Tag: Richardson Auditorium

  • Mozart, a Snow Plow, and Princeton Symphony

    Mozart, a Snow Plow, and Princeton Symphony

    Mozart’s masterful Symphony No. 39 is a marvel of classical invention. But not even HIS nimble imagination lit on the idea of including a snow plow.

    Last night, on the first of two concerts devoted to a program of the composer’s music, presented by the Princeton Symphony Orchestra at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium, a rumbling, scraping basso continuo underscored the work’s last two movements, as a wintry mix was cleared from the parking lot outside the venue. This was especially evident in the silence between movements, though briefly the truck’s back-up alarm did make for a disorienting John Cage-like tug-of-war between everyday and Elysium.

    Not everyone braved the weather last night, so a well-sold house was left with pockets of empty seats. A pity for those who couldn’t be there, as the music-making, on the concert’s first half, especially, was inspired and transporting, with plenty of warmth and glow to keep the sleet and slush at bay.

    Guest conductor Gérard Korsten, forgoing the standard-issue baton in favor of directing with his bare hands, oversaw the orchestra with energy and commitment. Whether I should be crediting him, the musicians, or the music, I’m not sure – perhaps all three – but whatever or whoever was responsible, all the tumblers aligned for some of the most satisfying Mozart I’ve ever heard from this group, which seldom disappoints, but is frequently more successful in Romantic and 20th century repertoire. (A gross generalization, as a concert they did with a barefoot Daniel Rowland that interleaved Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” with Astor Piazzolla’s “The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires” in 2016 continues to resonate in my memory.)

    The program opened with punchy and energetic ballet music from the opera “Idomeneo.” It came off so well, I was disappointed to find it was not the full 25-minute suite, but rather only two of the five numbers, with a combined running time of about 14 minutes. Too bad, because I really loved what I heard. The effect was like being awakened in the middle of a beautiful dream.

    But my yearning was short-lived, thankfully, as the highlight of the evening was surely the Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor – one of only two piano concertos Mozart composed in a minor key – which pretty much fulfilled its ideal with soloist Orli Shaham. Like a poetic alchemist, Shaham turned ivories into pearls, for a performance that balanced the work’s drama and depth, honoring the emotion in the score’s nascent Romanticism while never betraying its Classical poise. The pianist has had a long history with the piece – it was the work that made her want to take up the instrument as a child – but somehow she has managed to keep it fresh and immediate, her involvement evident in every phrase. She silently mouthed passages and swayed to the music and even leaned into the first violins at times, as if to symbolize her sense of oneness with the orchestra. Truly, it was a thing of beauty (with apologies to Keats).

    One of the things I love about the Princeton Symphony Orchestra is how the wind players all actually listen to one another. Last night, principal clarinetist Pascal Archer, always full of animation, was characteristically the focal point of some very sensitive wind playing, musically linking arms with clarinetist Gi Lee and flutist Sooyun Kim; but all the winds – and I should include in this the brass (two horns and two trumpets) – were excellent.

    While the performance of the symphony as whole did not, for me, attain the giddy heights or emotional depth of the concert’s first half, there’s no question it was well-played. Putting principal percussionist Jeremy Levine on period kettle drums may have been a nod to 18th century practice, but authenticity be damned, I missed the anchor of a strong downbeat as those strings rain their torrents of joy!

    Kudos, though, to trumpeters Jerry Bryant (principal) and Thomas Cook, who throughout the evening were consistently fine, both in uniformity and execution – impeccable in their restraint, when necessary – in both “Idomeneo” and the last movement of the symphony. If I could play the trumpet, I would always be tempted to play so that the walls of Jericho would crumble.

    As I know I’ve mentioned before, the prospect of an all-Mozart program seldom gets me excited, but the repertoire, soloist, and conductor for this one filled me with anticipation. It gave me pleasure to set aside my deep-seated cynicism, if only for an evening.

    The program will be repeated, without freezing rain, today, Sunday, at 4 p.m. I suspect tickets really will be scarce. But, who knows, if last night is any indication, there could be a number of stay-at-homes. You can try your luck at princetonsymphony.org.

  • Orli Shaham Mozart Princeton Symphony

    Orli Shaham Mozart Princeton Symphony

    I had a pleasant conversation with pianist Orli Shaham this afternoon, which I’ll be editing into a podcast for the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. Shaham will be the soloist in an all-Mozart program, which will include the Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on February 8 & 9. If, in just hearing about it, you already can’t contain yourself, you’ll find more information on this and the rest of the season at princetonsymphony.org.

