Friday, November 10, 2023

MARIJOSIUS AWARD, 2023: winners

Vytautas Marijosius
The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David (Volosin) Katz, founder and chief judge, is honored to announce 2023 WINNERS, runners-up and honorary mentions in orchestral programming, The Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award. Congratulations! Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com 

The American Prize—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award in Orchestral Programming honors the memory of the great Lithuanian conductor, Maestro Vytautas Marijosius, music director of the Lithuanian State Opera, and for nearly thirty-five years Director of Orchestral Activities at the Hartt School of Music of the University of Hartford. The Prize recognizes and rewards the best achievement in the unique field of orchestral programming, where the selection of repertoire by knowledgeable, creative and courageous music directors builds orchestras and audiences, educates young people and adults, and enriches the community.  

The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts is the nation's most comprehensive series of contests in the performing arts. The American Prize is unique in scope and structure, designed to recognize and reward the best performing artists, directors, ensembles and composers in the United States at professional, college/university, community and high school levels, based on submitted recordings. Now in its thirteenth year, The American Prize was founded in 2010 and is awarded annually in many areas of the performing arts. Thousands of artists from all fifty states have derived benefit from their participation in the contests of The American Prize, representing literally hundreds of communities and arts organizations across the nation.  Information about the 2023-24 season of contests is now available and applications are being accepted, with extended deadlines in September and October. (http://theamericanprize.org)

The American Prize in Orchestral Programming—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award (collegiate division), 2023

The American Prize winner:
David A. Rahbee 
University of Washington Symphony Orchestra
Seattle WA

David A. Rahbee
David Alexander Rahbee is currently Senior Artist in Residence at the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle, where he is Director of Orchestral Activities and teaches conducting. He is recipient of the American-Austrian Foundation's 2003 Karajan Fellowship for Y oung Conductors, the 2005 International Richard-Wagner-Verband Stipend, and the Acanthes Centre in Paris in 2007. He has recently worked with the Seattle Symphony, Orchesterakademie der Bochumer Symphoniker, the Seattle Modern Orchestra, National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia, Guernsey Symphony and Orquesta Sinfónica de Loja. He participated in masterclasses with Kurt Masur, Sir Colin Davis, Jorma Panula, Zdeněk Mácal, Peter Eötvös, and Zoltán Peskó. His principal conducting teachers were Charles Bruck and Michael Jinbo at the Monteux School. He holds degrees from Indiana University, New England Conservatory, and University of Montreal. He also studied at Universität für Musik und Darstellende Kunst, Vienna. www.davidrahbee.com


2nd Place:
Michelle Di Russo   
Cornell University Orchestra   
Ithaca NY  
Michelle Di Russo
A graceful yet powerful force on the podium, Argentinian-Italian conductor Michelle Di Russo is known for her compelling interpretations, passionate musicality, and championing of contemporary music. Recently appointed as the new Assistant Conductor of North Carolina Symphony and Interim Director of Orchestras at Cornell University and, she is a Freeman Conducting Fellow in Chicago Sinfonietta’s Project Inclusion program and The Dallas Opera Hart Institute, as well as a recipient of the Richard S.Weinert award from Concert Artists Guild.
 Former posts include serving as Assistant Conductor for the Phoenix Youth Symphony Orchestra and as cover conductor for The Phoenix Symphony and Arizona Musicfest. Di Russo was the recipient of a 2020 American Austrian Foundation/Faber Young Conductors Fellowship and has served as a conducting fellow at the Cortona Sessions for New Music in Italy. Recent engagements include covering for St. Louis Symphony, National Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra and San Diego Symphony.  


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Jeffrey Klefstad   
All University Orchestra—Carnegie Mellon University  
Pittsburgh  PA   

Jeffrey Klefstad
Jeffrey Klefstad is Music Director and Conductor of the All University Orchestra (AUO) at Carnegie Mellon University. He has led orchestras throughout North America and Europe, including the Aurora Festival Orchestra (Sweden), the Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic (Czech Republic), McGill Symphony Orchestra (MGSO) and Contemporary Ensemble (MCE). He has collaborated with the saxophone quartet, Quasar, and worked with the Meitar Ensemble (Israel) under the guidance of Pierre-André Valade. Previously, Klefstad served as assistant conductor for Resonance Works (Pittsburgh), was guest conductor in residence for l’Orchestre du Conservatoire de la Montérégie (Montreal), and cover conductor for the Pittsburgh, Akron and Edgewood Symphony Orchestras, and the Mendelssohn Choir of Pittsburgh. He has worked with acclaimed conductors and composers, Leif Segerstam, Kurt Masur, Manfred Honeck, Steve Reich, Jennifer Higdon, Roberto Sierra, and Samuel Jones, among others. www.jeffreyklefstad.com



