New England Philharmonic
Performing the masterpieces of our
time.
A Brief History of the New England
Philharmonic
The orchestra now known as the New England Philharmonic evolved
from a community string ensemble, the Mystic Valley Chamber Orchestra,
which was founded by the violists Michel Perrault and Gervásio de Chaves in 1976.
The group gave its inaugural performances in Arlington and Belmont in
November 1977 under the direction of Charles Ellis, its first
conductor and music director. Ellis continued on from three seasons,
presenting four pairs of concerts each year in Boston and suburban
venues. In 1978 Ellis commissioned the composer Stephen Savage to
write a work for the orchestra, establishing the organization’s
commitment to new music which has continued to this day.
From 1980 to 1983 the orchestra was conducted by Allen Olsen and
Kenneth Seitz. They continued the practice of regularly programming
new music and presided over the ensemble’s expansion from a string
chamber orchestra to a full orchestra with winds, brass, and
percussion, allowing it to explore a new repertoire.
In 1983, Ronald Feldman, a cellist with the Boston Symphony
Orchestra, began his five-year tenure as music director. Under his
direction, a number of important programs were instituted, foremost
among them the appointment of Robert Kyr as the orchestra’s first
Composer in Residence in 1985. In addition to producing an annual
commissioned work, the Composer in Residence was asked to conduct a
Call for Scores competition each year and select works for performance
by the orchestra from the compositions submitted, soon numbering in
the hundreds.
In 1986 the orchestra took up residency at Framingham State
College, repeating each concert program at the FSC campus and
inaugurating a December Family Concert that featured the winner of a
youth concerto competition sponsored by the college. This mutually
beneficial association was to continue for eleven years.
By this time the organization had outgrown its local profile and
its chamber orchestra origins. In 1987 it adopted the name New
England Philharmonic to represent its expanded audience and
aspirations. In 1988 the NEP received the ASCAP Award for
Adventuresome Programming, a national recognition of its special
commitment to new music. At the time it was the only orchestra of its
size to have both a Composer in Residence and a Call for Scores
program. The NEP has gone on to receive this award four more times.
Jeffrey Rink became the newly named orchestra’s music director in
1988. Under his direction the NEP continued to grow in size, quality,
and ambition, attracting as volunteer performers some of the area’s
best professional, nonprofessional, and student players. Highlights
of the eight years that Jeffrey Rink led the orchestra included
well-received collaborations with arts organizations from the
Underground Railway Theater to Chorus Pro Musica, a number of
appearances to full houses at Boston’s First Night celebrations, and
the local or world premieres of at least thirty works by contemporary
composers. The Composer in Residence program continued to flourish,
with the service of two distinguished local composers, Richard Cornell
from 1989 to 1993, and Marjorie Merryman from 1994 to 1997. The
orchestra received further recognition of its unique programming
mission in the form of one of the first grants awarded by the newly
established Aaron Copland Fund for Music, in 1993, as well as support
from the Virgil Thomson Foundation.
Beginning with the 1996-97 season, NEP established its residency
at Simmons College, in Boston.
A special 20th anniversary concert in May 1997 featured works by each
of NEP’s past and present Composers in Residence, with all of them in
attendance.
In 1997 Richard Pittman was appointed music director. Highlights
of his tenure have included Boston, New England and/or world premieres
at nearly every performance, including a new work commissioned by the
NEP every season, along with presentations of works by musical masters
from Haydn and Beethoven to Mahler to Stravinsky to Elliott Carter.
Under Mr. Pittman, the NEP has performed with leading soloists such as
Jayne West, Jacques Zoon, Bayla Keyes, Stephen Drury, and Lucia Lin;
has appeared at Boston’s First Night celebration and in educational
collaborations with schools in Westwood, Harvard, Everett, and North
Andover Mass.; and performances with the Simmons College Chorale, the
Boston Conservatory Chorus, and other choral groups. Michael Gandolfi
served as Composer in Residence from 1997 to 2000, followed by Richard
Cornell from 2000 to 2002, Andy Vores from 2002 to 2005, and Peter
Child since 2005, all carrying forward the Call for Scores competition. Each
season has also featured a performance by the winner of the NEP’s Young Artists Competition.
Committed to playing the best music of the past and the present,
the NEP continues to thrive on the exhilarating moments when composer,
performer, and audience share the same time and space.