Danish ensemble makes American debut at Carnegie Hall

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April 1: American debut of Danish ensemble Rudersdal Chamber Players at Carnegie Hall 

Rudersdal Chamber Players give premiere performances of piano quartets by Carl Nielsen, Poul Ruders, Amanda Maier and Andrew Waggoner

The Rudersdal Chamber Players from Denmark makes their United States debut at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall on Saturday, April 1, 2023 at 8 pm. The program of Scandinavian and American music for piano, violin, viola and cello features premiere performances of piano quartets by Danes Carl Nielsen and Poul Ruders, the Swedish composer and violin virtuosa Amanda Maier Röntgen (1853-1894), and the American composer Andrew Waggoner.

A centerpiece of the program is the East Coast premiere of a piano quartet by group’s namesake, the Danish composer Poul Ruders, whose work has been commissioned from the Berlin, BBC, and New York Philharmonic orchestras. Also on the program: the first performance in the United States of a chamber arrangement of Carl Nielsen’s “Helios Overture,” an orchestral work inspired by the setting sun over the Aegean Sea.

The piano quartet in E minor, composed in 1891, was Amanda Maier Röntgen's last major work. A celebrated violin soloist and composer, the music was inspired in part by a visit to her friend, the composer Edvard Grieg, in Norway. “Now, the Fire” by the American composer Andrew Waggoner, written for and dedicated to the RCP, receives its New York premiere.

Praised for their “flawless playing” (Pizzicato) and named “highly regarded” by Gramophone Magazine, Rudersdal Chamber Players – violinist Christine Pryn, violist Isabelle Bania, cellist John Ehde and pianist Manuel Esperilla have performed throughout Denmark and in Sweden, Norway, Germany, Poland and Russia (before the war). In 2022 they released the world premiere recording of Poul Ruders’ chamber music, earning 5 stars from BBC Music Magazine among other critical accolades. 

The performance is at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall (154 West 57th Street) on April 1, 2023 at 8:00 pm. Tickets are $25-$30, and are available at CarnegieHall.org | CarnegieCharge 212-247-7800 | Box Office at 57th and Seventh. The concert is presented by Weekend of Chamber Music. 

Calendar Listing

Saturday, April 1, 2023 at 8:00 pm

Rudersdal Chamber Players

American debut

Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall
154 West 57th Street
New York, NY

Tickets are $25-$30, and are available at CarnegieHall.org | CarnegieCharge 212-247-7800 | Box Office at 57th and Seventh.

Rudersdal Chamber Players
Christine Pryn, Violin
Isabelle Bania, Viola
John Ehde, Cello
Manuel Esperilla, Piano

PROGRAM
Carl Nielsen Helios Overture (arr. for chamber orchestra by Karl Aage Rasmussen)
United States premiere

Poul Ruders Piano Quartet
East Coast premiere

Andrew Waggoner Now, the Fire
New York premiere

Amanda Maier-Röntgen Piano Quartet
United States premiere

The concert is presented by Weekend of Chamber Music

Insider Interview with Ontario Pops Orchestra founder Carlos Bastidas

The Toronto-based Ontario Pops Orchestra highlights the work of women and BIPOC composers and instrumentalists and is one of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada. Their debut album Breaking Barriers (rel. March 31, 2023) features concertos by Bach and Vivaldi performed by violinists Tanya Charles Iveniuk, Yanet Campbell Secades and bassoonist Marlene Ngalissamy, all led by OPO founder, conductor, and music director Carlos Bastidas.  We spoke to Bastidas about the group’s mission, the new album, and what the orchestra plan’s to do next.

What prompted you to form the Ontario Pops Orchestra?

 In the Greater Toronto Area, there are several professional orchestras and about 20 community orchestras but there no symphonic pops orchestras, so we wanted to fill that cultural gap. We have been very successful in attracting new audiences to our online and in person concerts.

Tell us about the repertoire that is typical for the orchestra to perform?   

In our concert programs, I mix in popular classical pieces as well as movie soundtracks, Broadway songs and light classical concerti.

How did you choose the three soloists on Breaking Barriers?  

I wanted to feature three professional black women musicians to help bring diversity to the classical music world.

What plans are on the horizon for the OPO?  

We are one of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada. I want to continue to grow that equity and diversity.

We are reaching to new audiences by taking the orchestra from the concert hall into public spaces to perform free concerts for everyone to enjoy, not just the patrons who can afford to pay for concert tickets. Music should be accessible to everyone, everywhere. I feel this is important for the future of classical music.

New from organist Christopher Houlihan

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Organist Christopher Houlihan Releases New Recording, First and Last

Album features French works by Louis Vierne and César Franck, recorded on the only French-built organ in New York

Release date February 3, 2023, on Azica Records

"passionate and intelligently virtuoso musician" — Gramophone

On February 3, 2023, organist Christopher Houlihan, described as “the next big organ talent” by the Los Angeles Times, releases First and Last on Azica Records. The album features César Franck’s “Grande Pièce Symphonique,” op. 17 (1860–62) and Louis Vierne’s Symphonie No. 6, op. 39 (1930).

Sharing his inspiration behind the album, Houlihan says, “Within this genre, there are no two pieces that better represent the trajectory of this style than Franck’s Grande pièce symphonique and Vierne’s Symphony No. 6 – essentially the first and the last French Romantic organ symphonies.” 

As a young musician, Vierne (1870–1937) idolized the famous César Franck (1822–1890) and by the time he was 16, had earned a coveted spot in Franck’s organ class at the Paris Conservatoire. Houlihan says, “It is tempting to see a parallel between Vierne’s musical style and his difficult life. And in fact, it is true that particularly poignant personal events occasionally sparked his creativity.”

First and Last was recorded on the Manton Memorial Organ “Pascal Quoirin” (2011) at the Church of the Ascension, the only French-built organ in New York. Houlihan explains the significance of playing this repertoire on the organ at Church of the Ascension, “Among organ music, the successful performance of French repertoire is especially dependent on the particular sonorities available on a given instrument. The Quoirin organ is a very good fit for the colorful demands of Franck and Vierne’s music, and it was an honor to return to Ascension Church for this recording.”

Houlihan has steeped himself in Louis Vierne’s music, having performed all six of the French composer’s organ symphonies in critically acclaimed marathon concerts across North America in 2012, on a tour that was launched at the Church of the Ascension on the 75th anniversary of Vierne’s death.

Of Vierne's organ symphonies, Houlihan says, “I am often asked if I have a favorite among Vierne’s symphonies. It’s hard (and unnecessary) to pick, but the sixth just might be my favorite. It has all the characteristics that make Vierne’s music so appealing, and perfectly in proportion. And, with Vierne at the height of his artistry, it also marks the apex of the French symphonic organ tradition — a fitting culmination of the style established with Franck’s Grande pièce symphonique.”

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.

"glowing, miraculously life-affirming performances"— Los Angeles Times

Franck and Vierne: First and Last
French Romantic Organ Symphonies

Christopher Houlihan, organ

The Manton Memorial Organ, Pascal Quoirin (2011)
Church of the Ascension, New York

Azica Records (ACD-71356)
Release date: February 3, 2023

TRACKS
César Franck (1822 -1890) – Grande Pièce Symphonique, Op. 17 from Six pièces d’orgue (1860-1862) 
[01] Andantino serioso 4:03
[02] Allegro non troppo e maestoso 7:00
[03 Andante - Allegro - Andante 8:16
[04] Allegro non troppo c maestoso 2:49
[05] Beaucoup plus largement 4:10

Louis Vierne (1870–1937) – 24 Pièces en style libre, Op. 31
[06] Berceuse, no. 19 4:13

Louis Vierne – Symphonie No. 6, Op. 59 (1930)
[07] I. Introduction et Allegro 10:13
[08] II. Aria 7:27
[09] III. Scherzo 4:26
[10] IV. Adagio 9:51
[11] V. Final 7:31

Total Time = 69:59

About the Artist

The organist Christopher Houlihan has established an international reputation as a “passionate and intelligently virtuoso musician” (Gramophone), hailed for his "glowing, miraculously life-affirming performances" (Los Angeles Times). Houlihan has performed at Disney Concert Hall with the principal brass of the Los Angeles Philharmonic; the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia, presented by the Philadelphia Orchestra; and at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., presented by the National Symphony Orchestra. The Los Angeles Times raved about his Disney Hall debut, proclaiming, "Houlihan is the next big organ talent."

In addition to First and Last (Azica Records, 2023), his discography includes Christopher Houlihan plays Bach (Azica, 2018), and recordings of music by Maurice Duruflé and Jehan Alain, and Organ Symphony No. 2 by Louis Vierne, both on Towerhill Records.

Christopher Houlihan is the John Rose Distinguished College Organist and Director of Chapel Music, and Artist-in-Residence at Trinity College, where he succeeds his former teacher, John Rose. He is Artistic Director of the Albert Schweitzer Organ Festival Hartford, which sponsors one of the premier North American organ performance competitions. In addition to his studies at Trinity College, Houlihan studied with Grammy Award-winning organist Paul Jacobs at The Juilliard School and with Jean-Baptiste Robin at the French National Regional Conservatory in Versailles.

Cassatt String Quartet announces 2023 Spring Season

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Cassatt String Quartet announces spring 2023 concerts and residencies

Performances across the United States, residencies at Columbia University, Amherst College, Bennington College, and West Texas

"an extraordinary quartet" – New York Times

The Cassatt String Quartet, formed in 1985, announces its spring 2023 season. Through concerts and residencies, violinists Muneko Otani and Jennifer Leshnower, violist Rosemary Nelis, and cellist Gwen Krosnick perform throughout the year in New England, New York, and Texas. Season details are below.

