The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, October 20, 2016, Page 8, Image 20

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    8 // COASTWEEKEND.COM
#TrektheTillamook in an Tickets on sale for Astoria Music Festival concert
International Cello Com-
Antonov,
October photo contest Sergey
petition in Hungary ad the
Ilya Kazantsev to
TILLAMOOK STATE FOREST —
Throughout the month of
October, you can celebrate
the wild trails in the Tilla-
mook State Forest with a
photo contest hosted by the
Wild Salmon Center, an
environmental nonproit fo-
cusing on river conservation
across the Paciic Rim.
Now through Oct. 31,
enter the contest by publicly
posting an original photo or
video on Instagram of your
adventures trekking through
the forest.
All entries must include
the hashtag #TrektheTilla-
mook, the caption should
include the trail area or
general location where the
photo was taken, and entries
should tag @wildsalmon-
center on Instagram.
Wild Salmon Center staff
will pick the top three pho-
tos on Nov. 1. The winner of
the irst place photo will win
a Poler Napsack, the second
place photo will win two
cases of Brew Dr. Kombu-
cha and an insulated mug,
and the third place photo
will win gear from Outdoor
Project’s general store.
The contest is open to
legal residents of the U.S.
and the District of Columbia
who are 18 or older at time
5
$
of entry and are registered
users of Instagram. There is
no purchase or donation of
any kind necessary to enter
to win.
You could go ishing on
the Kilchis River, hike up
Kings Mountain or hunt for
mushrooms along Gales
Creek Trail. Still don’t
know where to adventure?
Visit the Outdoor Project for
Tillamook Forest adventure
proiles or download their
Tillamook State Forest Trail
Map to ind trails and camp
spots along Oregon High-
way 6.
This photo contest is
meant to highlight the
critical conservation areas
Wild Salmon Center and the
North Coast State Forest Co-
alition are actively working
to protect in Oregon’s North
Coast forests.
The North Coast State
Forest Coalition was estab-
lished by Wild Salmon Cen-
ter and conservation partners
to focus on balanced forest
management in northwest
Oregon’s Tillamook and
Clatsop State Forests. The
coalition promotes clean
drinking water, healthy ish
and wildlife habitat, and
abundant recreation oppor-
tunities.
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perform Britten,
Saint-Saens Nov. 4
ASTORIA — Tickets are on
sale now for a special Nov.
4 concert presented by the
Astoria Music Festival.
The concert will feature
Sergey Antonov, the young-
est winner of Moscow’s
prestigious International
Tchaikovsky Cello Competi-
tion, and pianist Ilya Kazant-
sev, a two-time winner of the
World Piano Competition in
Cincinnati, Ohio.
The concert will take
place at 7:30 p.m. at the
Liberty Theater, located at
1203 Commercial St. A gala
Artists Reception for patrons
will follow the concert at
Carruthers, a new restaurant
kitty-corner to the theater.
The concert will feature
sonatas as well as shorter
pieces for cello and piano.
Camille Saint-Saens’ tur-
bulent Cello Sonata No. 1 in
C Minor is on the program.
The sonata makes full use of
the lower registers of both
cello and piano, relecting
the composer’s sadness at
the loss of a family member
and at the state of France
following Napoleon III’s
crushing defeat by Prussia
in 1870.
The program also in-
cludes Benjamin Britten’s
Cello Sonata, the irst of ive
major works Britten wrote
for Antonov’s celebrated
cello teacher Mstislav Ros-
tropovich. In the timbre and
counterpoint of scherzo-piz-
zicato movement, one can
immediately detect indebt-
edness to the Indonesian
Balinese gamelan tradition.
The moto perpetuo inal
movement uses the “DSCH”
motif (D-E lat-C-B natural)
as a coded tribute to the
name Dmitri Shostakovich,
the composer who inspired
Britten to write for cello.
Antonov and Kazantsev
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Cellist Sergey Antonov, left, and pianist Ilya Kazantsev will per-
form Nov. 4 at the Liberty Theater in Astoria.
regularly appear together in
the world’s inest concert
halls, and this performance
provides North Coast audi-
ences an opportunity to hear
a celebrated international
musical team. Antonov is a
long-time audience favorite
at the Astoria Music Festiva,
where his accomplishments
have included concer-
tos, chamber music, solo
recitals, children’s concerts
and summiting Mt. Hood
with Astoria’s music-loving
radiologist Dr. William Arm-
ington and Blind Pilot’s lead
vocalist Israel Nebeker.
Ticket are $40 for patron
reserved seats and admission
to the post-concert recep-
tion; $25 general admission;
and $5 for students. Ticket
are available from the Liber-
ty Theater box ofice, open
2 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday
through Saturday, by phone
at 503-325-5922 ext. 55.
Tickets are also available
from Tickets West by calling
503224-8499 or 800-922-
8499. Tickets purchased
through Tickets West are
subject to a convenience
charge and may be requested
to be held at Will Call on
the night of performance to
avoid the shipping charge.
More about
the artists
Born in Moscow, Russia,
to a musical family, Antonov
began his cello studies at the
age of 5 at the Central Music
School of the Moscow
Conservatory, initially under
the tutelage of his mother,
Maria Zhuravleva, and went
on to graduate from Moscow
Conservatory having studied
with Natalia Shakhovskaya,
Alexander Bonduryansky
and Mstislav Rostropovich.
Antonov has also worked
with Grammy-nominated
cellist Terry King at the
Longy School of Music in
Boston from which he holds
an Artist Diploma Degree.
Antonov was the recip-
ient of the 2008 Golden
Talent Award by the Russian
Performing Arts Founda-
tion as well as garnered top
prizes at the Justuz Friedrich
Dotzauer Competition in
Germany, the David Popper
American String Teachers
Association in Detroit. His
chamber ensemble perfor-
mances have also brought
him honors from the Lyrica
Chamber Music Series as
their Young Artist of the
Year and irst prizes from
the Chamber Music Foun-
dation of New England and
the Swedish International
Duo Competition. He lives
in New York with his wife,
Nika, and son, Noah.
Kazantsev, a fresh pres-
ence on the international
music scene, has been hailed
by The Washington Post as
“virtually lawless.” He has
performed extensively with
orchestras in Russia and the
U.S., as well as appearing in
recital in Germany, Japan,
Italy, France, Canada, Belar-
us and Slovenia.
His many awards and
honors include irst prize
at the Nikolai Rubinstein
International Competition in
Paris and irst prize at the In-
ternational Chopin Competi-
tion in Moscow, Russia.
An enthusiastic advocate
of contemporary music,
Kazantsev has presented nu-
merous premieres of works
by contemporary American,
Russian and Eastern Euro-
pean composers, many of
which have been dedicated
to him. His advanced studies
have included working with
such contemporary music
specialists as Jay Gotlieb,
Mark Ponthus and com-
poser and conductor Pierre
Boulez.
Kazantsev began his
music studies in his native
Moscow, and at the age of
9 was accepted as a student
of Valeriy Pyasetsky at
the Central Music School
at the Tchaikovsky State
Conservatory. He moved to
the United States in 2002 to
continue his studies at the
Mannes College of Music
and the Manhattan School of
Music. He currently resides
in Boston.