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    Gotta have a schtick

    Fiddling around: Apollo Chamber Players fuse folk traditions with classical music

    Joel Luks
    Apr 27, 2013 | 2:38 pm

    Classical musicians can learn a bounty of survival skills from the ridiculousness that is Mel Brooks' The Producers. First, you have to have a shtick. Second, when you've got it, flaunt it. Third, be your own producer. And finally, keep it gay — a reminder that although the genre is serious business, it's still a form of entertainment.

    When violinist Matthew Detrick was searching for Apollo Chamber Players' signature stamp, he looked no further than his upbringing. Alongside his father, who plays guitar, banjo and harmonica, and his mother, a violinist, family time included fiddling around classic tunes and folk melodies. Bingo.

    "Muses of Love and Folksong," a concert set for 6 p.m. Sunday at Shepherd School of Music's Duncan Recital Hall, continues the ensemble's journey with music rooted in global folk traditions. Think of an Apollo performance as a survey of the crossroads between the tuneful folklore that flourished around the fine art of classical music. This raison d'être is etched in the quartet's mission, which incorporated as a nonprofit in 2009.

    Although the group has experienced some personnel changes recently — violinist Timothy Peters moved overseas to accept a post with the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra and violist Matthew Carrington returned to the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, a position he held previously for one year — two new ladies are balancing the foursome's sound, as they describe it, with feminine flair.

    In fact, they each play a distinctive role.

    Detrick usually pushes for faster tempi. Cellist Matthew Dudzik tends to slow things down. Newcomer, violinist Anabel Ramirez, who regularly performs with the Houston Ballet, Houston Grand Opera and Mercury, wants a steady pulse. In true viola spirit, Whitney Bullock, who holds the principal chair of the Symphony of Southeast Texas and is an instructor for the Michael P. Hammond Preparatory Department at the Shepherd School of Music, cares about one thing.

    "I just want everyone to be happy," she quips.

    On the program of this weekend's musicale are Beethoven's String Quartet in E Minor, Op. 59 No. 2, Bartok's String Quartet No. 1, Liszt's Romance oubliée for viola and piano, Josef Suk's Love Song, Op. 7 for violin and piano and folk songs from Eastern European and Hungarian provenance. The selections are unified by the theme of unrequited love and inspired by the composers' enduring affection for folk melodies.

    "All composers are influenced by folk music," Detrick explains. "Their cultural backgrounds and studies imbue their compositions with folk flavor, either in abstract form or through direct quotes."

    "We score our own arrangements — and we're building quite a large library."

    The Russian flavor in Beethoven's score, Dudzik says, is evident in the third movement titled Theme russe, a motif that Modest Mussorgsky also set in his opera in Boris Godunov. Likewise, Bartok's String Quartet No. 1 is teeming with folk airs. But it's the back story of its genesis that layers food for thought.

    "Bartok's quartet was written when he was about to embark on a research project with Zoltan Kodaly," Ramirez says. "He was in the midst of documenting folk songs of the countryside. But more than that, he was at the time desperately in love with Hungarian violinist Stefi Geyer, who didn't welcome his advances even though he wrote his first Violin Concerto for her."

    The approach to concert repertoire begins with casual conversation during rehearsals. Each member contributes their two cents so that recitals are satisfying for both the musicians and audiences.

    Yet there's a challenge. Much folk music isn't written down. It's passed down from generation to generation as matter of practice. The solution? Write your own.

    "You can't just go online an order Greek dances, Venezuelan waltzes and Moldavian songs," Detrick explains. "So we score our own arrangements — and we're building quite a large library. Lately, we've been getting requests from people around the world who want to buy our music."

    Plans are in the works to copyright and publish the collection, which includes a simplified student version for educational purposes.

    The additional revenue stream is part of a business strategy that Apollo is refining with guidance from the Houston Arts Alliance. The Capacity Building Initiative, a six-year program that invests in arts organizations through mentorship, grants and administrative support, is allowing Apollo to develop an organizational foundation to strengthen its fiscal health.

