Rachel Barton Pine
Jul 12, 2019
Violinist Rachel Barton Pine, a virtuosic performer known for
groundbreaking programming, will perform in Cooperstown on Sunday,
August 11 at 4:00pm at The Farmers' Museum in Cooperstown.
Pine will present a classical recital celebrating the violin's
American folk music roots, offering a program prominently featuring
works by African-American composers. The performance, sponsored by WAMC,
is presented by the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival in conjunction
with the Fenimore Art Museum.
The concert is an ambitious tour of American music-making throughout
history through the prism of the violin. The program will begin with a
beloved Bach Partita and European dance music of the early American
settlers, and will lead the audience through classical music influenced
by blues, spirituals, and even hip hop before concluding with
Vieuxtemps' thrillingly virtuosic variations on "Yankee Doodle."
Four of the featured composers are celebrated fiddlers: Mark
O'Connor, Darol Anger, Bruce Molsky, and David Wallace. "Each has
composed infectious concert music blending classical and American
traditional music, blurring the line between the violin and the fiddle,"
says Pine.
In constructing this program, one of Pine's goals was to give the audience the proper context to appreciate the massive contribution of Black musicians to what we understand as American music. Throughout the concert program, the music early settlers brought from Europe "transforms into a uniquely American style thanks to the influence of African-American music-making," says Pine. The prominent inclusion of works by Black composers - among them Noel da Costa, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson, and Daniel Bernard Roumain - is part of a broader series of initiatives spearheaded by Pine to place Black classical composers and much of their previously overlooked music into today's cultural consciousness.
The Cooperstown program is ambitious and stylistically far-reaching
and places tremendous demands on the performer, and Pine is perhaps
singularly equipped to deliver. She has been described as an "exciting,
boundary-defying performer" by the Washington Post; David Wallace, who
wrote one of the pieces featured on the program for Pine, has said that
she is "truly one of the few violinists who can navigate so many diverse
styles and genres equally well."
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