3rd Place (there was a tie):
Paul McShee   
Binghamton University Symphony Orchestra
Binghamton   NY 

Paul McShee

Described as “emotionally stirring” by the Missoulian, Paul McShee, artistic director of instrumental studies and assistant professor at Binghamton University, is known for the "energy and sincere expression" of his performances. Equally at home on the podium and in the opera pit, McShee is sought after as a conductor for opera productions in the U.S. and Europe, and directs the Edinburgh PopUpOpera. McShee has conducted the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the Baltimore Chamber Orchestra, the Boulder Chamber Orchestra, The Missoula Symphony Orchestra, the London Paradisal Players, L’Orchestre Band-Son, the Philharmonie Mihail Jora and the Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic. He holds the DMA in conducting from the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University. He has taught at the University of Minnesota, the University of Connecticut, and Binghamton University. His current research concerns the intersections between philosophy and the music of Brahms, Wagner, and Mahler. McShee studied under Marin Alsop, and Harvey Felder. www.paulrmcshee.com


The American Prize in Orchestral Programming—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award (non-collegiate division), 2023

The American Prize winner:
Ubaldo Valli  
Pierstown Grange Chamber Concerts  
Cooperstown NY

Ubaldo Valli  
Ubaldo Valli is director of the Pierstown Concert Series (Cooperstown NY).  He was Music Director/Conductor of the SUNY Cortland College-Community Orchestra, co-founded and conducted the Northeast String Orchestra (Albany, NY) and the Saratoga Springs Youth Symphony, served as Music Director and/or Conductor of the Hamilton College Orchestra, the Auburn (NY) Chamber Orchestra, the Saratoga Springs Youth Orchestra and the Empire State Youth Orchestra String Ensemble and Advanced Chamber Ensemble.  As a guest conductor, Valli has conducted widely: at festivals, for Music’s Recreation (Ithaca, NY), at Ithaca College and for an interfaith service with His Holiness, the Dalai Lama of Tibet. He studied conducting with Jeffrey Meyer, Pamela Gearhart and Karel Husa.  He has also studied and performed theater improvisation internationally and in 2018 and 2021 presented papers linking orchestral conducting and performance with improv and theatrical mask techniques at the Oxford Conducting Institute Conducting Studies Conference, University of Oxford. 



2nd Place (there was a tie):
Kathryn D. Brownlee  
New Texas Symphony Orchestra   
Dallas TX

Kathryn D. Brownlee 
Dr. Kathryn D. Brown is Founder, Artistic Director, and Conductor of the New Texas Symphony Orchestra. She started the NTSO in 2004 with a dream to give amateur and volunteer musicians an opportunity to play in a full orchestra setting, and to share with audiences the excitement and improved quality of life that comes from being a part of music played for the love of it. All NTSO concerts are free to attend thanks to the NTSO initiative of Free Concerts for All. Through this, Dr. Brown is honored to bring local and internationally recognized artists to audiences who otherwise might have missed their music. Dr. Brown earned a Doctor of Musical Arts from Boston University with a focus on community music and lifelong music making. She is also a Music Professor at Dallas College and holds memberships in the Conductors Guild, Texas Music Educators Association, and Sigma Alpha Iota. 



2nd Place (there was a tie):
Wojciech Milewski
Summerville Orchestra  
Summerville SC 
Wojciech Milewski
Energetic and dynamic Wojciech Milewski is an emerging operatic and orchestral conductor. He is the recipient of the 2019 Henderson Symphony Orchestra Harold Farberman Prize and was a finalist in the 2019 Los Angeles Conducting Competition. Recently named music director of Charleston Opera Theater, Wojciech has held the baton for the Summerville Orchestra since 2016. Under his leadership, the orchestra has directly engaged the community by starting three separate outreach series, selling out its rou pre-COVID seasons and doubling its active musician roster.


3rd Place:
Kaleb Benda  
Oklahoma Chamber Symphony  
Oklahoma City  OK   

Kaleb Benda
Conductor Kaleb Benda is Music Director of the Oklahoma Chamber Symphony, Music Director of the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma Concert Band, and Assistant Conductor of the Enid Symphony Orchestra. Having conducted across the United States and in Hungary, Benda’s multi-faceted career also includes regular appearances with the annual Cool Classics Series where he conducts the OK Strings ensemble, as Artistic Director of the Texas Chamber Symphony, and guest conducting engagements. In 2021 he and Oklahoma Chamber Symphony commissioned Williams’ Greenwood, Archer & Pine, a piece commemorating the centennial of the Tulsa Race Massacre. Consecutively in 2016-2021, Kaleb Benda was named a finalist for The American Prize in the discipline of conducting. In 2021, Kaleb was named a Next Gen under 30 award winner for his effort with Oklahoma Chamber Symphony to make classical music accessible in the community. Visit www.kalebbenda.com for more information.