Violinist Muneko Otani says, “We are thrilled to continue to have opportunities to tour the country, bringing concerts, masterclasses, workshops, and community events to audiences across the United States. Also, two recording projects will be released in 2023: an album of works by Gerald Cohen, and another of music by Daniel S. Godfrey." These new recordings add to the quartet's discography of 40 titles, which includes the 2022 releases Andy Teirstein's Restless Nation, Victoria Bond's Blue and Green Music.

Performance highlights include the world premiere of Passion's Continuum by Anthony De Ritis in Boston on February 19, in a program that includes Daniel S. Godfrey’s Toward Light for Guitar and String Quartet with guest artist Eliot Fisk. The following week, the CSQ and Eliot Fisk head to Mechanics Hall in Worcester, MA to record Godfrey’s Toward Light, produced by multi-GRAMMY award-winning producer Judith Sherman.

Also this spring, the quartet is in residence at Columbia University in New York City, culminating in a concert on March 31 at The Italian Academy on Columbia's campus. The spring residency at Amherst College includes a concert on May 7 of works by Amherst professor Dylan Schneider.

The quartet visits West Texas twice in 2023 for its bi-annual residency Cassatt in the Basin. The January visit included programs in Midland and Odessa, and a concert at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Since 2005, Cassatt in the Basin has reached over 20,000 people, enriching the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region.

This summer, the quartet returns to the Seal Bay Festival in Maine, where it is in its 20th season as ensemble-in-residence. The festival brings unique exposure to contemporary American chamber music to audiences in coastal Maine.


Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, spanning the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels – including three discs that have been named by Alex Ross to his “10 Best Classical Recordings” feature in The New Yorker

The Cassatt Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; its annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. 

The CSQ is named for the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Upcoming Concerts

January 29 at 2 pm: Lubbock, TX
Texas Tech University at Kent R. Hance Chapel (2511 17th St)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Giovanni Bottesini: Gran Quintetto with Mark Morton, bass

Part of Cassatt in the Basin Residency (January 24-30)

FEBRUARY 19 CONCERT POSTPONED:

February 19 at 4 pm: Boston, MA
Northeastern University's Fenway Center (77 St Stephen St)
Program:
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Anthony De Ritis: Passion's Continuum (World premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Heitor Villa-Lobos: Cadenza for solo guitar (Eliot Fisk)
Daniel Strong Godfrey: Toward Light for guitar and string quartet (with Eliot Fisk)

March 30 at 7:30 pm: New York City
Italian Academy at Columbia University (1161 Amsterdam Ave)
Program:
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

Part of Columbia University Residency (March 29-31)

May 7: Amherst, MA
Amherst College's Buckley Recital Hall (53 College St)
Music by Dylan Schneider:
PANDEMIC (world premiere)
with saxophonist Jonathan Hulting-Cohen
GOES A-H-H-H: Quartet Bossa Nova
Dancer at an Exhibition
(Written for the Cassatt String Quartet)

Part of Amherst College Residency (May 5-8)

May 9 at 8 pm: Bennington, VT
Dean Carriage Barn at Bennington College (1 College Dr)
Program: 
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet

Part of Bennington College Residency (May 9 & 10)

May 13 at 5 pm: Ossining, NY
Opening Night Concert at Bethany Arts Community (40 Somerstown Rd)
Program:
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: String Quartet
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Florence Price: String Quartet No. 1

May 14 at 4 pm: New Canaan, CT
Treetops Chamber Music Concert at Carriage Barn Arts Center (681 South Ave)
Program:
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet in F major, K. 590
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Amy Beach: Piano Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 67 (with Magdalena Baczewska)

July 25 - August 5: Seal Bay Festival in Maine
Programs include:
Anthony DeRitis: Passion's Continuum (ME premiere)
Zhou Long: Song of the Ch’in
Chen Yi: Fiddle Suite


Cassatt String Quartet concerts in New York State are supported by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of Governor and the New York State Legislature

Amherst concert sponsored by: Amherst College Music Department, Provost Lecture Fund, Arts at Amherst Initiative, Office of Provost: Faculty Development Fund

Additional funding for all programs that include contemporary music are made possible in part by: The Aaron Copland Music Fund, Alice M. Ditson Fund, and Amphion Foundation

Seal Bay Festival is also supported The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation

Insider Interview with Sylvan Winds

On February 19 at the National Opera Center in NYC, the Sylvan Winds present a program of contemporary works for winds and electronics. Featuring a world premiere by the Bosnian-American composer Svjetlana Bukvich, "How many would it take?" by Syrian clarinetist/composer Kinan Azmeh, and works by Allison Loggins-Hull, Phillip Bimstein, Gyorgy Ligeti, Henry Cowell, and the duo Lawson & Merrill (David Margolin Lawson, David Merrill).

We spoke to founding member and flutist Svjetlana Kabalin about the group’s 40+ years in the business, their season, and the upcoming program.

Tell us about the beginnings of the Sylvan Winds. How did the group form? 

The group started on the streets of New York City in 1976. After I graduated from Stony Brook University with a master’s degree, one of my classmates, oboist Mark Hill, called me. He said he had just $20 to his name and wondered if I’d be willing to play on the streets in Manhattan, busking for contributions from passersby. We started on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum and then went down Fifth Avenue to play baroque duos under an arch next to an active bus stop.

Then it was on to Broadway. We played in front of the theater where “The Belle of Amherst” with Julie Harris was playing. That was such a fruitful endeavor that we returned to the streets, along with a bassoonist, on July 4th weekend to take advantage of the crowds gathering all over the city for the Bicentennial festivities. Soon after, we expanded to a wind quintet, performing regularly in front of the Florsheim Shoe store on Fifth Avenue (able to take quick bathroom breaks at the St. Regis around the corner) and meeting celebrities like Rodney Dangerfield and Woody Allen as they walked past the quintet.

In fall of 1976, we performed at the reopening of Tavern on the Green in Central Park, the Bronx Botanical Garden, Brooklyn Library, Queens Museum and elsewhere. We were inspired by the St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble concert series at the Church of St. Luke in-the-Fields in Greenwich Village, and so in 1978 we began producing our own concert series at the same historic venue.

A woodwind quintet is such an unusual group of instruments – double reeds, single reed, brass and flute. How did this particular combination of instruments become a common genre of chamber music?

The wind quintet – flute, clarinet, oboe, bassoon and French horn - has been around since the second half of the 18th century, after the invention of the clarinet, so its history goes back nearly 300 years. Up until the 20th century, there wasn’t much music composed for this combination of instruments. However, from the 20th century to the present the repertoire has increased dramatically, and there are many wonderful works from which to choose, as well as many interesting arrangements of earlier works, such as Renaissance dances from the 17th century, popular pieces and core repertoire originally written for string quartet or orchestra.

What are the advantages or benefits to performing as a woodwind quintet? The challenges?

It is always a privilege to get together with colleagues to play chamber music. For wind players, it is fun to both fraternize and play beautiful music. But it is also challenging. Unlike string or brass players, who produce sounds in the same way, each of the musicians in a wind quintet produces sounds in different ways. There are only two instruments that are related, the oboe and bassoon, because of the double-reed. Otherwise, the flute, clarinet (a single reed) and horn (a brass instrument) are completely different. So, the challenges are matching timbres, intonation, and especially balances. The flute has the most limited dynamic range and the horn can obviously play very loud, so balance is very important.

The canon of works for woodwind quintet is fairly small, especially compared to that of, say, string quartet. Tell us about some of the repertoire you’ve discovered or created, and how you adapt other works for your instrumentation.

Over the past twenty-five years, we began exploring the quintet repertoire of different countries, which added a new dimension to the wind quintet program and was always very well received. Then, when the Sylvan Winds began partnering with different historic cultural venues throughout the city, the concerts became even more interesting and diverse. We have been fortunate to perform in the Great Hall at Ellis Island, the Eldridge Street Museum, Scandinavia House, and have played every year for the past 13 years at the Hispanic Society Museum & Library in Washington Heights.

We have also always been curious about past composers whose music was forgotten or under-performed. For example, we were involved in uncovering works that were performed by Georges Barrère, a French flutist who arrived in America in 1905. (Envious of the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s French wind section, the New York Symphony Orchestra’s music director, Walter Damrosch, brought Barrère along with three other French wind players and a trumpeter to New York to play in his orchestra.) During his time in America, Barrère commissioned over 140 works by Americans including music by the Black composer William Grant Still, and many women composers. These, along with the ragtime music written by young American women at the turn of the last century were the basis for our 2019 album “Music of the Gilded Age”.

Three quite diverse programs make up the Sylvan Winds 2022-2023 season: French repertoire in December, new music with electronics in February, and Spanish dance forms in May. How do these programs, and this season, fit into the mission of the ensemble?

The 2022-23 programs reflect the heart of our mission, creating compelling programs that engage audiences. Chamber music is a powerful form of communication, both for the performers and the audiences. The group is small and nimble enough to engage audiences in many different kinds of venues and with incredibly enriching programs. French repertoire is very near and dear to wind players, because the French Conservatory training developed during the 19th century gave French composers richer palettes of color, inspiring extraordinary orchestral works such as La Mer, Bolero, Daphnis & Chloe, and Afternoon of a Faun. And playing music of French composers in the historic Church of Notre Dame in Morningside Heights that has a large French and Hispanic community, seemed like the perfect way to share this tradition.

We are very excited, as well as humbled, about the program in February with electronics. It is new territory for us, but clearly a music experience that looks toward the future. And of course, we always love returning to the Hispanic Society, and our performance there in May celebrates its reopening after several years of renovation. We’re collaborating with flamenco dancer Eva Conti, Portuguese guitarist Pedro Da Silva, and percussionist Rex Benincasa for this program.

The Sylvan Winds is in its 44th concert season. What’s next for the group?

