Tag: Cleveland Institute of Music

  • Grant Johannesen A Centenary Celebration

    Grant Johannesen A Centenary Celebration

    Nobody likes a know-it-all.

    When five-year-old Grant Johannesen’s first music teacher recognized his talent, as she heard him noodling on a piano across the street, her generosity soon turned to annoyance when she discovered that he could emulate anything she played. He went on to study with Robert Casadesus, Egon Petri, Roger Sessions, and Nadia Boulanger.

    Johannesen was born in Salt Lake City 100 years ago today.

    As an adult, he toured extensively, both with the New York Philharmonic under Dmitri Mitropoulos, and as a solo pianist. He was particularly acclaimed for his elegant performances of French music, especially that of Gabriel Fauré.

    From 1974 to 1985, he served as director of the Cleveland Institute of Music. He was a frequent soloist with the Cleveland Orchestra and his hometown band, the Utah Symphony.

    Happy centenary, Grant Johannesen!


    Johannesen performs music by “American Indianist” Arthur Farwell (“Navajo War Dance”) and Samuel Barber (“Homage to John Field”)

    Johannesen plays “Nights in the Gardens of Spain” with the Cleveland Orchestra

    A lovely recital of French music presented at the Bergen Festival in 1973

    Fauré’s Fantaisie for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 111

    In conversation with David Dubal, now host of WWFM – The Classical Network’s “The Piano Matters”

  • Watch Cleveland Institute of Music’s The Juniper Tree

    If you missed both live streams, the Cleveland Institute of Music’s Sunday night performance of the Philip Glass-Robert Moran opera, “The Juniper Tree,” has been add to the first, both now posted to CIM’s Facebook page. You can watch by clicking on the play button below.

    I mentioned my concern that the peripheral action on the side balcony would not be visible to a single, stationary camera in the back of the hall, but happily that is not the case. However, I do recommend you read the brief synopsis in the program book before viewing.

    Here’s a link to the printed program, with synopsis and introductory comments by Robert Moran:

    https://www.cim.edu/sites/default/files/inline-files/The%20Juniper%20Tree_0.pdf?fbclid=IwAR3RkD78c2smjNhFq_HeKueh33G-1VyMHIoILOiyp5PiOnOBZO9seEpzVzo

  • Watch The Juniper Tree Opera Online

    As a follow-up to my earlier post, regarding the Cleveland Institute of Music live stream of the Philip Glass-Robert Moran opera, “The Juniper Tree” – to be streamed again tonight at 7:30 EST on Vimeo – if you have trouble signing in, as I did yesterday, last night’s performance has been posted to CIM’s Facebook page. You can watch by clicking on the play button below.

    Here’s a link to the printed program, with synopsis and prefatory comments by Robert Moran:

    https://www.cim.edu/sites/default/files/inline-files/The%20Juniper%20Tree_0.pdf?fbclid=IwAR3RkD78c2smjNhFq_HeKueh33G-1VyMHIoILOiyp5PiOnOBZO9seEpzVzo

  • Juniper Tree Opera Stream Tonight!

    Juniper Tree Opera Stream Tonight!

    Make room on your Sunday evening for an hour of decapitation, cannibalism, and supernatural vengeance by millstone.

    No, it’s not “60 Minutes.” The Cleveland Institute of Music Opera Theater is presenting Philip Glass and Robert Moran’s collaborative opera, “The Juniper Tree,” tonight at 7:30 EST.

    This grimmest of Grimm fairy tales has a little something for everyone. It was Maurice Sendak, who certainly knew a thing or two about wild things, that first suggested the subject. In perhaps the opera’s greatest irony, it is Moran who manages to find beauty, and even tenderness, at the heart of this black fable.

    “The Juniper Tree” was first performed at the American Repertory Theater, in Cambridge, MA, in 1985. Among the cast were Jayne West and the late Sanford Sylvan. Glass retained ownership of the opera and held back on releasing the recording until 2009. In the meantime, Moran encouraged fans to distribute their bootleg copies.

    CIM has been streaming this weekend’s performances, from a three-day run of an all-new production. I was unable to access last night’s performance, but I’ve got my fingers crossed for better luck tonight.

    The transmission will originate from a fixed camera situated at the rear of the hall, so the action may be a little distant, and some peripheral details in the side balconies lost, but here’s hoping story and music manage to retain their impact.

    Here’s a link to tonight’s livestream. Vimeo may require you to register, so be sure to do so in advance.

    https://livestream.com/cimmixonhall/junipertree110319

    Also, a printed program, with a colorful introductory note by Moran:

    https://www.cim.edu/sites/default/files/inline-files/The%20Juniper%20Tree_0.pdf

    Get out the TV trays for “The Juniper Tree.” The table is set tonight at 7:30 p.m.

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