Saturday, December 31, 2016
Errollyn Wallen: Happy New Year — album PHOTOGRAPHY in NPR's Top Ten Classical albums
Photography
NMC
Errollyn Wallen
Errollyn Wallen writes:
[1]“So
fine was the morning except for a streak of wind here and there that
the sea and sky looked all one fabric, as if sails were stuck high up in
the sky, or the clouds had dropped down into the sea.”
[2]New release PHOTOGRAPHY (NMC label)
in NPR's Top Ten Classical Albums of 2016
Happy New Year!
Errollyn x
John Malveaux: RollingOut.com: Chicago Sinfonietta conductor Kalena Bovell talks importance of music education
Kalena Bovell
John Malveaux of
writes:
Conductor Kalena Bovell interview http://rollingout.com/2016/12/24/chicago-sinfonietta-conductor-kalena-bovell-talks-importance-music-education/
Rolling Out
Lauren Martinez
December 24, 2016
Renowned musician and violinist Karlena Bovell represents a small
percentage African American female symphony conductors. She believes her
persistence and humility along with with receiving exceptional
mentoring from some of the industry’s best composers have been the keys
to her success in her line of work. Bovell currently serves as the
assistant conductor for the prestigious Chicago Sinfonietta,
a professional orchestra dedicated to modeling and promoting diversity
through symphonic music. The 29-year-old organization is gearing up for
its annual MLK tribute concert billed for Jan. 14-16. Bovell spoke with rolling out to discuss her involvement with the show, her musical upbringing and the importance of music education in the school system.
When did you discover you had an interest in music?
Probably before I could even pronounce the word. I think I was like
6 or 7, which probably sounds bad because I was in the first grade. I
was in the car with my mom and I liked the music that was on the radio,
but for some reason, that word would not come out.
How did you train growing up?
I actually have a different story compared to most people. I honestly
didn’t think I was going to be a musician or a conductor. Both of my
parents are from Central America so they came to this country trying to
achieve the American dream, which was an education, food on the table
and clothes on our backs. Music never really fit into that equation. It
was by chance in middle school that I just started playing the violin
and I fell in love with it. I thought I would end up being a violin
player, but had a lack of financial resources and music education
awareness. I didn’t know about private lessons and I didn’t take my
first lesson until I was 18. Imagine getting to college thinking you’re
really good and then you hear the people around you that have had
training since they were four and realize you’re actually not that good.
Sophomore year of undergrad, I was removed from orchestra because the
director felt I wasn’t good enough. I told him, “I am not my colleagues;
I am me.” It was by chance that I started conducting. I was fortunate
to attend a music conducting class and workshop and work with someone
who was a really big influence. He basically pulled me aside one day and
said, “You could be really good if you just believed.” At that point, I
started believing and that’s when my life started to change and really
started pursuing conducting.
Who are your favorite artists to listen to?
I love Brahm. He is my composer. If I could conduct Brahms 24/7 all
day and every day I would be happy. I also gain inspiration from
non-classical music. If you ride in my car, I listen to heavy metal and
alternative which sounds so weird, but I’m a poet so words are really
important to me. Listening to these other genres influence how I hear
classical music.
What is your proficiency?
I would say I’m proficient in classical music. Music is constantly
changing and how we as people listen to music is constantly changing.
I would also like to say that I’m open-minded and versatile enough to at
least conduct or be aware that all these genres do exist. I think it’s
really important to know our history like the Bach and the Beethoven,
but also know the Jennifer Higdon and the composer that might live above
you in your apartment complex.
How does your training and experience inform your craft to serve as a conductor?
I was a music education major in undergrad. I basically went to the
conducting teacher and asked to take lessons. He thought I wanted to get
another degree, but I just wanted to take conducting lessons. I went to
all of the conducting classes and did more work than his actual
conducting students. I sat in every rehearsal and this was during the
period where I worked six different jobs to save up money to attend the
different workshops. After undergrad, I went to community college so I
could strengthen my skills to really prepare myself for graduate school.
I studied really hard and I was able to get into The Hartt School,
which led me to Connecticut. I met a great teacher who was someone I
considered to be a father figure. That is really how my training started
with conducting. It started with having the mindset knowing this is
what I wanted to do plus I have such a persistent personality that I
wasn’t going to stop until I made it happen.
How important is music and art education?
I think they are incredibly important and for someone like me who
never thought that these opportunities would be possible they were
because I had a music education program in middle school. It was
possible because everyone had to take orchestra or choir. I began
singing back in elementary school. It’s such a disadvantage because
music has saved a lot of children because sometimes children are
hyperactive and they don’t know what to do with all that energy. When
you get them involved in music and the arts it gives them something to
focus on and they realize it’s something that they’re good at.
