Yolanda Kondonassis is a world-class harpist and this weekend she joins the Tucson Symphony Orchestra to perform a rare harp concerto.

Tucson Symphony Orchestra concert highlights harp concerto

World-class harpist Yolanda Kondonassis flew into Tucson last winter to rent a harp.

When you play an instrument that stands 6 feet and weighs nearly 100 pounds, itโ€™s not as if you can stow it in the belly of a passenger plane.

And no where in the cities where she was performing in New Mexico and Texas could she find a harp.

โ€œSo I flew into Tucson and rented a harp and a van and drove over to New Mexico and El Paso,โ€ she recalled in a recent phone interview.

She wonโ€™t have that problem when she arrives in Tucson to perform Ginasteraโ€™s Harp Concerto with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra this weekend.

โ€œI am really looking forward to coming to Tucson,โ€ said Kondonassis, who is no stranger here. She has played with the TSO before and has appeared on the lineup for Arizona Friends of Chamber Musicโ€™s winter festival.

The Ginastera is the seminal work for harpists including Kondonassis. Itโ€™s the piece that launches a harpistโ€™s career into another realm.

โ€œThis was the piece that said to me, โ€˜You know what, you can do this career. This career is going to work for you because there is a piece like this.โ€™โ€ Kondonassis said.

She described it as a piece that is at times powerful and muscular, with profound layers that reveal Latin-accented rhythms. The piece dispelled for Kondonassis the harpโ€™s mythical role as the instrument of โ€œhearts and flowers.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s sort of all this striking rhythm. It has Latin accents and at the same time, moments of great reflection and repose,โ€ she explained. โ€œIt exploits everything that I personally love about the harp: the strength, the rhythm, the definition but also the lyricism and the magic. You donโ€™t get all that in too many pieces for any instrument.โ€

Kondonassis, one of the worldโ€™s leading harpists, became acquainted with the Ginastera concerto early in her 30-plus-year career. Two years ago, she curated a recording celebrating the centennial of the composerโ€™s birth. The record includes performances of the Argentine composerโ€™s Pampeana No. 1 for Violin and Piano; and his Guitar Sonata.

The record opens with Kondonassis performing the Harp Concerto.

โ€œI had known this concerto for decades,โ€ she said. โ€œI think Iโ€™ve played this piece 215 times ... and itโ€™s really a part of me. But what I think makes a piece of music stand the test of time is every time you come to it, you uncover a little something new. It is music that can be reinvented, and thatโ€™s what this piece is. I will never, as long as I am able, turn down an opportunity to play this. Itโ€™s kind of woven into my fiber at this point.โ€


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