A man and his music
Alex Coolman
This season of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra marks the 10th anniversary of its musical director, Carl St.Clair. During his tenure, the
organization has experienced tremendous success, with its presence on the
national scene gaining credibility and definition, and its popularity at
home steadily increasing.
The 47-year-old conductor keeps up a packed schedule, shuttling back and
forth between California and Europe, where he is the principal guest
conductor of the Stuttgart Radio Orchestra. St.Clair is also a visiting
artist at the University of Southern California, and his prominence on
the domestic and international music scene has helped to keep the Pacific
Symphony’s star rising.
This success was cast in shadow this summer by the accidental death of
St.Clair’s 18-month-old son. But the conductor has made a tremendous
effort to overcome this personal tragedy, returning quickly to the public
work that he finds meaningful. St.Clair spoke in a recent interview of
the strength he draws from the symphony and his thoughts about the past
10 years of the organization’s development.
Q: In the past decade, the Pacific Symphony Orchestra expanded
tremendously. Ticket revenues and the budget have both gone up
considerably in the years since you’ve been here. Could you talk a bit
about what you feel your role has been in the growth of the orchestra?
A: The Pacific Symphony Orchestra has really been a terrific success
story in the last 10 years. I’m sure we are all aware of the various
economic ups and downs and the various markets in Orange County in the
last 10 years that have really cost many cities in California their
orchestral life. We know the various plights of, let’s say, San Diego.
And the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. It’s taken a toll on orchestras in
cities like San Jose, although they’re coming back, and Sacramento and
Oakland and I’m sure the list is even longer.
But during this time, the Pacific Symphony has been able to maintain a
very strong financial base. Our audiences have actually grown. On almost
every front, in spite of the various difficult times, which we are now on
the upswing from, we have either maintained or gotten better in almost
every avenue of what a symphony orchestra’s life actually encompasses.
For that, we owe the credit to our donors, the people who support us. We
owe that to our audience that was willing to stick with us, and a
subscriber base who is committed to have concerts as part of their
cultural life in Orange County.
I think certainly I would be remiss if we would leave out the fact that
we have the [Orange County] Performing Arts Center. It’s been an
important catalyst. The Pacific Symphony today would not be where it is
had it not moved into The Center itself. And I think our leadership has
just been terrific. Louis Spisto, in many of his years, we were a dynamic
duo, a one-two punch, and I think that really helped keep the fires lit.
And now that he’s gone on to Detroit and now New York, I think John
Forsyte is doing a wonderful job.
He came on in, in 1998?
Yeah, he’s been here just a little over a year, but I mean he’s just
picked up as though there was never a moment of slack, and I think the
leadership from our board of directors has just grown and gotten more
inspiring and deeper. I think that one of the great things about anyone
who’s connected with the Pacific Symphony is that every ounce of energy
they spend, every cent that in any kind of philanthropic way they give to
the orchestra is all spent in a positive, constructive way.
In other words, we’re not using any energy or any money to correct
problems or ills of the past or mistakes of the past. That gives everyone
a very optimistic, very positive energy cycle, with which to roll around
in. And this is something that not every orchestra or not every city can
say. So that’s why, in growing the Pacific Symphony Orchestra, we have to
do it slowly and in parallel. Orange County is not that old, the
orchestra is not that old, you know.
So we’re all developing our relationship in a very hand-in-hand way,
which makes for a very positive future. It’s when one or the other
components of this relationship gets out of sync with the others that
relationship problems develop.
Q: How do you decide on how to strike a balance between more conservative
decisions, for holiday programs and things people always expect to hear,
and more difficult work.
A: Programming is really what the music director -- meaning that musical
spokesperson for the PSO board -- that’s where the relationship is built
between the audience and the orchestra, through the decisions that the
music director makes in programming.
Because basically I would be considered a musical chef, in which I’m
inviting you to my house for dinner and I’m cooking you a musical meal
every time you’re invited in. If it’s always the same meal, you would get
tired of coming. If it’s always such exotic food that you go home with
some kind of stomach problem, then that would also be an unacceptable
invitation.
