Tag: Trenton War Memorial

  • Golden Age Film Scores Return to Trenton

    Golden Age Film Scores Return to Trenton

    There’s a moment in the Billy Wilder classic “Sunset Boulevard” when Gloria Swanson, as a faded silent movie actress, remarks, “I am big. It’s the pictures that got small.”

    Much the same could be said, setting aside the delusions of grandeur, of the great composers who worked during Hollywood’s golden age. It’s ironic that in the current era of vertiginous CGI that so many of our movies seem to lack dimension. There was a time when music with a strong profile was regarded as an essential element of the moviemaking process. It was a way of creating 3-D without the necessity of special glasses.

    On May 14, the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra will remind us of what’s been missing, to great extent, from the movie-going experience in recent years. The program “Cinematic Classics” will be presented at Patriots Theater in the Trenton War Memorial. Works by composers Miklós Rózsa, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Bernard Herrmann and William Walton prove what can be achieved by a skilled musician with a gift for melody, an innate sense of drama, and good old-fashioned musical know-how.

    For those of you who believe that they don’t make ‘em like they used to, this concert is highly recommendable. You can read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/05/classical_music_njcp_performin_1.html

  • NJ Orchestra Couple Connects Through Music

    NJ Orchestra Couple Connects Through Music

    In life and in career, the husband-and-wife team of Daniel Spalding and Gabriela Imreh understand the importance of human connection.

    Spalding, formerly on the conducting staff of Romania’s Cluj-Napoca Philharmonic and the Houston Symphony Orchestra, is music director of the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, and Imreh, a concert pianist with an international career. The couple has been living out of boxes in Ewing, where they have made their home for the past 30 years. They are in the process of moving to Trenton, where Spalding conducts the NJCPO, in search of a greater sense of community.

    The next concert of the NJCPO, to be held at the Trenton War Memorial on April 2, will be an intimate affair, with a slimmed down orchestra performing “in the round” in the structure’s elegant Art Deco George Washington Ballroom. The program will include works by Rossini, Mozart, Piazzolla, Bernstein and Copland.

    The aim is greater immediacy and increased interaction with the audience. You can find out more about it, learn a little bit about the couple’s travails after they met in Romania, and glean some of Imreh’s insights into what it takes to perform American music, in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/03/classical_music_gabriela_imreh.html

  • NJ Capital Philharmonic New Year’s Eve Concert

    NJ Capital Philharmonic New Year’s Eve Concert

    What are you doing New Year’s Eve? I’ll be trying to take a nap in anticipation of doing the overnight at WRTI. So keep it down, if you please!

    My recorded interview with music director Daniel Spalding will air as part of WWFM’s live broadcast of the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra’s celebratory concert at the Trenton War Memorial tonight at 8 p.m. You can listen to the concert live at 89.1 FM or online at wwfm.org. Or you can pick up a ticket and still be guaranteed to reach your party or get back home by about 10:30.

    Last week’s newspaper article, about the concert, appeared on Christmas Day, thereby getting lost in the shuffle. Click here to read my piece about the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic’s New Year’s Eve concert in the Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/12/classical_music_njcp_performin.html

    Happy New Year!

  • Glass & Moran Reunited in NJ This Weekend

    Glass & Moran Reunited in NJ This Weekend

    Two old cronies are brought together again, if only in my newspaper article.

    Composer Robert Moran enlisted Philip Glass to be one of 25 composers to participate in “The Waltz Project” in the late 1970s. The project was documented on an album released by Nonesuch Records in 1981.

    In 1985, the two collaborated on an opera, “The Juniper Tree,” after a tale by the Brothers Grimm (and a very grim one at that), the composers divvying up its four acts between them. In the meantime, Moran set about arranging 21 variations, for various combinations of instruments, on Glass’ “Modern Love Waltz,” which have also been recorded.

    On Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Glass’ “Concerto Fantasy for Two Timpanists and Orchestra” will open the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra season, at the Trenton War Memorial. The soloists will be Jonathan Haas (for whom Glass wrote the work) and William Trigg (who has performed with the Philip Glass Ensemble). Also on the program will be Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5.

    By coincidence, on Saturday morning, from 10:00 to 1:00, Moran will preside over a workshop hosted by Westminster Conservatory Honors Music Program. The composer will lead the HMP community on a freewheeling journey through his creative process, seasoned with personal anecdotes, audio and video illustrations, advice to young composers, and what promises to be lively discussion, offered up in a kind of master class setting.

    The event, which is free and open to the public, will take place at Hillman Performance Hall, The Marion Buckelew Cullen Center, at Westminster Choir College of Rider University in Princeton. Refreshments will be provided.

    Moran studied with Hans Erich Apostel in Vienna and then with Darius Milhaud and Luciano Berio at Mills College. He gained notoriety in the late 1960s and early ‘70s through a series of performance pieces incorporating entire cities, including San Francisco, Bethlehem, Pa. and Graz, Austria. These involved tens of thousands of performers.

    His many stage works include “Desert of Roses,” written for Houston Grand Opera, and, in 2011, “Alice” composed for the Scottish Ballet.

    For the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, he was commissioned to write a work for the youth chorus of Trinity Wall Street, the so-called “Ground Zero” church in Lower Manhattan. “Trinity Requiem,” scored for children’s chorus, four cellos, harp and organ, offers a similar brand of solace to that conjured in the 19th century masterwork by Gabriel Fauré.

    With Robert Moran, you never know what you’re going to get. In his more puckish moments, he might write for harpsichord and electric frying pan. But then there are times when his natural gift for lyricism will melt your heart.

    Read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/10/classical_music_njcp_opening_s.html

  • NJ Capital Philharmonic Orchestra Debut

    NJ Capital Philharmonic Orchestra Debut

    Is it possible that I am still asleep and dreaming? For the first time since the restructuring of the paper, one of my stories has actually hit the front page, a seemingly regular occurrence under the old system.

    But conductor Daniel Spalding and I both presented cases for the importance of heightened exposure for the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, as it is about to commence its first complete season. The orchestra, rising from the ashes of the Greater Trenton Symphony, will perform at the Trenton War Memorial Saturday night at 8.

    The program will include works by Beethoven, Shostakovich and American composer Ron Nelson. Awadagin Pratt will be the soloist in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4.

    The Times of Trenton did the right thing and actually sent a photographer to one of the orchestra’s rehearsals.

    Please consider attending the concert, if you can. The area can never have too many orchestras, if people will only go, and the greater the support, the better the NJCP is bound to get. It’s your call whether or not you think the city of Trenton should have its own orchestra.

    Personally, I’m looking forward to George Antheil’s “Capital of the World,” which the NJCP will perform on May 9. Antheil, the self-proclaimed “Bad Boy of Music,” was born in Trenton in 1900. He turned Paris on its ear with his “Ballet Mécanique,” which incited one of the great musical riots in 1926. Spalding made an acclaimed recording of the work with his other group, the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra, at the War Memorial, which was issued on the Naxos label. He’s also recorded Antheil for New World Records.

    The Greater Trenton Symphony, founded in 1921, was New Jersey’s oldest professional symphonic ensemble. The orchestra performed its last concert – the first since 2010 – on New Year’s Eve, 2012. You can read more about what happened next in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2014/10/classical_music_nj_capital_phi.html

    PHOTO: Awadagin Pratt, who will be the soloist tomorrow night in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4, wowed the judges of the Naumburg International Piano Competition with his performance of the piece in 1992

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