2012-2013 Season
Newsletter
Support the Symphony
Event Calendar
leftMay 2012left
SMTWTFS
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    
       
End Calendar
Plan Title
Sign-up for Our Newsletter
Sign-up for Our Newsletter
Symphony Venues
The Fox Spokane
Parking Information
Parking Information
Downtown Dining
Downtown Dining
Downtown Accomodations
Downtown Accomodations
Ticket Information
Ticket Information
Right Column:
Content:

Symphony serves up a collection of family favorites

May 15, 2009

Author: Jim Kershner

Position: Staff writer

Source: Spokesman Review



If you go:

 

Spokane Symphony, “The Magical Music of Walt Disney,” conducted by Morihiko Nakahara

 

When: Tonight at 7:30

 

Where: Martin Woldson Theater

at The Fox,

1001 W. Sprague Ave.

 

Cost: $14 for children, $32-$37 for adults

 

Call: The symphony ticket office (509-624-1200) or TicketsWest outlets (325-SEAT, 800-325-SEAT,www.ticketswest.com)

 

Disney has created many memorable images: The lion king with his cub, Aladdin with his lamp, beauty with her beast. Yet tonight, we’ll be reminded that Disney has also provided the world with a remarkably rich soundtrack over the decades.

 

The Spokane Symphony will present a family concert titled “The Magical Music of Walt Disney,” featuring music from Disney features ranging from “Mary Poppins” to “Mulan.”

 

Resident Conductor Morihiko Nakahara will lead the full orchestra in music from nearly a dozen movies, including “Tarzan,” “The Little Mermaid,” “Hercules,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Rescuers Down Under,” “Aladdin,” “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” and “The Lion King.”

 

And the experience won’t be exclusively musical. Plenty of those memorable Disney images will be in evidence as well.

 

Rare Disney stills, along with full animated scenes, will be projected above the orchestra throughout the show. The music will be synchronized to these images, which were provided by the Disney company.

 

You’ll see the ballroom dance scene from “Beauty and the Beast” and the magic carpet ride scene from “Aladdin,” to name just two.

 

So this will certainly be a kid-friendly program – a special $14 ticket is available for children 12 and under.

“But you don’t have to have a kid to come,” said Annie Matlow, the symphony’s marketing director. “Adults will have a good time, too.”

 

The program will showcase the diversity of Disney’s soundtracks over the decades.

 

There will be pieces by pop superstars such as Elton John and Phil Collins, old-school songwriters such as the Sherman brothers (Richard M. and Robert B.) and soundtrack legends such as Alan Menken, Jerry Goldsmith and Hans Zimmer.

 

Jim Kershner can be reached at (509) 459-5493 or by e-mail at jimk@spokesman.com.

     

Content:
Right Column: