This week on “Sweetness and Light,” on the eve of International Women’s Day, we’ll have lighter works by six female composers: (pictured, clockwise from upper left) Peggy Stuart Coolidge, Elisabeth Lutyens, Teresa Carreño, Cécile Chaminade, Katherine Gladney Wells, and Doreen Carwithen – though not necessarily in that order. One was a crotchety avant-gardist who kept food on the table by writing music for sci-fi/horror films. One played for Abraham Lincoln at the White House. One was an heiress of the Seven-Up fortune.
I’ll fill you in, as concisely as possible, on “Sweetness and Light.” Cherchez les femmes, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
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Cherchez les Femmes on “Sweetness and Light”

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Cover Me!

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I scored the cover story in this month’s Princton Echo! Yes, it’s the same article that ran this week in the Princeton weekly U.S. 1, but there I got bumped from the cover by the indisputably more compelling subject of summer camps. Julian Grant’s new harpsichord concerto, “Vaudeville in Teal,” will receive its world premiere, with Mahan Esfahani the soloist, on concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra at Richardson Auditorium this weekend (Saturday at 7:30 and Sunday at 4:00).
Tickets and information at princetonsymphony.org
Much more information in my article at https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/grant-goes-for-baroque-in-new-harpsichord-concerto/article_94cf66e3-ae6b-4c7f-b193-2dc7fcdc2592.html
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Vivaldi and Villa-Lobos for the Birds

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Because I squandered yesterday in shameless self-promotion on account of the appearance of my newspaper article about Julian Grant’s new harpsichord concerto (which will be introduced on this weekend’s concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra), I neglected to mark the birthday of Baroque luminary Antonio Vivaldi. Since today happens to be the anniversary of the birth of Brazilian master Heitor Villa-Lobos, let’s hear it for the V’s, as I juxtapose avian inspirations by Vivaldi and Villa-Lobos.
Happy birthday, boys!
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Vivaldi, “Il Gardellino” (“The Goldfinch”)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfZGSeRwEO0
Villa-Lobos, “Uirapuru,” folkloric rainforest piece named for Brazilian bird
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1sPSAD9SEc
And in case you missed it
https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/grant-goes-for-baroque-in-new-harpsichord-concerto/article_94cf66e3-ae6b-4c7f-b193-2dc7fcdc2592.html
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Julian Grant Goes for Baroque with New Harpsichord Concerto in Princeton

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As Director of Music at London’s St. Paul’s Girls’ School, Julian Grant was the successor of some rather estimable composers. “I had an office which had a big plaque right in from of my desk, saying, ‘In this room Gustav Holst wrote ‘The Planets’’ — which was not helpful,” he says with a laugh.
Grant, who is probably most notable for his 20 operas, has since settled in Princeton. His harpsichord concerto, “Vaudeville in Teal,” will receive its world premiere this weekend, on two concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4:00, at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium. Mahan Esfahani, one of the foremost proponents of the instrument, will be the soloist.
Also on the program will be two works indebted to music of the 18th century: a genuinely fun concerto for two oboes and orchestra, “Extra(ordinarily) Fancy),” by Princeton alumnus Viet Cuong (who also studied at Curtis), and the pseudo-Pergolesi ballet “Pulcinella,” by Igor Stravinsky. The latter will be played complete, as opposed to in its more familiar guise as a concert suite. The work is sunny, tuneful, and memorable, Stravinsky for people who think they don’t like Stravinsky. Rossen Milanov will conduct.
On a related note, Grant and Esfahani will discuss Grant’s harpsichord concerto, their creative partnership, and the process of shepherding a new work from written score to actual performance, at Princeton Public Library tomorrow evening at 6:30. The event is free. Attendees will have the opportunity to enter a drawing for tickets to the weekend concerts.
To learn more, visit princetonsymphony.org.
Oh, yeah! I also hope you’ll read my article in the Princeton weekly newspaper U.S. 1, out today.
https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/grant-goes-for-baroque-in-new-harpsichord-concerto/article_94cf66e3-ae6b-4c7f-b193-2dc7fcdc2592.html
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