|

3467 Sonoma
Boulevard
Suite 10
Vallejo, CA 94590
P. O. Box 568
Vallejo, CA 94590
707-643-4441
Fax: 707-643-5746
Info@VallejoSymphony.org
Keep
informed about the activities of your Vallejo Symphony. In a once-a-month
email, you'll receive concert and event reminders, as well
as tidbits about guest
artists, links to reviews, pictures, and more!

Please let us know how you like our concerts.
Write your own concert review
here.
|
VALLEJO SYMPHONY
2009-2010
Celebrating Our 78th
Season Four
Saturday Nights - Four Great Concerts
 |
Maestro
David Ramadanoff
Music Director
Conductor
An Ohio native,
David Ramadanoff began his professional studies at the Cleveland Institute
of Music, continuing them as a master's candidate at Temple University
from 1968 to 1971 and a doctoral candidate at the Juilliard School from
1972 until 1975. During this time, he taught conducting at Juilliard,
worked with Herbert Blomstedt and Otto Werner Mueller at Aspen Festivals,
and with Seiji Ozawa, Leonard Bernstein, Eugen Jochum, and Gunther
Schuller at Tanglewood.
|
Maestro Ramadanoff made his New York conducting debut in William Walton's
opera The Bear for the American
Opera Center. He was the recipient of a special grant from the National
Endowment for the Arts to serve as Assistant Conductor of the Syracuse
Symphony (1973-74). During this same period, he was Music Director of the
Olney Symphony in Philadelphia and in 1973 was a prize-winner in the Georg
Solti conducting competition.
In 1975, Seiji Ozawa appointed Mr. Ramadanoff Assistant Conductor of the
San Francisco Symphony, and in 1977 he was promoted by Edo de Waart to the
position of Associate Conductor. During his six years with the San
Francisco Symphony, he regularly conducted subscription concerts and also
served as Music Director of all the orchestra's educational and community
concerts.
In 1977, Mr. Ramadanoff was awarded the prize for best performance of a
Hungarian work at the International Hungarian Radio and Television
conducting competition. In 1980 he won the Leopold Stokowski Conducting
Award as Most Outstanding Young American Conductor and, under its
auspices, made his Carnegie Hall debut with the American Symphony in 1982.
In addition to his tenure at the Vallejo Symphony, the Maestro assumed the
position of Music Director and Conductor of Master Sinfonia in the South
Bay in 1979 and the Young People's Symphony Orchestra in Berkeley in
1988. From 1984-88 he served as Director of Orchestral Activities at the
San Francisco Conservatory of Music, as well as Principal Conductor of its
orchestra.
Under Maestro Ramadanoff's direction the Vallejo Symphony has developed
into an orchestra of regional importance, and the VSO's status as an
excellent professional orchestra attracts some of the finest players from
around the Bay Area. He also has been instrumental in the VSO's outreach
programs, which include performing in Benicia and Vacaville and
establishing two educational programs. Mr. Ramadanoff developed the
Mini-Concert series, which sends small ensembles of musicians into the
schools, as well as the Youth Concert, in which the full orchestra
performs for young audiences. As a result of his innovative programming,
the Vallejo Cultural Commission awarded Mr. Ramadanoff a Special
Achievement Award for producing and conducting the West Coast Premiere of
Hannibal Lokumbe's concert opera African
Portraits in February 1997.
Since his appointment as Music Director of the Vallejo Symphony in 1983,
Maestro Ramadanoff has centered his work in the Bay Area. He continues to
accept guest conducting opportunities.
His most recent appearances have been with the Santa
Cruz County Symphony and the Fort Collins, Colorado, Symphony. |
|
|