The group is looking forward to more collaborations with other performers, including our “American Voices” program with Emmy award winning baritone, Kenneth Overton; our “Tango Nuevo” program with bandoneonist Leandro Ragusa and guitarist Federico Diaz; and our collaboration with tap dancer Max Pollak (yes, tap dance!) that began with a “Woodwind Motion” concert for Composers Concordance. We also have some other very interesting programs planned, but aren’t ready to give it away just yet………

"Ray Charles and Me" an essay by Victoria Bond

RAY CHARLES AND ME
By Victoria Bond

It all started with Quincy Jones. He was composing an immense oratorio called “A Black Requiem” for full orchestra and chorus, with Ray Charles as featured soloist. He was working on it with my composition teacher, Paul Glass.  Quincy’s lessons each week were right before mine, and Paul introduced us. As we became better acquainted, I followed his progress on the work with great interest.

The Requiem was powerful and traced the history of black slaves coming to America, beginning with slave ships coming to America and continued through the Watts riots in Los Angeles. Ray was narrator, preacher, storyteller, and participant. When the work was premiered with the Houston Symphony, Quincy invited both Paul Glass and me to attend the rehearsals and premiere.

During rehearsals, when not onstage, Ray and Paul whiled away the time playing chess backstage.. Taking the opportunity to get to know Ray, I sat in as an observer on their games.  Ray was curious about me and my work, and when I told him I was a composer, he quipped “If you are a legitimate composer that makes me an out of wedlock composer!” Ray was funny and witty and loved a good joke. He had an acute sense of hearing that allowed him to be aware of everything around him, and he was endlessly curious and inquisitive.  Quincy had structured the Requiem with  Ray’s talents in mind, and being close friends since their childhood in Seattle, he knew every nuance of Ray’s personality and musicianship.  He created room for Ray to improvise and be spontaneous, and the orchestral and choral portions of the Requiem were organized around this.

However, during the rehearsals, Quincy made changes to the orchestral parts.  His work in film and recording allowed him the freedom to change things on the spot, and he applied that experience to the less flexible world of the symphony orchestra.  These musicians were accustomed to playing the repertory of composer long dead, who could not interrupt with any remarks or criticisms, and conductors rarely, if ever, changed the notes in the score unless there were errors.  For Quincy to edit his music as the rehearsal progressed and to make changes to the musician’s parts as he discovered a better version than what was on the page, violated the norm. The players were not shy with expressing their displeasure, and Quincy was frustrated with their lack of flexibility. He was able to make some changes, but I am sure he would have wanted more had he not encountered such resistance.

The concert was a tremendous success and Ray’s part was so skillfully written that he appeared to be making it up on the spot. The choral and instrumental writing was powerful and the audience cheered and rose in a standing ovation at the conclusion.

 

Conducting Ray Charles in Richmond

That was the last time I saw Ray for several years.  The next occasion was when I was invited to conduct the Richmond Symphony in a pops concert featuring Ray. The music consisted of his normal repertoire of rhythm and blues, country and western and standards. I expected to receive the kind of scores I was accustomed to using for a symphonic concert, with all of the parts notated. Instead, I received either a piano part with no indication of any other instruments, or worse, just one instrumental part. Standing on the podium in front of the orchestra with so little information was an exercise in Zen, and I had to recreate the score in my head as we played and I could hear what each instrument was doing.

Being someone who conducts a lot of opera, I was accustomed to working closely with singers and adjusting my tempos to their breath and the ebb and flow of the music. Few operas have steady tempos for long periods of time. Flexibility of the beat, known as “rubato,” is the hallmark of the romantic nature of opera, and allows the music to either hold back or rush forward as the emotion being expressed dictates.  So when the first rehearsal began, I watched Ray and slowed down and speeded up when he did, matching the tempo of the accompaniment to his voice as I would do in opera.  He stopped me and said, “No, no!  You keep going and I will catch up with the bus.” This was completely new to me. I did what he wanted and held the tempo steady as he wove around it. Sometimes he was so far behind the beat that I thought he had forgotten what came next, but in an instant, he was right there, synchronized perfectly. This was one of Ray’s signature abilities. His voice had the natural flow of speech. It was never mechanical or stiff, but dipped, dived and vaulted around the beat, surprising the listener with the revelation that this music was alive, vibrant and spontaneous.

I was told that at the end of one of the pieces, Ray would improvise for a long time as the orchestra held the final notes, and I was to wait until a movement of his shoulder gave me the signal to stop. Anyone familiar with Ray’s playing style knows that he famously swayed from side to side, leaning left and right. We were in performance, at the end of the piece in question, and Ray was wailing on the keyboard, swaying back and forth.  This went on for what seemed like an eternity and I watched his shoulder like a hawk to try and discover when I was to cut off. Just then, his left shoulder went down with a decisive motion and I thought this must be the signal, so I cut off the orchestra.  Thankfully the audience cheered and applauded noisily afterwards, because Ray was furious.  He started yelling at me right on stage because I had obviously mistaken his signal and should have continued to hold.  I wanted the floor to open up and swallow me.  Here was my opportunity to work with the legendary Ray Charles, and I had blown it.  I would surely never work with him again. I was shamed in front of the orchestra and was completely humiliated. 

After the concert I slunk back to his dressing room to apologize, expecting him to fly into a rage for ruining the performance.  He was, on the contrary, cheerful and forgiving. “Don’t worry,” he said, “You’ll get it right the next time!”  The next time? I thought in disbelief. He actually wanted me to conduct for him again even after what I did?  I had to be sure where to cut the orchestra off if there was to be a next time, so I checked with the drummer, perhaps the most important musician of the hand-picked soloists who traveled with Ray to each of his orchestral engagements. The drummer looked at me, knowing what had happened at the concert, and said “Watch the right shoulder, not the left one.” So that was it. I never made the same mistake again.

Recording A Black Requiem

After the concert I reminded Ray that we first met when I had attended the rehearsals and concert of “A Black Requiem” and asked him if he had performed it since then. He told me that Quincy had been so upset with the orchestra’s behavior and never wanted to have it performed again.  I asked Ray if HE would want to do the work again if I could program it on a concert, and he assured me that he would. “You’ll have to convince Quincy first,” he warned me, skeptical that Quincy would budge from his position. I told Ray that at the time I was the Music Director and Conductor of the Roanoke Symphony in Virginia and was sure that the orchestra would be thrilled to perform the work. Now my challenge was to convince Quincy.

I contacted him, explained the situation and emphasized that Ray was eager to do the Requiem again, and that I had an orchestra ready and willing to perform it. As is turned out, Quincy lived a short walking distance from my mother’s house in Los Angeles, and several months later, when I was visiting my mother, he invited my husband Stephan Peskin and I to lunch at his home. He met us at the door, casually dressed and elegant. He had a full-time cook and we ate a delicious lunch, listening to stories about his many projects.  After lunch I finally broached the subject of the Requiem. “There’s no score,” he said. “It’s all little bits and pieces in a big box. Nothing has been touched since the premiere.”  I asked if there was a recording, and there was an archival one made at the concert. I explained that I could match up the bits and pieces of the puzzle to the recording and create a score. I told him that Ray was eager to do it again and that I had an orchestra and chorus eager to present it, and I was eager to conduct it.  I pleaded with him to let me try to put it all together. Reluctantly he agreed, not certain that I could decipher his scattered notes and make sense of them.

He went over to a cupboard and started to pull things out of it.  “Come here and help me, Steve,” he said to my husband.  As the two of them sat on the floor, Quincy began to hand him statues and plaques, one after another. It was an amazing sight – Grammy Awards, Emmy Awards, Academy Awards and Tony Awards – all hidden away in a cupboard!  Finally he found the box he was looking for and dragged it out.  It was piled high with loose pages and bits of paper, scraps of music and assorted messages – a real mess!  “Here it is” he said, looking at me with an “I told you so” expression that challenged me to make some semblance of order out of this chaos. “Do you think you can do it?” he said. “If I can have the recording, I KNOW I can do it” I confidently replied, all the while wondering if I actually could.

That was the beginning of the great adventure. The bits and pieces were not as disorganized as I had feared, and once I was familiar with the recording, I was able to put them together into a cohesive score. The set of parts followed and after a Herculean effort, the work was ready for performance.  Ray was excited. The Roanoke Symphony was ecstatic. Gospel choirs from local churches rehearsed for months to learn the choral portions of the Requiem. The community was at fever pitch. To have Ray Charles in person performing with their orchestra, conductor and choirs was nothing short of a miracle. 

Ray arrived and immediately everyone wanted to have their picture taken with him.  He was courteous and generous, and very patient. The first rehearsal went smoothly and the minute I got home, there was a message on my phone from Quincy. I called him back immediately and he was as excited as kid, wanting to know how it went, and if there were there any problems, and asking me how did it sound, etc. I reassured him that it was a brilliant work and the orchestra and the choir loved it, and that Ray was as pleased as could be. “You know he can be the Ayatollah” Quincy warned me.  “Look out for his temper. It is fierce!” I assured him that Ray had been a perfect gentleman and hadn’t yelled at me once, remembering the dressing down I had received years earlier.

The performance was a sensational success, and Ray was so impressed with the performance of the orchestra, the choir and me, that he told me he wanted to return with a recording crew and record the work!  This was a heady prospect. The date was set, the orchestra and choir rehearsed again, and Ray arranged for an enormous truck, filled with recording equipment to park in front of the Roanoke Civic Center.  There were cables everywhere and technical crew rushing about adjusting microphones and rearranging the stage.  Ray flew in and supervised the setup, listening with superhuman precision to the takes as we recorded them.  At one point when the orchestra was playing a particularly complex passage, layered with contrapuntal textures and thick harmonies, Ray shouted “Where’s the harp?  I don’t hear the harp!”  How anyone could possibly hear such a soft instrument in the midst of that din was unbelievable. Sure enough, the harpist had lost her place and was not playing.  What an ear! I was impressed. We all were impressed except Ray. That was how he heard. It was just normal for him to hear every detail.    