    "We are on our way to fulfill every musicians' dream," Detrick says. "We are going to Carnegie Hall in October. We are producing our own show. We want to present a concert that embodies the cultural diversity of Houston."

    With a fundraising goal of $12,000 and $9,000 already in the piggy bank, Apollo won't be wondering, as Max Bialystock pondered, where they went right.

    ___

    Apollo Chamber Players presents "Muses of Love and Folksong" on Sunday, 6 p.m., at Rice University's Shepherd School of Music. Tickets are $20 for general public, $15 for seniors and Rice alumni, $10 for students, and can be purchased online.

    Apollo Chamber Players concert preview April 2013 musicians
    Photo courtesy of Apollo Chamber Players
    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    hoop it up

    Houston festival hosts dramatic reading of basketball-inspired TV show

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Nov 6, 2025 | 5:00 pm
    cinema arts festival hoopztown reading
    Photo by Trent Wittenbach
    Hoopzdreams tells the story of a gifted, multiracial athelete.

    This year’s Houston Cinema Arts Festival (HCAF), which starts this Thursday, November 6, offers plenty of film screenings – both feature-length films and shorts – as well as panel discussions, Q&As, workshops, etc. But the fest will also have a staged reading of the TV pilot Hoopztown, this Saturday at 2 pm at Six Foot Studios.

    Hoopztown centers around Maya Hernandez, a gifted, multiracial athlete on track to be considered for the inaugural WNBA in 1996. She moves back to her hometown of Houston, where it’s revealed that her mother, a janitor at Houston Medical Center, is diagnosed with cancer.

    The project is created and written by Fleurette S. Fernando, an educator, director, choreographer, arts administrator, and founding director of the M.A. in Arts Leadership Program at University of Houston, where she serves as an associate professor. “I wrote this story for the women in my life; my mother, my sisters, my teachers, my colleagues, my girlfriends, my students and particularly for my daughter,” says Fernando. “Her journey as a student athlete and the relationships she built with the girls on her various teams through the turbulent and magical years of her youth was an inspiration.”

    hoopztown Fleurette S. Fernando Elizabeth Sosa Bailey Collaborators Elizabeth Sosa Bailey and Fleurette S. Fernando.Courtesy of Elizabeth Sosa Bailey

    Hoopztown has gone through multiple iterations. During the 2015 ATX TV Festival Pitch Competition, Fernando was a finalist for her concept of the project. From there, the pilot (originally titled Hoopz) and loglines for a 10-episode run were put into motion. That first episode, titled “Rebound,” focuses on Maya’s first day at her new job, coaching a girls’ basketball team at a racially and socioeconomically diverse high school.

    “Hoopztown is an ode to a woman’s journey through the lens of many races, ages and circumstances,” she says. “It’s a tribute to the underdog and a homage to a woman’s perilous path through a man’s world. Nowhere is this struggle more acutely demonstrated, mentally, emotionally, physically and economically, than in the arena of competitive sports in America.”

    Since Fernando and her creative partner, Elizabeth Sosa Bailey, are both active members of

    the Houston Cinema Arts Society (HCAS) board, they knew they had to do a reading during this year’s fest.

    “There is so much of myself that I see in this story, as someone who left a career to return home when my father was diagnosed with cancer and as a mixed race Latina understanding the duality of identity,” says Sosa Bailey. “Even the high school that Hoopztown is set in is much like my own. I attended Lamar High School, making me about a decade younger than the characters in the story. There are all of these wonderful little coincidences in Hoopztown.”

    The project is a beneficiary of its second Houston Arts Alliance grant made possible through the

    City of Houston Mayors Office of Cultural Affairs (MOCA). The reading cast includes over 20 actors, with Eva Marie Thomas playing the main role. Open to the public with a Pay What You Can ticket structure, the event invites the audience to experience the first run-through of what is slated to be the first episode, filmed in Houston using local cast and crew. The audience can also provide feedback and contribute to the project’s fundraising initiative to get to the next stage of filming.

    For tickets, go to the Houston Cinema Arts Festival website.

    performing-artstvfestivals
    news/entertainment

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