[email protected] Concertma

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Johnsonk@Nyphil.Org Concertma FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ARTIST CHANGE November 7, 2012 Contact: Katherine E. Johnson (212) 875-5718; [email protected] Concertmaster GLENN DICTEROW and Cellist ALISA WEILERSTEIN To Perform BRAHMS’S DOUBLE CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN AND CELLO Music Director Emeritus KURT MASUR To Conduct Program To Conclude with Brahms’s Symphony No. 2 November 8–10 and 13 Cellist Alisa Weilerstein will perform Brahms’s Double Concerto for Violin and Cello with Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow, replacing Principal Cello Carter Brey, who has had to withdraw due to illness. Music Director Emeritus Kurt Masur will conduct the concerts on Thursday, November 8, 2012, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, November 9 at 8:00 p.m.; Saturday, November 10 at 8:00 p.m.; and Tuesday, November 13 at 7:30 p.m. The program will conclude with Brahms’s Symphony No. 2. The following week, Mr. Masur conducts a second all-Brahms program, featuring the Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4, Thursday, November 15, 2012, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, November 16 at 8:00 p.m.; and Saturday, November 17 at 8:00 p.m. Mr. Masur’s two consecutive weeks of all- Brahms programs mark the beginning of the Philharmonic’s survey this season of the composer’s complete symphonic and concerto oeuvres. Related Events Pre-Concert Talks Joelle Wallach, composer and visiting professor at College of Music, University of North Texas, will introduce the program November 8–10 and 13. Harvey Sachs, The Leonard Bernstein Scholar-in-Residence at the New York Philharmonic, will introduce the program November 15–17. Pre-Concert Talks are $7; discounts available for multiple concerts, students, and groups. They take place one hour before each performance in the Helen Hull Room, unless otherwise noted. Attendance is limited to 90 people. Information: nyphil.org or (212) 875-5656. National and International Radio Broadcast The November 8–10 and 13 program will be broadcast the week of November 28, 2012* and the November 15–17 program will be broadcast the week of December 5, 2012* on The New York Philharmonic This Week, a radio concert series syndicated weekly to more than 300 stations nationally, and to 122 outlets internationally, by the WFMT Radio Network. (more) Kurt Masur / Glenn Dicterow / Alisa Weilerstein / 2 The 52-week series, hosted by actor Alec Baldwin, is generously underwritten by The Kaplen Foundation, the Audrey Love Charitable Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Philharmonic’s corporate partner, MetLife Foundation. The broadcast will be available on the Philharmonic’s Website, nyphil.org. The program is broadcast locally in the New York metropolitan area on 105.9 FM WQXR on Thursdays at 9:00 p.m. *Check local listings for broadcast and program information. Artists In 2008 Kurt Masur celebrated 60 years as a professional conductor. He became music director of the Orchestre National de France in 2002 and was named the ensemble’s honorary music director for life in 2008. From 2000 to 2007 he was principal conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra. He served as Music Director of the New York Philharmonic from 1991 to 2002, when he was named Music Director Emeritus, becoming the first New York Philharmonic music director to receive that title. After his departure the New York Philharmonic established the Kurt Masur Fund for the Orchestra to endow an annual conductor’s debut week at the Philharmonic in perpetuity. From 1970 until 1996, Mr. Masur was Kapellmeister of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, a position of profound historic importance. Upon his retirement from that post, in 1996, the Gewandhaus named him its first-ever conductor laureate. Mr. Masur is a guest conductor with the world’s leading orchestras and holds the lifetime title of honorary guest conductor of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. In July 2007 he celebrated his 80th birthday in an extraordinary concert at the BBC Proms in London, at which he conducted the joint forces of the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the Orchestre National de France. A professor at Leipzig Academy of Music since 1975, Kurt Masur has received numerous honors. These include the Cross of the Order of Merits of the Federal Republic of Germany (1995), Gold Medal of Honor for Music from the National Arts Club (1996), the titles of Commander of the Legion of Honor from the French government and New York City Cultural Ambassador from the City of New York (1997), and the Commander Cross of Merit of the Polish Republic (1999). In March 2002 the President of the Federal Republic of Germany, Johannes Rau, bestowed upon Mr. Masur the Cross with Star of the Order of Merits of the Federal Republic of Germany, and in September 2007 the President of Germany, Horst Köhler, bestowed upon him the Great Cross of the Legion of Honor with Star and Ribbon. In September 