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WOLF TRAP: AMERICA'S HOME FOR THE ARTS
BUENA PARK, CA (December 13, 2002)Settlers named the northern
Virginia valley Wolf Trap almost 400 years ago. Today it is the
home of America's only national park for the performing arts,
and Yamaha celebrates the 2002-2003 season as the park's official
piano.
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The
stunning indoor/outdoor Filene Center hosts concerts and shows
of every variety at Wolf Trap.
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Donated to the federal government in the late 1960s by owner Catherine
Filene Shouse, the 128-acre park offers a uniquely American venue
for artistic expression. The 7,028-seat indoor/outdoor Filene Center
plays host to seasonal performances and educational programs of
every type, while nearby, The Barns of Wolf Trap provides an intimate
setting for a smaller venue of up to fewer 400 people.
In April 2003, a new $10 million Educational Center will open,
providing space not only for Wolf Trap's Institute for Early
Learning Through the Arts but also for the renowned Wolf Trap Opera
Company.
The Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts is a not-for-profit
organization that runs the park in partnership with the National
Park Service. Since assuming the reins in 1996, president and CEO
Terrence Jones has championed Wolf Trap's role in commissioning
new works of art. As he told the New York Times in August,
"We're a national park for the performing arts. We need
to contribute to the national repertoire."
"The ability to have Yamaha equipment readily available certainly
will facilitate that process," say Jones. "We've
been extremely pleased with the quality of the pianos, and have
gotten extremely positive responses from the artists. Yamaha understands
our needs and is willing to cooperate with us."
One special program Jones has instituted is "Face of America,"
which combines music, dance, and other means of expression to shine
a spotlight on a different national park each year, highlighting
not only its natural wonders but the people who live in and around
it. In 2002, the series highlighted Mammoth Cave National Park in
Kentucky, combining filmed and live performances by Doug Varone
and his dance company on stage at the Filene Center.
The 2002 season also included performances by Harry Connick Jr.,
Tony Bennett, the B.B. King Blues Festival, Natalie Cole, George
Benson, Bruce Hornsby, and Yo Yo Ma, along with scores of other
performers.
Yamaha's involvement with Wolf Trap began on a small scale,
with a single CFIIIS concert grand piano used by Yamaha artist John
Tesh at The Barns last winter. Now 15 pianos of various sizes are
in use in the park.
Ann McPherson McKee, Wolf Trap's Senior Vice President for
Performing Arts and Education, praised the park's new Yamaha
instruments. "The pianos worked beautifully for us. They held
their tuning versus other instruments we've had in the building
before, which is significant since the Filene Center is an indoor/outdoor
facility."
Jones says he especially enjoys hearing piano performances in the
smaller venue. "The facility in The Barns is like an extension
of the piano, because it's so acoustically pure," he explains.
Up-to-date information about performances and educational programs
at Wolf Trap is available online at www.wolftrap.org.
For more information about Yamaha pianos, write Yamaha Corporation
of America, Piano Division, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622-6600;
email infostation@yamaha.com;
visit www.yamaha.com or telephone (714) 522-9011.
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