Landmarks Orchestra's logo that reads: "Boston Landmarks Orchestra" surrounded by a deep purple rectangle. Clockwise, there are other squares with different colors and abstract figures in white, including an orange square with a violin player, a brown square with a conductor with a baton, a red square with a narrator reading from a book, a yellow square with a flute player, a gray square with two figures applauding, and a green square with a dancer.

Eroica Symphony: Beethoven and Revolution

Wednesday, August 20 at 7:00pm
DCR Hatch Memorial Shell

Table of Contents

Eroica Symphony: Beethoven & Revolution

Boston Landmarks Orchestra
Christopher Wilkins, conductor
Val Jeanty, sound chemist
Adrian Anantawan, violin
Solaya, vocalist
Josil Joseph Rebert, Master Drummer
Arnaud Lauture, Master Drummer
Jean Dany Joachim, Poet

Coriolan Overture Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Romance No. 1 in G, Op. 40 Beethoven

Adrian Anantawan, violin

Quand nos Aïeux brisèrent leur entraves (When Our Fathers Broke Their Chains) Occide Jeanty
(1860-1936)
arr. David Kempers
Faces Val Jeanty
(b. 1974)
arr. David Kempers

Val Jeanty, sound chemist
Solaya, vocalist
Adrian Anantawan, violin

Kote Moun Yo Traditional
arr. David Kempers

Val Jeanty, sound chemist
Adrian Anantawan, violin
Josil Joseph Rebert, Master Drummer
Arnaud Lauture, Master Drummer
Jean Dany Joachim, Poet

 

intermission

Symphony No. 3 “Eroica” Beethoven
Allegro con brio
Marcia funebre: Adagio assai
Scherzo: Allegro vivace
Finale: Allegro molto

Run Time

The total run time of this concert is approximately two hours with one intermission.

Boston Landmarks Orchestra

Boston Landmarks Orchestra LogoBoston Landmarks Orchestra builds community through great music. Landmarks produces free concerts and musical events across the greater Boston area. Increasing access to music for everyone is at the core of all its programming. Between 2018 and 2023, 70% of the repertoire Landmarks performed was written by composers of color or women. The orchestra intentionally promotes artists and targets audiences that have been historically excluded from orchestral music. Landmarks was founded in 2001 and began its signature summer concert series at the DCR Hatch Memorial in 2007. The orchestra also performs community concerts at local venues in neighborhoods such as Roxbury, Dorchester, and Jamaica Plain.

Headshot of Christopher Wilkins. He is smiling, wearing a gray and light blue shirt.CHRISTOPHER WILKINS was appointed Music Director of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra in the spring of 2011. Since then, he has expanded the orchestra’s mission of making great music accessible to the whole community. He has also helped develop the orchestra’s Breaking Down Barriers initiative, making accessibility a priority in all aspects of the orchestra’s activities.

Mr. Wilkins also serves as Music Director of the Akron Symphony. As a guest conductor, Mr. Wilkins has appeared with many of the leading orchestras of the United States, including those of Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco. Previously, Mr. Wilkins served as Music Director of the Orlando Philharmonic, the San Antonio Symphony, and the Colorado Springs Symphony.

He has served as associate conductor of the Utah Symphony, assisting Joseph Silverstein; assistant conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra under Christoph von Dohnányi; conducting assistant with the Oregon Symphony under James DePreist; and was a conducting fellow at Tanglewood. He was winner of the Seaver/NEA Award in 1992.

Born in Boston, Mr. Wilkins earned his bachelor’s degree from Harvard College in 1978. He received his master of music degree at Yale University in 1981, and in 1979 attended the Hochschule der Künste in West Berlin as a recipient of the John Knowles Paine traveling fellowship. As an oboist, he performed with many ensembles in the Boston area, including the Berkshire Music Center Orchestra at Tanglewood, and the Boston Philharmonic under Benjamin Zander.

First Violin

Gregory Vitale, Concertmaster

Yeolim Nam

Heidi Braun Hill

Yumi Okada

Alice Hallstorm

Stacey Alden

 

Second Violin

Paula Oakes, Principal

Rose Drucker

Robert Curtis

Lilit Hartunian

Lisa Brooke

 

Viola

Ashleigh Gordon, Acting Principal

Noriko Futagami

Don Krishnaswami

Jason Amos

Kara Charles

 

Cello

Aron Zelkowicz, Principal

Melanie Dyball

Patrick Owen

 

Bass

Barry Boettger, Acting Principal

Kevin Green

 

Flute

Lisa Hennessy, Principal

Brian Dunbar

Oboe

Andrew Price, Principal

Benjamin Fox

 

Clarinet

Rane Moore, Principal

Margo McGowan

 

Bassoon

Ronald Haroutunian, Acting Principal

Gregory Newton

 

Horn

Whitacre Hill, Acting Principal

Nancy Hudgins

Lauren Winter

 

Trumpet

Dana Oakes, Principal

Jesse Levine

 

Timpani

Jeffrey Fischer, Principal

 

Percussion

Robert Schulz, Principal

 

Personnel Manager 

Christopher Ruigomez

Librarian

Kiya Klopfenstein

Assistant Librarian

Sophie Steger

Arranger

David Kempers

Guest Artists

Headshot of Val JeantyVal Jeanty is a Grammy-winning Afro-Electronica composer, turntablist, and SoundChemist redefining the possibilities of electronic music through Haitian folkloric culture. Born in Port-auPrince, Haiti, she continues the legacy of her great uncle, composer Occide Jeanty, weaving ancestral rhythms and chants into bold, futuristic Soundscapes. Her signature style of Afro-Electronica merges field recordings, Haitian percussions, turntables, and electronic instruments into immersive performances that explore sound as a spiritual transformative force.

