West Side Orchestral Concerts | |
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Motto | "Tanglewood around the corner" |
Formation | 1961 |
Extinction | 1977 |
Type | Outdoor summer classical concert series |
Purpose/focus | To present little known works by the classical masters and new works by American composers, as well as a full repertoire |
Headquarters | Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City |
Location | Riverside Park (Manhattan) |
Region served | Upper West Side of Manhattan and Citywide |
Official languages | English |
Founder and conductor | Madame Frédérique Petrides |
Main organ | West Side Community Concerts, Inc./West Side Orchestral Concerts, Inc. |
Affiliations | The New York City Department of Parks; The Recording Industries Trust Fund; Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians |
West Side Community Concerts, Inc., renamed West Side Orchestral Concerts, Inc. in 1968,[1] were an American summer classical concert series given by a 40-piece orchestra, The Festival Symphony Orchestra. The series debuted in the summer of 1962 and continued until 1977. Frédérique Petrides (1903-1983) was its founder, organizer and musical director. The first concert in 1962, took place at 73rd Street, in Riverside Park, but in 1963 the series moved to its permanent location, a spacious sports arena, with the Hudson River as a backdrop, at 103rd Street in Riverside Park, Manhattan, New York, where, for the concerts, a temporary acoustical shell[2] was brought in. The series was publicized and referred to as "Tanglewood around the corner".[3][4] The concerts were well received by the press,[5][6] attended by as many as 4,500, and broadcast live on WNYC radio.[7][8]
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Prior to founding the West Side Community Concerts/ West Side Orchestral Concerts, Frédérique Petrides, a pioneer in her field, had founded the Orchestrette Classique, an all-women's chamber orchestra, which existed from 1932 to 1943, premiered works by new American composers, such as Paul Creston, Samuel Barber and David Diamond; and gave five to six concerts annually in Carnegie chamber Music Hall, now Weill Recital Hall, founded the Carl Schurz Park concert series on Manhattan's Upper East Side in 1958, founded the Hudson Valley Symphony Orchestra in Tarrytown, New York in the 1930's, and founded the Student Symphony Society in New York City in 1950. Ms. Petrides was also editor and publisher of the Women in Music newsletters, that, in the 1930's, were published in New York and circulated internationally.[9] [10]
Madame Petrides launched and directed two separate outdoor summer orchestra festivals, both in Manhattan neighborhoods where she resided. The first series, begun in 1958, was in Carl Schurz Park on the Upper East Side, adjacent to East End Avenue, where she had lived from 1931 to 1958. The second, West Side Community Concerts was launched in 1962, in Riverside Park on the Upper West Side, close to West 78th Street, where she lived from 1958 to 1983.[11][12]
It was for the Carl Schurz Park concerts, near Gracie Mansion, that Frédérique Petrides first organized and directed her Festival Symphony Orchestra, composed primarily of members of the New York Philharmonic. This continued to be her orchestra as leader of the West Side Community Concerts/West Side Orchestral Concerts series.[13]
Petrides had this to say: "I had very fine musicians to work with." [14]
"It was necessary to be well-organized because there was only limited time to rehearse. I talked very little but would get down to the business of rehearsing immediately. A woman must be better than a man if she is to conduct prestigious groups, and I made it my career always to be 100 percent prepared and know all the scores tremendously well. I never encountered a problem conducting all-male orchestras, and we always worked well together."[15]
For more than forty years, Frédérique Petrides' conducting career was abetted by her husband, journalist, Peter Petrides (1896-1978), who acted as manager and publicist for the concerts.[21] Although Greek, he was born Petros Agathangelos Petrides in Caratepeh, Turkey and grew up in Constantinople. After emigrating to the United States, as a young man, he became a writer for and Managing Editor of the Greek-American newspaper, The National Herald (not to be mistaken for the newspaper of the same name that was established in 1997). " I could never have done [my] work without his continuous help and encouragement...He was a wonderful Publicity Man, full of creative ideas..." Frédérique Petrides[22]
"Madame Frédérique Petrides is a telented and dedicated pioneer conductor. She has the breadth and depth of knowledge and perceptive ability to delve into little - known scores and present new and different listening experiences. That she was able to combine in her programs new music with little - known classical compositions made a unique contribution to the American musical scene. Why would a conductor choose this direction? She [Petrides] answers,
'I needed to attract attention in order to receive the support of a listening public as well as support from the higher echelon in the music circle of fine musicians and critics. There was a wealth of music on library shelves and it had not been explored. There were works by classical composers and these had never been performed in America. Modern works needed public performances, too. People are instinctively attracted to new listening experiences--how else can there be musical growth? I continually accomplished this goal by offering something different.'" [23]
Among the leading critics who, during the fifteen years of its existence, closely followed and reviewed the West Side Community Concerts/West Side Orchestral Concerts series were Francis D. Perkins of the New York Herald Tribune , Howard Klein, Theodore Strongin and Raymond Ericson of The New York Times; and Robert Sherman, also with The New York Times, who in the July 3, 1970 edition of that paper wrote of Frédérique Petrides as “a prime mover in New York’s cultural affairs since the mid-thirties”.[24]
Frédérique Petrides Photos New York Public Library
Frédérique Petrides Papers New York Public Library