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Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association

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(Redirected from Mid-Columbia Sinfonietta)
Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association
Orchestra
Short nameCGOA
Founded1978; 46 years ago (1978)
LocationHood River, Oregon
Concert hallHood River Elks Lodge
Hood River Middle School
Riverside Community Church (Hood River, Oregon)
Wy'East Middle School (Odell, Oregon)
Bingen Theater (Bingen, Washington)[1]
Music directorMark Steighner
Websitewww.gorgeorchestra.org

The Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association (CGOA) is a nonprofit organization that sponsors several performing ensembles in the Columbia River Gorge area of Oregon and Washington. Founded in 1978 as the Mid-Columbia Sinfonietta, the CGOA was created in 2005 and now encompasses six ensembles: Sinfonietta (community orchestra), Voci Choir, Jazz Collective (big band jazz), String Quartet (classical), Stages (musicals), and Youth Choir.[2] As of 2020, Mark Steighner is the artistic director of the association.

History

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Early musical groups in Hood River

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The earliest musical group in the Hood River Valley was the Hood River Music Association (HRMA), founded in 1942 by parents and members of the local community. The HRMA would come to be led by Boris Sirpo, the founder of the Portland Chamber Orchestra, who dreamed of turning Hood River into the "Salzburg of America".[3] Under Sirpo, the association would twice put on the Hood River Music Festival, a four-day event held in 1948 and 1951, and sponsored the Hood River Symphony, a children's orchestra, and junior and senior choirs.[3][4] Sirpo would break ties with the HRMA in 1956 due to contract disputes, and would be replaced by a string of conductors over the next 22 years.[3]

Mid-Columbia Sinfonietta

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On May 14, 1978, the Mid-Columbia Sinfonietta presented its first concert, held in Hood River under the auspices of the Chamber Music Society of Oregon. Dorothy McCormick, a Hood River native who had studied violin under Sirpo in the 1940s, served as the first director of the sinfonietta.[3] The orchestra became a member of the Portland Chamber Music Society, but remained as an amateur ensemble.[4] The local youth orchestra would also be brought into the fold, being renamed as the Mid-Columbia Junior Orchestra and also being conducted by McCormick.[3]

McCormick passed away in 2004 after suffering a stroke while conducting the junior orchestra in concert. She was replaced in the role of conductor by Mark Steighner, who directed his first concert in charge of the Sinfonietta on March 4, 2005.[3] Steighner, the music director at Hood River Valley High School, led the charge to "increase the professionalism" of the Sinfonietta, highlighted by a name change to the Columbia Gorge Sinfonietta and the June 2005 formation of the Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association (CGOA).[4]

Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association

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The CGOA was officially formed as a nonprofit organization on June 25, 2005, with Faith Ackerman named as the first president of the board of directors.[3] Upon the founding of the CGOA, the Sinfonietta began to collaborate with artists from outside the Columbia River Gorge area, including Storm Large, Stephen Seifert, Blair Tindall, and the Vienna Boys' Choir.[5][6][7][8] The association also began expanding beyond orchestra, originally with the addition of the VOCI choir in December 2006.[3] A youth choir, a big band, and a theatre ensemble were all added over the next ten years.[4]

In 2016, Steighner founded the Performing Arts Initiative (PAI), an all-volunteer effort to develop a dedicated performing arts building in the Columbia River Gorge.[9][10] The PAI signed a land lease agreement to build a 600-seat multi-use facility for performing arts in Hood River; architectural renderings of the complex were released in 2019.[11][12]

Ensembles

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The founding ensemble of CGOA is the Columbia Gorge Sinfonietta, the largest and oldest of the association's six ensembles. It typically has about 45 musicians, with five to nine being paid, professional musicians from the Portland metropolitan area.[13] The Sinfonietta existed alone until the creation of CGOA, when VOCI was created in 2006. The choir performs both alone and with the Sinfonietta, and after years of flux has settled to become a mixed-gender group of about 50 singers.[13] The CGOA also includes the Gorge Youth Chorus, open to children ages eight to 13.[14] It had been created in the early years of the CGOA but went on hiatus before returning as an active ensemble.[4]

Two more ensembles were added to CGOA in 2015: The Gorge Jazz Collective and the Hood River String Quartet.[4][13] The Jazz Collective is a contemporary big band, but also has collaborated with local banda and marimba groups.[14][15] The string quartet is the only one of the six CGOA ensembles that does not perform public shows, but instead plays private house concerts, weddings, and special occasions.[14] Professional violinist Chari Bickford, also a member of the Sinfonietta, became the first leader of the quartet.[13]

The newest CGOA ensemble is Stages Theatre, added to the association in 2016.[4] The theatre group presents both musical theatre and nonmusical productions, including Murder Ballad, and is the only CGOA ensemble that is not solely a musical group.[14][16]

References

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  1. ^ "CGOA Performance Venues and Locations". GorgeOrchestra.com. Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  2. ^ "Orchestra Association welcomes new board members". Hood River News. 14 December 2019. Retrieved 2020-05-28.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Roulier, Erica (September 11, 2019). "Kaleidoscope: Sinfonietta celebrates 40 years of music". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "About CGOA". GorgeOrchestra.com. Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  5. ^ Drake, Jim (April 27, 2016). "Jim Drake's Entertainment Blog: Storm Large on wanting to be good, paying your dues, and the luxury of time". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  6. ^ "Sinfonietta, Stephen Seifert, pay tribute to America in music Feb. 26 and 28". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. February 10, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  7. ^ "Dance into Hood River Music Month". Hood-Gorge.com. Mount Hood/Columbia River Gorge Region Tourism. February 7, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  8. ^ "Vienna Boys Choir in concert Nov. 15". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. November 5, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  9. ^ "PAI Board". GorgePerformingArts.org. Performing Arts Initiative. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  10. ^ "Performing Arts Initiative Consortium Evening". GorgeCulture.org. Columbia Gorge Arts and Culture Alliance. January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  11. ^ "Performing Arts Initiative schedules second Business Consortium event, Feb. 6". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. January 16, 2019. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  12. ^ "PAI to unveil design of planned arts center in Hood River". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. May 18, 2019. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  13. ^ a b c d Cook, Janet (Spring 2016). "Beethoven in the Gorge". The Gorge Magazine. Hood River, Oregon: Eagle Magazines, Inc. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  14. ^ a b c d "The Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association presents: Jazz Rocks! from the CGOA Jazz Collective Big Band" (Press release). Hood River, Oregon: Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association. November 15, 2019.
  15. ^ "Community of Music: Concerts blend wide variety of music Jan. 22, 24". HoodRiverNews.com. Hood River News. January 9, 2016. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  16. ^ "CGOA: 2019–20 season". GorgeOrchestra.com. Columbia Gorge Orchestra Association. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
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