2008 Mr. Masur received the Furtwängler Prize in Bonn, Germany. He is also an Honorary Citizen of his hometown of Brieg. Mr. Masur has made more than 100 recordings with numerous orchestras. Kurt Masur made his New York Philharmonic debut in June 1981 conducting works by Wagner and Strauss; his most recent appearances with the Orchestra were in April 2011, when he led Liszt’s Les Préludes and Brahms’s Symphony No. 1. (more) Kurt Masur / Glenn Dicterow / Alisa Weilerstein / 3 New York Philharmonic Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow, The Charles E. Culpeper Chair, has established himself worldwide as one of the most prominent American concert artists of his generation. His extraordinary musical gifts became apparent when, at age 11, he made his solo debut in Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto with the Los Angeles Philharmonic (where his father, Harold Dicterow, served as principal of the second violin section for 52 years). In the following years, Mr. Dicterow became one of the most sought-after young artists, appearing as soloist from coast to coast. He has won numerous awards and competitions and is a graduate of The Juilliard School, where he was a student of Ivan Galamian. In 1967, at the age of 18, Mr. Dicterow made his New York Philharmonic debut under Andre Kostelanetz performing Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto. In 1980 he joined the Orchestra as Concertmaster, having served as associate concertmaster and concertmaster of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He has since performed as soloist every year, both on tour and in New York. Highlights of his appearances on tour with the Philharmonic include his performance of the Barber Violin Concerto during the Orchestra’s 1998 Asian Tour, in Manila, Korea, and in Beijing, China, where he performed in The Great Hall of the People to an audience of more than 10,000 people. Most recently, he performed Bernstein’s Serenade with the Philharmonic at Carnegie Hall and Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 at Avery Fisher Hall, both in November 2008. His most recent solo appearance was in May 2012 performing Bartók’s Violin Concerto No.1, conducted by Alan Gilbert. Mr. Dicterow has made numerous recordings and can be heard in the violin solos of the film scores for The Turning Point, The Untouchables, Altered States, Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast, and Interview with the Vampire, among others. In May 2012 Glenn Dicterow announced that he would step down from his position at the New York Philharmonic at the end of the Orchestra’s 2013–14 season to become the first Robert Mann Chair in String and Chamber Music, a faculty position at the University of Southern California’s Thornton School of Music, one of the country’s oldest and most prestigious music schools. American cellist Alisa Weilerstein has attracted widespread attention for playing that combines natural virtuosic command with impassioned musicianship. In September 2011 she was named a MacArthur Foundation Fellow, and in 2010 she became an exclusive recording artist for Decca Classics, the first cellist to be signed by the label in more than 30 years. Her debut album, released in North America on October 30, 2012, features the Carter and Elgar Cello Concertos with Daniel Barenboim and the Berlin Staatskapelle. Ms. Weilerstein’s 2012–13 season includes engagements throughout North America and Europe. She will make her debut with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, and then appear with the Atlanta Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra, and the Philadelphia Orchestra. In January Ms. Weilerstein will tour Europe with pianist Inon Barnatan and will join Mr. Barnatan and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields for a 16-city United States tour in March. Ms. Weilerstein made her Cleveland Orchestra debut at age 13 playing the Tchaikovsky “Rococo” Variations. Throughout her career she has performed with all of the major orchestras throughout the United States and Europe. She has also appeared at major music festivals (more) Kurt Masur / Glenn Dicterow / Alisa Weilerstein / 4 throughout the world as a soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician. Ms. Weilerstein is a graduate of the Young Artist Program at the Cleveland Institute of Music, where she studied with Richard Weiss. In May 2004, she graduated from Columbia University in New York with a degree in Russian History. Repertoire Johannes Brahms composed his final orchestral work, the Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Orchestra, in part as a gesture of reconciliation to the Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim, with whom he had been close for many years until the two had a falling-out. “I should like to send you some news of an artistic nature which I heartily hope might more or less interest you,” wrote the composer to Joachim in 1887. The overture of friendship was eagerly accepted, and later that year Brahms led the work’s premiere in Cologne, with Joachim and cellist Robert Hausman as the soloists.
