Tag: Princeton Symphony Orchestra

  • Caroline Shaw: Pulitzer Winner to Solo Violinist

    Caroline Shaw: Pulitzer Winner to Solo Violinist

    Is there nothing Caroline Shaw can’t do? A founding member of the Grammy Award-winning vocal octet Roomful of Teeth, Shaw is enrolled in the PhD program in composition at Princeton University. In 2013, at the age of 30, she became the youngest recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music for her composition “Partita for 8 Voices,” which she also recorded.

    Now Shaw makes her debut as a solo violinist in her most recent work, which receives its first performances in a series of concerts, the next of which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Sunday at 4 p.m.

    “Lo,” for violin and orchestra, is a co-commission of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra and the North Carolina and Indianapolis Symphonies, in support of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW Festival.

    PSO Music Director Rossen Milanov will conduct the concert, which will also feature the tone poem “Pohjola’s Daughter,” by Jean Sibelius, and the Symphony No. 1, by Johannes Brahms. Shaw will join Milanov for the pre-concert talk at 3.

    On Saturday at 12 p.m., Shaw will also take part in a Pi Day celebration at Nassau Inn, 10 Palmer Square, where a pop-up masterclass will be held for violinists ages 3-6. At 4 p.m., she will discuss her creative process with Milanov, as part of a PSO “Behind the Music” event, at the Arts Council of Princeton’s Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon St.

    Registration for the masterclass and tickets for “Behind the Music” – both free and open to the public – are available through the PSO website, princetonsymphony.org.

    Learn more about Caroline Shaw and the Princeton Symphony Orchestra in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/03/caroline_shaw_pso_performing_i.html

  • WWFM: St Patrick’s & Silver Screen Soundtracks

    WWFM: St Patrick’s & Silver Screen Soundtracks

    Trying to figure out your plans for Friday night? Why not grab some Sno-Caps and a large popcorn and join me for a double feature?

    First, on “Picture Perfect,” we look ahead to St. Patrick’s Day, with music from “The Luck of the Irish” (by Cyril J. Mockridge), “Angela’s Ashes” (by John Williams), “Circle of Friends” (by Michael Kamen), and “The Quiet Man” (by Victor Young).

    Then we’ll have an hour to hit the concession stand before the start of a special concert with the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. Vocalist Jessica Hendy will join guest conductor Lucas Richman for “A Silver Screen Salute,” featuring selections from “Ben-Hur,” “Psycho,” “Star Wars,” and more.

    Richman has worked in Hollywood for 25 years, recording the actual scores onto the soundtracks of films like “The Village,” “As Good as It Gets,” and “Se7en.”

    As always, “Picture Perfect” can be heard at 6:00 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6. If you miss it, you can enjoy it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

    The Princeton Symphony Orchestra concert will be broadcast tonight at 8. There will be no webcast of the PSO, so you had better be there or be square.

    WWFM – The Classical Network can be heard locally, in the Trenton-Princeton area, at 89.1 FM. Internet streaming is available through the website. For a complete list of frequencies, look here:

    http://wwfm.org/technical.shtml

  • Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s Silver Screen Pops

    Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s Silver Screen Pops

    The shrieking violins of “Psycho.” The menacing double-basses of “Jaws.” Both exemplify the lingering power of exceptionally well-suited music and visuals.

    Both will be represented on a concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Audition tomorrow night at 8:00. The orchestra’s annual “Saturday Evening POPS!” is a sequel of sorts to last year’s “Silver Screen Salute.”

    The program will include music from classic films like “Ben-Hur” and “Star Wars,” with songs from more recent favorites like “Titanic” and “Frozen.”

    Lucas Richman will conduct. Richman has worked in films for nearly a quarter century. He’ll be joined by Broadway vocalist Jessica Hendy for some classic love songs by George Gershwin and Marvin Hamlisch.

    You can read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/02/classical_music_pso_cnso_perfo.html


    PHOTO: The hand of Hendy

  • Princeton Symphony’s World Tour with Upshaw and Luo

    Princeton Symphony’s World Tour with Upshaw and Luo

    Armchair travelers, rejoice! The Princeton Symphony Orchestra will offer a trip around the world this weekend. Book passage to Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium this Sunday at 4 p.m., as the orchestra embarks for Hungary (by way of Zoltán Kodály), Spain, Eastern Europe, and Amherst, Massachusetts (by way of Osvaldo Golijov), China (by way of Jing Jing Luo), and Bohemia (by way of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart).

    The PSO continues its season-long celebration of the creativity of women with not one, but two notable guest artists. Dawn Upshaw will be the soloist in Golijov’s “Three Songs for Soprano and Orchestra.” Singer and composer are frequent collaborators, with Upshaw frequently described as Golijov’s muse.

    The PSO’s other notable guest is composer-in-residence Jing Jing Luo. Luo, a native of Beijing, is “a self-taught calligrapher in Chinese ink brush painting,” an art she says she has practiced since childhood.

    The title of her work, “Tsao Shu,” alludes to “Chinese cursive writing, with ink brush, not with pen.” She elaborates, “The piece, it’s about the motion of the calligraphy with the ink brush, the motions of the stroke. Each stroke in calligraphy is reflected in music through the string section, percussion section, woodwind and brass.”

    Luo will join PSO music director Rossen Milanov for a pre-concert talk on Sunday at 3 p.m. Milanov will conduct the program, which will also include Kodály’s “Dances of Galanta” and Mozart’s Symphony No. 38, the “Prague” Symphony.

    On Saturday at 4 p.m., Luo will converse with composer and PSO board member Julian Grant about Chinese culture and its influence on her art and music. The discussion will take place at the Arts Council of Princeton’s Paul Robeson Center for the Arts. The Saturday event is free with ticketed reservations through the PSO website, princetonsymphony.org.

    Read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/01/classical_music_pso_performing.html

    PHOTO: Upshaw armchair traveling with Golijov

  • Dawn Upshaw Song Cycles on The Lost Chord

    Dawn Upshaw Song Cycles on The Lost Chord

    Tonight, after you’ve put away the snow shovel, popped some Advil, and finished slathering on the Bengay, consider tuning in for a couple of contemporary song cycles performed by Dawn Upshaw.

    Upshaw will be my guest this week on “The Lost Chord.” She will talk about her working relationship with composer Osvaldo Golijov, whose “Three Songs” she will sing on an upcoming concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. We’ll also hear her astonishing recording of Golijov’s “Ayre,” a hypnotic synthesis of folk, pop and classical-inflected music on texts from Arabic, Hebrew, Sardinian and Sephardic sources.

    Then she’ll melt our hearts by applying her distinctive timbre to selections from Maria Schneider’s “Winter Morning Walks.” Schneider is best known as a jazz artist, but, as is evident from her album “The Thompson Fields,” she possesses an extraordinarily ambitious compositional sense.

    “Winter Morning Walks” was the recipient of three Grammy Awards in 2014, in the categories of Best Classical Contemporary Composition, Best Vocal Performance (for Dawn Upshaw), and Best Engineered Album, Classical. It was Upshaw’s fifth Grammy.

    And lest you forget, Upshaw’s was the voice heard in the very moving recording of Henryk Gorecki’s Symphony No. 3, issued by Nonesuch Records in 1992, which sold over a million copies and became one of the best-selling classical music albums of all time.

    Upshaw will appear at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on January 31 at 4 p.m. Also on the program, PSO music director Rossen Milanov will conduct works by Mozart, Kodály, and Jing Jing Luo, the orchestra’s current composer-in-residence. For more information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

    I hope you’ll join me for “The Knack of Dawn” – new music performed by Dawn Upshaw – this Sunday night at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

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