Tag: New Jersey

  • Raritan River Music Fest Goes Online

    Raritan River Music Fest Goes Online

    Most of the world’s summer music festivals have already thrown in the towel, but for one of the most local, the show must go on. This year’s Raritan River Music Festival concerts will continue, though perhaps not wholly as planned.

    Now in its 31st year, Raritan River Music has built a loyal following with its series of May concerts presented by a variety of professional musicians and ensembles at historic venues throughout – and adjacent to – New Jersey’s Raritan Valley.

    The venues may be closed, but the performances will take place as scheduled.

    The festival will open tonight with the Argus Quartet, performing music by Bach, Fanny Mendelssohn, and Christopher Theofanidis, including the New Jersey premiere of Theofanidis’ “Conference of the Birds.”

    Next Saturday, the Newman & Oltman Duo will be joined by Cuban guitarist Rene Izquierdo for “A la Cubana: A Century of Music from the Pearl of Antilles.”

    On May 16, the instrumental and vocal ensemble Meridionalis will present “Selva Musical/Transatlantic Baroque: Music of Spain and the New World,” featuring selections spanning the mid-1500s – a generation after Columbus sailed – through the Baroque.

    On May 23, the Philadelphia Flute Quartet will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, with a program which will include works by award-winning American women composers and the New Jersey premiere of “Hidden River” by Eric Sessler.

    The concerts will be streamed FREE, Saturday evenings at 7:30 p.m. EDT. If you enjoy them, please consider showing your support and helping to defray the costs by leaving a donation at the Raritan River Music website. Your generosity will help to secure the continuance of the festival in happier times ahead.

    The Raritan River Music Festival was founded in 1989 by Michael Newman and Laura Oltman, of the Newman & Oltman Guitar Duo. The couple have strong ties to the area, making their home in lower Warren County along the Delaware River.

    Newman is on the faculties of Mannes College of Music, in New York City, and The College of New Jersey. Oltman teaches at Princeton University and Lafayette College in Easton, PA. The duo co-founded the New York Guitar Seminar at Mannes. They have served as ensemble-in-residence there since 1987.

    In reference to pulling together the technological threads to make this year’s Raritan River Music Festival possible, Newman writes, “It has been all-consuming for the past month, learning about audio engineering, video production, live streaming, etc., etc. But we were committed to making it happen, to pay the performers we had invited to play on the festival, and to bring the festival directly to all the friends and fans of the festival, many who have been attending every year for the past 31 years.”

    The events will include introductions and discussions with participants and composers, live chats and Q&As, and of course plenty of great music-making.

    The concerts will be streamed at Raritan’s homepage, http://www.RaritanRiverMusic.org, where you can also learn more about the organization and the upcoming concerts.

    Follow Oltman’s advice in her recorded intro: open up a cold one and enjoy chamber music performances, Saturday evenings in May, from the resilient Raritan River Music Festival.


    Newman & Oltman’s new recording of “El Libro de los Seres Imaginarios/The Book of Imaginary Beings,” by Cuban master Leo Brouwer, written specifically for the duo and given its world premiere at last year’s festival, is available now, on the MusicMasters label.


    PHOTO: The Argus Quartet will perform, virtually, at the Raritan River Music Festival, tonight at 7:30 p.m.

  • Boheme Opera NJ Celebrates 30 Years with Aida

    Boheme Opera NJ Celebrates 30 Years with Aida

    Boheme Opera NJ will celebrate its 30th anniversary with two performances of Verdi’s “Aida” at The College of New Jersey, this Friday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.

    Joseph and Sandra Pucciatti staged their first production – a skeletal performance of “I Pagliacci” – in a Trenton parking lot, back in 1981. From this unlikely acorn sprang central New Jersey’s most enduring opera company, which gave its first main stage performance in 1989.

    Opera is a colorful business. Read all about the Pucciattis’ incredible journey, from “Hey! Let’s put on a show!” to the Radamès’ triumphal march, in my article in this week’s U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo, out today.

    https://princetoninfo.com/boheme-opera-celebrates-30-with-triumphal-march/


    PHOTO: Marsha Thompson will head the cast in this weekend’s “Aida”

  • Jersey Shore Childhood Memories Parkway Traffic

    Jersey Shore Childhood Memories Parkway Traffic

    Memories of those childhood trips to the Jersey shore, stuck in traffic on the Garden State Parkway. Windows down out of fear of the car overheating. They don’t call it the Parkway for nothing.

  • Diane Wittry New Garden State Philharmonic Director

    Diane Wittry New Garden State Philharmonic Director

    Congratulations to Diane Wittry, music director of the Allentown Symphony Orchestra, who can now add the Garden State Philharmonic to her resume. The Garden State Philharmonic has been serving New Jersey for 62 years. Among Wittry’s other posts is that of artistic director of the Ridgewood Symphony Orchestra. Wittry is the Philharmonic’s seventh music director and its first female conductor.

    https://www.newjerseystage.com/articles/2018/07/16/garden-state-philharmonic-names-diane-wittry-as-music-director/

  • Did New Jersey Doom Composer Granados?

    Did New Jersey Doom Composer Granados?

    Is it just my guilty conscience, or did New Jersey kill Enrique Granados?

    The great Spanish composer was persuaded to work his masterful set of piano miniatures, titled “Goyescas,” into an opera by none other than Ernest Schelling (whose birthday, by coincidence, is today). Schelling, born in Belvidere, NJ, was the barnstorming pianist who gave the U.S. premiere of “Goyescas” in its piano guise. He would later become music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.

    Granados honored Schelling’s suggestion, with the idea of unveiling his new work at the Paris Opera. However, the outbreak of war caused him to shift his focus to New York’s Metropolitan Opera, where “Goyescas” received its world premiere on January 28, 1916, opening to enthusiastic reviews.

    It was Woodrow Wilson, former president of Princeton University and former governor of New Jersey – then President of the United States – that really did Granados in. The positive reception of “Goyescas” led Wilson to extend an invitation to the composer to come play at the White House, an offer Granados could hardly refuse. As a result, Granados delayed the date of his departure, and a few weeks later, he and his wife were drowned in the English Channel, after their ship, the S.S. Essex, was torpedoed by a German u-boat.

    I think New Jersey, and in particular Princeton, owes him something. Therefore, I hope you’ll join me tomorrow morning on WPRB, as we honor Granados on the 150th anniversary of his birth, with a full morning of his music, including an assortment of his rarely-heard orchestral, choral and chamber works, and, yes, his opera “Goyescas.”

    We genuflect before one of music’s great moustaches, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. It will take plenty of caffeine before I can properly enunciate “sesquicentennial,” on Classic Ross Amico.

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (93) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (126) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (189) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (141) Mozart (87) Opera (203) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (107) Radio (87) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS