Wednesday, January 31, 2018
DelcoTimes.com: AmiciMusic Presents Music of William Grant Still and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania on Feb. 6 at 7:30 PM
William Grant Still (1895-1978)
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)
LANSDOWNE >> AmiciMusic, a Baltimore-based chamber
music organization, holds a special concert at the Lansdowne Friends
Meeting House, 120 N. Lansdowne Ave. at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 6. The
program features Philadelphia-based violinist Tim Schwarz, D.M.A., in a
program called “MUSIC from the UNDERGROUND,” highlighting forgotten
works by minority composers.
Schwarz and Daniel Weiser, D.M.A., piano/artistic
director, are the featured performers for the program that includes
pieces by William Grant Still, George Morrison and Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor. Weiser also talks about each composer and the history
behind the music.
News.UCI.Edu: Concert highlighting African American composers will cap conference for college conductors, kick off Black History Month [U. of California Irvine]
“I hope this showcase generates a little more respect for the
contributions of these composers to their field,” says Stephen Tucker,
UCI associate professor of music and conductor of the UCI Symphony
Orchestra.
Steve Zylius / UCI
Megan Cole / UCI
on
The famed Czech composer Antonín Dvořák believed that the African
American tradition was central to all American compositions, calling it
“all that is needed for a great and noble school of music.” On Feb. 3,
Stephen Tucker, UCI associate professor of music and conductor of the
UCI Symphony Orchestra, will launch Black History Month with a concert
showcasing some of America’s most celebrated African American composers,
highlighting their influence on the world of concert hall music.
The 7 p.m. event will conclude the three-day College Orchestra
Directors Association Conference, hosted by UCI, which is expected to
draw nearly 100 college conductors from around the world.
To be held at Orange County’s Soka University, the concert will
feature two world premieres: a composition by Carolyn Yarnell called
“It’s Still Big, Just Like You Remember!” and an aria by Richard
Thompson, “We Wear the Mask,” sung by UCI student Marlaina Owens. The
UCI Symphony Orchestra will also play compositions by Adolphus
Hailstork, four-time Grammy winner Billy Childs, George Walker and Duke
Ellington.
Tucker, who wrote his dissertation on Ellington and considers several
of these composers “the center of [his]academic life,” is eager to
bring their work to wider audiences.
“I’ve never had the opportunity to do a black history concert before,
so the chance to play music by African American composers for a captive
audience of peers is wonderful,” Tucker says. “I want everyone to leave
the concert with this arsenal of pieces in their minds, so they can do
their own research and find out who else is out there – because there
are so many African American composers in jazz and classical, and they
influence everything.”
Although Tucker was raised in Jamaica, he noticed when he came to
America as a young man that the contributions of African American
musicians were “everywhere” and “so powerful,” although sometimes
overlooked in the classical genre.
“These influences are not just felt in pop music; there are benefits
to be gained from observing, embracing and adopting the African American
tradition in concert hall music,” he says. “I hope this showcase
generates a little more respect for the contributions of these composers
to their field and possibly inspires more African American musicians to
pursue their craft.”
Tuesday, January 30, 2018
Sergio Mims: The New Yorker: The Rediscovery of Florence Price: How an African-American composer’s works were saved from destruction
Price’s Second Violin Concerto explores unstable harmonic terrain.
Illustration by Paul Rogers
Sergio Mims forwards this article:
n
2009, Vicki and Darrell Gatwood, of St. Anne, Illinois, were preparing
to renovate an abandoned house on the outskirts of town. The structure
was in poor condition: vandals had ransacked it, and a fallen tree had
torn a hole in the roof. In a part of the house that had remained dry,
the Gatwoods made a curious discovery: piles of musical manuscripts,
books, personal papers, and other documents. The name that kept
appearing in the materials was that of Florence Price. The Gatwoods
looked her up on the Internet, and found that she was a moderately
well-known composer, based in Chicago, who had died in 1953. The
dilapidated house had once been her summer home. The couple got in touch
with librarians at the University of Arkansas, which already had some
of Price’s papers. Archivists realized, with excitement, that the
collection contained dozens of Price scores that had been thought lost.
Two of these pieces, the Violin Concertos Nos. 1 and 2, have recently
been recorded by the Albany label: the soloist is Er-Gene Kahng, who is
based at the University of Arkansas.
The
reasons for the shocking neglect of Price’s legacy are not hard to find.
In a 1943 letter to the conductor Serge Koussevitzky, she introduced
herself thus: “My dear Dr. Koussevitzky, To begin with I have two
handicaps—those of sex and race. I am a woman; and I have some Negro
blood in my veins.” She plainly saw these factors as obstacles to her
career, because she then spoke of Koussevitzky “knowing the worst.”
Indeed, she had a difficult time making headway in a culture that
defined composers as white, male, and dead. One prominent conductor took
up her cause—Frederick Stock, the German-born music director of the
Chicago Symphony—but most others ignored her, Koussevitzky included.
Only in the past couple of decades have Price’s major works begun to
receive recordings and performances, and these are still infrequent.
The
musicologist Douglas Shadle, who has documented the vagaries of Price’s
career, describes her reputation as “spectral.” She is widely cited as
one of the first African-American classical composers to win national
attention, and she was unquestionably the first black woman to be so
recognized. Yet she is mentioned more often than she is heard. Shadle
points out that the classical canon is rooted in “conscious selection
performed by individuals in positions of power.” Not only did Price fail
to enter the canon; a large quantity of her music came perilously close
to obliteration. That run-down house in St. Anne is a potent symbol of
how a country can forget its cultural history.
Price
was born in 1887, in Little Rock, Arkansas, and grew up in a
middle-class household. She returned home after attending the New
England Conservatory, one of the few conservatories that admitted
African-Americans at the time. Her early adulthood was devoted largely
to teaching and to raising a family. Life in Arkansas was oppressive;
lynchings were routine. In 1927, Price moved with her family to Chicago,
where her horizons began to expand. She divorced her husband, who had
become abusive, and struck out on her own. Until then, her compositional
output had consisted mostly of songs, short pieces, and music for
children. She increasingly essayed larger symphonic and concerto forms,
winning support from Stock, a conductor of rare broad-mindedness.
Beginning
in 1931, Price wrote or sketched a total of four symphonies. The First
and the Third have been published by A-R Editions, under the scholarly
guidance of the late Rae Linda Brown, and recorded by the New Black
Music Repertory Ensemble and the Women’s Philharmonic, respectively. The
Second was apparently never finished; the Fourth, whose score turned up
in the St. Anne house, will receive its première by the Fort Smith
Symphony, in Arkansas, in May.
Monday, January 29, 2018
AaronAsk: Weekly mentoring for a creative life: 5 Habits of Highly Disruptive People: Speed & Agility! (2:42)
Aaron P. Dworkin writes:
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John Malveaux: On 1-20-18 The Pittsburgh Symphony performed George Walker's "Lyric for Strings" & Kathryn Bostic's "The August Wilson Symphony"
George Walker
Kathryn Bostic
John Malveaux of
writes:
The
Pittsburgh Symphony 1-20-18 celebrated concert titled "Lift Every
Voice: Resonating music, works, & legacy" was hosted by Phylicia
Rashad. The concert included Coretta Scott King's favorite composer George
Walker "Lyric for Strings" and the world premiere of
Kathryn Bostic five movement “The August Wilson Symphony.”
Sunday, January 28, 2018
LeaderTelegram.com: Luther College Symphony Orchestra to perform William Grant Still's "Ennanga" Feb. 6, Grace Lutheran Church, Eau Claire, WI
William Grant Still (1895-1978)
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
1/27/18
SYMPHONY PERFORMANCE: The Luther College Symphony
Orchestra, under the direction of Daniel Baldwin, will perform at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 6, at Grace Lutheran Church, 202 West Grand Ave. The
concert is part of the Symphony Orchestra’s 2018 Midwest Tour.
