NHMF Musicians return for 2010 Season; long road to recovery remains
Nestled between the Lakes Region and the White Mountains of New Hampshire, Plymouth is a bucolic college town, home to Plymouth State University, the long-time host of the New Hampshire Music Festival.
As reported earlier this year, this community had come together in support of its beloved summer orchestra amidst the strife caused by the Festival's decision makers to move into a drastically new direction for the future which many feared did not include their resident Festival Orchestra.
Immediately following the first rehearsal of the season on July 7, 2009, President/CEO David Graham and Festival Director Henry Fogel delivered shocking news: Musicians wishing to return for the 2010 season would have to undergo a rigorous reapplication process. Veteran performers were being asked to submit an audition portfolio consisting of a CD or DVD of a solo performance of music from three periods of music history as well as optional performances of jazz, improvisation, or alternative styles, and three written essays regarding their approach to music making and mentoring. The rationale behind it was to assure management that musicians would be competent to assume duties related to a “new orchestra model".
Orchestra solidarity was paramount at this critical juncture. At an orchestra meeting, it was decided that musicians would wear purple ribbons during rehearsals and concerts to express their solidarity against Management's actions. Little did the orchestra know that the audience, who were outraged at the prospect of losing their musicians, would also choose to wear purple ribbons! Concerned citizens gathered to establish a group, S.O.O.N. (Save Our Orchestra Now), whose goal was to save the New Hampshire Music Festival and its musicians.
The battle to save the festival continued throughout the fall and winter, and after countless hours of discussion and lobbying by the Orchestra Committee and executives of SOON, the Board of Trustees voted to abandon the "new model". Along with this decision came the resignations of President David Graham, Festival Director Henry Fogel, newly appointed Artistic Director Jonathan Gandelsman, and several board members.
NHMF musicians are pleased with the news that they will return in 2010, and are looking forward to performing for their supportive audience.
We are hopeful that the issues that still remain between the Festival Board and Management and the Musicians, can be resolved through negotiation, dialogue and mutual agreement during the course of this summer. The Orchestra Committee looks forward to meeting directly with members of the board to work out a Personnel Policy that is mutually agreeable and will ensure the stability and quality of the orchestra into the future.
The Orchestra Committee continues to work to restore peace and harmony to an organization that has seen much strife over recent seasons. The goal for NHMF musicians is to provide world-class performances of classical orchestra and chamber music and to achieve recognition so that they are never again put in such a precarious position.
We would like to thank our loyal supporters for helping us to achieve what we have so far. Please consider a donation to the Festival at this time. Your ongoing support both financially and publicly will ensure the health of the organization well into the future.
Sincerely,
The NHMF Orchestra Committee
Ella Marie Gray Bernard Di Gregorio Joseph Higgins Nina Allen Miller Kristin Van Cleve |
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1/29/10 - Festival Family Letter |
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Dear NHMF Family,
We know you are looking forward to receiving the 2010 season brochure and we plan to have specific information about the six week season to you by early March. The Festival will be presenting the Classics Series on Thursday and Friday evenings, Chamber Music on Tuesday evenings, three Pops Concerts on alternating Saturday evenings, and the NHMF Chorus is back as promised, all at Silver Center for the Arts at PSU beginning the week of July 5th.
The Board of Directors met on January 21st to reaffirm its decision to re-invigorate its artistic mission in a more traditional way through a music director search now planned for the 2011 season. Festival Director Henry Fogel and Artistic Director Jonathan Gandelsman recognized that the traditional approach for a new music director made it inappropriate for them to work directly with the Festival in their previously announced roles. By mutual agreement, both Fogel and Gandelsman have ended their appointments with the Festival and wished the Festival success in its plan for sustaining community support for classical music.
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1/13/10 - Laconia Citizen Editorial |
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Playing in a different key
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
The decision by the New Hampshire Music Festival to abandon plans for major alterations to its programming after months of intense criticism brings to mind a comment made many years ago by the legendary Senator Everett Dirksen who said, "When I begin to feel the heat, that's when I start to see the light."
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1/13/10 - Adaptistration Article |
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ps - click on Drew's name (below) for more articles of interest!
January 12, 2010 | Drew McManus
All things being equal, something like this might have slipped by under the radar but thanks to the Boston Globe’s Geoff Edgers, events at the New Hampshire Music Festival (NHMF) have taken center stage. According to Edgers’ article from the 1/11/2010 edition, the NHMF’s board and administrative leadership attempted to implement sweeping changes that were the result of re-conceptualizing the artistic model…
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1/4/10 - Letter to the Musicians |
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January 4, 2010
Dear NHMF Musicians,
The Orchestra Committee would like to wish you all a very happy New Year. It has been some time since our last communication to you and we are aware of the frustration in not knowing what the future holds.
Over the last several weeks, members of the Orchestra Committee and SOON have been in talks with the Festival, and the Committee can now report that the Festival Board of Directors has decided to make a change from its previous course, the proposed "new model". Rather than putting the entire Festival at risk of failure, the Board has re-embraced the traditional model in pursuit of its goal to create an exciting musical experience of a high caliber.
Though we have received no written confirmation, we have been assured that the October 2009 Personnel Policy and opt in/opt out letter is now null and void. We have also been assured that our Orchestra, as we have known it, will be in residence at NHMF in 2010.
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1/26/10 - Laconia Daily Sun |
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By staff writer Michael Kitch
Fallout from Music Festival’s summer of controversy leads to wholesale changes in leadership.
3 board members resign; Fogel is out as director; and Graham will leave president’s post in May; Red Hill property to be put up for sale. CENTER HARBOR - Less than two weeks after abandoning pursuit of a new artistic vision and restructured orchestra, which sparked bitter controversy last summer, the Board of the NH Music Festival shuffled directors and management when it met last week. Longtime director of the Festival and current chairman of its finance committee, Ron Sibley of Plymouth, yesterday confirmed that after a transition period he will replace Rusty McLear as chairman. At the same time, he said that vice chairman Susan Weatherbie and two other Board members have tendered their resignations. David Graham, the president of the Festival since 1987, will be leaving his position in May. The Festival has also severed its relationships with Henry Fogel, past president of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and dean of the Chicago College of Performing Arts who was engaged as Festival director this spring, and Johnny Gandelsman, the celebrated violinist named artistic director in the summer.
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1/4/10 - Festival Family Letter |
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Festival Family Letter
January 4, 2010
Dear NHMF Family,
The Board of Directors met on December 17th to review our artistic goals and the options available to us to achieve them starting with the 2010 season. After a long and comprehensive discussion, the Board concluded it was not in the best interests of our audience, orchestra, management, or the Board to embark on another season of division and tension that marked 2009. Indeed, the Board believed that to do so could put at risk the very existence of the Festival.
Consequently, the Board has changed course. It has decided to work toward its goal to create more exciting musicial experiences in a more traditional way. We felt our plans to introduce a collaborative approach to music making with a contingent of new musicians, existing musicians and highly distinguished students was not going to be embraced. For that reason, pursuing that approach would not have achieved the collaborative environment we sought in presenting concerts for the enjoyment of our patrons.
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Copyright © 2010 The Musicians of the New Hampshire Music Festival. All Rights Reserved.
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