Tag: Rossen Milanov

  • Princeton Symphony Orchestra Virtual Event

    Princeton Symphony Orchestra Virtual Event

    A virtual salon, or comfort food for the musical couch potato?

    Find out tomorrow, as you catch up with your friends at the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. The PSO invites you to cap your weekend with a special online, at-home event, this Sunday at 4 p.m. EDT.

    “Zoom along” for this virtual get-together that will include a conversation with PSO music director Rossen Milanov, performances by violinist Daniel Rowland and cellist Maja Bogdanović, and an appearance by PSO concertmaster Basia Danilow. Reminisce about your favorite PSO moments, and take part in the Q&A.

    Registration is free. For more information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

  • Schubert’s Symphony No 9 Nickname Revealed

    Schubert’s Symphony No 9 Nickname Revealed

    What was Franz Schubert’s less-than-flattering nickname? Find out when you read my program note on this week’s “At Home with the PSO.”

    “At Home with the PSO” is the Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s gateway to original online content, including performance webcasts, photo albums, a virtual gallery, musicians’ recipes, and more, with fresh material being added weekly.

    Schubert’s Symphony No. 9 – also known as “The Great” C major symphony – is the focus of this week’s PSO “Play It Forward.” Watch music director Rossen Milanov’s spoken introduction, read my program note, and enjoy a complete performance from the PSO archive.

    HOT TIP: In the amount of time it takes to listen to the symphony, you could actually bake double-bassist Dan Hudson’s “Dangerously Easy Blondies.” Simply open another window and call up princetonsymphony.org on a second screen. (You’ll need two screens, because if you back out of the page, the audio will stop!) Look for the recipe listed under “Cooking with the PSO.” More musician recipes are archived at the bottom of the page.

    DON’T MISS: The PSO will present a special “At Home” event, this Sunday at 4 p.m. EDT.

    The virtual get-together will include performances by violinist Daniel Rowland and cellist Maja Bogdanović, a conversation with Milanov, and an appearance by PSO concertmaster Basia Danilow. Registration is free. Details are available on the PSO homepage, princetonsymphony.org.

    If it’s “Great,” it must be pretty good. Check out Franz Schubert’s “Great” C major symphony on this week’s “At Home with the PSO.”


    “Play It Forward” (the PSO plays Schubert):
    https://princetonsymphony.org/home-pso/music-play-it-forward

    “Cooking with the PSO” (Dangerously Easy Blondies):
    https://princetonsymphony.org/home-pso/cooking-pso

    A direct link to my program note:
    https://princetonsymphony.org/schubert-symphony-no-9-program-note

    Sunday registration:
    https://princetonsymphony.org/

  • Dvořák Symphony No 8 Princeton Symphony Orchestra

    Dvořák Symphony No 8 Princeton Symphony Orchestra

    Chase away the rainy-day blues with Dvořák’s sunniest symphony!

    The Princeton Symphony Orchestra continues its “At Home with the PSO” series, as music director Rossen Milanov introduces the Symphony No. 8. Escape into a world of birdsong, uplifting fanfares, and continuous melody, influenced by the Czech countryside. The live performance took place at Richardson Auditorium on March 24, 2019.

    “At Home with the PSO” is a gateway to original online content – performance webcasts, musicians’ recipes, photo albums, and more – with fresh material being introduced weekly.

    While you’re over there, at the PSO website, check out the new Virtual Gallery. Explore artwork and creative writing by student participants of the PSO Bravo program by navigating a 3-D space. Click on the speakers located throughout the gallery to hear Saad Haddad’s Clarinet Concerto, the PSO co-commission that inspired the works adorning the virtual walls.

    Then search under “Cooking with the PSO” to learn how to bake Chunky Chocolate Drops with concertmaster Basia Danilow. Rossen Milanov’s Maple Soy Sauce Glazed Tofu is archived at the bottom of the page. A new recipe on the way on Wednesday!

    To hear Dvořák’s Symphony No. 8, look online at princetonsymphony.org, search under “At Home with the PSO,” and click on “Play it Forward.”


    PHOTO: Dvořák and family, making the most of a lovely day

  • Princeton Symphony At Home with Mendelssohn

    Princeton Symphony At Home with Mendelssohn

    Last week, the Princeton Symphony Orchestra launched “At Home with the PSO,” a new gateway to original online content, including performance webcasts, musicians’ recipes, photo albums, and more, with fresh content being added weekly.

    But my Spidey sense didn’t start tingling until they linked my program note for one of their past concerts. This week, the focus is on Felix Mendelssohn’s “Reformation Symphony.”

    Read the note, enjoy the performance, and while you’re over there, learn to cook maple soy sauce glazed tofu with music director Rossen Milanov!

    Look online at princetonsymphony.org, click on “At Home with the PSO,” and scroll down under “Play it Forward.”

  • Carnival Music Feast on The Classical Network

    Carnival Music Feast on The Classical Network

    Shrove Tuesday. Mardi Gras. Fastnacht Day.

    The last day to stuff down as many doughnuts as you can before the start of Lent.

    To mark the occasion, this afternoon on The Classical Network, we’ll glut ourselves with music related to Carnival.

    Among the featured highlights will be Heitor Villa-Lobos’ fantasy for piano and orchestra, “Momôprecóce” (“Carnival of the Brazilian Children”); Robert Schumann’s cryptogrammatic “Faschingsschwank aus Wien” (“Carnival Jest from Vienna”); and Igor Stravinsky’s Shrovetide ballet “Petrouchka,” in a recording conducted by Princeton Symphony Orchestra music director Rossen Milanov.

    We’ll also enjoy a touch of Mardi Gras, with some pieces on Creole themes; a set of variations on “Carnival of Venice;” musical depictions of stock characters of the commedia dell’arte; and “Manhã de Carnaval,” from the film “Black Orpheus.”

    First, on today’s Noontime Concert, it’s a Telemann blow-out. Tempesta di Mare – Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra will present “Fire and Invention,” part of its Telemann 360° project.

    Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) left behind an enormous catalogue of monumental compositions in every style and genre (with 3000 works to his credit, the Guinness Book lists him as the most prolific composer of all time), yet so much of it remains unrecognized, or even unperformed.

    The sheer volume of his output has made it difficult for posterity to wrap its collective head around the full scope of his accomplishments. Tempesta is doing its best to change all that. Today’s concert will include a Concerto for Orchestra, a collection of Entr’actes, and a Violin Concerto, featuring Tempesta principal violinist Emlyn Ngai.

    Tell your friends to tune in for Telemann. Then stick around for plenty of fried, buttery goodness. Abandon yourself to the debauchery of Carnival, from 12 to 4 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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