On Tour with Ray

After that recording session, I became Ray’s regular conductor for his orchestral concerts and traveled all over the country and even to Poland with him.  It was what I called my post-doctorate musical training, as I learned so much from working with him that I had never learned at Juilliard.  The schedule generally consisted of flying to the location, having one rehearsal and a concert and flying back the next day.  Very often Ray would not show up for the rehearsal, and I attributed this to his confidence in me.  I must confess, however, that the first time this happened, I was surprised and concerned, never having done a performance without the soloist being at the rehearsal. Ray, of course, had performed thousands of times, knew his repertoire and was the consummate showman in front of an audience.  He was always on the road and hardly ever stayed at his Los Angeles studio and home for very long.  The audiences gave him energy, and he loved them and needed his intense schedule for sustenance.

He always stayed at Holiday Inns because he knew the configuration of the rooms, which were always identical, and he could maneuver them without assistance.  He did have someone who was always with him, guiding him onto the stage and helping him with the everyday assistance a blind person would need.  I remember walking through the airport with Ray and his assistant.  I was a few steps behind them and as they walked, I saw people do a double take once they realized who he was.

In September of 2000, I was in the midst of rehearsals for an opera in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania when I got a call from my husband.  “Ray just called and he said he needs you right away!” I called Ray’s manager Joe Adams who said yes, Ray wanted me to conduct his 70th birthday concert and he needed me to come the next day.  “Where is the concert?” I asked. “In Warsaw, Poland” was the surprising answer. “We have a first-class ticket waiting for you.  Just get to JFK tomorrow. This was a real challenge. Of course I was honored to be asked to conduct Ray’s special birthday concert and I wanted to go, but I did have an obligation to the opera company and I would need to get their permission to leave the rehearsal for a few days.  I spoke to the director. “Are you kidding?” he said. “Of course you should go.  This is a historic moment. We are OK managing the staging rehearsals without you.  Just let us know when you will be back.” The schedule was tight: I would fly overnight to Warsaw, rehearse that afternoon, perform the concert that evening and I would fly back the next day. There would be no problem missing two days of rehearsal.

The last concert I conducted with Ray was at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center.  As we were about to go onstage, Ray said to me “You play piano, don’t you?” I confirmed that I did. “At the end of the concert you and I are going to play a little duet!” I gasped. I was going to play a duet with Ray Charles? Where was the music? How could I do this? But Ray was off, walking onstage to the huge ovation of the thousands of fans in the audience.  I panicked. Was I about to crash and burn in front of thousands of people? Maybe Ray was only kidding. Maybe he would forget.  Throughout the concert I was praying that he would forget. 

But sure enough, at the end of the concert Ray made an announcement. “And now, ladies and gentlemen, I have a little surprise for you.  The Maestro and I are going to play a duet.  Come on over to the piano bench, Victoria,” he commanded.  What was I to do? Shaking all over, I walked like a condemned woman to the guillotine. “Sit down beside me, Victoria,” and I obeyed.  Then he whispered in my ear “just follow me. The song has only three chords. It’s very easy.” And so it was. Ray was as relaxed as though he was entertaining a few friends at his house.  His relaxation infused me and calmed my agitation. He began alone so that I could hear and see the chords and what he was doing, and then I joined him.  This was fun! It was such an exhilarating feeling that I didn’t want it to end, but finally we had to, and the crowd went wild!

 

Ray’s Final Years

A couple of years later, I saw Ray in New York where he had invited my husband and me to attend a performance with his big band at a jazz club. At the end of his set, he announced that his favorite conductor was in the audience and asked me to stand. People looked around in amazement to see a petite, white woman. “Come backstage and say hello” he said as he left the stage. My husband has been with me to many concerts where I go backstage to congratulate the artist, particularly when it is someone I know. He hates this ritual, which he calls “kissing the ring” as though the artist in question were royalty, expecting a sign of obsequious fealty from his subject. So when I dashed back to see Ray and was met by him giving me a huge hug that lifted me clear off the floor, Stephan hung back. “Where is that man of yours?” he bellowed.  “Or is he too proud to come backstage to see me?” Stephan heard this, as did everyone in a 10 block radius, and he came backstage where he and Ray embraced warmly.

 The last time I saw Ray was at his studio in Los Angeles.  My husband and I drove there at his invitation. He was very sick, and had not been performing for some time.  We were met by his manager, Joe Adams, who brought us inside.  “Look out!” Joe shouted, “Blind man driving!” and just then, Ray sped towards us in an electric wheelchair.  He was thinner and frailer than I remembered him being, but his robust personality was undiminished. He laughed and joked with my husband and me, and although we did notice a large number of medications covering his desk, he seemed his old self.  I was devastated by the news of Ray’s death in June 2004.  We knew it was coming when we saw him, but wanted to hope that somehow he would charm even death and live many more years.

Conducting Ray Charles’ Music with Stockton Symphony and Billy Valentine

I am grateful for this opportunity in February 2023 to bring Ray’s music to a new audience at Atherton Auditorium with the Stockton Symphony and with the brilliant singer/songwriter Billy Valentine. Billy knows Ray’s style so intimately, and he brings an impressive background of his own accomplishments to the program. He grew up in Columbus, Ohio where his parents owned a nightclub, Club Faces, where his five brothers and seven sisters worked. “We had people lined up around the block to get in because my mother and father greeted you at the front door,” Valentine recalls. “And my sisters would work the cash register while brother and I worked the stage. When there was a break, we would call our sisters to come up on stage to sing with us as well. It was a family operation.” His skills as a song writer allowed him to collaborate with greats like Will Jennings, the Neville Bros. and the immortal Ray Charles. 

It is a privilege to work with Billy Valentine and the Stockton Symphony, and we both look forward to bringing Ray Charles’ songs to life at Atherton Auditorium.

Gramophone review: "Things Lived and Dreamt"

Victoria Bond on WQED's Voice of the Arts

Plugged-In: Winds, Electronics and a world premiere 2/19

The Sylvan Winds perform electro-acoustic program February 19 at National Opera Center

"Plugged In" program features world premiere by Svjetlana Bukvich and new music by Allison Loggins-Hull

Plus music by Kinan Azmeh, 20th century classics by Davidovsky and Cowell and more

On February 19 at 6 pm the Sylvan Winds continues their 2022-23 season with a performance at the National Opera Center in New York City. The "Plugged-In" program of works for winds and electronics features a world premiere by Bosnian-American composer Svjetlana Bukvich, new music by Allison Loggins-Hull, Syrian clarinetist/composer Kinan Azmeh's "How many would it take?", works by Phillip Bimstein, Cynthia Folio, and Lawson & Merrill, alongside 20th century classics for wind quintet by Gyorgy Ligeti and Henry Cowell. Tickets are $25 in advance ($20 for Seniors & students) available here and $30 at the door. (Programs subject to change)

The new work by Svjetlana Bukvich, Unraveling the Linear, was commissioned by the Sylvan Winds and receives its world premiere on this concert. Ms Bukvich says, "Unraveling the Linear explores our relationship with time, moment to moment perception. But it may be an illusion, a result of complex interactions in timeless space." 

The wind quintet is in their fifth decade of performances, and the 2022-23 season celebrates music, culture, and history. Performing in important cultural and historic New York City buildings, the Sylvan Winds creates imaginative and informative programs that reflect the environs of each space.

Hailed by the New York Times for "…its adventuresome programming and stylishness of performance," the Sylvan Winds was founded in 1976. Founding member and flutist Svjetlana Kabalin is joined by oboist Kathy Halvorson, clarinetist Nuno Antunes, Gina Cuffari on bassoon, and horn player Zohar Schondorf, completing the traditional woodwind quintet instrumentation. The quintet has appeared under the auspices of Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival and the Caramoor International Music Festival.

Tickets for the February 19, 6:00 pm concert at Scorca Hall at the National Opera Center (330 7th Ave, 7th Floor, Manhattan) are available at SylvanWinds.com.

Calendar Listing

Programs subject to change

February 19, 6:00 pm: Plugged In
Scorca Hall (330 Seventh Ave, Manhattan)

The Sylvan Winds present a program of contemporary works for winds and electronics. Featuring a world premiere by the Bosnian-American composer Svjetlana Bukvich, "How many would it take?" by Syrian clarinetist/composer Kinan Azmeh, and works by Allison Loggins-Hull, Mario Davidovsky, Henry Cowell, and the duo Lawson & Merrill (David Margolin Lawson, David Merrill).

PROGRAM
Lawson & Merrill: Riviere (2022)
Henry Cowell: Suite for Wind Quintet (1934)
Phillip Bimstein: "The Fearful Things & Paradise Lost" from Casino (2006)
Cynthia Folio: Seven Aphorisms (2001) Nos. 4, 5, & 6
Kinan Azmeh: How Many Would it Take? (2012)
György Ligeti: Six Bagatelles (1953) Nos. 3, 4, & 6
Allison Loggins-Hull: Agency (2022)
György Ligeti: Ten Pieces (1968) Nos. 7, 9, & 10
Svjetlana Bukvich: Unraveling the Linear (2022)

Unraveling the Linear by Svjetlana Bukvich was commissioned by the Sylvan Winds, with funding from the Individual Artist Program, made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.


Free Admission
May 25, 6:30 pm: La Pasion: Fado, Tango & Flamenco
Hispanic Society Museum & Library (Broadway between 155th and 156th St, Manhattan)

Music from the Latin diaspora, presented at the Hispanic Society Museum & Library. Featuring works by Albeniz, Bizet, da Silva, D’Rivera, de Sousa, Gomes, and Piazzolla.


These concerts are made possible, in part, with funding from the New York State Council on the Arts, with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

The Composers Now Festival celebrates living composers, the diversity of their voices, and the significance of their musical contributions to our society. During the month of February, the Festival brings together myriad performances ranging in genre from jazz to indie, classical to post-classical, experimental to folk, and beyond.