What is a Freeman Fellow?
Chicago Sinfonietta has a program of inclusion with instrumentalists
and then the Freeman Conducting Fellow is basically within that same
program. You are getting a taste of the real world and are learning the
things that they don’t teach you in grad school. You’re learning how to
work with an organization, how to work with donors, how to work with a
board, and how to compose yourself on and off the podium. If you have
hopes to become a music director you’re getting that training as a
conducting fellow. We also get to shadow very closely and work with the
Sinfonietta team.
Please explain how significant it is to be a Sinfonietta assistant conductor for Chicago Sinfonietta’s annual MLK concert.
The best way I could describe it is to talk about how significant it
was for me. Last year, was the first time I had seen the MLK concert and
I remember walking out of the auditorium completely changed. It was a
life-altering experience because when I thought about Martin Luther
King’s dream and how far we have come as a nation. To see so many people
in this space come together and celebrate life and the joy of music was
beautiful.
Retweeted
By Kalena Bovell (@SilvurSmiles)
Retweeted
By Kalena Bovell (@SilvurSmiles)
Friday, December 30, 2016
Afro-Cuban Composer & Violinist José White, born Dec. 31, 1835, wrote "La Bella Cubana," played by Fernando Muñoz (5:58) on YouTube
[José
Silvestre White (1835-1918), Afro-Cuban violinist and composer. Shown
here after he received the 1st prize for violin at the Conservatoire
de Paris in 1856. Bibliothèque Nationale de France]
Capricho Latino
Rachel Barton Pine, violin
Etude No. 6, Jose White
Cedille Records CDR 90000 124 (2011)
In its review of Capricho Latino, ClassicalCandor.blogspot.com notes:
“Jose White's Etude No. 6
is more mainstream than most of the other works on the album and
strikes a Romantic note in the program.” Craig Zeichner observed in Ariama.com
on June 21, 2011: “Pine is one of the great violinists and in a short
time has made some of the most consistently excellent recordings
available anywhere, this may be one of her very best.” CD Universe
classifies the recording as “Post-Romantic.”
Rachel Barton Pine writes in the liner notes:
“Each of White's Six Etudes
(1868) is dedicated to a famous violinist: his teacher Alard, Ernesto
Camillo Sivori, Henri Vieuxtemps, Henryk Wieniawski, Hubert Leonard, and
one Secundino Arango, whose identity has intrigued European and
American scholars. Arango, Afro-Cuban, born in Havana at the end of the
18th century and deceased in the same city in the late 1840's, was a
violinist, cellist, organist, and composer of both religious music and
popular danzones. He was also White's first violin teacher. Fittingly,
White's Etude No. 6 is a danzón with a pyrotechnic central section much in the virtuoso Parisian style of the time.”
José Silvestre White is featured at AfriClassical.com,
with a Works List by Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma,
http://www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com
Fernando Muñoz plays
"La Bella Cubana" by Jose White
(5:58)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GGzspkZFzg
Published
on Jun 13, 2012 by fernandoviolin1987
Trio Concertante
Fernando Muñoz violin
Dianelys Castillo clarinete
Leonardo Gell piano
Trio Concertante
Fernando Muñoz violin
Dianelys Castillo clarinete
Leonardo Gell piano
Season's Greetings from Imani Winds: Please consider an end-of-year tax-deductible donation to make a difference in the world of chamber music
We wish all of you and yours a happy
holiday season! This year has elicited so much change both in the world
and within our group, and out of this change Imani Winds' path has
become more defined and exciting. Please consider an end-of-year
tax-deductible donation to be a part of our efforts to make a difference in the world of chamber music.*
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Kelly Hall-Tompkins: Music Kitchen, Food for the Soul, NEA Grant $10,000 = Your Match
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Thursday, December 29, 2016
In 2016 MBDA reached new milestones creating along the way important initiatives and programs that supported the continued growth of minority business enterprises
As we bring 2016 to a close, the Minority Business Development Agency
(MBDA) is particularly proud of the accomplishments achieved throughout
the year. This year, MBDA reached new milestones creating along the way
important initiatives and programs that supported the continued growth
of minority business enterprises (MBEs) within an innovation-driven
economy.
Throughout the year, MBDA played a critical role in U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker’s Open for Business
agenda. As the leading federal agency dedicated to the growth and
global competitiveness of MBEs, MBDA remains enthusiastic about the
future role that MBEs will increasingly play in fueling the Nation’s
economic health and prosperity.
