Tag: Time for Three

  • Princeton Symphony: Time for Three Shines

    Princeton Symphony: Time for Three Shines

    If you can find time to squeeze it in before your Oscar party, and if you’ve got the energy after losing an hour’s sleep due to the time change, it would be worth your while to try to catch the second performance of this weekend’s concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra.

    The program includes suites from the ballets “The Fire Dancer” (1938-40) by Bulgarian composer Marin Goleminov (in what music director Rossen Milanov claims is the work’s first U.S. performances) and “Romeo and Juliet” (1935-36) by Sergei Prokofiev.

    However, for as enticing as these offerings are, the real highlight is “Contact” (2022), a recent triple concerto by American composer Kevin Puts (Pulitzer Prize winner in 2012 for his opera “Silent Night”). The work, which is cinematic in the best possible sense, was written for the loosey-goosey, genre-hopping trio Time for Three (violinists Nick Kendall and Charles Yang and double-bassist Ranaan Meyer). These guys have been like overcaffeinated squirrels from the time I used to watch them improvising in Philadelphia’s Rittenhouse Square while still students at the Curtis Institute of Music. You won’t be able to take your eyes off the soloists, even as you’re alternately caressed, shaken and stirred by the music.

    When “Romeo and Juliet” is the concert’s standard repertoire, you know the program has to be an exceptionally challenging one for the musicians, but last night you could see they were totally transfixed, charmed, and energized by their kinetic guests.

    There was plenty of crackle in the hall for that piece and for the encore, as the trio presented a cover of the R&B classic “Stand by Me.” I don’t know that I’ve ever heard an audience react like that to a classical music concert in Richardson Auditorium. The level of energy was outstanding.

    Today’s concert begins at 4 p.m. Admittedly, it is a long program, cresting two hours, but of course there is an intermission, and you’d be guaranteed to be out before 6:30. Grab a coffee ahead of time, have the fridge stocked in advance, and it’s possible you’ll be back in time for the start of the Oscars broadcast. You can always record the trashy red carpet prelude, if it means that much to you.

    Or ditch the Prokofiev, if you must, and take off at intermission. Of course, you’d be missing some fantastic music. Also, if you love John Williams, it’s an added pleasure to be able to spend time with a composer who was clearly one of his biggest influences.

    I apologize for not providing more advance notice for this extraordinary concert, but I had a lot of deadlines this week, and really, I didn’t think anything about it until yesterday! Do yourself a favor, if you can, and make time for Time for Three.

    For tickets and information, visit princetonsymphony.org.


    PHOTO: As seen at last summer’s The Princeton Festival

  • Time for Three Shines at Princeton Festival

    Time for Three Shines at Princeton Festival

    At last night’s opening concert of The Princeton Festival, Time for Three affirmed its strong musical bond. The musicians have been playing together since their student days at the Curtis Institute of Music. In 2023, they became Grammy Award winners.

    Left to their own devices, the trio presents an eclectic and electric blend of classical, Americana, and modern pop. This was their second appearance at the Princeton Festival, and the crowd was clearly energized.

    In March, the group will return to perform with the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, as soloists at Richardson Auditorium in Pulitzer Prize winner Kevin Puts’ triple concerto, “Contact.” Time for Three was recently honored with a Grammy for the Deutsche Grammophon release, “Letters for the Future,” which includes a recording of the work and that of another concerto by Philadelphia composer (and Pulitzer winner) Jennifer Higdon.

    The Princeton Festival, which runs through June 25, will continue tonight at 7:00 with Drama Desk Award nominee Capathia Jenkins and a tribute to the “Queen of Soul,” Aretha Franklin. The concert will feature three-time Grammy-nominated artist Ryan Shaw, with the Princeton Symphony Orchestra led by its former assistant conductor, John Devlin (now music director of the Wheeling Symphony Orchestra of Wheeling, WV). The program will include such Franklin favorites as “Respect,” “Think,” “A Natural Woman,” and “Chain of Fools.”

    Then tomorrow afternoon, something completely different, as internationally-acclaimed pianist Christopher Taylor will perform a recital of contrasting works by Sergei Rachmaninoff, Nikolai Kapustin, Sofia Gubaidulina, and Sergei Prokofiev. That concert will take place at 4:00.

    Further festival events will encompass opera (Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville”), chamber music, musical theater, contemporary dance, a klezmer “good vibes explosion,” and a special family concert, all presented on the grounds of Morven Museum & Garden at 55 Stockton Street (Route 206).

    Vibrant Baroque music and an intimate program for guitar and cello will be offered across the way at Trinity Church Princeton, at 33 Mercer Street.

    The festival’s “big top,” an 11,000 square-foot, clear-span (no poles or obstructed views), open-sided performance pavilion, allows for easy access to refreshments, ample picnicking opportunities, a garden stroll, or the simple enjoyment of a late-spring/early-summer evening.

    The Princeton Festival is the premier summer arts program of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. For complete listings and ticket information, visit princetonsymphony.org/festival.