Ontario Pops releases debut album

Ontario Pops Orchestra releases debut album "Breaking Barriers"

Music includes concertos and symphonic works by Mozart, Bach, and Vivaldi conducted by Music Director Carlos Bastidas

One of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada, OPO highlights work of women and BIPOC composers/instrumentalists

On March 31, 2023 the Ontario Pops Orchestra (OPO) releases its debut CD, Breaking Barriers. The album was released on digital platforms in Fall 2022. Three Black women are spotlighted as soloists: violinists Tanya Charles Iveniuk, Yanet Campbell Secades and bassoonist Marlene Ngalissamy. The recording includes concertos by Bach and Vivaldi alongside Holst’s St. Paul’s Suite, and "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" and Symphony No. 40 by Mozart, all led by OPO founder, conductor, and music director Carlos Bastidas.

Inspired by watching broadcasts of the Boston Pops Orchestra as a youngster in his native Colombia, Bastidas founded the OPO in 2014 to foster musicianship in a positive, inclusive and supportive environment. One of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada, the Toronto-based orchestra performs classical and popular music, provides musicians with performance and professional development opportunities, and highlights the work of women and BIPOC composers and instrumentalists. 

The album release will be celebrated with a concert on March 31, 2023 at 8 pm at Toronto's Trinity St. Paul Music Centre (427 Bloor St. W). Tickets are $20-$30 CAD and are available here.

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical or digital copy of this recording.

About the Artists

Carlos Bastidas is the founder, conductor, and music director of the Ontario Pops Orchestra in Toronto and the emeritus conductor for the Durham Chamber Orchestra in the Region of Durham (Ontario). Born in Colombia, Maestro Bastidas studied bassoon, composition, conducting and chamber music at the University of Ottawa. In 2019, he received the Transformation Institute's Transformation Award for Heritage, and was one of TD's 10 Most Influential Hispanic Canadians. As found of Ontario Pops, he has steadily built the ensemble's following and developed its reputation as one of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada from its beginnings in 2014.

Born in Camagüey, Cuba, violinist Yanet Campbell Secades is an accomplished soloist, chamber and orchestral musician. She has performed throughout Europe and the Caribbean as well as in her home country Cuba. In 2015, she won the first prize at Cuba’s prestigious Unión de Artistas y Escritores Cubanos (UNEAC) competition, and in 2019 she was a prize winner at the Federation of Canadian Music Festivals’ National Competition. Yanet has performed at the Rheingau Musik Festival in Germany and the Mozartwoche in Austria. She received her Master of Music from Memorial University of Newfoundland and she is currently is in the Artist Diploma Program at the Glenn Gould School of the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto.

A native of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada with roots in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, violinist Tanya Charles Iveniuk, has performed across North and South America, and the Caribbean. Recipient of the Women’s Art Associate of Canada – Luella McCleary Award, the Gabriella Dory Prize in Music, and the Hamilton Black History Council’s John C Holland Award, Tanya received a Bachelor of Music from the University of Toronto, and an Artist Diploma from the Glenn Gould School. She is the concertmaster of the Obiora Ensemble, and violinist with Ensemble du Monde (Guadeloupe), Toronto Mozart Players, and the Odin Quartet. Former posts include Associate Concertmaster of the Gateways Festival Orchestra and violinist with Sinfonia Toronto. Tanya is a dedicated educator, and an in-demand string adjudicator and clinician abroad as well as in Ontario.

Marlene Ngalissamy developed a deep passion for the bassoon at age 13. As her curiosity blossomed, she was accepted at the Montreal Conservatory of Music where she studied with Mathieu Harel and Stephane Levesque. She continued her studies at the Curtis Institute of Music with Daniel Matsukawa. She participated in workshops and programs around the world including the Pacific Music Festival in Japan, the International Summer Academy of the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna and the Pablo Casals Festival in France.


Breaking Barriers

Ontario Pops Orchestra
Carlos Bastidas, conductor

Tanya Charles Iveniuk, violin
Yanet Campbell Secades, violin
Marlene Ngalissamy, bassoon

CD release date: March 31, 2023
(Digital album released October 2022)

TRACKS

Disc 1

Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550 by Wolfang Amadeus Mozart
[01] I. Molto allegro 8:35
[02] II. Andante 7:34
[03] III. Menuetto. Allegretto - Trio 4:28
[04] IV. Allegro assai 5:41

The Four Seasons, RV 315 "Summer" by Antonio Vivaldi
with Tanya Charles Iveniuk, violin
[05] I. Allegro non molto 6:10
[06] II. Adagio e piano - Presto e forte 2:43
[07] III. Presto 3:02

St. Paul's Suite for String Orchestra, Op. 29, No. 2 by Gustav Holst
[08] I. Jig. 3:45
[09] II. Ostinato. 2:03
[10] III. Intermezzo. 4:14
[11] IV. Finale (The Dargason) 3:47

Disc 2
Serenade in G Major, K. 525 "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" by W.A. Mozart
[01] I. Allegro. 6:18
[02] II. Romanze. 6:55
[03] III. Menuetto 2:16
[04] IV. Finale. 4:05

Violin Concerto in A minor, No. 1, BWV 1041 by Johann Sebastian Bach
with Yanet Campbell Secades, violin
[05] I. Allegro moderato 4:21
[06] II. Andante. 7:11
[07] III. Allegro assai 3:57

Violin Sonata No. 3, BWV 1005 by J.S. Bach
with Yanet Campbell Secades, violin
[08] I. Adagio. 4:59

Bassoon Concerto in E minor, RV 484 by Vivaldi
with Marelene Ngalissamy, bassoon
[09] I. Allegro poco. 4:45
[10] II. Andante. 3:38
[11] III. Allegro 3:11

Insider Interview with Pianist Orli Shaham

On January 27, 2023 Orli Shaham makes her Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra debut performing John Adams’ piano concerto “Why Must the Devil Have All the Good Tunes?” with David Robertson conducting. In this Insider Interview with Classical Music Communications, Shaham talks about the “gnarly,” aspects of the work, Martin Luther, working with the FRSO for the first time and more.

Please give us some insight into the composer John Adams, and this piece, “Must the Devil Have All the Good Tunes?”

The style of “Must the Devil Have All the Good Tunes?” is classic Adams. It has a great deal of rhythmic drive and intensity, and thick and rich harmonies that are quite gnarly. In fact, he uses the word “gritty” to describe the sound of the first movement. There are some beautiful moments of repose where he sets the scene for lovely reflection, almost meditative kinds of sounds. The piano becomes part of the orchestra in those moments, for example, in the second movement. In the third movement, the overflowing rhythmic joy is similar to the qualities in "Hallelujah Junction," (one of my favorites of John Adams’, which I recorded with Jon Kimura Parker on my album “American Grace”).

Can you explain the title of the piece? 

The phrase has been attributed to Martin Luther, the 16th century theologian. This was one of those situations like "Hallelujah Junction" - John Adams thought that it was a title just waiting for a piece. He had the line first, and then conceived of the composition. There's a lot of devilish influences, just like in Lizst’s Totentanz, or the devilishly difficult writing of Paganini, who was himself considered a devilish virtuoso. And there are references to gospel, which are also related to the theme.

This is your debut performance in Finland. You're familiar with the composer John Adams, and the conductor, David Robertson, of course. What about the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra?

I've heard so many great recordings from this orchestra, and I've known many wonderful Finnish musicians. I'm very excited to actually go to Finland to work with some of those same musicians.

January: Cassatt String Quartet at Texas Tech and residency in West Texas

Cassatt String Quartet performance at Texas Tech in Lubbock

January 29 performance is part of the long-running Cassatt in the Basin program with guest artist Mark Morton on bass

Community program "Cassatt in the Basin" brings the quartet to West Texas twice a year for concerts and music education events in Odessa and Midland

"an extraordinary quartet” – New York Times

On January 29 at 2 pm, the Cassatt String Quartet performs at Kent R. Hance Chapel on the campus of Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Admission is free, details are here.

The New York-based quartet brings a special program to Lubbock, performing quartets by Mozart and Dorothy Rudd Moore. Mark Morton, professor of double bass at Texas Tech University, joins them for Giovanni Bottesini's "Gran Quintet for strings".

The concert is one of the events of Cassatt in the Basin. Since 2005, the quartet's bi-annual residencies in West Texas have enriched the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region.

The January 2023 visit by the Cassatt String Quartet includes a multitude of activities in Odessa and Midland, including:

  • Concerts at at Manor Park Retirement Home (1/25) and Heartland Home Assisted Living (1/28)

  • Coachings and side-by-sides with students at Odessa and Permian High Schools, and Compass Academy

  • Open rehearsal at Brookdale Senior Living (1/26)

  • Family program at the Ector County Library (1/30)

A full schedule of events is at CassattInTheBasin.com/Events


Hailed for its “mighty rapport and relentless commitment,” the Cassatt String Quartet has performed to critical acclaim across the world since its founding in 1985, with appearances at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Tanglewood Music Center, the Kennedy Center, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Centro National de las Artes, Maeda Hall, and Beijing’s Central Conservatory. The group’s discography includes over forty recordings, spanning the Koch, Naxos, New World, Point, CRI, Tzadik, and Albany labels – including three discs that have been named by Alex Ross to his “10 Best Classical Recordings” feature in The New Yorker Magazine. 

The Cassatt Quartet’s upcoming projects include major performances and recordings of works by Tania León, Dylan Schneider, Shirish Korde, and Daniel S. Godfrey; their annual residencies at the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music and Cassatt in the Basin!; hometown concerts in the New York area; and appearances at Treetops Chamber Music Society, Maverick Concerts, and Music Mountain. 

The CSQ is named for the great Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt. 

