SUSAN CLOKE
SMYO Concert December 16, 2012 Virginia Avenue Park |
Columnist
Santa Monica Mirror
January 4, 2013
Santa Monica Mirror
January 4, 2013
The audience was hushed and proud with good
reason. They were the parents, family, friends and supporters of the student musicians playing the first
Holiday Concert of the new Santa Monica Youth Orchestra. (SMYO)
All Santa Monica students are welcome to join
the orchestra. To be a
member of SMYO you need to be a student at a Santa Monica public school,
private school or live in Santa Monica and be home schooled. The founder of SMYO, Shabnam (Shab)
Fasa, said, “We don’t audition. We
take everyone. We don’t ask anyone
to pay.”
SMYO is based on El Sistema, a government
sponsored program of music education in Venezuela. Los Angeles Philharmonic’s beloved conductor Gustavo Dudamel
is originally from Venezuela, had studied with El Sistema, and made starting a
youth orchestra in Los Angeles a part of his contract with the LA
Philharmonic. El Sistema
music education goals are to teach students to make and love music and to
become members of the international community of music. Fasa had the opportunity to work with
Dudamel at the Youth Orchestra of LA and that gave her the confidence to start
the SMYO.
Shab Fasa works as a Manager for Community Corp
in Santa Monica. She studied at
SMC and then went on to get a degree in Ethnomusicology from UCLA.
She was born in Iran. Her mother, who had studied at Berkeley, left Iran because
of the revolution and brought her family to Denmark where they were granted
political asylum.
In Denmark, as part of her schooling, her mother
gave her a choice, “Study the piano or study the violin.” She chose the violin because she wanted
to be able to carry her instrument and because she fell in love with the Brahms
Violin Concerto.
“The cool thing about the symphony for kids is
that they become part of a collaborative body of sound. You are dependent on everyone else in
the orchestra to be able to make a great sound. It makes you humble and it makes you proud at the same time.”
said Fasa.
“I felt part of the community in Denmark because
I was a violinist. The feelings of
togetherness in an orchestra bring people together across boundaries.”
She and her family moved from Denmark to the US
in 2002 and, after trying a few other places,
landed in Santa Monica. Fasa
said, “I did my research and Santa Monica is where I wanted our family to
live.”
In January of 2012 she and Julius Carlson and
Damian Berdakin, the original music mentors of the SMYO, held their first
rehearsal. “We invited 400 kids
and 9 kids showed up!”
There are now 49 student musicians in the SMYO. Their conductor, Clarinetist Ryan Dedenbostel, recently came to Santa Monica from his job at New York's Manhattan School of Music. Shab Fasa is the founder of SMYO, a violinist and the violin instructor. Bassist, cellist and luthier Gabriel (Gabo) Golden mentors the cello students. He studied at Oberlin Conservatory of Music and at the USC Thornton School of Music and performs with Les Surprises Barogque and with Tessarae. Musicologist and classical guitarist Julius Reder Carlson mentors the students and teaches the history of music. He studied at the University of Chile and at UCLA and is the editor of UCLA's Ethnomusicology Review.
With their conductor in front of them and their
mentors interspersed among them, the students began an almost 2 hour
rehearsal. It got off to a
cacophonous start and I watched with admiration as Dudenbostel gently,
carefully, charmingly and with demanding expectation brought the students
together into an orchestra.
The concert opened with a holiday medley of Joy
to the World, O Come All Ye Faithful, Hark the Herald Angels Sing and Silent
Night. They then played “In the
Bleak Midwinter” by Gustav Holst and closed the concert with selections from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet. .
As a treat for the students and audience alike
the conductor and the mentors brought out their own instruments and played a
gorgeous interpretation of Rock of Ages.
The gift to the students is the gift of learning
music. Through music study they
learn focus and concentration, learn about the music of their own and other
cultures, and as Fasa thoughtfully said, “The students learn to access their
own inner world and to have respect for their own imagination and for being
able to be with each other.”
The people working to make all this possible are Board
Members Dorothy Chapman, Deborah Bogen, Betsy Hiteshew, Melissa Sweeney and
Irene Zivi, the Cultural Affairs Department of the City, the Boys and Girls
Club and the families of the student musicians.
The afternoon was a gift of music for all of us
in the filled to capacity Thelma Terry Center at Virginia Avenue Park. It is a gift of generosity from the teachers
and mentors and supporters. It was
a gift of inspiration to take with us into the New Year.