Tag: Signum Quartett

  • Princeton Festival: Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden”

    Princeton Festival: Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden”

    The Princeton Festival continues, as commentator Rob Kapilow, host of the popular radio show “What Makes It Great?,” explores Franz Schubert’s String Quartet in D minor, “Death and the Maiden.” Kapilow will deconstruct key passages from the piece with live musical illustrations, to reveal what makes the music so extraordinary. On the second half of the program will be a complete performance of the work by the Signum Quartett. Tonight’s event is presented in partnership with WWFM – The Classical Network, and will be broadcast live at 89.1 FM and wwfm.org.

    “Death of the Maiden” stands near the pinnacle of the Romantic string quartet repertoire. If you’re an ardent Schubertophile, you’ll also want to be on hand for tomorrow evening’s concert, which will round out a complete cycle of the composer’s late quartets, with the Signum playing both the “Rosamunde” and the monumental Quartet in G major. Both concerts, tonight and tomorrow, will begin at 7 pm.

    This year, nearly all festival events take place in a specially-constructed outdoor 10,000 square foot state-of-the-art performance tent on the grounds of Morven Museum & Garden on Route 206 (55 Stockton Street), not far from the Princeton Battle Monument.

    Drop by early, before this evening’s concert to enjoy empanadas, available for purchase from the Hotpanada truck. Tables and chairs will be available for picnicking, or bring your own blanket.

    Tomorrow, enjoy a preconcert talk by Schubert scholar Charles Fisk of Wellesley College, who will chat about Schubert’s later years, with a special emphasis on the final quartets. The talk will take place at Morven’s Stockton Education Center, located on the grounds, at 5 pm.

    For Schubert, of course, “late” came early, as he died in 1828 at the age of 31. His productivity, and the depth and range of his music, is staggering.

    The Princeton Festival runs through June 25, with musical events in a variety of genres presented every evening: opera, jazz, cabaret, musical theater, chamber music, classical and Broadway pops. Baroque music concerts will be presented across the street at Trinity Episcopal Church.

    Indulge in free pre-concert talks, a poetry workshop, an on-site bar, and abundant lawn space at Morven for picnicking prior to the concerts. For a complete schedule, visit princetonsymphony.org/festival.

    Direct link to tickets for tonight’s concert

    https://princetonsymphony.org/performances/what-makes-it-great/2022-06-13

    With the balance of the quartet cycle tomorrow evening

    https://princetonsymphony.org/performances/schuberts-late-string-quartets/2022-06-14


    Signum in concert with “Death and the Maiden”

    Empanadas in the truck from Hotpanada

    https://hotpanada.com/

  • Webern’s Last Smoke: A Tragic Tale

    Webern’s Last Smoke: A Tragic Tale

    It was on this date in 1945 that Anton Webern, living in Allied-occupied Austria, violated curfew by stepping out onto his back porch for a cigar, so as not to disturb his sleeping grandchildren. He was shot and killed by an American soldier. The soldier was so distraught at what he had done, it drove him to alcoholism, and he died in 1955.

    The moral of the story: smoking is bad for your health.

    Here’s Anton Webern in an early, romantic mode – his “Langsamer Satz” from 1905, performed by the Signum Quartett (slated to appear on a Princeton Symphony Orchestra chamber concert at the Institute for Advanced Study on October 4):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LnE0s2UbkA

    From only a few years later, here’s Webern’s “Six Bagatelles,” composed between 1911 and 1913:

    Each bagatelle is under 140 notes, so each would qualify as a #quartweet. You can learn more about the Signum Quartett and its #quartweet project – if you happened to miss it the first time – here:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/08/classical_music_princeton_symp_2.html

    PHOTO: Anton Webern: the last smoke was the best

  • Princeton Symphony’s #Quartweet Composition Project

    Princeton Symphony’s #Quartweet Composition Project

    Do you have ambitions to be a composer, but can’t afford to spend your summer like Gustav Mahler, scribbling in the Alps? The Signum Quartett and Princeton Symphony Orchestra provide an intriguing alternative. Express your musical thoughts in 140 characters or less, as part of the #quartweet project. Read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/08/classical_music_princeton_symp_2.html

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