Recommended publications
  • Kurt Masur My Relationship to Beethoven
    Kurt Masur My Relationship to Beethoven Schriftenreihe Bulletin of the German Historical Institute Washington, D.C., Band 39 (Fall 2006) Herausgegeben vom Deutschen Historischen Institut Washington, D.C. Copyright Das Digitalisat wird Ihnen von perspectivia.net, der Online-Publikationsplattform der Max Weber Stiftung – Deutsche Geisteswissenschaftliche Institute im Ausland, zur Verfügung gestellt. Bitte beachten Sie, dass das Digitalisat urheberrechtlich geschützt ist. Erlaubt ist aber das Lesen, das Ausdrucken des Textes, das Herunterladen, das Speichern der Daten auf einem eigenen Datenträger soweit die vorgenannten Handlungen ausschließlich zu privaten und nicht-kommerziellen Zwecken erfolgen. Eine darüber hinausgehende unerlaubte Verwendung, Reproduktion oder Weitergabe einzelner Inhalte oder Bilder können sowohl zivil- als auch strafrechtlich verfolgt werden. FEATURES MY RELATIONSHIP TO BEETHOVEN Seventh Gerd Bucerius Lecture, Washington DC, May 31, 2006 Kurt Masur Music Director, Orchestre National de France Principal Conductor, London Philharmonic The Bucerius Lecture Series, endowed in memory of the publisher Gerd Bucerius, honors individuals who have made important contributions to the development of civil society. This year’s lecture honored the conductor Kurt Masur, Gewand- hauskapellmeister of the renowned Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig from 1970 to 1996, who played an important role in the peaceful revolution of 1989 in East Germany. Kurt Masur spoke about his long engagement with the composer Ludwig van Beethoven, offering many spontaneous asides and anecdotes, and even occasionally breaking into song. He then answered audience questionsat length. Since no printed text can capture this remarkable performance, we only print selected excerpts here. A video recording of the lecture will be available on DVD. If you would like a free copy of this DVD, please send an email to [email protected] by January 31, 2007.
    [Show full text]
  • Pizzazz on the Podium
    Montage Art, books, diverse creations 14 Open Book 15 Bishop Redux 16 Kosher Delights 17 And the War Came 18 Off the Shelf 19 Chapter and Verse 20 Volleys in F# Major places this orchestra square- ly at the center of cultural and intellectual discourse.” The Philharmonic sounds better than it has in decades, too, because Gilbert has im- proved morale, changed the seating plan, and worked on details of tone and balance— even the much-reviled acoustics of Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center sound Alan Gilbert less jagged now. The conducting conductor is also pre- CHRIS LEE the New York Pizzazz on the Podium Philharmonic pared to be surprised: at Avery Fisher to him, his job is both Alan Gilbert’s music that should be heard Hall in Lincoln to lead and take in Center what the musicians by richard dyer are offering. The unexpected hit of his first season ike his celebrated predecessor as diverse as György Ligeti and Wynton was Ligeti’s avant-garde opera, Le Grand Leonard Bernstein ’39, D.Mus. Marsalis, named a composer-in-residence Macabre, in a staging by visual artist Doug ’67, Alan Gilbert ’89 seems to en- (Magnus Lindberg), and started speaking Fitch ’81, a friend who had tutored art in joy whipping up a whirlwind and informally to the audience, as Bernstein Adams House when Gilbert was in col- then taking it for an exhilarating sometimes did. His programs are full of lege. To publicize the opera, Gilbert ap- L ride. Though only in his second year on interconnections and his seasons add peared in three homespun videos that the the job, the second Harvard-educated mu- up; Gilbert has said that every piece tells Philharmonic posted on YouTube; Death, sic director of the New York Philharmonic a story, and every program should, too.
