Who killed the composer?
COSTA MESA â It was a whodunit murder mystery and everyone was a suspect.
From the concertmaster dressed as a cook, to the bikers playing the bass instruments, to the violins and violas, no one was above suspicion. The murderer was the conductor, but that didnât turn out to be a bad thing.
âIf youâre going to hear the worldâs greatest composers, youâre going to have to allow for a little murder,â said narrator David Stoneman, who spoke all the parts in the performance.
The Costa Mesa-based Pacific Symphony â dressed in costumes â performed two âHalloween Whodunitâ concerts Saturday morning for children and their families at the Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall.
Guest organist Kristen Lawrence opened the show with Bachâs menacing âToccata and Fugue in D minorâ before the murder mystery, Nathaniel Stookeyâs composition âThe Composer is Dead,â with the accompanying text by Lemony Snicket, began.
The piece kept the children and parents laughing through Stonemanâs narration as it highlighted each section in the orchestra and the individual instruments while explaining musical terms like conductor and concertmaster.
The murder wasnât such a mystery for 5-year-old Maya Bleszinski, who guessed the answer before the detective, but that didnât stop the girl, dressed as Rapunzel from the Disney animated film âTangled,â from enjoying herself, especially the final uplifting piece.
âI thought it was good,â she said. âWhat I liked about it is that at the end, they played âOde to Joy.ââ
The final piece, a portion of Beethovenâs Ninth Symphony, always captivates the audience, said conductor Maxim Eshkenazy.
Itâs inclusion, though, was also meant to show the children the other side of the organ, which is traditionally thought of as a spooky instrument, he said.
The concert is part of the symphonyâs Family Musical Mornings, a five-part double concert series for kids that kicked off Saturday with âHalloween Whodunitâ and continues with âNutcracker for Kidsâ on Dec. 10, âSymphony in Spaceâ on Feb. 4, âHansel and Gretelâ on March 3 and âHappily Ever Afterâ on May 12.
The concert is in a format that is easy to understand for kids with quick pieces with videos, actors and interactive elements, Eshkenazy said.
âItâs very much in tune with the iPhone/MTV generation,â he said.
The series, though, is also meant to introduce kids to instruments and musical concepts to teach them appreciation and increase their depth of knowledge, Eshkenazy said.
âI want to open a door for a life-long love [of classical music],â he said.
Those feelings was already blooming for 5-year-old Adalia Stiglich and 7-year-old Annette Gengler who said they âlovedâ the performance, and want to come back.
âIâd like to,â said Annette, âeven though I live all the way in Apple Valley.â
Twitter: @BritneyJBarnes
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