American Opera Projects in 2016: A Year of Transformative Opera
Taylor Raven and Jorell Williams in Seattle Opera's new production of AS ONE, November 2016. Photo: Rozarii Lynch
Mei-Ann Chen: Support Chicago Sinfonietta: A Different Kind of Orchestra
Uploaded on Dec 21, 2016
What makes the Sinfonietta unique? Maestro Mei-Ann Chen answers.
Chicago
Sinfonietta continues to be a different kind of orchestra. What you see
and hear on stage, who you see in the audience, and what you experience
leaves an impact like no other arts organization in the city.
Give
the gift of music, be a positive influence in a young person's life,
and change the landscape of classical music with a donation to Chicago
Sinfonietta.
Please consider a contribution that will allow us
to expand and enrich the Sinfonietta family by strengthening the
orchestra and bolstering our community programming.
Thank you for your generosity. We are truly grateful.
To learn more, visit www.chicagosinfonietta.org/support.
Detroit Symphony Orchestra: "The Music of Prince" Live Streamed, Led by guest conductor Brent Havens, who arranged Prince’s top hits for orchestra, Dec. 31, 10 PM
THE MUSIC OF PRINCE
FREE NEW YEAR'S EVE WEBCAST
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31 @ 10:00PM EST
Put
on your dancing shoes and walk the purple carpet, it’s time to party
like it’s 1999 with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in partnership with
Detroit Public Television as they pay tribute to the iconic legend known
for his eclectic work, flamboyant stage presence, extravagant dress and
perhaps, most importantly, his out-of-this-world music!
Led
by guest conductor Brent Havens, who arranged Prince’s top hits for
orchestra, the DSO together with a tribute band will perform adaptations
of the artist’s top hits including "Little Red Corvette," "Purple
Rain," "Raspberry Beret," "When Doves Cry" and more.
Televised
and live-streamed worldwide by Detroit Public Television made possible
by the Stanley and Judith Frankel Family Foundation.
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Somm Recordings Releases Complete Non-orchestral Piano Works of Ralph Vaughan Williams by Rebeca Omordia & Mark Bebbington 27 January 2017
Rebeca Omordia and Mark Bebbington
(Tweeted by @NaijaClassical)
Eni Fashani writes:
Rebeca Omordia joins renowned British pianist Mark Bebbington on a new release by SOMM Recordings of first ever recording of Vaughan Williams’ complete piano music. The CD includes the world
premiere of 'Introduction and Fugue' for two pianos and a 1947
transcription of 'Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis' written for two
pianos.
Godwin Sadoh: Chase Castle performs selections from my "Impressions from an African Moonlight" Sat. Jan. 7, 2017 at Bethel Lutheran, Biloxi, MS, 7 PM CST
Godwin Sadoh
Chase Castle
Prof. Godwin Sadoh writes:
Dear Bill,
Chase Castle will perform
selected pieces from my Impressions from an African Moonlight, in a Gulf Coast
Organ Recital, on Saturday January 7, 2017, at Bethel Lutheran Church, 2521 Pass Road, Biloxi, Mississippi,
7:00 PM CST.
Godwin Sadoh
Comment by email:
Comment by email:
Thanks Bill. I'll share it on Facebook. [Godwin Sadoh]
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Miriam Makeba: Mama Africa The Musical from African Music Publishers Documents The Long, Hard Struggle of An African Musical Legend Against Apartheid
Miriam Makeba: Mama Africa The Musical
African Music Publishers AMP AGCD 2609 (2016)
The liner notes for this recording are by Fred Onovwerosuoke, whose website is www.fredomusic.com. They begin with a Synopsis.
Synopsis
MIRIAM MAKEBA - MAMA AFRICA (the musical) tells the story, life and times of Miriam Makeba. This original musical centers on the life, struggle and legacy of South African talent and phenomenal singer, Miriam Makeba. She lived the majority of her life, exiled from South Africa for more than 30 years. She left South Africa in the late 1950's and was forbidden to return until 1992. During her years in exile she devoted her life and art to the South African ideal and cause, for freedom, justice and equality. She passed away in 2008.
This musical explores her activism in helping to bring down apartheid (and impact on the global civil rights movement), her fame & international success owing to her magical voice and her endurance in overcoming betrayal, failed marriages and the death of her only daughter, Bongi, while in exile. Set in Africa, the USA and Belgium MIRIAM MAKEBA - MAMA AFRICA (the musical) is an inspirational, universal story that will appeal to a multi-generational audience worldwide.