    [Show full text]
  • ANNUAL REPORT 2019/20 Fadi Kheir Fadi LETTERS from the LEADERSHIP
    ANNUAL REPORT 2019/20 Fadi Kheir Fadi LETTERS FROM THE LEADERSHIP The New York Philharmonic’s 2019–20 season certainly saw it all. We recall the remarkable performances ranging from Berlioz to Beethoven, with special pride in the launch of Project 19 — the single largest commissioning program ever created for women composers — honoring the ratification of the 19th Amendment. Together with Lincoln Center we unveiled specific plans for the renovation and re-opening of David Geffen Hall, which will have both great acoustics and also public spaces that can welcome the community. In March came the shock of a worldwide pandemic hurtling down the tracks at us, and on the 10th we played what was to be our final concert of the season. Like all New Yorkers, we tried to come to grips with the life-changing ramifications The Philharmonic responded quickly and in one week created NY Phil Plays On, a portal to hundreds of hours of past performances, to offer joy, pleasure, solace, and comfort in the only way we could. In August we launched NY Phil Bandwagon, bringing live music back to New York. Bandwagon presented 81 concerts from Chris Lee midtown to the far reaches of every one of the five boroughs. In the wake of the Erin Baiano horrific deaths of Black men and women, and the realization that we must all participate to change society, we began the hard work of self-evaluation to create a Philharmonic that is truly equitable, diverse, and inclusive. The severe financial challenge caused by cancelling fully a third of our 2019–20 concerts resulting in the loss of $10 million is obvious.
    [Show full text]
  • BRETT MITCHELL Biography
    BRETT MITCHELL Biography Hailed for presenting engaging, in-depth explorations of thoughtfully curated programs, Brett Mitchell began his tenure as Music Director of the Colorado Symphony in July 2017. Prior to this appointment, he served as the orchestra's Music Director Designate during the 2016-17 season. He leads the orchestra in ten classical subscription weeks per season as well as a wide variety special programs featuring such guest artists as Renée Fleming, Yo-Yo Ma, and Itzhak Perlman. Mr. Mitchell is also in consistent demand as a guest conductor. Highlights of his 2018-19 season include subscription debuts with the Minnesota Orchestra and Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and return appearances with the orchestras of Cleveland, Dallas, and Indianapolis. Other upcoming and recent guest engagements include the Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee, National, Oregon, and San Antonio symphonies, the Grant Park Festival Orchestra, the Rochester Philharmonic, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. From 2013 to 2017, Mr. Mitchell served on the conducting staff of The Cleveland Orchestra. He joined the orchestra as Assistant Conductor in 2013, and was promoted to Associate Conductor in 2015, becoming the first person to hold that title in over three decades and only the fifth in the orchestra's hundred-year history. In these roles, he led the orchestra in several dozen concerts each season at Severance Hall, Blossom Music Center, and on tour. From 2007 to 2011, Mr. Mitchell led over one hundred performances as Assistant Conductor of the Houston Symphony. He also held Assistant Conductor posts with the Orchestre National de France, where he worked under Kurt Masur from 2006 to 2009, and the Castleton Festival, where he worked under Lorin Maazel in 2009 and 2010.
    [Show full text]
  • Joyce Yang Piano Blessed With
    Joyce Yang Piano Blessed with “poetic and sensitive pianism” (Washington Post) and a “wondrous sense of color” (San Francisco Classical Voice), pianist Joyce Yang captivates audiences with her virtuosity, lyricism, and interpretive sensitivity. As a Van Cliburn International Piano Competition silver medalist and Avery Fisher Career Grant recipient, Yang showcases her colorful musical personality in solo recitals and collaborations with the world’s top orchestras and chamber musicians. Yang came to international attention in 2005 when she won the silver medal at the 12th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. The youngest contestant at 19 years old, she took home two additional awards: the Steven De Groote Memorial Award for Best Performance of Chamber Music (with the Takàcs Quartet) and the Beverley Taylor Smith Award for Best Performance of a New Work. Since her spectacular debut, she has blossomed into an “astonishing artist” (Neue Zürcher Zeitung). She has performed as soloist with the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, the Baltimore, Detroit, Houston, Milwaukee, San Francisco, Sydney, and Toronto symphony orchestras, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, and the BBC Philharmonic (among many others), working with such distinguished conductors as Edo de Waart, Lorin Maazel, James Conlon, Leonard Slatkin, David Robertson, Bramwell Tovey, Peter Oundjian, and Jaap van Zweden. In recital, Yang has taken the stage at New York’s Lincoln Center and Metropolitan Museum; the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC; Chicago’s Symphony Hall; and Zurich’s Tonhalle. Yang kicks off the 2015/16 season with a tour of eight summer festivals (Aspen, Bridgehampton, Grand Tetons, La Jolla, Ravinia, Seattle, Southeastern Piano Festival, and Bravo! Vail) before commencing a steady stream of debuts, return engagements, and notable chamber music concerts.
