San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Violinist shifts gears for San Diego debut

Nurit Bar-josef, soloist in four Mainly Mozart concerts this week, bikes about 100 miles a week

- george.varga@sduniontri­bune.com BY GEORGE VARGA

When Nurit Bar-josef performs four Mainly Mozart Festival of Orchestras drive-in concerts this week at the Del Mar Fairground­s, it will mark several firsts for the accomplish­ed violinist.

It will be the first time the National Symphony Orchestra concertmas­ter has been to San Diego, the first time she has performed a drive-in concert, and the first time she and members of her orchestra have teamed for performanc­es with members of New York’s Metropolit­an Opera Orchestra, whose concertmas­ter is Del Mar native David Chan.

Bar-josef will be one of the featured soloists for Thursday’s performanc­e of Vivaldi’s Concerto for Four Violins in B minor and the lone soloist for Saturday’s performanc­e of Ralph Vaughan Williams’ The Lark Ascending. She will return here in June for five Mainly Mozart All-star Orchestra concerts. They will be held outdoors, in a non-drivein format, at a San Diego County location to be announced.

“Because of the (concurrent) performanc­e schedules of the National Symphony Orchestra and Metropolit­an Orchestra,” Bar-josef noted, “we would never have a chance to perform concerts together like this if not for the pandemic shutting down our (concert) seasons.”

This week will be the first time Bar-josef has performed live, rather than online, for more than a handful of listeners — anywhere — since the coronaviru­s pandemic began more than a year ago. And it will be the first time in 13 months that she will travel to and from rehearsals by car, rather than her usual mode of human-powered transporta­tion.

“My husband and I live in Maryland and, PRE-COVID, I biked to my rehearsals at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., unless they were in the evening,” said Bar-josef, who was only 26 when she was appointed the National Symphony Orchestra’s concertmas­ter in 2001.

“It’s anywhere from 15 to 20 miles, round trip, depending on how much further I ride if I have time and the weather is great, or if I just need to blow off a little more steam,” she continued. “I do that ride anywhere from three to four days a week. Then, on weekends or days off, I’ll usually do the 27- to 30-mile loop we cyclists tend to do in this area. I guess it’s around 100 miles per week during a normal work week with good weather and no evening rehearsals. Sometimes when I’m riding, the music we’re rehearsing that week will run through my head, or I’ll think about my (violin) fingerings.”

A devoted musician year in and year out, Bar-josef is most assuredly not a fair-weather cyclist.

“I try to ride during all seasons,” she said. “I’ll still ride during the winter if it’s in the 20s, unless it’s super windy and feels a lot colder. I won’t ride if it’s wet, icy, or after dark.”

Bar-josef is bringing one of her violins, but not her bike — a fourfigure-priced Pinarello Prince — to San Diego. Might Mainly Mozart provide a bike for her visit here?

“In 33 years, I’ve never been asked that question before, but I’ll definitely look into it!” said Nancy Laturno, who co-founded Mainly Mozart in 1988 and launched its groundbrea­king drive-in concert series last summer.

“Musicians tell us if they like to play golf or tennis, but I can’t remember ever being asked to accommodat­e a bike request. We want our visiting musicians to enjoy themselves and feel like they can establish a home away from home here.”

Bar-josef had considered getting in a San Diego bike ride. “But we have a fairly busy schedule,” she said, “and I’m coming there to work.”

‘I am so excited!’

For Bar-josef, the opportunit­y to perform anywhere onstage with some of her fellow musicians for a live audience — in cars or otherwise — is one she has been craving for the past year.

“I haven’t performed at the Kennedy Center for an audience since early last March,” she said, speaking from the Bethesda home she shares with her husband, bassoonist Erich Heckscher.

“I hadn’t even been back in the Kennedy Center until a couple of weeks ago. And that was only with a reduced number of masked, socially distanced National Symphony Orchestra members to shoot some video performanc­es that are starting to stream.

“Other than playing for some NON-COVID patients at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, I haven’t performed anywhere in the past year. We all know what music can do for the soul. I am so excited to be coming to San Diego!”

A Boston-area native, Barjosef began playing the violin in first grade. She was greatly inspired by the records her parents played her featuring such legends of the instrument as Jascha Heifetz, David Oistrakh, Itzhak Perlman, Fritz Kreisler and Pinchas Zukerman.

So inspired, in fact, that she knew by the time she was 9 that she wanted to devote her life to the violin. After earning degrees at the Curtis Institute of Music and Juilliard, she became the assistant concertmas­ter of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Boston Pops in 1998. Three years later, the National Symphony Orchestra selected her as its concertmas­ter, a role that calls on Bar-josef to be the musical liaison between the conductor and the orchestra’s members.

“The most important responsibi­lity I feel the concertmas­ter has is to set the tone, not only for the first violin section, but for all the strings,” she said, “and to do so with a sense of confidence that helps carry the section. That’s not to say the section doesn’t have a sound of its own, but a concertmas­ter in general shows what the conductor wants the music to be.”

Bar-josef ’s Del Mar drive-in concerts will be preceded by Monday and Tuesday performanc­es at UC Irvine’s Barclay Theatre. The 750-seat venue will have a capacity of 50 socially distanced audience members. Both Irvine performanc­es are private affairs for members of the Philharmon­ic Society of Orange County.

“We couldn’t have brought this all-star group to our audience without the help of Mainly Mozart,” said Philharmon­ic Society president and artistic director Tommy Phillips. “Their trailblazi­ng commitment to bringing music to our Southern California audience is inspiring to all of us as we navigate these unique times together.”

The unique times since the March 2020 coronaviru­s shutdown of live events has led to a continuing series of pivots by Mainly Mozart. The fearlessly innovative nonprofit last summer became the first major classical music organizati­on in the nation to stage drive-in concerts, which it presented in Del Mar through October. The success of those performanc­es led other concert promoters to follow suit and San Diego Opera to launch its 2020 drive-in production of “La bohème.”

In February, Mainly Mozart returned for four more Del Mar drive-in concerts, each of which drew a sold-out audience. Advance ticket sales for this month’s four concerts are 25 percent ahead of those for the February concerts, which each drew a capacity crowd of 350 carloads of listeners, according to Laturno.

“Things are changing so fast,” she said.

“Since we started doing drivein concerts last July, we have been making guesses and taking leaps based on what we believe will be true and what we believe people will accept. Our drive-in concerts have become so popular that, even after the pandemic subsides and we move back to doing our indoor performanc­es, we’ll still do some drive-in concerts because our audience enjoys them so much.”

“We all know what music can do for the soul. Iamso excited to be coming to San Diego!”

Nurit Bar-josef

 ?? STEVEN WILSON ??
STEVEN WILSON
 ?? ERICH HECKSCHER ?? Violinist Nurit Bar-josef rides her Pinarello Prince bicycle to and from Washington’s Kennedy Center several times a week.
ERICH HECKSCHER Violinist Nurit Bar-josef rides her Pinarello Prince bicycle to and from Washington’s Kennedy Center several times a week.

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