Sequence of Tracks
Act 1 of the Musical opens with a Zulu/Xhosa chant inviting the audience to hear the story of a remarkable legend, Miriam Makeba. It is quickly followed by the call & response song, Emabhacheni and the dance tune, Kikirikiki. Ntutu's Song welcomes the birth of a new child, Miriam! Hapo Zamani is a satire on the antics of Apartheid police, while Khawyleza is one of those 'code songs' to alert mothers/neighbors about police raids. At the birth of a child, joys or strife, the seer/healer, Sangoma, always is sought for advice and divination. Hence the traditional songs, Baxabene Oxam, Uhadi and Bamtwana Bokugula. The Click Song which Miriam sang for US President John Kennedy. Malaika is the endearing KiSwahili love song that Miriam Makeba made popular, used in the Musical to celebrate Zenzi's marriage to police constable James Kubay. Then followed the dance songs, Saduva and Ibhabalazi. Sabumoya reflects on difficult times for Miriam and family after prison. Freedom Song is mesh of two protest songs echoing the pains of similarly oppressed peoples. As were the protest songs, Sobashy and Abazali and Beware Verwoed, against erstwhile Apartheid prime minister, especially suring the Sharpville Massacre. Nguma Kurila in the Musical was used in the scene of Bongi's (Makeba's daughter) arrival in the United States and of tales from her homeland of South Africa. Thambo Uyigwe, Uwam Uyajabula and Nongqongqo are from scenes where Miriam uses her found fame to passionately appeal to world leaders to respond to untold atrocities, the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela, etc., in South Africa. The lovely track, Amabonvani, follows. Act 2 opens with a rousing Zulu chant, a series of songs & chants not included on the CD, followed by the set of emotive reminiscences - Iyaguduza, reflecting on matrimonial pains, African Sunset and Suliram. The Musical closes with Pata Pata, Miriam Makeba's rousing signature tune!
For a listener without knowledge of African languages and dialects, the recording can sound more festive than its subject matter truly is. The sober message of the liner notes brought this reviewer's mind back to the anti-apartheid campaigns of Amnesty International, as a volunteer member of a local chapter of the group for several years beginning in the late Seventies. Presentations by former prisoners of South Africa's apartheid regime provided priceless context to the stream of documents about oppression of the majority of the country's people. Each listener will bring a unique perspective to this musical account of the life and music of Miriam Makeba, but the story is one which deserves to be widely disseminated.
Comment by email:
Blessings to you, Bill. And much gratitude for your tireless service. Have a great New Year! Fredo [Fred Onovwerosuoke]
Comment by email:
Blessings to you, Bill. And much gratitude for your tireless service. Have a great New Year! Fredo [Fred Onovwerosuoke]
Dr. William H. Chapman Nyaho, Born Dec. 28, 1958, is Pianist, Professor & Pioneer of Sheet Music and CDs of Piano Music of Africa and the African Diaspora
Senku: Piano Music by
Composers of African Descent
William Chapman Nyaho, piano
Musicians Showcase 1091 (2003)
ASA: Piano Music by
Composers of African Descent
William Chapman Nyaho, piano
MSR Classics MS1242 (2008)
MSR Classics MS1242 (2008)
William H. Chapman Nyaho (b. 1958)
Piano Music of Africa and the African Diaspora
Compiled and Edited by
William H. Chapman Nyaho
Volume 2
Oxford University Press
William H. Chapman Nyaho
Volume 2
Oxford University Press
Dr. William Chapman Nyaho (b. 1958) is featured at AfriClassical.com. He is a well-traveled recitalist with a great many residencies to his credit. He turns 58 Wednesday, Dec. 28. He has landmark recordings and sheet music publications to his credit. His
performance website is
http://www.nyaho.com/ and he has a Facebook Page.
Nyaho.com
Nyaho.com
William Chapman
Nyaho brings a unique cultural background
and extraordinarily eclectic sense of music
to the concert hall, propelling an evening of his music to, as one
critic put it, "reach great heights."
His teaching experience and great sensitivity make the master classes,
lectures and school activities highlights of his
residencies that almost rival his exciting performances.
His performances with Susanna Garcia in the well-respected Nyaho/Garcia
Duo have equally won criticial acclaim.
Nyaho's love of music, expressed through his insightful technique,
creates an exciting musical experience for the experienced music
devotee and newcomer alike.