    [Show full text]
  • Pdf 139.3 Kb
    Dresdner Philharmonie The Dresden Philharmonic can look back on 150 years of history as the orchestra of Saxony’s capital Dresden. When the so-called “Gewerbehaussaal” opened on 29 November 1870, the citizens of the city were given the opportunity to organise major orchestra concerts. Philharmonic concerts were held regularly starting in 1885; the orchestra adopted its present name in 1923. In its first decades, composers such as Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Dvořák and Strauss conducted the Dresdner Philharmonie with their own works. The first desks were presided over by outstanding concertmasters such as Stefan Frenkel, Simon Goldberg and the cellists Stefan Auber and Enrico Mainardi. From 1934, Carl Schuricht and Paul van Kempen led the orchestra; van Kempen in particular guided the Dresden Philharmonic to top achievements. All of Bruckner’s symphonies were first performed in their original versions, which earned the orchestra the reputation of a “Bruckner orchestra” and brought renowned guest conductors such as Hermann Abendroth, Eduard van Beinum, Fritz Busch, Eugen Jochum, Joseph Keilbert, Erich Kleiber, Hans Knappertsbusch and Franz Konwitschny to the rostrum. After 1945 and into the 1990s, Heinz Bongartz, Horst Förster, Kurt Masur (from 1994 also honorary conductor), Günther Herbig, Herbert Kegel, Jörg-Peter Weigle and Michel Plasson were the principal conductors. In recent years, conductors such as Marek Janowski, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos and Michael Sanderling have shaped the orchestra. As of season 2019/2020, Marek Janowski has returned to the Dresden Philharmonic as principal conductor and artistic director. Its home is the highly modern concert hall inaugurated in April 2017 in the Kulturpalast building in the heart of the historic old town.
    [Show full text]
  • Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Summer
    SUMMER 2009 BOSTON SYM ON Y ORCH E RA JAMES LEVINE MUSIC DIRECTOR DALECHIHULY r ^ m I &£ V + i HOLSTEN GALLERIES CONTEMPORARY GLASS SCULPTURE 3 Elm Street, Stockbridge 413 -298-3044 www.holstenpalleries.com i photo: Icrcsa Nouri I O l \ e Broun and Coral Pink Persian Set They're Not Only Preparing ^ / for a Changing World They're Preparing to Change the World y M 1 what girls have in mind 'J'NZib-iS 492 Holmes Road, Pittsfield, Massachusetts 01201 (413)499-1300 www.misshalls.org • e-mail: [email protected] V Final Weeks! TITIAN, TINTORETTO, VERONESE RIVALS IN RENAISSANCE VENICE " 'Hot is the WOrdfor this show. —The New York T Museum of Fine Arts, Boston March 15- August 16, 2009 Tickets: 800-440-6975 or www.mfa.org BOSTON The exhibition is organized by the Museum The exhibition is PIONEER of Fine Arts, Boston and the Mus6e du fcUniCredit Group sponsored by Investments* Louvre, and is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Titian, Venus with a Mirror (detail), about 1555. Oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Andrew the Humanities. W. Mellon Collection 1 937. 1 .34. Image courtesy of the Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington. James Levine, Music Director Bernard Haitink, Conductor Emeritus Seiji Ozawa, Music Director Laureate 128th season, 2008-2009 *f=^y Trustees of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc. Edward H. Linde, Chairman • Diddy Cullinane, Vice-Chairman • Robert P. O'Block, Vice-Chairman Stephen Kay, Vice-Chairman • Roger T. Servison, Vice-Chairman • Edmund Kelly, Vice-Chairman • Vincent M.
