Tag: Princeton University Concerts

  • Princeton Staffer’s Mom Shark Attack Fund

    I only just learned of this: If you’ve had any dealings with Princeton University Concerts, you probably have had some interaction with Darya Koltunyuk – more familiarly known as Dasha. Dasha is the organization’s outreach manager. I’ve been getting press releases from and corresponding with her, in connection with newspaper and radio projects, since at least 2014.

    On August 7, Dasha’s mother was swimming off Rockaway Beach, when she was attacked by a shark! Her mother has been in and out of surgery since, with a long road to recovery ahead of her. Dasha and her husband, Greg Kallor, both musicians and Princeton residents, have set up a fundraising page to help address spiraling medical costs. Please don’t hate sharks, but please do consider donating!

    https://gofund.me/62504856

  • Princeton Concerts Return Story Mishap

    Princeton Concerts Return Story Mishap

    Okay, so I’m the kind of guy who submits 1,930 words when the quota is 1200. I expected that there would have to be a little trimming.

    But as I was reading the online version of my latest article, posted this morning, I thought it peculiar that all the information about Princeton University Concerts, which I thought was to be the primary focus of the article, was cut!

    Then, as I continued to read, I realized it all started turning up at the bottom of the page. So after the opening, the second half of the article appears first, then the content I imagined would be closer to the top, and then it just kind of ends stone cold. So much for all my careful craftsmanship.

    In the final analysis, not all that much was actually cut. Some, but not as much as I anticipated. It just kind of turned out to be a topsy-turvy presentation of my article.

    But I really can’t complain – as long as the check is cut right-side up. It looks like I got the cover story!

    Read all about Marna Seltzer, director of Princeton University Concerts, and the return of PUC’s tent-pole chamber music series to Richardson Auditorium, in this week’s U.S. 1 newspaper.

    The cover:

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/eeditions/page-page-01/page_f39e4886-dc06-5dc2-8c61-7bebba21e4c1.html

    The article:

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/eeditions/page-page-13/page_003fe72c-0d12-5a04-ac66-5a4b8d978b79.html

  • Princeton Concerts Explode With Talent

    Princeton Concerts Explode With Talent

    Okay, so even if it does have the vexing habit of dropping last-minute surprises on those of us who work in print media (most recent example: sending out a press release yesterday about Steve Reich appearing with So Percussion at Richardson Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow), I have to admit Princeton University has really outdone itself for next season. Joyce DiDonato, Marc-André Hamelin, Steven Isserlis, Bobby McFarren, the Takács Quartet, Abigail Washburn, Pinchas Zukerman and more will appear as part of the 125th season of the university’s flagship concert series. An artistic residency by Gustavo Dudamel serves to put the whole enterprise way over the top. Dudamel will bring musicians from the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Berlin Philharmonic. And this is just the series that we KNOW about.

    During the intermission of today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network, I’ll be joined by the amazing Marna Seltzer, Director of Princeton University Concerts, who will preview next season’s outstanding artist roster. Our on-air conversation will take place around 1:00 p.m.

    Prior to that, I hope you’ll join me at 12:00 for a knockout recital given at Richardson Auditorium on November 17 by pianist Benjamin Grosvenor. The concert will include works by Johann Sebastian Bach, Claude Debussy, Alban Berg, Maurice Ravel, and Johannes Brahms, interleaved with musical reflections on Brahms by Brett Dean.

    Then, a little after 2:00, with the trees budding but the weather still wildly in flux, we’ll attempt coax spring, with two major works inspired by the season, performed by venerable orchestras located comparatively nearby – John Knowles Paine’s Symphony No. 2 “Im Frühling” (“In Springtime”), with the New York Philharmonic, and Igor Stravinsky’s “Le sacre du printemps” (“The Rite of Spring”), with the Philadelphia Orchestra.

    In whatever language, we spring into great music, from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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