Calendar Listing

Cassatt in the Basin presents

Cassatt String Quartet

with Mark Morton, bass

Muneko Otani, violin
Jennifer Leshnower, violin
Rosemary Nelis, viola
Gwen Krosnick, cello

Free Admission

January 29 at 2:00 pm

Kent R. Hance Chapel
2511 17th Street
Lubbock, TX

PROGRAM
Dorothy Rudd Moore: Modes
Giovanni Bottesini: Gran Quintet for strings
Mozart: String Quartet No.23 in F major, K.590

Details here

Pianist Francine Kay performs Czech music on new release

Pianist Francine Kay performs Czech music on Things Lived and Dreamt

Release date January 13, 2023 on Analekta

Music by Dvořák, Smetana, Janáček, and Suk, and a work by the rarely-heard Czech woman Vítězslava Kaprálová

"Kay plays with astonishing grace and floating sonorities" — Knut Franke, Fono Forum (Germany)

Pianist Francine Kay performs favorites and seldom-heard works by Czech composers on Things Lived and Dreamt, a new recording from Analekta Records (AN29004, release date January 13, 2023). In addition to the charming and popular Humoresque No. 7 by Dvořák and Smetana’s Polka No. 2, the collection shines a light on Suk's piano masterpiece from which the album's title is taken. Things Lived and Dreamt op. 30 is a set of ten fantastical pieces that Suk himself described as “a sort of artist’s diary”. 

A highlight of the album is April Preludes by Vítězslava Kaprálová (1915-1940), a student of Bohuslav Martinů. “If it hadn’t been for her premature death in 1940 at the young age of twenty-five, Vítězslava Kaprálová would undoubtedly have become a major figure in 20th century music,” according to Music Web International.

Leoš Janáček's great Sonata 1.X.1905 (From the Street) runs the gamut of emotional energy as it commemorates the death of a Moravian carpenter who was killed during a civil demonstration.

This is Ms. Kay’s fourth recording on Analekta. Her Debussy recording earned her a JUNO nomination and was Fono Forum's Disc of the Month.

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.

Things Lived and Dreamt

Francine Kay, piano
Analekta (AN29004)
Release date: January 13, 2023

TRACKS

LEOŠ JANÁČEK (1854–1928) 
Sonata 1.X.1905 (1905)
[01] Předtucha (Lepressentiment/ The Presentiment) Con moto 5:47
[02] Smrt (La mort / The Death) Adagio 7:16

JOSEF SUK (1874–1935)
Jaro (Printemps / Spring), Op. 22a (1902)
[03] No.5 Vroztoužení (Ledésir/Longing) Allegro non troppo 3:56

ANTONÍN DVOŘÁK (1841–1904) Humoresques, Op. 101 (1894)
[04] No. 4 – Poco andante – fa majeur / F Major 2:32
[05] No.7 – Poco lento e grazioso–sol bémol majeur/G-Flat Major 3:10
[06] No.8 – Poco andante–si bémol mineur/B-Flat Minor 3:03

JOSEF SUK (1874–1935)
Životem a snem (Things Lived and Dreamt), Op. 30 (1909)
[07] I Allegretto moderato – S humorem a ironií, místy rozdurděně (With humour and irony, agitated in places) 2:13
[08] II Allegro vivo – Neklidně a nesměle, bez silnějšího výrazu (Restless and somewhat timid, without strongly marked expression) 1:48
[09] III Andante sostenuto–Tajemně a velmi vzdušně (Mysterious and light and airy) 3:44
[10] IV Poco allegretto – Zamyšleně, později stále výbojněji (Contemplative, then increasingly resolute in mood) 3:07
[11] V Adagio – K uzdraveni mého syna (For my son’s recuperation) – Klidně, shlubokým citem (Calm, with deep feeling) 5:26
[12] VI Moderato quasi allegretto – S výrazem tiché, bezstarostné veselosti (With quiet, carefree cheer) 3:27
[13] VII Adagio non tanto – Jednoduše, později s výrazem drtivé moci (Forthright, later with the expression of overpowering force) 4:27
[14] VIII Vivace – Jemně, švitorně (Delicate, warbling) 2:04
[15] IX Poco Andante – Šepotavě a tajemně (Whispering and mysterious) 3:34
[16] X Adagio – Zapomenutým rovům v koutku hřbitova křečovického (Dedicated to forgotten graves in the Křečovice cemetary – Snivě (Dreamy) 5:04

VÍTĚZSLAVA KAPRÁLOVÁ (1915–1940)
Dubnová Preludia (Préludes d’avril / April Preludes), Op. 13 (1937
[17] I Allegro ma non troppo 2:10
[18] II Andante 3:16 
[19] III Andante semplice 2:20 
[20] IV Vivo 1:47

BEDŘICH SMETANA (1824–1884) 
Czech Dances 1, JB 1 : 107 (1877)
[21] Polka No.2 en la mineur/in A Minor – Moderato 2:17

Total time = 74:09

About the Artist

Noted for her “extraordinary range of color” (Montreal Gazette) and “poetic brilliance” (Toronto Star), the JUNO-nominated pianist Francine Kay is acclaimed for the beauty of her sound and the intensity and depth of her interpretations. 

Since making her debut at the Carnegie Recital Hall as winner of the Pro Piano Competition, Francine Kay has been a regular guest at international festivals.  Her performances are broadcast frequently on CBC, NPR, the BBC, WFMT, Radio France, and the EBU.

Ms. Kay’s discography on the Analekta label includes recordings of works by Ravel, Satie and Debussy, the latter of which was hailed as "prodigious, incomparably luxuriant in sound, bold and effortless" (Répertoire), and “one of the most outstanding recordings of Debussy’s piano music in recent years.” (Fono Forum)

Francine Kay is on the faculty of Princeton University. She earned her DMA at Stony Brook University, her Masters and Bachelors degrees at The Juilliard School with Adele Marcus, and an Artist Diploma from the Glenn Gould School at the Royal Conservatory of Music. Leon Fleisher, Gilbert Kalish and Marek Jablonski were Francine Kay's musical mentors. 

Cover Art: Veronika Holcová; Photo credit: Bo Huang

"Connecting Cultures" music for piano four-hands

New album "Connecting Cultures": music for piano four-hands played by Zhihua Tang and Deborah Moriarty

Music from around the world by Mozart, Dvořák, Falla, Amy Beach, Florence Price; music from China, and Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue

On Blue Griffin Records, released November 25, 2022

In a project born out of the performers' desire to connect with other cultures around the world and with one another, the pianists Deborah Moriarty and Zhihua Tang released "Connecting Cultures: Four-hand music from around the world" on Blue Griffin Records November 25, 2022.

Both Moriarty and Tang are on faculty at Michigan State University College of Music and each perform around the world. For this album, they share a piano bench, performing works by Amy Beach, Florence Price, Dvořák, and the Chinese composers Wang Jianzhong and Gong Huahua, alongside familiar favorites Rhapsody in Blue and Mozart's Andante and Five Variations in G major.

Each of the works are drawn from the composers' roots. From spirituals to nursery songs and folk dances, the selection comes from a variety of cultures and promotes female, African American, and Hispanic composers alongside standard repertoire. "Through these pieces it is possible to discern a unified human characteristic that has been poignantly revealed by this pandemic," the duo writes in the album's liner notes. "We all have a keen longing for home and comfort, and for a better united future for humanity. By exploring these human traits, we can express renewed faith in the promise of all cultures coming together to move toward that future on common ground."

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.


Connecting Cultures
Deborah Moriarty and Zhihuang Tang, piano four-hands

Blue Griffin (DE 3592)
Release date: November 25, 2022

TRACKS

Antonín Leopold Dvořák 
[01] Slavonic Dance, Op 46. No. 8 4:36
[02] Slavonic Dance, Op. 72 No. 2 4:49

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
[03] Andante and Five Variations in G major, K. 501 8:03

Wang Jianzhong
[04] Colorful Clouds Chasing the Moon 3:20

Gong Huahua
[05] Mountain Harvest 6:49

Manuel de Falla
Two Spanish Dances from La Vida Breve
[06] Spanish Dance No. 1 3:38
[07] Spanish Dance No. 2 4:45

Amy Marcy Cheney Beach
Summer Dreams, Op. 47
[08] The Brownies 3:46
[09] Robin Redbreast 1:42
[10] Twilight 1:45
[11] Katy-dids 1:11
[12] Elfin Tarantelle 1:52
[13] Good Night 2:59

Florence Beatrice Price|
Three Negro Spirituals
[14] I Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray 1:53
[15] Lord I Want to Be a Christian 4:03
[16] Ev’ry Time I Feel the Spirit 1:32

George Gershwin (arr. Henry Levine)
[17] Rhapsody in Blue 17:31


Zhihua Tang is assistant professor and director of collaborative piano at the Michigan State University College of Music. Tang has enjoyed an active performing career around the world and has been praised for her extraordinary versatility and profound artistry on the piano.

As a concerto soloist, she has performed with Detroit Civic Orchestra, Chicago Sinfonietta, Indiana University Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Ballet Orchestra, and Shanghai Conservatory of Music Symphony Orchestra. As a recitalist, she has performed extensively across Europe, the United States, and Asia, and has participated in the Aspen Music Festival, Banff Music Festival, and Gilmore Piano Festival.  

A native of Shanghai, Tang earned her DMA from Michigan State University College of Music studying with Deborah Moriarty, her master's degree from Indiana University studying with Menahem Pressler and attended the Shanghai Conservatory.


Deborah Moriarty is professor of piano and chair of the piano area at the Michigan State University College of Music, where she is a recipient of the Distinguished Faculty Award. 

A Massachusetts native, she made her debut with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at age 11. She has served on the piano faculty at the New England Conservatory of Music and the University of Lowell. Moriarty attended the Curtis Institute of Music, the Juilliard School, and the New England Conservatory of Music, where she received her Master of Music degree with honors. A medal winner in the “Concours Debussy,” she is an active recitalist and soloist with orchestras across the country, and has performed in Europe, Asia and South America. Moriarty is a founding member of the Fontana Ensemble of Michigan and has recordings on the Crystal, CRI, Blue Griffin and Centaur labels. 

