About Us
|
Founded in 1969 as Training
Orchestra, Inc.
Click here to watch a promotional video about GYO. You may need to download Quicktime to view this movie.
From its first rehearsal in 1969, Training Orchestra has provided young musicians the opportunity to study and perform under professional direction and guidance. Through all the changes that some 40 years bring - new musicians and staff, a dizzying variety of rehearsal and performance venues, and even changes in name - Paul Rudoff's vision for a program to serve the musically gifted children of Long Island has remained constant. |
![]() |
Paul Rudoff's
passion for conducting, his love of working with children, and his
desire to find a way for young musicians to play side by side
with professionals led to the founding of Training Orchestra in
1969. The program began its life under the auspices of the
Huntington Symphony. Many of the Symphony's members were coaches and
their children were among the first students. The office was in Anne
Sanderson's home in Huntington.
Over the years, rehearsals and concerts have been held in locations
all over Long Island: in the Huntington, Smithtown, Ronkonkoma,
Jericho, Mineola, Farmingdale, East Islip, Hauppauge, and Half
Hollow Hills School Districts, at St. Elizabeth's Church
(Huntington), and at Friends Elementary School in Westbury. For the
past several years, our rehearsal and subscription concert venues have been generously
provided by the Half Hollow Hills School District.
By the mid-seventies, there were separate Nassau and Suffolk
orchestras, each with its own junior orchestra. In 1985, a Saturday
program, the Chamber Music Workshop, was established. Many
well-known artists appeared as soloists with the chamber orchestra,
before it was disbanded in 1992 due to Paul Rudoff's illness. In the
late eighties Training Orchestra took on a new identity, renaming
the twin orchestras the Gemini Youth Orchestras. Nationally
known conductor Kenneth Klein was appointed music director in 1991-92
and Gail Rinaudo became conductor of the reorganized junior
orchestra, the Gemini Youth Concert Orchestra, in 1992-93. Stephen
Rogers Radcliffe succeeded Kenneth Klein in 1993, serving as music
director and GYS conductor until 1996. The baton passed to maestro
Kimbo Ishii-Eto in the fall of 1996, to Amir Kats in 2001, to
Michael Adelson in 2003 and to Michael Canipe in 2005 and Matthew
Pierce in 2007, before returning to Maestro Adelson, who is also
affiliated with the New York Philharmonic and the Mannes School of
Music, in the Spring of 2008.
Gemini has continued to grow. The informal wind
ensemble that Michael Canipe led for many years was given a name -
the Gemini Festival Winds - and made "official" in 1997; now a full
repertory group, it
was renamed The Gemini Concert Winds in 2007. The Gemini Youth Preparatory
Orchestra (now the String Orchestra) began rehearsing in 1997 when Gemini took up residence at Five Towns College.
In 2007, the Gemini Chamber Orchestra was formed to for NYSSMA Level
5 and 6 String Players. And in 2009, the Gemini Jazz Ensemble was born under the guidance of
veteran conductor/performer Anthony Graziosi, bringing GYO to five
performing groups.
Working with professional soloists is an important part of a Gemini
student's musical experience. The Gemini Youth Symphony has featured
guest soloists including Stanley Drucker, Philip Smith, and Lorne
Monroe of the New York Philharmonic; cellist Timothy Eddy,
violinists Raymond Gniewek, Renee Jolles, pianists Cecilia Brauer,
Jose Ramos-Santana, John Musto, Jeffrey Biegel and Yu Zhang, flautist Samuel
Baron, and the Guild Trio. Guest conductors have included the
renowned David Amram, and the returns of Maestros Radcliffe and
Klein. Gemini musicians have performed all over the New York area:
Carnegie Hall (1996 and 2004), Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall
(1999 and 2008) and Alice Tully Hall (the first
performance for all GYO groups in a single concert at a major
venue in 2007, and also in 2009), Sony Center in Manhattan, Tilles Center, Staller Center, and
the Cathedral of the Incarnation (Garden City). Summer
appearances have included the Gurwin Jewish Geriatric Center (GFW
benefit), Heckscher Park and the Long Island Mozart Festival.
Reaching out within this country and abroad, GYO helped sponsor the New Orleans String Project (2007-08), with our musicians appearing as guests in the Crescent City; while our families hosted both the Auckland Youth Symphony (September 2008) and the Uruguayan National Youth Orchestra "Jose Artigas" (November 2008), both of which appeared with GYO groups in concert.
Gemini musicians have had the opportunity to work with the Long
Island Philharmonic and Philharmonic Chorus, New York Philharmonic,
Long Island Baroque Ensemble, the Bach Aria Festival and Opera in a
Nutshell with the New York City Opera.
Many Gemini graduates have attended premier music schools and perform in
orchestras and chamber ensembles here and abroad. Others choose
careers in music education, or combine teaching and performance.
Many former Gemini musicians continue to play in college and
community groups while pursuing other careers. The love of music
and the joy of performing and listening seem to remain with Gemini
graduates no matter what career path they choose.
≈≈≈