The concert is open to the public, and a freewill donation will be taken at the door. There is no charge for students.
The program begins with Giuseppe Verdi’s Overture to I Vespri
Siciliani,then features William Grant Still’s “Ennanga” for harp, piano
and strings. Luther harp instructor Rachel Brandwein will perform
“Ennanga” with members of the Symphony Orchestra string section. After
an intermission, the concert will conclude with Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64.
Chamber Music America announces the Composer Equity Project as part of its Classical Commissioning grant program
Chamber Music America’s
Classical Commissioning Program
provides grants to professional U.S.-based presenters and ensembles
whose programming includes Western European and/or non-Western classical
and contemporary
music. Grants are provided for the commissioning and performance of new
works by American composers. The program supports works scored for 2–10
musicians performing one per part, composed in any of the musical
styles associated with contemporary classical
music.
Since 1983, only 70 of the 205 commissions made through CMA’s
Classical Commissioning program have been composed by women or
ALAANA (African, Latinx, Asian, Arab, and Native American) composers.
The Board of Directors of Chamber Music America has made diversity,
inclusion, and equity a primary focus of the organization’s
work. (Please read CMA’s Statement of Commitment.)
CMA’s goal in this program is, through the panel review process, to
award a majority of the grants to applicants who apply with women and
ALAANA composers.
Therefore,
CMA has created the Composer Equity Project, a database of women and
ALAANA composers that will be accessible on CMA’s website. Applicants
will be encouraged to
use this resource and become familiar with potential composers for a
commission.
Women and ALAANA composers are encouraged to contact CMA by March 15 to be included on the list for
this round of applications. The initial listing will be available
here on
February 15, 2018 and updated on March 15, 2018. Composers will
continue to be added throughout the year, even after this particular
deadline has passed.
Composers
are also encouraged to pursue an ensemble for which they might like to
create a new work through the Classical Commissioning program. A list of
CMA member ensembles
can be found at the following
link.
The Classical Commissioning deadline is April 29, 2018.
For any program-related questions, contact:
Susan Dadian, Program Director
CMA Classical/Contemporary
(212) 242-2022, ext. 102
Chamber Music America,
the national network for ensemble music
professionals, was founded in 1977 to develop, support, and strengthen
the chamber music field. With a membership of nearly 6,000, including
musicians, ensembles, presenters, artist managers,
educators, music businesses, and advocates of ensemble music, CMA
welcomes members representing a wide range of musical styles and
traditions. CMA provides its members with grant programs, consulting
services, a national conference, professional development
seminars, access to instrument and other insurances, and several
publications, including
Chamber Music magazine; the weekly Accent e-newsletter; and a member-driven website,
www.chamber-music.org.
James Greeson: Arkansas Philharmonic will present a premiere performance of Florence Price's Violin Concerto No. 2 Feb. 17 with Dr. Er-Gene Kahng
Florence B. Price
Professor Emeritus James Greeson of Arkansas University writes of Florence B. Price:
The Arkansas Philharmonic will
be presenting a premiere performance of her Second Violin Concerto on
Feb. 17 featuring my colleague Dr. Er-Gene
Kahng. I think at about the same time Er-Gene's recording of both of
Price's newly discovered violin concertos will be released by Albany
Records.
Here is a link to Arkansas Phil's website:
Two other Price things in
February are that I've been told that the New Yorker has an article on
Price written by Alex Ross due out soon, and also a musicologist here at
the U. of Arkansas, Dr. Micaela Baranello, has a
piece on Florence Price and Er-Gene's new recording of her concertos
that will appear in the New York Times Arts & Leisure section in the
Feb 11th issue. If or when I get a link to that article I'll try to
share it with you.