    [Show full text]
  • July 18, 2002, 8:00 P.M
    LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER July 18, 2002, 8:00 p.m. on PBS Lincoln Center Festival/New York Philharmonic Kurt Masur's 75th Birthday & Farewell "Thank you, Kurt Masur" has been the season-long motto of the New York Philharmonic. Indeed, there is much for which to thank Mr. Masur. His 11 seasons as the Orchestra's Music Director have seen a dramatic improvement in the Philharmonic's performance standards as well as a discipline in its playing that have laid to rest the one-time canard that the players of the New York Philharmonic are an unruly bunch. Concert after concert during the Masur years the Philharmonic has shown that it can stand comparison with the greatest orchestras anywhere in the world. The 2001-2002 season has been Mr. Masur's final one as Music Director, though he will return for a number of weeks next season as a Guest Conductor. To put the seal on the Masur tenure, as well as to celebrate the Maestro's 75th birthday, a special concert by the New York Philharmonic has been scheduled in Avery Fisher Hall for Thursday evening, July 18. Characteristically, Mr. Masur has devised a program that beams a spotlight on a number of the orchestra's principal players. Happily, we'll be in Avery Fisher Hall that evening with our cameras and microphones to bring that concert to you live in our continuing Live From Lincoln Center series. The concert will begin with a demonstration of the corporate excellence of the players-the Overture to Candide by Leonard Bernstein (himself a former Music Director of the Philharmonic), performed by the orchestra without conductor! I remember a similar conductorless Candide Overture performance as a memorial to Bernstein in Carnegie Hall with musicians from several of the orchestras with whom he had particularly close associations, among them the Philharmonic, of course, as well as the Boston Symphony, the London Symphony, the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, and the Vienna Philharmonic.
    [Show full text]
  • The Newness of It All
    the Newness of it all... SEPTEMBER 16–18, 2016 Michelle Djokic, Artistic Director Friday,Concert September 16, 1 2016 7:00 pm The Barn at Glen Oaks Farm, Solebury, PA “Oh Gesualdo, Divine Tormentor” Bruce Adolphe SEPTEMBER for string quartet (b. 1955) 16–18, 2016 chamberfest IN THE HEART OF BUCKS COUNTY Deh, come in an sospiro Belta, poi che t'assenti Resta di darmi noia nco Gia piansi nel dolore Moro, lasso Adolphe - More or Less Momenti Clarinet Quintet in A major, K. 581 Wolfgang A. Mozart for clarinet and string quartet (1756 – 1791) THE ARTISTS Allegro Larghetto Piano - Anna Polonsky Menuetto Clarinet - Romie de Guise-Langlois Alllegretto con variazione-Adagio-Allegro Violin - Philippe Djokic, Emily Daggett-Smith Viola - Molly Carr, Juan-Miguel Hernandez Cello - Michelle Djokic k INTERMISSION k C String Quintet in C major, Opus 29 Ludwig van Beethoven for two violins, two violas and cello (1770 – 1827) Allegro moderato Adagio molto espressivo Scherzo -Allegro Presto k 1 OpenSaturday, SeptemberRehearsal 17, 2016 Sunday,Concert September 18,2 2016 10:30 am-1:00 pm & 2:00-5:00 pm 3:00 pm The Barn at Glen Oaks Farm, Solebury, PA The Barn at Glen Oaks Farm, Solebury, PA Art of the Fugue, BWV 1080 Contrapunctus I-IV Johann S. Bach Open rehearsal will feature works from for string quartet (1685 – 1750) Sunday’s program of Bach, Copland and Schumann Contrapunctus I - Allegro Contrapunctus II- Allegro moderato k Contrapunctus III - Allegro non tanto Contrapunctus IV - Allegro con brio Sextet Aaron Copland for clarinet, piano and string quartet (1900 – 1990) Allegro vivace Lento Finale k INTERMISSION k Piano Quartet in Eb Major, Opus 47 Robert Schumann for piano, violin, viola and cello (1810 – 1856) Sostenuto assai - Allegro ma non troppo Scherzo, Molto vivace Andante cantabile Finale, Vivace k For today's performance we are using a Steinway piano selected from Jacobs Music Company 2 3 PROGRAM NOTES Momenti, which consists of some of the strangest moments in Gesualdo’s music orga- nized into a mini tone-poem for string quartet.
