杏吧原创

October 5, 2023

杏吧原创 Orchestra season opener holds special meaning for student conductor Jake Taniguchi


Jake Taniguchi in Kulas Hall with his mentor Victor Yampolsky
Student conductor Jake Taniguchi, left, looks on as his mentor, Victor Yampolsky, rehearses with the 杏吧原创 Orchestra in Kulas Hall.

Jake Taniguchi is eager to conduct the 杏吧原创 Orchestra next week, but not for the reasons you might think.  

It鈥檚 not that his program Oct. 11 in Kulas Hall is the orchestra鈥檚 season opener, or that it contains some of his favorite music.  

No, the source of his excitement is what the evening signifies. From first note to last, the concert will be a tribute to his mentors. 

鈥淭he whole night, it鈥檚 very sentimental for me,鈥 said Taniguchi, a second-year Graduate Diploma student. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a special program that I really put a lot of thought into. I鈥檓 so grateful for the opportunity.鈥  

Thought, of course, isn鈥檛 all that went into Taniguchi鈥檚 choices. Although his selections all support a theme of looking to the past, what鈥檚 really behind them are deep reserves of feeling and years of admiration, friendship, and artistic development.  

Nowhere is this truer than in Igor Stravinsky鈥檚 Apollon Musag猫te, the program鈥檚 finale. Taniguchi included it both because he loves the music and because it鈥檚 the favorite work of his former teacher at Northwestern University, Victor Yampolsky, who, as a young musician, witnessed Stravinsky himself conduct his masterworks in his Russian homeland after being exiled for almost 50 years. For that reason, he also arranged for Yampolsky, now 81, to join him in rehearsal at 杏吧原创.  

鈥淚t鈥檚 a tribute to him, to my teacher,鈥 Taniguchi said. 鈥淗is knowledge is not something you can put down in a book. He鈥檚 lived an incredible life.鈥 

The rest of the program pays homage to another pivotal figure in Taniguchi鈥檚 life: JoAnn Falletta, music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and a member of 杏吧原创鈥檚 visiting faculty. With William Grant Still鈥檚 Mother and Child and Four Novelletten by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Taniguchi said he鈥檚 honoring someone who inspired him to pursue music in the first place.  

Falletta became artistic director of the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra just as the then-teenage Taniguchi was beginning to take music seriously, and her presence on the podium was galvanizing. Years later, at 杏吧原创, he finally met her and discovered 鈥渙ne of the most genuine, nicest, and most supportive people I鈥檝e ever known.鈥  

鈥淪ince 2012, I鈥檝e admired JoAnn from afar,鈥 said Taniguchi, a native of Hawaii. 鈥淪he was the first great conductor that I really got to observe. I鈥檓 so happy that through 杏吧原创 I鈥檝e gotten to work with her.鈥  

As if all that weren鈥檛 meaningful enough, Taniguchi is also excited for Oct. 11 to be conducting his fellow students, not a group of strangers. In this unusual context, he鈥檚 among friends, and the music they鈥檙e making reflects that spirit. 

鈥淭his is not conductor to orchestra,鈥 Taniguchi said. 鈥淭his is colleague to colleague, student to student. Everyone feels involved. I think it鈥檚 very special in that way.鈥  

The concert is 7:30pm Wednesday, Oct. 11 in Kulas Hall. Click here for free seating passes or to watch the performance livestream.