Best Wishes,
Jim Greeson
Saturday, January 27, 2018
OurTimePress.com: Second Harlem Classical Music Celebrations, co-hosted by Opera Ebony, Three on 3 Presents, Opera Noire of New York, the Harlem Chamber Players and Harlem Opera Theater
H. Leslie Adams
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)
January 26, 2018
The Second Harlem Classical Music Celebrations, co-hosted by Opera
Ebony, Three on 3 Presents, Opera Noire of New York, the Harlem Chamber
Players and Harlem Opera Theater, present the works of renowned operatic
and spiritual composers in symposium and in concert. This collaboration
series runs from February 1-24 at multiple venues and includes program
titles like “A Tribute to the Spiritual”, symposium and concert; Opera
Ebony and Three on 3 Presents with Jasmine Muhammad and Christopher
Cooley; A 10th Annual Black History Month Celebration with
works by H. Leslie Adams, spirituals and Nonet by Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor; “Lift Every Voice and Sing”: A Tribute to John
Rosemond Johnson; a two-act theatrical work, Harriet Tubman: When I
Crossed That Line to Freedom; and the David I. Martin Music Guild of the
National Association of Negro Musicians 2018 Scholarship Local
Competition Winds & Percussion. For full calendar of events, visit
HarlemOperaTheater.org; Harlemchamberplayers.org; Operaebony.org.
John Malveaux: George Walker's newly released Sinfonia No. 5 recorded on Albany Records include an option with speaking parts and slides
George Walker
John Malveaux of
writes:
Advancement of drawings, photographs,videos, animation, and film
into music performances offer new opportunities to share compelling
stories and visions of composers. Composer George Walker's newly released
Sinfonia No. 5 recorded on Albany Records include an option with
speaking parts and slides. Please see Los Angeles Master Chorale
upcoming ISRAEL in EGYPT
Friday, January 26, 2018
Chi-chi Nwanoku: Chineke! is trying to locate the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor violin concerto music parts and score
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)
Chi-chi Nwanoku writes:
Dear William
Chineke! is
desperately trying to locate the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor violin concerto
music parts and score. Is there any way you could put out a call to all
whom you may know that might be able to help us please?
Many thanks
Very best wishes
Chi-chi
Please note that all Chineke!-related correspondence should be directed to my work email: chichi@chineke.org
Chi-chi Nwanoku OBE, FRAM, FTCL
Founder, Artistic & Executive Director Chineke! http://chineke.org/
The Guardian: Florence Price will be among those featured in the Forgotten Female Composers project of the BBC
Florence Price will be among those featured in the Forgotten Female Composers project. Photograph: aetn.org
Our Classical Century: BBC to stage year-long celebration of music
Project includes special prom and live broadcast reviving works of five female composers
The BBC
has announced its most ambitious classical music project, a year of
television and radio programmes and concert broadcasts celebrating a
century of landmarks in music.
The corporation will also mark International Women’s Day
in March with a concert and live broadcast reviving the work of five
almost forgotten female composers, together with recordings of their
works, which have either never been heard or not performed for many
decades.
Our Classical Century, which involves BBC Four, Radio 3 and all the BBC orchestras, will begin next autumn and culminate in a special prom in 2019.
Alan Davey, the controller of Radio 3,
said: “We’re comfortable celebrating our excellence in other areas of
culture – even other genres of music – but less so with classical.
“We get self-conscious, wary of somehow sounding pompous or affected.
I’m sure all of us agree that we should be really confident about
ourselves as a classical music nation.”
Our Classical Century will launch on BBC Four, with four groups of
programmes made by Lion Television broadcast across a year highlighting
key moments in the history of music since 1918. It will be linked to
programmes on Radio 3 identifying 100 of the century’s most significant
events, compositions and performances. It will culminate in a newly
commissioned composition to be performed on the first night of the 2019
Proms.The Forgotten Female Composers project will be premiered on 8 March,
International Women’s Day, with a live broadcast of five previously
unheard pieces in a concert from LSO St Luke’s in London. The project,
created with the Arts and Humanities Research Council, includes recordings of full-scale symphonies.