A professor at Berklee College of Music, Jeanty’s work has been showcased at the Whitney Museum and the MoMA in New York City, the Venice Biennale in Italy, and the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin. Her compositions have been commissioned and presented by leading arts institutions, universities, and international festivals dedicated to contemporary and experimental music.

Her honors include the 2024 United States Artists fellowship, the 2022 NYU/CBA Toulmin fellowship, the 2019 NYSCA/Roulette residency, and the 2017 Van Lier fellowship. In 2023, she won a Grammy Award for New Standards Vol.1 with Terri Lyne Carrington and previously earned a Grammy nomination for her collaboration with Yosvany Terry for New Throned King.

Through Afro-Electronica, Jeanty transforms Haiti’s ancestral knowledge into the vanguard of experimental sound seamlessly weaving tradition, technology, and visionary artistry into immersive sonic worlds.

Headshot of Adrian AnantawanAdrian Anantawan holds degrees from the Curtis Institute of Music, Yale University, and Harvard Graduate School of Education. As a violinist, he has studied with Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zukerman, and Anne-Sophie Mutter; his academic work in education was supervised by Howard Gardner. Memorable moments include performances at the White House, the Opening Ceremonies of the Athens and Vancouver Olympic Games, and the United Nations. He has played for the late Christopher Reeve, Pope John Paul II, and His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Adrian has performed extensively in Canada as a soloist with the Orchestras of Toronto, Nova Scotia, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Montreal, Edmonton, and Vancouver. He has also presented feature recitals at the Aspen Music Festival and Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. He has also represented Canada as a cultural ambassador in the 2006 Athens Olympics, and was a featured performer at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremonies. Adrian helped to create the Virtual Chamber Music Initiative at the Holland Bloorview Kids Rehab Centre. The cross-collaborative project brings researchers, musicians, doctors and educators together to develop adaptive musical instruments capable of being played by a young person with disabilities within a chamber music setting. He is also the founder of the Music Inclusion Program, aimed at having children with disabilities learn instrumental music with their typical peers.

From 2012-2016, he was the co-Director of Music at the Conservatory Lab Charter School, serving students from the Boston area, kindergarten through grade eight—his work was recognized by Mayor Marty Walsh as a ONEin3 Impact Award in 2015. Adrian is also Juno Award nominee, a member of the Terry Fox Hall of Fame, and was awarded a Diamond Jubilee Medal from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II for his contributions to the Commonwealth. He is the current Chair of Music at Milton Academy, the Artistic Director of Shelter Music Boston, and an Associate Professor of Music at Berklee College. Throughout the year, Adrian continues to perform, speak and teach around the world as an advocate for disability and the arts.

Headshot of SolayaSolaya is a Caribbean vocalist, artist, and producer from Atlanta, Georgia, whose work bridges ancestral tradition and contemporary experimentation. Born into a family of percussionists, dancers, and singers, she absorbed the rhythmic languages of folkloric Latin music and the intricate patterns of West African forms from an early age. These roots form the core of her artistry.

In live performance, Solaya transforms the voice into a dynamic, multi-layered instrument—looping, harmonizing, and shaping sound in real time. Her improvisations move between the delicate and the powerful, weaving textures that blur the boundary between singer and instrumentalist. She approaches each stage as a living canvas, responding to the moment and the musicians around her.

With the orchestra, her experimental vocals invite dialogue between the rich depth of classical instrumentation and the raw intimacy of the human voice. This meeting of worlds reflects her broader mission: to represent her Dominican and Puerto Rican heritage, to remain true to her identity, and to carry the pulse of her culture into new spaces.

Solaya’s performances are at once grounded in tradition and unafraid to explore the unknown—an offering to the past, present, and future.

Headshot of Jean Dany JoachimJean Dany Joachim, Cambridge Poet Populist from 2009 to 2011, and the current Poet in Residence at First Church in Cambridge, is also an author of short stories and plays. He created the Many Voices Project, a series of readings and follow-up poetry workshops, inspiring conversations about race and equality. He has three published collections of poetry, Crossroads / Chimenkwaze (2013), Avec des Mots (2014), and Quartier (2016). He is the director of City Night Readings, a series featuring diverse poetic talents, writers, and artists. Jean Dany is a 2017 Massachusetts Cultural Council grant recipient for his play: Your Voice Poet.