But there is a trust. Over a period of 10 years, what’s happened, I
think, is that the majority of the audience knows that I’m thinking about
them. They know that the programming decisions that I’m making have them
in mind. They know that there’s some order, some plan, some larger
scheme. It’s not just every night a smorgasbord or a sort of pot luck, if
you will.
Q: I’m struck by what a complex role you have to fill. Not only do you
have to have this standard of musical excellence, but you also have to
act as a sort of manager for all the various musicians and their various
interests, to get them to mesh into a single product. And then you have
to think about how that’s going to relate to the community. You’re at the
intersection of so many interests.
A: You know, it’s true. Today, the job of a 20th century American music
director has grown in complexity. A very large part of my job, for
instance, is public speaking. And in addition to that, and to attending
meetings of all kinds, I’m also a very very hands-on music director as
far as our education program, working with our education director and our
assistant conductor and our youth programs, our Class Act programs, our
Mervyn’s Family Concert Series, our youth concert series, the classical
raves, and then I do one myself, which is the Classical Connections,
which is sort of for older audiences.
You have to also work very closely with the president of the
organization, with budgets. I mean, they say “Well we can’t have five
Midoris in one season. That’s expensive, you know.” So we have to say,
“well we need so many violinists, so many cellists, who are they? What’s
their repertoire? What sort of complements our season by being different
from the last one so we don’t have a series of soloists who all have the
same basic persona, the same musical slant.” All of these are factors.
And then there is the orchestra itself. There’s the orchestra committee
and the personnel director and so there are many components and it is
very complicated.
But I love it, I thrive on it. When you have these kind of energies
moving toward the same focal point, it serves only to energize me, to
make me realize how blessed I am, how fortunate I am to have this kind of
symphony orchestra.
Q: Obviously you’ve gone through tremendous difficulty in your personal
life and you’ve come back into your career very quickly and with a
tremendous amount of enthusiasm. Are you willing to talk a little bit
about your perspective on things?
A: We’re trying to reel that from the public arena, where it was from a
long period of time. What we’re trying to do in our family and with our
close friends now is to kind of reel it in, to pull it into the more
private, personal sanctums, because inevitably this is where it’s going
to have to be dealt with. So that’s where we are today, and for me -- and
I will only speak for me personally -- I am an artist, you know. That’s
who I am. So, whatever I deal with is dealt with as an artist, through my
art. So for me to do otherwise would be contradictory to who I am as a
spirit. It would have been impossible for me not to have reentered. This
is who I am. That would have been denying me of myself.
And being back with the Pacific Symphony, being back with the audiences
like we did at the opening of the Mahler 8 or at the commemorative
concert we did with the music of John Williams at Irvine Meadows, it was
very healing for me. To be back with the Pacific Chorale did so much for
us during those darkened times. The Pacific Symphony family, the staff,
the orchestra, the board of directors, they were standing by us through
all of this.
But to be back with them in the elation and the jubilatory scene of a
concert, really it’s like seeing the first bloom of a rejuvenation of
life. So that’s what’s great for us. And I would like to say that my
wife, Susan, her spirit is very very strong, her faith is strong. We’re
both supporting one another and doing the best we can. She’s done
marvelous. But we have so many friends. Without the prayers and all of
the various acts of compassion, from e-mails to phone calls to prayers to
masses to prayer session to hugs, we see some people nodding on the
street ... We had one lady who was stopped at a stop sign and we were
stopped across the street and she just mouthed “I’m praying for you.”
That, you know, brings you to tears immediately. So without all this
compassion, it really would be impossible for us to be where we are
today.
Really, we didn’t know how deeply our relationship with our community
went, because we’re always in the public eye, but this outpouring was so
overwhelming that we didn’t know if we had the grace to really accept it
gracefully. But it just showed the depth of the relationship that we had
made with our community. It made us very very proud.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.