May the Score Be with You: The Music of John Williams – Billings Symphony Skip to content

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Classic Series

May the Score Be with You: The Music of John Williams

Saturday
Mar 12, 2022

7:30 PM

Sunday
Mar 13, 2022

2:00 PM

Alberta Bair Theater

$18-$63

The BSOC celebrates Emmy and Grammy award-winning composer John Williams, whose movie scores such as Jaws, Star Wars, and three Harry Potter films, to name just a few—have defined the musical landscape for generations of movie buffs.

Local high school choirs and Antonio Jarvey, a Montanan and nationally accomplished saxophonist, accompany the Billings Symphony for this special concert. Choose the evening concert at 7:30 PM on Saturday, March 12 or the matinee at 2:00 PM on Sunday the 13.

Produced with support from Visit Billings funds

ANTONIO JARVEY | SAXOPHONE

Saxophonist Antonio Jarvey is out of the Big Sky State, Montana, currently studying with Dr. Johan Eriksson at the University of Montana. Through the years Antonio has studied with Zach Shemon, Dr. Timothy McAllister, Dr. Andrew Bishop, Hal Hugg and Ron Coons, and has performed with numerous groups including the Montana All-State Honor Band, Montana All-State Jazz Band, All-Northwest Honor Band, Honor Band of America, NYO-USA and Interlochen’s World Youth Wind Ensemble. Antonio has garnered top prizes from the MTNA regional and national woodwind competitions, International Saxophone High School Honors Recital, 2020 University of Montana Concerto/Aria Competition and the 2021 Montana Association of Symphony Orchestras Young Artist Competition. Antonio has performed as soloist with such groups as the Great Falls Youth Orchestra, Great Falls High Symphonic Band, Great Falls Municipal Band, University of Montana Symphony Orchestra, Great Falls Symphony, Billings Symphony and the Cambridge Symphony. As an advocate of new music, Antonio has commissioned works by Elise Arancio, Justin Zeitlinger, Bryan Kostors, Ella Kaale, Isabelle Pearson, Jake Gasel, Julie Giroux and Reed Ellsworth.

John Williams’ Escapades was inspired directly by his score for Steven Spielberg’s 2002 film, Catch Me If You Can, which is set in the 1960s. Williams created a marvelous score evoking the style of the progressive jazz movement popular during that time. In this suite, “Closing In” relates to the often-humorous sleuthing ever present in the story, and “Joy Ride” represents the main character’s wild flights of fantasy. Antonio finds great joy in this piece, as it represents both the jazz and classical idioms that the saxophone is fluent in. He is honored to perform the piece four times this season and hopes to bring alive the inspiration and jubilant nature the score delivers in the film.

The Music of John Williams (1932– )

While John Adams, Phillip Glass, John Corigliano, and a host of others vie for the mantle of successor to Aaron Copland, in point of fact, the average American has probably heard more music for symphonic orchestra by John Williams than all of the others put together. He stands alone in his position as the most successful and most admired film composer of the last thirty years or so. Over four-dozen Academy Award nominations (five won) and twenty-five Grammy wins speak for themselves. His music is so ubiquitous that it is easy to forget just how much of it we know and experience. While there have been any number of film composers who have experimented in various styles of writing for films, it is he who is most responsible for the rebirth of the great symphonic film music style that had prevailed in Hollywood in the 1930s and 40s. Symphony orchestras perform his music on the concert stage simply because it was written for symphony orchestras—on Hollywood sound stages. His peripatetic musical talent is not confined to Hollywood, by any means, though. He spent the eighties as Arthur Fiedler’s successor as conductor of the Boston Pops, and guest conducts almost everywhere. Also active as a composer of concert music, he has written over a dozen concertos for solo instruments and orchestra, as well as several chamber music works.

Williams was classically trained as a pianist, having studied at the Juilliard School with the formidable Rosina Lhévinne, mentor of generations of top concert pianists. Subsequently, he soon joined the New York commercial scene as arranger, pianist, and composer before moving to Los Angeles.

There he continued his career, making an early appearance as a composer with contributions to television series like “Gilligan’s Island” and “Wagon Train” in the late 1950s. As his career developed, he began to write film scores by the dozens it seems—movies you know, but probably have forgotten about. You may remember: Valley of the Dolls, The Poseidon Adventure, The Cowboys, and The Towering Inferno. Somewhat more recent films include: War Horse and The Book Thief. He is most renowned for the Star Wars films, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and such, but his work has encompassed much more, including such compositions as the theme to the NBC Nightly News. But there is no doubt that it is his association with the film directors George Lucas and Steven Spielberg—begun in the 1970s—that has produced his most notable scores.

His symphonic style owes much to the music of many great composers—Gustav Holst comes to mind—and Williams personally has singled out Edward Elgar. Other than a masterful technical prowess in orchestration, his success as a composer is surely his remarkable talent to imagine just the right music for an infinitude of human emotions—from the terror in the simple, two-note, shark motive in Jaws to the soaring spaceship music of Star Wars. He scored more of the Harry Potter films than anyone else, and his adroit conjuration of the magic of those tales is just perfect in the minds of countless fans.

Oh, yes, remember Henry Mancini’s sinister, low jazzy piano theme to “Peter Gunn?” That was the young Williams, himself, at the piano. That tells it all. (Notes freely provided by William E. Runyan, PhD | © 2016)