Moriarty is the Artistic Director of the Encore Festival and the “Music in the Hidden Churches” concert series in Todi, Italy. She is co-founder of “Celebrating the Spectrum: A Festival of Music and Life,” an annual summer festival that brings together talented pianists with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Sylvan Winds 2022-23 season begins Dec 16

The Sylvan Winds announce their 2022-2023 season. Across three concerts in December, February, and May, the wind quintet performs in significant cultural and historic buildings in Manhattan. Kicking off on December 16, 2022 at 7:30 pm at the Church of Notre Dame in Morningside Heights, the Sylvan Winds get into the holiday spirit with traditional French carols and March of Three Kings from Bizet's L'Arlesienne Suite No. 2. The program also includes music by Claude Arrieu, one of the most prolific French women of the 20th century, and works by Rameau, Auric, and Milhaud. Selections from Bizet's Carmen complete this all-French program. Details are below.

The venue, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, was founded by a French community of priests and has been a center of the French culture in New York since 1910.

The Sylvan Winds' 2022-2023 season celebrates music, culture, and history. Performing in important cultural and historic New York City buildings, the Sylvan Winds creates imaginative and informative programs that reflect the environs of each space. (Programs subject to change)

  • Chants de Noel! | December 16, 7:30pm | Church of Notre Dame (405 West 114th St, Manhattan) Works by Rameau, Auric, Arrieu, Milhaud, Bizet, and traditional French Carols.

  • Plugged In | February 19, 6pm | Scorca Hall (330 Seventh Ave, Manhattan) Works for winds and electronics by Martin, Davidovsky, Azmeh, Loggins-Hull, and a world premiere by Svjetlana Bukvich.

  • La Pasion: Fado, Tango & Flamenco | May 25, 6:30pm | Hispanic Society Museum & Library (Broadway between 155th and 156th St, Manhattan) Works by Albeniz, Bizet, da Silva, D’Rivera, de Sousa, Gomes, and Piazzolla.

Hailed by the New York Times for "…its adventuresome programming and stylishness of performance," the Sylvan Winds was founded in 1982. Founding member and flutist Svjetlana Kabalin is joined by oboist Kathy Halvorson, clarinetist Nuno Antunes, Gina Cuffari on bassoon, and horn player Zohar Schondorf, completing the traditional woodwind quintet instrumentation. The quintet has appeared under the auspices of Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival and the Caramoor International Music Festival.

Tickets for the December 16 concert at Church of the Notre Dame are $25 in advance ($20 students/seniors) or $30 at the door and available here.


The SYLVAN WINDS

2022-23 Season

Programs subject to change

December 16, 7:30pm: Chants de Noel!
Church of Notre Dame (405 West 114th St (entrance on Morningside Dr), Manhattan) 

The Sylvan Winds get in the holiday spirit with an All-French program at the historic Church of Notre Dame in Morningside Heights. Works by Rameau, Auric, Arrieu, Milhaud, Bizet, and traditional French Carols are on the program. 

PROGRAM

Bizet: March of Three Kings from L'Arlesienne Suite No. 2.
Rameau:  Gavotte with Six Doubles
Auric: Trio for oboe, clarinet & bassoon
Arrieu: Quintet in C (1955) 
Milhaud: La Cheminée du Roi René
Traditional: French Carols
Bizet: March of Three Kings from the L'Arlessiene Suite
Bizet: Selections from Carmen  

February 19, 6:00 pm: Plugged In
Scorca Hall (330 Seventh Ave, Manhattan)

The Sylvan Winds present a program of contemporary works for winds and electronics. Featuring a world premiere by the Bosnian-American composer Svjetlana Bukvich, "How many would it take?" by Syrian clarinetist/composer Kinan Azmeh, and works by Allison Loggins-Hull, Mario Davidovsky, Irving Fine, and Robert Martin.

PROGRAM

Robert Martin: Black Rock
Irving Fine: Partita
Mario Davidovsky: Synchronisms No. 8 for wind quintet and tape
Kinan Azmeh: How many would it take? 
Allison Loggins-Hull: Agency (2023)
Svjetlana Bukvich: World Premiere (2023)

May 25, 6:30 pm: La Pasion: Fado, Tango & Flamenco
Hispanic Society Museum & Library (Broadway between 155th and 156th St, Manhattan)

Music from the Latin diaspora, presented at the Hispanic Society Museum & Library. Featuring works by Albeniz, Bizet, da Silva, D’Rivera, de Sousa, Gomes, and Piazzolla.

PROGRAM

Bizet: Aragonaise, Seguidilla & Danse Boheme from Carmen
Piazzolla: Libertango & Milonga sin palabras
Paquito D'Rivera: Vals Venezolano & Contradanza
Julio Campos de Sousa: Fado Loucura
Jose Carlos Gomes: Fado Magala
Albeniz: Asturias from Suite Espanola, Op. 47
Traditional: Siguiriya/Martinete
Pedro da Silva: An Irishman in Turkey


These concerts are made possible, in part, with funding from the New York State Council on the Arts, with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Gramophone Review: Mozart Piano Sonatas Vol. 2 & 3

GRAMOPHONE Review

MOZART Piano Sonatas Vols 2 & 3 (Orli Shaham)
By Jed Distler

The following is an excerpt. To read the full review, visit Gramophone.co.uk

The stylish intelligence and pianistic refinement distinguishing the first volume in Orli Shaham’s Mozart piano sonata cycle (released in 2020) continues into Vols 2 and 3. She rightly brings out the operatic subtext of the A minor Sonata, K310, probing the Allegro maestoso’s gnawing dissonances and generating tension through dynamic understatement in the Presto finale. Her beautifully sung-out Andante cantabile manages to be expansive and flexible without losing shape or continuity. In the opening Allegro of the F major Sonata, K332, Shaham gives distinct character and breathing room to each theme, and astutely brings out the composer’s cross-rhythmic phrase groupings. The Allegro assai’s vertiginous runs truly scintillate yet never lapse into square regularity; sophisticated accent placement and subtle elongations keep the listener guessing, so to speak.

Oct 22: Cutting Edge Concerts 25th Season Finale

Cutting Edge Concerts closes 25th anniversary season with works by Victoria Bond and others

October 22 concert presented in collaboration with KeyedUp Music Project at Tenri Cultural Center 

"a gift to New Yorkers thirsty for new sounds" – Time Out New York

Composer Victoria Bond founded Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival to celebrate, support and promote the work of living composers. Over the past 25 years, works by more than 200 composers have been played by world-class ensembles and soloists in the country. Audiences have delighted to dozens of world premieres and hundreds of on-stage conversations with the composers themselves.

On October 22 at 7 pm at Tenri Cultural Center, Cutting Edge Concerts closes out their 2022 season. Joining forces with KeyedUp Music Project, the program includes songs by Bond set to words by Albert Einstein and Walt Whitman, sung by Dennis Tobensky, and Illumination performed by pianist Marc Peloquin. Also on the program: music by Robert Helps, Dalit Warshaw, and David Del Tredici. details and tickets 

In other Cutting Edge Concerts news, the Bowers/Fader duo gives an encore performance of Bond's "Nowhere Land," which they premiered at last month's CEC concert at St. John's in the Village. The concert is on October 23 at 5 pm at the National Opera Center.  details and tickets

New CD from Artistic Director Victoria Bond

On October 1, 2022, Cutting Edge Concerts' Artistic Director Victoria Bond's new album, "Blue and Green Music" was released on Albany Records. The centerpiece of the album is the world premiere recording of Blue and Green Music, commissioned by the Cassatt Quartet through a Chamber Music America commissioning grant.

Also on the album: Bond's Dreams of Flying, performed by the Cassatt Quartet, plus the song cycle From an Antique Land, and a song set to a text by Albert Einstein, Art and Science, both performed by baritone Michael Kelly and pianist Bradley Moore. 

About Cutting Edge Concerts

Inspired by Pierre Boulez's series, "Perspective Encounters", the composer and conductor Victoria Bond founded Cutting Edge Concerts in 1998. With 25 years of concerts, Cutting Edge Concerts has presented over 300 new works by more than 200 composers. Each program highlights the music of living composers, all of whom attend the concert. Along with performances by world-class ensembles and soloists, each program features on-stage discussions between host Victoria Bond and the composers.

About Victoria Bond

A major force in 21st century music, composer Victoria Bond is known for her melodic gift and dramatic flair. Her works for orchestra, chamber ensemble and opera have been lauded by The New York Times as "powerful, stylistically varied and technically demanding." Her compositions have been performed by the New York City Opera, Shanghai, Dallas and Houston Symphonies, members of the Chicago Symphony and New York Philharmonic, American Ballet Theater and the Cassatt and Audubon Quartets.  Ms. Bond is also an acclaimed conductor, and is the principal guest conductor of Chamber Opera Chicago, and has held conducting positions with Pittsburgh Symphony, New York City Opera, Roanoke Symphony, and Bel Canto and Harrisburg Operas.

Insider Interview with Composer Mark Abel

Two song cycles form the cornerstone of “Spectrum” (Delos, DE 3592) by acclaimed composer Mark Abel, which features some of the most outstanding voices on stage today: Hila Plitmann, Isabel Bayrakdarian, and Kindra Scharich. Trois Femmes du Cinema (Three Women of Cinema) is about cult figures Anne Wiazemsky, Pina Pellicer and Larisa Shepitko. Two Scenes from “The Book of Esther” is a provocative excerpt from an opera in development. The album’s impressive array of instrumentalists includes pianist Carol Rosenberger; fellow pianists Dominic Cheli, Sean Kennard and Jeffrey LaDeur; Alexander String Quartet violist David Samuel; Pacific Symphony concertmaster Dennis Kim and cello star Jonah Kim.

Despite starting your classical music career while still involved in a different line of work (journalism), you have made an impressive mark with critical acclaim and six albums (!) under your belt. What made you want to write concert music? 