The composers include Florence Price,
born into a wealthy African American family in 1887, who had her first
piece published at the age of 11, received a double first at the New
England Conservatory of Music, but was denied a place on the Arkansas
Music Teachers Association because she was black. However, she achieved
considerable success in the music movement known as the Harlem
Renaissance, including a symphony performed in 1932 by the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra.
Saint Luke Productions: "Tolton: From Slave to Priest" premieres in Southern California this weekend; tours nationally
Saint Luke Productions writes:
Dear Mr. Zick,
I thought the readers of your blog might be
interested in this musical/dramatic event on the life of the first
African American priest, portrayed by veteran TV/film actor Jim R.
Coleman (jimcolemanactor.com), “Tolton: From Slave to Priest”
which premieres in Southern California this weekend, Jan. 26-28. The
shows will be at the Freed Theater, the professional space at the former
Crystal Cathedral campus, now the Christ Cathedral of the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Orange.
There are four Negro spirituals featured throughout
the 75 minute drama, including gorgeous improvisations by Atlanta
actress Elissa Sanders. “Steal Away,” “Do You Hear the Lambs a-cryin”
and “my god is so high.”The score was based on
these, and created by young composer Tony Manfredonia of Michigan.
Event information:
Fri,. Jan. 26, 7pm
Sat., Jan. 27, 7pm
Sun., Jan. 28, noon
Freed Theater, on the campus of Christ Cathedral (formerly Crystal Cathedral), Garden Grove, in Orange County
Tickets: $20 plus Eventbrite fee –
www.ccdramaseries.com or can be purchased at the door. During
business hours Pacific Time, live assistance provided at 360-687-8029
(Saint Luke Productions).
Historical information:
www.ToltonCanonization.org
Fr. Tolton (1854-1897) is on the road to sainthood;
his cause is being led by Bishop Perry in the Archdiocese of Chicago,
where Fr. Tolton died tragically young. He was the first-ever African
American priest. His rejection by American seminaries
was not an obstacle too big – he went to Rome for his seminary
education and ordination. His messages of perseverance in adversity,
humility, and forgiveness will bring hope and healing to our nation.
The show will tour nationally, booked in various dioceses such as Youngstown, Memphis, and Dallas.
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Cellist Jerome Wright and Pianist Glenn Sales Perform at Weill Recital Hall, Carnegie Hall, Friday, March 2nd, 2018 at 8:00 PM
Jerome Wright writes:
Greetings Bill,
Forwarding information on my Carnegie Hall concert on March 2, 2018
Best as always,
Jerome Wright
Harriman-Jewell Series: Dance Theatre of Harlem at Kauffman Center [Kansas City, Missouri] (Feb 9)
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Wednesday, January 24, 2018
AlmanacNews.com: Weekend concerts celebrate music by African American composers [Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 27 and 28 at 3 PM in East Palo Alto]
The hand on the left is that of LaDoris Cordell, and on the right, that
of Josephine Gandolfi. The two women will be among the performers in
"Out of the Blues: The Gift of Song." Photo by Laurie Naiman
Wed. Jan. 24, 2018
By Renee Batti
The musicians and guest artists of the African
American Composer Initiative are set to deliver another rousing set of
concerts next weekend celebrating the music of such legendary composers
as Billy Strayhorn and Thelonius Monk as well as contemporary composers,
performing works ranging from spirituals and jazz to original modern
compositions and genre-blending arrangements.
The ninth annual benefit concerts, "Out of the
Blues: The Gift of Song," will feature vocal and instrumental music dawn
from "the traditions of spirituals, jazz, blues, popular, and concert
music," says pianist Josephine Gandolfi of Menlo Park, who with Judge
LaDoris Cordell and Deanne Tucker co-founded the African American
Composer Initiative.
They will be performed on Saturday and Sunday,
Jan. 27 and 28, at 3 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center of Eastside
College Preparatory School in East Palo Alto.