Sergio A. Mims: TheArtsDesk.com: Kanneh-Mason, Fantasia Orchestra, Fetherstonhaugh, St Gabriel's Pimlico BBC Young Musician of the Year
Sheku Kanneh-Mason in a Fantasia Orchestra rehearsal earlier this year
By David Nice
Wednesday, 21 December 2016
Sheku Kanneh-Mason isn't just BBC Young Musician 2016 - he's the
year's top player in my books, a master at any level. Despite a contract
with Decca, starting with the Shostakovich First Cello Concerto he
played in the competition finale, he looks likely to remain loyal to
family and friends, including the Fantasia Orchestra, founded this year,
in which he's already played as part of the cello section.
You
have to pinch yourself to realise the ages delivering this quality.
Kanneh-Mason is 17, as was Mendelssohn when he composed the work of
total genius which launched last night's concert; conductor Tom
Fetherstonhaugh, currently Junior Organ Scholar at Merton College,
Oxford, is 18; many of the players in the Fantasia are younger still,
coming as they do from junior as well as senior conservatoire orchestras
(another Kanneh-Mason, brother Braimah with whom Sheku spars so
charmingly in the fabulous BBC documentary,
is one of the first violins). Kanneh-Mason was, of course, in the
limelight, and the original reason for heading out to a high church in
Pimlico, but this concert delivered so much more.
Those strings, for a start: no orchestra sets out into the woods of Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream Overture
without some discipline and ability to master its flitting fairy music.
These violins absolutely could, precise from the start, and there were
even artistically portamento-d "hee-haw"s in the rude mechanicals'
bergomask dance. The strings' buoyancy in Haydn's C major Cello Concerto
was almost as much of a delight as Kanneh-Mason's playing (the cellist pictured above
with the orchestra in rehearsal), and he acknowledged it by stepping
back into what amounted to an obbligato role in the finale, keeping it
light rather than showy.
The technical difficulty of the work can
be disproportionate to its effect, but Kanneh-Mason's intonation was
near-perfect, his dynamic shading kept us focused and he even managed to
make the minor-key mood at the heart of the Adagio sound profound. So
much of his artistry is akin to the lessons of bel canto; there were
parallels with Lucy Crowe's feather-light coloratura the previous evening in the virtuoso runs, and he even emulated the singer's messa di voce, swelling a phrase to a peak and gracefully retreating, in some of the most fiendish writing.
This
is an instinctive artist who seems fully-fledged already, like Bryn
Terfel or Angela Gheorghiu at the start of their careers - but
Kanneh-Mason is even younger. And he now has on permanent loan from
Florian Leonhard Fine Violins the 1610 Amati which contributed to his
success in the BBC final to gild his subtleties. Fetherstonhaugh, in a
personable, confident speech, had apologised for the lack of Christmas
theming in the programme, managing to justify the Mendelssohn by
mentioning its use in seasonal ballets by Ashton and Balanchine.
No need: we can all dream of summer nights in the dead of winter, and
then up popped Holst's tune for "In the Bleak Midwinter" as theme for a
nimble set of variations in Kanneh-Mason's encore, his own work (like
the impressive first-movement cadenza in the Haydn).
Retweeted
By theartsdesk.com (@theartsdesk)
Retweeted
By theartsdesk.com (@theartsdesk)
John Malveaux: Score and Parts for Adolphus Hailstork's "Epitaph for a Man Who Dreamed" Needed for Rehearsals for Jan. 14, 2017 Concert in Santa Monica
Adolphus Hailstork
(Provided by Rose Grace)
John Malveaux of
writes:
Maestro Guido Lamell of Santa Monica Symphony scheduled Adolphus Hailstork's "Epitaph for a Man
Who Dreamed" January 14, 2017 but he is unable to locate the score and
musicians parts. I provided an email for Hailstork but he has not
responded and available time for rehearsal is running out. If anyone can
help to save the performance, please contact Glamell
@aol.com or jmalveaux@gmail.com asap
Christine Gangelhoff: Marlon Daniel, Conductor, discusses his work and the influences of classical musical pioneers of color [William Grant Still, Saint-Georges] (YouTube 28:30)
Marlon Daniel
Dr. Christine Gangelhoff writes:
Dear Bill,
I thought you might be interested in this episode of Black America hosted by Carol Jenkins.
In this dynamic conversation, Marlon Daniel, Orchestra Conductor and
Music Director of the Colour of Music Festival and the Ensemble du
Monde, discusses his work and the influences of classical musical pioneers of color.
Happy Holidays to you and yours.
Warmest regards,
Christine
Dr. Christine Gangelhoff
Coordinator of Music Department
University of The Bahamas
Nassau, Bahamas
Hello Bill, Thanks for posting! I'll forward Marlon the link as well. Happy Holidays! Best wishes, Christine [Dr. Christine Gangelhoff]
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