    [Show full text]
  • The Eleventh Season: from Bach July 18–August 10, 2013
    The Eleventh Season: From Bach July 18–August 10, 2013 WELCOME TO MUSIC@MENLO Dear Friends, The most transformative musical experiences of our own lives inevitably surface at Music@Menlo. Whether they inspire a single concert or provide context for an entire festival, we bring you these musical revelations with tremendous excitement. This we promise you: if you find it at Music@Menlo, it has a story deeply rooted in our personal history. Such an experience occurred for us during Music@Menlo’s ninth festival, which illustrated Brahms’s wide range of musical sources and influences. A program opened with an eloquent performance of Bach’s Second Suite for Solo Cello and then moved to works by composers indebted to both Bach and Brahms. Bach is a composer we had long revered, and we spoke excitedly of this concert’s extraordinary effect. Had the music of Bach—which unquestionably laid the foundations for the flow- ering of classical music through the present day—transformed the works which followed it, by composers including Schoenberg and Harbison? Or had Bach’s music, through its cosmic logic, simply opened our ears to hearing everything that followed it more clearly and vividly? These questions blossomed into our dream of an entire Music@Menlo season programmed in this special way, and in due time From Bach was born. Once again, Music@Menlo is proud to offer a rich festival experience to be found nowhere else. What better way to inaugurate our second decade than with con- certs that begin with works by a composer without equal, created at
    [Show full text]
  • PHILIPPE QUINT Biography (Updated July 2016)
    PHILIPPE QUINT biography (updated July 2016) Lauded by Daily Telegraph (UK) for his “searingly poetic lyricism” violinist Philippe Quint is carving an unconventional path with his impassioned musical desire for reimagining traditional works, rediscovering neglected repertoire to commissioning works by contemporary composers. His dedication to exploring different styles and genres with an award winning discography has solidified him as one of the foremost violinists of today. Receiving several Grammy nominations for his two albums of Korngold and William Schuman Concertos, Mr. Quint is in constant demand worldwide appearing with major orchestras at venues ranging from the Gewandhaus in Leipzig to Carnegie Hall in New York. Philippe Quint plays the magnificent 1708 "Ruby" Antonio Stradivari violin on loan to him through the generous efforts of The Stradivari Society®. Highlights of the 2015/2016 season included performances with Colorado, Seattle & North Carolina Symphonies, Luzern’s Zaubersee Festival with pianist Marc-Andre Hamelin, and a first visit to Verbier Festival performing with Joshua Bell and Tabea Zimmerman among others. At the invitation of Maestro Vladimir Spivakov, Philippe opened the 28th edition of Colmar Festival dedicated to Jascha Heifetz with Tugan Sokhiev conducting the Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse in a performance of Korngold Violin Concerto. Earlier this year he was part of the opening of Mary B. Galvin’s new hall in Chicago hosted by Renee Fleming. Winner of the “Ambassador of Arts” award in 2014, presented to Philippe by Brownstone and Gateway Organizations at the United Nations last March, his 2014-2015 season highlights included debuts with Seattle Symphony with Ludovic Morlot, Milwaukee Symphony with Edo de Waart, Kansas Symphony with Michael Stern, Vancouver Symphony with James Gaffigan, and returns to San Diego Symphony with Jahja Ling and Indianapolis Symphony with Krzysztof Urbanski.
    [Show full text]
  • Artist Series: Ani Kavafian Program
    The following program notes may only be used in conjunction with the one-time streaming term for the corresponding Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center (CMS) Front Row National program, with the following credit(s): Program notes by Laura Keller, CMS Editorial Manager © 2021 Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Any other use of these materials in connection with non-CMS concerts or events is prohibited. ARTIST SERIES: ANI KAVAFIAN PROGRAM Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Scherzo, WoO 2, from “F-A-E” Sonata for Violin and Piano (1853) Ani Kavafian, violin • Alessio Bax, piano Arno Babadjanian (1921-1983) “Andante” from Trio in F-sharp minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello (1952) Gloria Chien, piano • Ani Kavafian, violin • Mihai Marica, cello INTERMISSION (Q&A with the artist) Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904) Trio in F minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello, Op. 65 (1883) Allegro ma non troppo Allegretto grazioso Poco adagio Finale: Allegro con brio Orion Weiss, piano • Ani Kavafian, violin • Carter Brey, cello NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Scherzo, WoO 2, from “F-A-E” Sonata for Violin and Piano (1853) Johannes Brahms (Hamburg, 1833 – Vienna, 1897) The F-A-E Sonata was an unusual joint composition project at the behest of Robert Schumann. The violinist Joseph Joachim came to visit him in Düsseldorf in October 1853, and Schumann rallied two of his young students, Brahms and Albert Dietrich, to compose a violin sonata with him. Brahms had only met Schumann the previous month, arriving with an introduction from Joachim, but Schumann was Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center immediately taken with Brahms and the two had become fast friends.
    [Show full text]