The AACI presents programs devoted to music by
African American composers. In addition to Strayhorn and Monk, composers
include William Grant Still and Florence Price, and contemporary
composers Valerie Capers, Regina Baiocchi, Roxanna Wright, Andre Meyers,
John Robinson, Charles Lloyd and Charles Brown. Music by some of the
founders of the spirituals preservation movement, including Roland
Hayes, Hal Johnson and Harry Burleigh, also will be performed,
according to Ms. Gandolfi.
John Malveaux: HuffingtonPost.com: Santa Monica Symphony’s Annual Martin Luther King Concert featuring Cedric Berry: Review
Cedric Berry
(Photo by Kevin Tu)
(Photo by Kevin Tu)
John Malveaux of
writes:
Santa Monica Symphony & MLK Jr. Westside Coalition concert honoring MLK Jr. featuring bass baritone Cedric Berry
Thanks
John Malveaux
HuffPost
Ira Israel, Contributor
Psychotherapist & Author
Dovetailing
with Oprah Winfey’s inspirational Golden Globe speech regarding a new
day appearing on the horizon, this weekend the Santa Monica Symphony
performed an exquisitely programmed concert celebrating freedom,
justice, and equality. One of the Santa Monica’s oldest treasures and a
city icon now in its 73rd season, the orchestra provides classical
music concerts free to the public five times per year.
Sponsored
in part by the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Westside Coalition,
the concert featured primarily American music. Aaron Copland’s familiar
“Fanfare for the Common Man” opened the program, followed by an
orchestration of Duke Ellington’s composition “Black, Brown, and Beige,”
then “Te Deum” by Puccini and a stellar rendition of Joseph
Schwantner’s stunning and captivating piece “New Morning for the World.”
University of Southern California faculty member and highly
accomplished bass-baritone, Cedric Berry, served as narrator for “New
Morning for the World” commemorating Martin Luther King’s legacy with
pivotal excerpts from King’s speeches set to dramatic flourishes.
The
familiar opening tones of Copland’s “Fanfare for the Common Man” set
the stage for an unparalleled program. Ellington’s “Black, Brown and
Beige,” was an aptly chosen piece for Martin Luther King weekend because
it recounts African American history and incorporates spirituals, the
blues, and a section entitled “Emancipation Celebration.” The first half
of the concert finished with the colossal power and lyricism of Cedric
Berry’s voice as he grandly empowered Puccini’s “Te Deum” aria from
“Tosca.”
Tuesday, January 23, 2018
John Malveaux will interview Michael Abels about composing classical music & Long Beach Vice Mayor Rex Richardson will interview him about Get Out score Feb. 18
Michael Abels
John Malveaux of
writes:
MusicUNTOLD president John Malveaux will interview 2017 MusicUNTOLD Composer of Year Michael Abels about his career as classical music composer and City of Long Beach Vice Mayor Rex Richardson will interview Michael Abels about his sound track for the four time Oscar nominated movie GET OUT Sunday February 18, 2018, Michelle Obama Community Library, 2:00 PM, Long Beach, Ca.
Sergio Mims: Chicago Tribune: Rafael Payare brings energy and purpose to his downtown CSO podium debut
Rafael Payare and Sergio A. Mims
Rafael Payare conducts the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Thursday. (Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune)
Sergio A. Mims writes:
Just
to let you know that John von Rhein of the Chicago Tribune gave a rave
review of Rafael Paraye concerts with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
last week. And I could not agree more. It was a stunning concert. Payare
is definitely on the path on the verge of a major conducting career
Also here is a photo of me and Payare taken yesterday between rehearsals.
The musicians of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra are back in harness this weekend at Symphony Center
after a long holiday hiatus. Their collective gratitude to be making
music again translated into playing of robust vitality at Thursday
night’s first subscription concert of the season, if not the gleaming
tonal finish and exacting precision this great symphonic ensemble
produces at its very best.
Different sorts of corporate virtuosity were on display throughout the evening, and the man whose job it was to make them fit together convincingly was the up-and-coming Venezuelan conductor Rafael Payare, who was making his subscription series debut following his first appearance with the orchestra in 2015 at Ravinia.