    And if you haven’t had a chance to take a look at it yet, here’s my preview in the Princeton weekly U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/eeditions/page-page-12/page_58fa5c3c-6e2a-5848-acb1-58218381fe73.html?fbclid=IwAR3N-XKweZ6w7xlx3pqJAR3i-S4269PQM87QmlCXtVhfK8WPdmHc00FJNYo


    Photo by Carolo Pascale

  • Time for Three Kicks Off Princeton Festival

    Time for Three Kicks Off Princeton Festival

    Tomorrow night, make time for Time for Three.

    The charismatic, genre-hopping, Grammy Award-winning trio will open The Princeton Festival, blurring the boundaries between classical, Americana, and modern pop.

    This year’s festival, which will run June 9-25, will also encompass opera (Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville”), chamber and instrumental music, musical theater, contemporary dance, R&B and soul, a klezmer “good vibes explosion,” and a special family concert, all presented on the grounds of Morven Museum & Garden at 55 Stockton Street (Route 206).

    Vibrant Baroque music and an intimate program for guitar and cello will be offered across the way at Trinity Church Princeton, at 33 Mercer Street.

    The festival’s “big top” will be an 11,000 square-foot, clear-span (no poles or obstructed views), open-sided performance pavilion, allowing for easy access to refreshments, ample picnicking opportunities, a garden stroll, or the simple enjoyment of a late-spring/early-summer evening.

    The Princeton Festival is the premier summer arts program of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. For complete listings and ticket information, visit princetonsymphony.org/festival.

    Then check out my preview in the Princeton weekly U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/eeditions/page-page-12/page_58fa5c3c-6e2a-5848-acb1-58218381fe73.html

  • Grammy Winners Coming to Princeton Festival

    Grammy Winners Coming to Princeton Festival

    Really, I could care less about the Grammys. The broadcast has shown slight regard for classical music for decades.

    However, for a classical music artist, to win a Grammy still has some cachet. The Grammy is basically the Oscar of the music biz, the most widely recognized of the mainstream music awards. So in that regard, it’s very nice for a musician to win one.

    This year, in particular, my antennae are up, since so many of the winners are slated to appear in Princeton over the coming year.

    The trio Time for Three, made up of violinists Nicholas Kendall and Charles Yang and double-bassist Ranaan Meyer, were honored last night for Best Classical Music Instrumental Solo, for their album “Letters from the Future,” a Deutsche Grammophon release of two triple concertos, one by Kevin Puts, composer and the other by Jennifer Higdon, with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Xian Zhang.

    Time for Three will return, following last year’s memorable, freewheeling appearance, to open this summer’s The Princeton Festival on June 9. The ensemble will also “solo” in Puts’ concerto on a concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra next March. Puts’ concerto, titled “Contact,” was also recognized with this year’s Grammy for Best Contemporary Classical Composition.

    And just think, I used to listen to these guys horse around in Rittenhouse Square when they were still students at the Curtis Institute.

    Parenthetically, Higdon is a Philadelphia resident and Zhang is music director of the New Jersey Symphony.

    The Attacca Quartet was honored with this year’s Grammy for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance for their album “Evergreen,” made up of five works by Caroline Shaw. The Attacca Quartet too will appear at this summer’s Princeton Festival on June 17. Caroline Shaw’s “Entr’acte” will be heard next season on a concert of the PSO in November.

    Of course, Puts and Shaw are already Pulitzer Prize winners – Puts for his opera “Silent Night” in 2012 and Shaw for her a cappella masterpiece “Partita for 8 Voices” in 2013. Shaw, who was in the graduate program here in Princeton, became the youngest composer ever to be recognized with a Pulitzer, at age 30. Her work “Narrow Sea” garnered a Grammy for Best Contemporary Classical Composition in 2022.

    Baritone Will Liverman will present a recital at the Princeton Festival on June 19. Liverman is one of the principals on a recording of Terence Blanchard’s “Fire Shut Up in My Bones,” winner of this year’s Grammy for Best Opera Recording. The work opened the 2021-22 Metropolitan Opera season. In the recording, Liverman sings opposite Angel Blue, who you’ll recall stepped up at the eleventh hour to substitute for an ailing Pretty Yende to deliver a miraculous concert with the PSO only last month. Blanchard is the recipient of five previous Grammys in the Awards’ jazz categories.

    Offering further shout-outs to our neighbors in Philadelphia, Yannick Nézet-Séguin is the conductor on “Fire Shut Up in My Bones.” His recording with Renée Fleming (in which he appears as pianist), “Voice of Nature: The Anthropocene,” was also honored last night in the Best Classical Solo Vocal Album category. Nézet-Séguin, the Met’s music director, has just extended his contract as music and artistic director of the Philadelphia Orchestra through 2030.

    Finally, Philadelphia-based choir The Crossing was recognized in the category of Best Choral Performance for their album “Born.” The ensemble’s conductor, Donald Nally, only recently returned to his alma mater, Westminster Choir College, for a six-week residency.

    This year’s Princeton Festival will take place June 9-25, largely on the grounds of Morven Museum & Garden. Concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra are held at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium. For more information about the festival and next season’s concerts, visit princetonsymphony.org.

    Congratulations to all, with appreciation from Princeton!

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