Finalist Honorable Mention:
John B. Gordon 
Williamson County Symphony Orchestra   
Round Rock TX

John B. Gordon

The Williamson County Symphony Orchestra was formed in 2002 with the mission of encouraging the general public to come listen to great music.  The Orchestra consists of between 60 and 80 members, staffed almost entirely by volunteer musicians, into a near-professional level ensemble.  The concert format that was instituted 21 years ago has a programming formula that brings in large to over-flow audiences. Under Director of Music John Gordon's leadership, the Orchestra continues to perform FREE "pops-styled" concerts with a mixture of music from the classical, both romantic & modern periods, movies & TV, contemporary, and religious genres of music and new compositions from Composer-in-Resident, Dr ML Daniels.  The FREE concerts are pitched toward families, seniors, and the general public.  The Orchestra performs a two-concert series four times a year - Fall, Christmas, Spring, & Outdoor - at venues across Williamson County plus one FREE concert for troops and families at Ft Hood.

John Gordon was a founding member of the Orchestra in February of 2002.  He has served as Chairman (President) of the Board of Directors for 20 years and as Director of Music for the last three years.  He has guided the music selection, selected venues, brought in Conductors, done some conducting, and assisted the Orchestra's musicians over the years while serving as First or Second Trumpet in performances. John is a Registered Professional (Electrical) Engineer and has been involved in many of the major electric utility cases in Texas.  


*** 


Congratulations!

MARIJOSIUS AWARD, 2023: finalists

Vytautas Marijosius
The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David (Volosin) Katz, founder and chief judge, is honored to announce 2023 FINALIST conductors in orchestral programming, The Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award. Congratulations!

As the contests unfold, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when winners will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first. 

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com 

The American Prize—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award in Orchestral Programming honors the memory of the great Lithuanian conductor, Maestro Vytautas Marijosius, music director of the Lithuanian State Opera, and for nearly thirty-five years Director of Orchestral Activities at the Hartt School of Music. The Prize recognizes and rewards the best achievement in the unique field of orchestral programming, where the selection of repertoire by knowledgeable, creative and courageous music directors builds orchestras and audiences, educates young people and adults, and enriches the community.  

The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts is the nation's most comprehensive series of contests in the performing arts. The American Prize is unique in scope and structure, designed to recognize and reward the best performing artists, directors, ensembles and composers in the United States at professional, college/university, community and high school levels, based on submitted recordings. Now in its thirteenth year, The American Prize was founded in 2010 and is awarded annually in many areas of the performing arts. Thousands of artists from all fifty states have derived benefit from their participation in the contests of The American Prize, representing literally hundreds of communities and arts organizations across the nation.  Information about the 2023-24 season of contests is now available and applications are being accepted, with preliminary deadlines in May & July. (http://theamericanprize.org)

At The American Prize there is never a preset number of finalists in any division—finalists are those artists who are judged to be worthy of additional consideration and evaluation. Contestants, therefore, do not compete against each other, but in reference to judges' perceived impression of an artistic ideal.

If you are not a finalist this year, please remember that the contests are not yet over. The American Prize reserves the right to award Honorable Mentions and Citations for Special Achievement to any contestant, regardless of final placement. TAP has honored a number of semi-finalists and quarter finalists in the past--to recognize a unique talent or focus, unusual repertoire, vital programming or outreach. Citations and Honorable Mentions are usually awarded at the same time as winners and runners-up, but can be presented at any time up to the last winners' announcement of the contest year.

We invite finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize in Orchestral Programming—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award (collegiate division), 2023

Michelle Di Russo   
Cornell University Orchestra   
Ithaca NY   

Jeffrey Klefstad   
All University Orchestra—Carnegie Mellon University  
Pittsburg  PA   

Paul McShee   
Binghamton University Symphony Orchestra
Binghamton   NY 

David A. Rahbee 
University of Washington Symphony Orchestra
Seattle WA  


NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize in Orchestral Programming—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award (non-collegiate division), 2023

Kaleb Benda  
Oklahoma Chamber Symphony  
Oklahoma City  OK   

Kathryn D. Brownlee  
New Texas Symphony Orchestra   
Dallas TX

John B. Gordon 
Williamson County Symphony Orchestra   
Round Rock TX

Phillip Lenberg
Ukiah Symphony Orchestra  
Ukiah  CA  

Wojeiech Milewski
Summerville Orchestra  
Summerville SC 

David W. Oertel 
Starlight Symphony Orchestra   
Wimberley  TX

Eric Scheider   
Hendersonville Symphony Orchestra  
Hendersonville NC

Ubaldo Valli  
Pierstown Grange Chamber Concerts  
Cooperstown NY

*** 

We invite finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. 

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize National Non-profit Competitions in the Performing Arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing winners in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize "

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all finalists.