16th century madrigalists to tours with popular rock musicians to world premieres of the most cutting-edge avant-garde contemporary music. As the Associate Conductor of the El Paso Symphony Orchestra, Loeb founded and served as both Executive and Music Director of the El Paso Symphony Youth Orchestras – El Paso’s only national-level, NEA-recognized, multiple-orchestra system serving the best young musicians in the El Paso, southern New Mexico and Juarez region.  He held the position of Assistant Conductor for the Haddonfield Symphony for four years and Assistant Conductor for the Greater Bridgeport (CT) Symphony Orchestra for two, and served for three summers as Assistant Conductor for the TodiMusicFest in Portsmouth, VA.  He is the Founder and Artistic Director of the International Conducting Workshop and Festival, now in its ninth year, hosted by orchestras around the world.  He has also served as Director of Orchestras at the Music Institute of Chicago.

Benjamin Loeb’s projects have shown his tremendous range. With the Haddonfield Symphony (now Symphony in C) he led the MET Life award-winning musical outreach into schools in southern New Jersey in which he introduced children of all ages to the instruments of the orchestra.  At Rutgers University, the Peabody Conservatory and Harvard University, he led operas in full productions.  In El Paso he has conducted the El Paso Symphony in Young Peoples’ Concerts, Family Concerts and Christmas Concerts.  In one recent concert, both the El Paso Symphony and El Paso Youth Orchestra performed together combining to make over 150 musicians on stage. With the Pueblo (CO) Symphony, he both played and conducted Beethoven Emperor Concerto.  A frequent guest conductor in China, he often leads all-American programs while giving master classes and performing recitals with Chinese instrumentalists on his off days.  At the Peabody Conservatory, as a musical response to the attacks of September 11, Loeb organized and led what Tim Smith of The Baltimore Sun called “a remarkable concert” of Bruckner Symphony #7 and the world premiere of John Traill’s “In Memory”, a set of four orchestral miniatures based on the themes of the Bruckner.  He has been asked by Yo-Yo Ma to create and conduct arrangements of 16th century madrigals for his Silk Road Project, and he has toured with his sister Lisa Loeb leading orchestral accompaniments to her rock music.

This year marked the eighth of the International Conducting Workshop and Festival (ICWF) – an five-day workshop for conductors in Ciudad Chihuahua, Mexico, which has trained over 275 conductors from 28 countries since its inception, and which has included both full orchestra concerts and chamber music with international artists.  The ICWF has included past faculty members such as Larry Rachleff, Don Schleicher, Carl St.Clair, and Rossen Milanov. Last January’s workshop with over 26 active participants was led by Loeb, Gustav Meier, Director of Conducting Studies at Peabody Conservatory and Music Director of the Greater Bridgeport (CT) Symphony, and Jacob Chi, Director of Orchestras at Colorado State, Pueblo.

As a pianist, Benjamin Loeb has been praised by the Boston Globe: “[his] vigorous, cogent playing signaled the kind of equally weighted partnership, plus competition, plus mutual quest, etc. that [makes] this music live.”  Past season highlights include three performances of the Beethoven Emperor Concerto including one in which he both conducted and performed as soloist.  Some of the conductors with whom he has worked include Alan Gilbert, JoAnn Falletta, and Carl St. Clair.  His concerts have taken him around to world to major venues and on radio and TV in New York City, San Francisco, Dallas, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Berlin, Seoul, Shanghai, Wuhan, Guangzhou, Panama City, Helsinki, St. Petersburg and tours across the United States.  He has performed for Community Concerts and has been featured as Artist-in-Residence on NPR’s Performance Today with violinist Livia Sohn.  As one of the last Artistic Ambassadors for the United States Information Agency he toured Argentina and Chile with clarinetist David Gresham.  He has served three times as an official pianist for the Joseph Joachim/Hanover International Violin Competition, as well as for the Walter Naumberg Violin Competition, Marlboro Music Festival and Concerts Artist Guild auditions.  He served as staff pianist for the Steans/Ravinia Festival and SMU Summer Conservatory among others.  He can be heard on many labels having recorded CD’s with violinists Joseph Lin (Korngold and Busoni), Takako Nishizaki (Mozart), and Livia Sohn (Opera Fantasies) on Naxos, Judy Kang for the Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and with soprano Allison Charney on the DSCLabel.  He also has a recently released solo album on Naxos of Joplin Rags and has two recordings in production of Christmas and Children Songs with soprano Katrina Swift.

He holds a Graduate Performance Diploma from the Peabody Conservatory in Conducting, as a student of Gustav Meier, a Master in Music from the Curtis Institute and a Doctor in Musical Arts from the Juilliard School in Accompanying and a Bachelor of Arts from Harvard University.

He resides in El Paso, Texas with his wife, Quyen, his 4-year-old daughter, Anna Sofia Uni, and his 20-month-old, Lulu Ladybug. He continues to tour worldwide as conductor, pianist, educator and arts advocate, and to teach at the new El Paso Conservatory of Music.

Loeb’s far-ranging interests do not limit him to music; he has directed plays, cooked gourmet meals for 65, tutored over 500 people in test preparation for the Princeton Review, and played and enjoyed almost every sport.  He is also an active member of the Rotary Club of El Paso.  Moreover (or most important), he is a lifetime Dallas Cowboys fan.

BEETHOVEN - Egmont Overture, Symphony No.8
BRAHMS - Symphony No.2
ELGAR - Enigma Variations
SCHUMANN - Symphony No.2
SMETANA - Moldau