Tag: PUBLIQuartet

  • Weekend Streaming Concerts & Performances

    Weekend Streaming Concerts & Performances

    Friday again. If you’re starved to see a “live” performance of anything these days, even it means streaming, here are just a few morsels to savor over the coming weekend.

    Pianist Orli Shaham will appear with the Grand Rapids Symphony, in Francis Poulenc’s “Aubade.” Even under the best of circumstances, the work is hardly over-programmed, but what makes this concert especially interesting is that it will also be danced, as was originally intention. Dancers from the Grand Rapids Ballet will join Shaham and musicians from the orchestra. Also on the program will be “Aubade” by the Brazilian composer Antônio Francisco Braga (1868-1945) and Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings. If “aubade” is not in your active vocabulary, it indicates a piece of music associated with the dawn or early morning. The concert will be available on-demand to ticket holders for 30 days, beginning tonight at 7:30 pm EST.
    https://www.grsymphony.org/art-of-dance

    Somewhat closer to home, the PUBLIQuartet, familiar to followers of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra (especially in regard to its landmark #Quartweet residency) will appear on “The Atterbury House Sessions.” This live concert series, held at New York’s historic Atterbury House, is curated by violinist Lara St. John, who has also appeared locally, as soloist with the PSO and courtesy of Lambertville’s Riverside Symphonia. The PUBLIQuartet concert will include works by Jessie Montgomery, Jessica Meyer, John Corigliano, and the quartet itself. Live streaming begins tomorrow at 5 pm EST. The concert will be available then, on-demand, for the period of one week. For more information, visit https://www.larastjohn.com/?ss_source=sscampaigns&ss_email_id=604bc1656af8864a81fd6f99

    Bard College can always be counted on to put together a good program. Tomorrow, the Bard College Conservatory Orchestra will be conducted by its music director, Leon Botstein (also president of Bard College) and assistant conductor Andrés Rivas . Featured will be the Serenade in E-flat major, Op. 7, by Richard Strauss, “Ennanga” for Harp, String Orchestra, and Piano, by William Grant Still, Prologue and Variations, by Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, and the Divertimento for String Orchestra by Béla Bartók. The concert will stream Saturday night at 8 pm EST.

    Bard College Conservatory Orchestra

    Tempesta di Mare – Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra will celebrate the 300th anniversary of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, on a concert titled “1721: A Very Good Year.” Also featured will be works by Locatelli, Telemann, and Evaristo Felice Dall’Abaco. The concert will begin streaming tomorrow at 7 pm EST, and on-demand through March 21st (Bach’s birthday).
    https://tempestadimare.secure.force.com/ticket/PatronTicket__PublicTicketApp#/events/a0S0H00000O1WOKUA3

    Finally, Voices Chorale NJ will host an “Irish Coffee House Concert” with Gerry Dignan. Get a leg up on St. Patrick’s Day with a program of Celtic ballads and fast Irish “mouth music.” The concert will be streamed on Monday at 7:30 pm.
    https://www.voiceschoralenj.org/

    Five events to keep you out of trouble. Don’t forget to change your clocks. Enjoy the music, and have a great weekend.

  • Election Day Music Escape American Composers

    Election Day Music Escape American Composers

    It’s Election Day – AT LAST???

    In 24 hours, it will all be over, except for the lawsuits, the counter-lawsuits, and the recounts.

    Join me in rising above the the anxiety with an afternoon of inspirational music. We’ll begin with a concert featuring PUBLIQuartet, captured live during last season’s Downtown Concert Series in Freehold, NJ. The program will include music by Britten, Debussy, Piazzolla, and Villa-Lobos, alongside works by contemporary American composers, such as Pulitzer Prize winner Caroline Shaw.

    PUBLIQuartet reinvigorates the classical chamber repertoire with plenty of sass and panache. The ensemble caught the attention of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Colbert invited them to perform an improvised soundtrack to a live stream of the final presidential debate in real time on the show’s Facebook page.

    The Downtown Concert Series’ next concert will feature the Mobius Trio, which will appear at historic St. Peter’s Church in Freehold on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    Following today’s broadcast of PUBLIQuartet, I hope you’ll stick around for more American music. Aaron Copland will make a statement with his “Statements for Orchestra,” from 1934. Peter Boyer will remind us of the American Dream, with “Ellis Island: The Dream of America,” a work that employs the actual words of immigrants who came to this country in search of a better life. Peter Schickele will stir the musical melting pot with his String Quartet No. 1 “American Dreams,” from 1983, a piece reflective of Appalachian fiddle music, fox trots, waltzes, blues, bop, and even birdsong. And if you don’t like the way the returns are going, you can always contemplate foreign real estate with Michael Torke’s “An American Abroad,” from 2002.

    Why worry? It won’t change anything. So why not make us your stress-free zone? Relax, recharge, and rejoice in the American experience, from 12 to 4:00 p.m. EST. It will be the second leg of a marathon of American music, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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