Classical has been my principal interest for many years, though initially it was as a fan only. For a good portion of my 21-year journalism career, I wasn’t certain I’d be able to raise the quality of my spare-time composing to clear the invisible bar of credibility that would result in my work being taken seriously. But I kept at it, juggling creative breakthroughs with strong doses of self-criticism. Finally, by the early 2000s, I felt confident I’d developed my own voice. Getting the music heard, recorded and performed since then is another story, of course.

Tell us about how your background prepared you for this path?  

My father was quite a devotee of pre-20th century music – Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms in particular. So in my childhood I got meaningful exposure to classical on a high aesthetic plane. But I began rebelling in my early teens, abandoning it in favor of the innovative modern jazz of the era. I did understand jazz deeply enough to realize I lacked the discipline to master it as a player. The best rock of the ‘60s, however, proved a viable entry point. I quit college after two years and went hard at this music for an extended period. It wasn’t until the late 1970s that I began facing the hard truth that rock is quite a limiting medium and further creative growth in that context would be impossible for me. With hindsight, it now seems inevitable that I would make my way back to classical, starting with a long period of catch-up to learn about the many composers I wasn’t familiar with. Happily, I was ready and eager to sink my teeth into this – but as a fan, not a composer. That came later.  

How would you describe your compositional voice or style?  

There’s a strong streak of lyricism in my work, in both the music and words (which I often write myself). The melodic component is important to me, and it’s never far off -- probably ingrained due to my prolific songwriting in the rock field. But I’m not a neo-Romantic. I’ve listened to a lot of progressive and avant-garde music over the years and elements of this can be heard in my output. Put simply, I’ve absorbed a lot of musical styles over time and it’s always been my goal to synthesize them into a cohesive – and hopefully seamless – original style.   

How has that voice evolved over the course of the six albums and your years of composing?  

Good question. Lately I’ve been re-listening to some of my earlier “serious” compositions and am getting some fresh perspective. It’s clear that the basic shape of my style has been set for some time. In the last six years or so I’ve been experimenting with differing iterations of a fully formed identity – a 100 minutes-plus opera (something I didn’t think I’d ever attempt), expanding my range of expression in song cycles and lyric writing, and, perhaps most significant, becoming comfortable writing chamber music. This last element has definitely stretched my horizons. One always wants to make every note count but chamber music is in many ways the ultimate test.      

You’ve collaborated with many brilliant performers across the albums, some of whom are featured on Spectrum. Tell us about how you got to know one or two of them, and how working together came about.  

The one I’ve worked with most extensively is the soprano Hila Plitmann – best known for her collaborations with John Corigliano, David Del Tredici and Richard Danielpour. She’s an absolutely fabulous and unique artist, dedicated from the start of her career to being a vessel for new music. Hila has very much inspired me to forge ahead and be more daring. I was very little known when I came cold calling in the summer of 2014, but that didn’t matter to her. What did was my song cycle The Palm Trees Are Restless, the first of what has grown into a sheaf of six projects together. I’ve also been blessed and am proud to have attracted such eminent musicians as David Shifrin, Fred Sherry, Isabel Bayrakdarian and Carol Rosenberger. But I find a special gratification in working with people on the way up, like pianist Dominic Cheli and mezzo-soprano Kindra Scharich; I’ll be very happy if their fine work on Spectrum helps boost their profiles.        

What do you hope listeners take away from Spectrum?  

I’m self-taught and didn’t come up through the familiar academic routes. This sets me apart in some respects from most composers; for example, very few write their own texts. I consider my composing an authentic reflection of who I am from an artistic and intellectual standpoint. And I think most people sense that after spending some time with my work. Spectrum is the broadest survey to date of what I do, and I hope listeners find the “content” resonating with them on more than one level.   

Insider Interview with Organist David Enlow

In honor of the 200th anniversary of composer César Franck’s birth, the organist David Enlow presents an all-Franck recital November 17, 2022 at The Church of the Ascension in New York City. Enlow is uniquely poised for such a commemoration. His recording of the complete organ works by Franck (Pro Organo, 2012) received critical acclaim, with l'Orgue praising his “perfect technique, inventive, flexible, vigorous musicality.” In this insider interview, we speak to Enlow about Franck, his place in the organ repertoire, and what makes this recital so special.

How and when did you get interested in playing organ?  

My grandmother (like a lot of grandmothers!) had a small electronic house organ, and when I was five years old, my idea of fun was to play Christmas carols when different family members would arrive – the only thing that has changed is that it’s now the arrival of a procession with incense and clergy!

What is Franck’s place/role as a composer in organ repertoire?  

Franck is called the ‘Father of the Symphonic School’ but in many ways that is organ world jargon – Franck was a great Romantic, a spiritual and introspective composer with great personal burdens who created beautiful soundscapes on a colossal scale.  Franck is a greater composer, in skill, inspiration, and craftsmanship, than the generations of organist-composers who followed, those who wrote principally for the organ.  Franck should really be considered a singular figure in organ music, and if organists will treat his music as Romantic music, in the way pianists approach the accompaniment to the violin sonata, all will become clear. 

What has drawn you to Cesar Franck’s compositions?  

The combination of beautiful melodies, soulful, moving harmony, intelligent voice leading and counterpoint, and the grand scale of the pieces, all contributing to a dramatic arc in each piece. 

What revelations did you have about Franck in the process of recording all of his organ music?  

I found the pieces that are regarded as “lesser Franck” can polish up really well with a few thoughtful interpretative decisions.  The ‘Final’ for example – it’s carnival music, but carnival does not mean unsophisticated, especially in 19th-century France.   

The Grande Pièce Symphonique is criticized for being sprawling and incoherent, but if you had only heard goofy renderings, Berlioz’ works would face the same judgement.  And of course, when I learned the works of his that I didn’t already know, it informed my existing interpretations of the works I had lived with since teenage years.  I was able to notice more common patterns in Franck’s compositions, devices that he loves to use and harmonies that recur, which make us more aware of which are his most special moments. 

What’s special about the organ at Church of the Ascension? 

I’ve made much of the fact that it was made in France, as opposed to American organs built in a French style by Americans who have studied that style.  It’s like the difference between champagne and a sparkling white wine from our country – the champagne doesn’t have to prove its French-ness, it just is.  So, when I am drawing stops at this organ, everything I need to play Franck is present and ready to go.  I don’t have to say “well, there is no French trompette, so I’ll make do with so-and-so.”  That French-ness aside, this is also a beautiful instrument with the scale, color, and variety to make Franck’s music come alive.  Not to discount our own native instruments -- that same level of scale, beauty, and color are also present in many American organs (otherwise I wouldn’t have recorded the Franck works at St Mary the Virgin in Times Square!)  

What are one or two of the most important things that listeners should know about Franck and his work?   

The most important thing to know is that this music comes from a time when spirituality and spectacle were aligned.  Franck prays quietly, and then moments later, he summons the titanic resources of the pipe organ to rend the heavens. There is virtuosity, kindness, intimacy, grandeur – so much is contained and expressed in this music. 

Nov 17: César Franck at 200

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November 17: Concert celebrating 200th anniversary of César Franck’s birth

Organist David Enlow performs all-Franck recital at Manhattan's Church of Ascension

"strong and compelling" The American Organist

In honor of the 200th anniversary of César Franck’s birth, the organist David Enlow presents an all-Franck recital. The performance is on November 17, 2022, 7:00 pm at The Church of the Ascension (5th Avenue at 10th Street in Manhattan).

The French composer César Franck was an enormous influence on the development of romantic and post-romantic music. His music combined the structure of German Romanticism with the orchestral color and harmonies of French music. As a prodigious organ player, the Belgian-born composer inspired Parisian organists and composers alike with his long-form works for solo organ and virtuoso improvisations.

Organist David Enlow is uniquely poised for such a commemoration. His recording of Franck's complete organ works (Pro Organo, 2012) received critical acclaim, with l'Orgue praising his “perfect technique, inventive, flexible, vigorous musicality.” 

The Church of the Ascension is an especially appropriate venue for this recital, as it is home to the only French-built organ in New York City, the Manton Memorial Organ built by Pascal Quorin in St-Didier, France. With over 6000 pipes, it is the largest French organ built anywhere in the past half century. The church’s history goes almost as far back as Franck himself – it was first organized in 1827, and has been in its current building since 1841.

Highlights of the November 17 recital include: 

  • Choral in A minor: Franck's final work, written while convalescing after a traffic accident in Paris

  • The cinematic Pièce Héroïque, written for the dedication of the organ at Paris' Palais du Trocadéro. "This piece could easily be the soundtrack to a feature film about love in wartime," says David Enlow

  • Final: A carnival-like work written for the composer's populist friend Louis Lefébure-Wély

Organist David Enlow, hailed for his “dazzling technique” (Boston Classical Review) and “performances full of color, passion, invention, and power” (American Record Guide), is Music Director of Park Avenue Synagogue and Church of the Resurrection, and organist of the Clarion Music Society. He is first prize winner of the Albert Schweitzer Organ Festival and the Arthur Poister Competition, and studied with Paul Jacobs, John Weaver, and John Tuttle.

Tickets for the November 17 recital at The Church of the Ascension (W 10th St and 5th Ave, New York, NY) are $20 and available here.

Calendar Listing

Organist David Enlow

César Franck 200th Birthday Concert

November 17, 2022 at 7:00 pm

The Church of the Ascension
W 10th St, 5th Ave.
New York, NY

Tickets: $20 general admission available here

PROGRAM

All works by Cesar Franck, performed on the Manton Memorial Organ built by Pascal Quorin (St-Didier, France)

Pièce Héroïque (from Trois Pièces)
Grande Pièce Symphonique
Prière
Final (from Six Pièces)
Cantabile (from Trois Pièces)
Choral en la-mineur / Choral in A Minor