  • Tim Keyes World Premiere Princeton

    Tim Keyes World Premiere Princeton

    When most congregants attend Sunday services, they’re probably not expending a lot of thought on all the work that goes into the preparation of the music, or the broader creative lives of those who compose and arrange it.

    Tim Keyes has been the pastoral assistant of music and liturgy at The Catholic Community of St. Charles Borromeo Service and Justice in Skillman, NJ, for 23 years. His latest symphony is in rehearsals – with his own ensemble, the Tim Keyes Consort – in preparation for the work’s world premiere at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium, on Saturday at 8 p.m.

    The “Symphony in Bb: Elegy” is Keyes’ 4th symphony and the first to be scored exclusively for orchestra. The 30-minute, three-movement work is dedicated to the memory of his father and, according to the composer, “explores the grief associated with the loss of a loved one and an enduring belief in eternal life.” The timing couldn’t be better, as Sunday is Father’s Day.

    The second half of the program will be devoted to the world premiere of an hour-long, 12-movement oratorio, “The Stone.” Keyes says the work is the second of a triptych, which began with his oratorio “The Well,” given its debut at Richardson in 2016. The trilogy explores scriptural stories in John’s gospel.

    According to Keyes, “‘The Stone’ examines the story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead and embraces the emotional drama between Martha, Mary and Jesus.”

    The oratorio is scored for orchestra, choir and three soloists. On Saturday, it will be sung by tenor Justin Connors (Jesus), mezzo-soprano Victoria Lotkowictz (Mary), and soprano Danyelle Dellolio (Martha).

    For tickets, call 609-258-5000, or visit princeton.edu/utickets.

    For more information about the Tim Keyes Consort, now celebrating its 29th year, visit timkeyesconsort.org.

    News about the event came in while I was down with COVID, so I couldn’t write it up for the paper, but here’s a link to an article I wrote about Keyes and the consort in 2019.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/keyes-symphony-a-transformation-of-light-in-sound/article_7ba300c1-cd1b-5250-9c8c-aee773786f15.html

    And one I wrote about “The Well” in 2016, for The Times of Trenton.

    https://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/2016/06/classical_music_tim_keyes_cons.html?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR0hfJgg4IIjadPllt2s7z3sa_TD5ypshkzPdDtZDwy266R0BCXUL-fiSmw_aem_AQxIhpMzslBqEwGfv-NPkS15Wu41dJWB-JLHwiB0OazGjpgmxeQ5ZPfUJGCfdhDl1STMgrQvL_01C8iRxVlhIiC2

  • Vaughan Williams Tuba Concerto Princeton

    Vaughan Williams Tuba Concerto Princeton

    Anyone else plan to be in attendance when Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Tuba Concerto is performed in Princeton this weekend?

    The work will appear on two concerts by the Princeton University Orchestra, on Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Wesley Sanders (’26) will be the soloist. Also on the program will be Robert Schumann’s Cello Concerto, with Kaivalya Kulkami (’26), and Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, with Daniel Lee (’27). Michael Pratt will conduct.

    Looking ahead, there’s more English music in the offing for the spring, when Edward Elgar’s milestone oratorio “The Dream of Gerontius” will be performed on April 19 & 20.

    All concerts will be held at Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall on the campus of Princeton University. I last heard the students play “Ein Heldenleben” there last season and was suitably impressed.

    View the rehearsal clips on the Princeton University Orchestra Facebook page. Then, for tickets and information, visit music.princeton.edu/events/


    PHOTO: Vaughan Williams, looking as miserable as you would imagine, being serenaded by the tuba. The composer wrote the first ever concerto for the instrument in 1954. A late and unusual work, the piece was dedicated to Philip Catelinet, principal tubist of the London Symphony Orchestra. “Glorious John” Barbirolli conducted the premiere. These are the forces heard on the work’s first recording. Give a listen, and I’ll see you at Richardson.

  • GPYO Concert Princeton Music Scene

    GPYO Concert Princeton Music Scene

    There was an awful lot to absorb and distill about Greater Princeton Youth Orchestra, which moved into its new digs on Westminster Choir College campus this past summer. Witness my struggle with information overload and learn more about the orchestra’s founder Matteo Giammario, Princeton’s protean Portia Sonnenfeld, and the history of Westminster Choir, among other things, in my whirlwind cover story in this week’s U.S. 1, out today.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/eeditions/page-page-12/page_bf0f7eab-87ed-5a3c-aca2-e131ea201331.html

    GPYO musicians will perform music by Rossini, Fauré, Mahler, Tchaikovsky, and Andrew Lloyd Webber on a concert to be held at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Saturday, February 3, at 7 p.m.

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