Da
Camera of Houston, founded in 1987, was created in response to concerns
about the dwindling audience for classical music in America with the
intention to produce a series of thematically programmed concerts
designed to attract new listeners to the concert hall. By bringing
together leading American and international musicians, specifically
selected for each program, Da Camera concerts offer a broad range
of repertoire and musical styles while ensuring a product of outstanding
musical excellence. Members of the Houston Symphony and faculty of
Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, University of Houston’s
Moores School and others are often included in Da Camera programs,
expanding the opportunities for locally based musicians of national
acclaim and enriching our community by enhancing the musical life
of artists who choose to live here.
Under
the artistic leadership of Sarah Rothenberg
since 1994, Da Camera maintains its commitment to this high caliber
of musicianship brought together to perform in its Houston-based subscription
series at the Wortham Theater Center and The Menil Collection; its
extensive education and outreach activities; and its regional, national
and international touring initiatives.
Ms.
Rothenberg, an acclaimed pianist widely regarded for her innovative
and thoughtful programs, has broadened Da Camera’s goals to
include connecting music to other art forms in originally conceived
multi-disciplinary productions as well as in programs relating music
to the social and political context in which it is composed. Da Camera
is further committed to expanding awareness of American music through
the presentation of a jazz series and commissioning of new compositions. In
pursuing these goals, Da Camera has established collaborative relationships
with a wide range of cultural institutions in Houston and throughout
the world. To expand its impact in the community, Da Camera has firmly
incorporated extensive education and outreach activities in its seasonal
programming.
In
1995, Da Camera of Houston produced the first of its acclaimed “Music
and the Literary Imagination” programs, conceived and directed
by Ms. Rothenberg, launching the organization’s national profile
as a leader in innovative concert programs with a series at New York’s
Great Performers at Lincoln Center. Since the outstanding success
of Marcel Proust's Paris (which debuted in Houston and went
on to be performed a dozen times for nearly 5,000 people in three
different languages) subsequent programs bringing together music with
works of such writers as Franz Kafka, Thomas Mann and Anna Akhmatova
have been performed across the country to sold-out houses and widespread
critical acclaim. During the 1998/99 season, these productions brought
international acclaim to Da Camera of Houston with performances at
the prestigious International Cervantino Festival in Mexico, De Ijsbreker
in The Netherlands and the Barbican Centre in London.
Moondrunk,
Da Camera’s most ambitious production to date, featuring Schoenberg’s
Pierrot lunaire and music of Brahms and J. Strauss, premiered
in Houston in 1997. This original chamber music/dance theater production--conceived
by Ms. Rothenberg, with choreography and stage direction by John Kelly,
lighting by Jennifer Tipton, sets by Scott Pask and costumes by Donna
Zakowska--performed to capacity audiences at Broadway’s 42nd
Street New Victory Theater in January 1999 where it opened Lincoln
Center’s “New Visions” series. Extensive press coverage
of the event from a broad range of national media included The
New York Times, ArtForum, and American Theater Magazine which
proclaimed the production “the birth of a new genre” reaffirming
Da Camera’s significant national and international role as a
leading innovator in producing and presenting music. Further confirmation
came in 1999 from the Chamber Music America/American Society of Composers,
Authors and Publishers Award for Adventurous Programming which granted
Da Camera a special commendation for outstanding programming concepts.
Da
Camera’s approach to programming concerts of musical substance
that offer a wide range of repertoire and styles as well as relate
music to other art forms and relevant topics is succeeding in building
new concert audiences. This strategy is supported by a personalized
approach to constituency development that includes a strong commitment
to education and outreach activities. National and international attention
toward Da Camera productions on tour enhances local awareness and
pride in the organization while generating important earned revenues
from performance fees. This integrated approach to organizational
development has propelled Da Camera of Houston’s stature as
an essential Houston institution of national and international importance.top