Payare, who turns 38 this year, is another of the gifted alumni of the El Sistema music education program that helped bring another podium dervish, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, to world attention. Whether Payare (who is married to American cellist Alisa Weilerstein) attains similar international staying power remains to be seen, of course, although reports from Europe, where he has settled into a reportedly happy collaboration as music director of the Ulster Orchestra in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and has guest conducted the Vienna Philharmonic, speak well for his chances.
The CSO artistic administration allotted the guest conductor only two concerts, alternating his program with more lucrative, orchestra-accompanied screenings of “Singin’ in the Rain.” Payare appeared determined to make the most of his relatively limited podium time, applying himself with serious attention to musical values that belied the occasional excesses of his animated podium manner.
Different sorts of corporate virtuosity were on display throughout the evening, and the man whose job it was to make them fit together convincingly was the up-and-coming Venezuelan conductor Rafael Payare, who was making his subscription series debut following his first appearance with the orchestra in 2015 at Ravinia.
Payare, who turns 38 this year, is another of the gifted alumni of the El Sistema music education program that helped bring another podium dervish, conductor Gustavo Dudamel, to world attention. Whether Payare (who is married to American cellist Alisa Weilerstein) attains similar international staying power remains to be seen, of course, although reports from Europe, where he has settled into a reportedly happy collaboration as music director of the Ulster Orchestra in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and has guest conducted the Vienna Philharmonic, speak well for his chances.
The CSO artistic administration allotted the guest conductor only two concerts, alternating his program with more lucrative, orchestra-accompanied screenings of “Singin’ in the Rain.” Payare appeared determined to make the most of his relatively limited podium time, applying himself with serious attention to musical values that belied the occasional excesses of his animated podium manner.
John Malveaux: Afro-American Chamber Music Society Orchestra & Multigenerational Choir perform works of Dr. Jester Hairston Feb. 11 & 25 in Pasadena, CA
John Malveaux of
writes:
On Sunday, February 11, 3:30pm at Westminster Presbyterian and Sunday, February 25, 3:30pm at First AME, the Afro-American Chamber Music Society Orchestra will celebrate its 30th Anniversary and Black History Month by paying tribute to the late Dr. Jester Hairston. The concerts will feature Hairston’s niece, noted
conductor and clinician, Dr. Jacqueline Hairston. She will conduct
Negro Spirituals and Folk Songs by Dr. Jester Hairston, well-known for
his Spiritual "AMEN," made famous in the 1963 film, “Lilies of the
Field,” starring Sidney Poitier. The program will be performed by the
50-plus Multigenerational Choir and the Afro-American Chamber Music
Society Orchestra, conducted by Janise White. Dr.
Hairston has been recognized as a leading expert on the Negro Spiritual
having composed and arranged over 300 spirituals which he performed
with choirs all over the world. The Multigenerational Choir will regale
the audience in over a dozen Negro Spirituals, Work Songs, Children’s
Play Songs & Street Cries by Hairston. Also on program, Nolan
Shaheed, Jazz Trumpeter will perform: Spiritual Fantasy No. 6 for
trumpet and orchestra. This piece is based on the Negro Spiritual,
"Sinner Please Don't Let This Harvest Pass" by Dr. Frederick Tillis.
Monday, January 22, 2018
Sphinx Organization Announces New Board Leadership and Welcomes New Board Member
Sphinx is excited to announce a new Executive Committee:
Tynnetta McIntosh, Board Chair
Mary Beth Halprin, Board Vice Chair
Deidre Lambert-Bounds, Treasurer
Anthony Glover, Secretary
Terry Woodard
We are also honored to welcome Terry Woodard, Managing Director and Senior Banker of the J.P. Morgan Private Bank, to the Board of Directors.
He has chaired the Private Bank's
Diversity Council, has captained the Morehouse and Spelman Recruiting
Team, and is a member of the organization's Executive Leadership
Council.
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