Podium Note

by Christopher Wilkins

Beethoven & Revolution

The Haitian Revolution followed directly on the heels of the French Revolution, itself inspired by the American Revolution. These three struggles for liberty unfolded within a single generation. Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony—first performed in 1804, the climactic year of the Haitian Revolution—embodies the revolutionary spirit more powerfully than any other musical work of its time.

Beethoven dedicated his Third Symphony at first to Napoleon Bonaparte. But when Napoleon declared himself emperor, Beethoven famously crossed Napoleon’s name out, tearing a hole in the title page. According to his student Ferdinand Ries, Beethoven cried, “He is nothing but an ordinary mortal! Now he will trample all the rights of men under foot to indulge his own ambition!”

Our guest artist, the multi-talented Val Jeanty, brings us three short works from Haitian culture. She has worked with the Landmarks Orchestra before, first as Music Director of Jean Appolon Expressions dance company, with whom we’ve collaborated several times. Two summers ago, she also performed in Terri Lyne Carrington’s Seen-Unseen with the Boston Landmarks Orchestra during the NAACP national convention in Boston.

Tonight, Jeanty offers three works relating to different historical aspects of Haitian culture: a folk song, an original work in which she serves as composer and “turntablist,” and a march-hymn composed by her great-great-uncle, Occide Jeanty. He was the most important composer of concert music in Haiti in the late 19th century. His anthem became, for a time, Haiti’s national anthem. It is still performed frequently today. Val Jeanty has created musical connections so that the three works can be performed without pause.

Several additional guest artists bring new dimensions to the program. Adrian Anantawan, a frequent guest with the Boston Landmarks Orchestra and Artistic Director of Shelter Music Boston, performs Beethoven Romance No. 1 for violin and orchestra. At the invitation of Val Jeanty, he is joined by vocalist Solaya, master drummers, Josil Joseph Rebert and Arnaud Lauture, and poet Jean Dany Joachim for Faces, the text of which is:

Faces
Smiling
Smiling faces
Smiling faceless

Also returning to the Landmarks podium is guest conductor Damali Willingham, who leads the orchestra in three works. A conductor, composer, bassoonist, and educator—and a former student at Berklee College of Music—Willingham made their Landmarks conducting debut in 2023.

In addition to our Hatch Shell performance on Wednesday night, we are thrilled to offer performances on Thursday and Friday evenings in two area churches, and, during the day on Friday, at a community services venue in collaboration with Shelter Music Boston. From the beginning, providing free concerts of great music to all Bostonians has been a mission-level priority.

We are especially proud to return this summer to Bethel AME Church in Jamaica Plain—practically a second home to us due to the generosity of Pastors Ray and Gloria Hammond—and to Roxbury’s Twelfth Baptist Church, led by their inspiring pastor, Rev. Dr. Willie Bodrick, II.

During the performance of Occide Jeanty’s anthem, “Quand nos Aïeux brisèrent leurs entraves” (‘When Our Forefathers Broke Their Chains’), Jean Dany Joachim reads his poem, “Ayiti,” taking as its title the Haitian Creole name for the country of Haiti. The final stanza echoes the hymn lyric’s wording, “we broke the chains.” The text of the poem is:

Ayiti
by Jean Dany Joachim

Oh world, let me introduce you to my country, Haiti,
A small island firmly rooted in the Caribbean,
A green bower of beauty.

Rich in nature, with its mild climate,
Its rivers dance, winding and intertwining,
Refresh and nourish its carpet.
This land was born for friendship and peace.
Its landscape, a canvas to be desired by all.

The sun visits every day,
Corn, coffee and sugar cane once abounded here.
Generosity everywhere and souls are warm,
Smiles and joy light up every face.

Our skies are starry and our nights are magical.
My country, a corner of paradise, a land of dreams.

And by an unfortunate accident, one fine day,
Christopher Columbus and his companions landed.
One of their ships was wrecked on our shores.

Deception, betrayal, massacre and horror
impregnated the island’s soil.
Exploitation through and through.

Live free or perish was our only option.
We joined forces to overthrow it all,
And in 1791, we said no to their servitude

We broke the chains, demanding
Justice freedom and dignity
We celebrate life, with a beating heart,
Oh world, hear our song of resilience.

Ambassador Program

Started in 2022, the Ambassador Program aims to seasonally employ enthusiastic, music-loving folks from a variety of backgrounds, representing the diversity of Boston’s neighborhoods. With 54% of our Ambassadors speaking more than one language—including Spanish, Portuguese, and French—they help spread the word of Boston Landmarks Orchestra to a vast number of Boston communities, including Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, East Boston and more. From promoting our concerts in their own neighborhoods, to helping patrons both new and familiar navigate the Esplanade, our Ambassadors are here to engage as many people as possible, promoting Boston Landmarks Orchestra’s mission of building community through great music.

THANK YOU
to our many donors and supporters. 

Click here for current list of donors 

Special thanks to Directors, Advisors, Musicians and Staff who make our work possible.

Click here for a list of Board Members

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