Thursday, September 17, 2009

Harlem Quartet & Sphinx Chamber Orchestra Perform at August Wilson Center Opening Tonight


[Harlem String Quartet]

Post-Gazette.com
August Wilson Center opens its doors
Music, dancing part of tonight's fanfare
Thursday, September 17, 2009
By Sally Kalson, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Live music, star voices and heartfelt thanks, accompanied by the aroma of southern foods, will waft through the airy spaces of the August Wilson Center for African American Culture tonight as the new facility holds its grand opening celebration.” “Events will run from 5 p.m. to midnight, with three segments based on ticket level. Guests also will be able to tour the opening exhibitions, 'Pittsburgh: Reclaim, Renew, Remix' and 'In My Father's House.' Members of the public may visit the center for free on Saturday from noon to 5 p.m.”

In addition to the southern buffets and cocktails, festivities will feature music by The Harlem Quartet and violinist Elena Urioste. They also will perform as part of the larger Sphinx Chamber Orchestra, comprising young African-American and Latino musicians performing Bach, Vivaldi and Mozart, as well as works by composers Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson, George Theophilus Walker and Michael Abels. Also performing will be Broadway singer/actor and Carnegie Mellon University graduate Billy Porter; the August Wilson World Chorus, 75 singers from local churches coming together just for tonight's event; and the August Wilson Dance Ensemble.” [Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson and George Walker are profiled at AfriClassical.com]

Conclusion of Interview on Eliesha Nelson's CD 'Quincy Porter: Complete Viola Works'

[“Quincy Porter: Complete Viola Works”; Eliesha Nelson, viola; John McLaughlin Williams, violin, piano, harpsichord; Douglas Roth, harp; Northwest Sinfonia, John McLaughlin Williams, conductor; Dorian Recordings DSL-90911 (73:47) (2009) (Reverse side of CD cover)]

Yesterday AfriClassical posted Part I of our inte
rview with the African American violist Eliesha Nelson on the occasion of the release of her debut CD, “Quincy Porter: Complete Viola Works”; Dorian Recordings DSL-90911 (73:47). Part I chronicled the life and career of Eliesha Nelson from her birth on Eielson Air Force Base, which is 25 miles Southeast of Fairbanks, to the photo shoot for the CD cover art. The front cover shows her standing in Lake Erie, in a long flowing dress which is billowing with the movement of the waves on the lake. The art on the reverse side is a picture of Eliesha Nelson from behind.
How did you become associated with such a high-ranking studio as Skywalker?
Well, anyone can rent the space. I was really lucky with the producers that I ended up booking with. I basically didn't know anyone in the industry outside of John when it came to recordings.
Does anything else come to mind that you'd like to say about the Concerto?
Outside of it being a really fantastic piece, hopefully that more violists will start to play it and people will find it beautiful and wonderful and interesting, which I definitely think it is!
So you'd like to raise the profile of this piece then?
Yes, that's kind of the point of the recording too, the reason why I chose Quincy Porter and not Hindemith or the Brahms Sonatas or something like that. So the point was also to say, “This is also really wonderful music too and worth listening to.”
The next work on the CD I believe is “Speed Etude”?
Yes.
And on that one, John is playing the piano?
Right. “Speed Etude” and “Poem” - they were written around the same time and that was when Porter had received a commission from the Juilliard Musical Foundation...
The CD cover says they were both written in 1948.
Right. He was commissioned by Juilliard to compose five pieces, one quintet and four sort-of solo pieces. “The Poem” was actually originally written for cello and he obviously transcribed it for viola, and “Speed Etude” written definitely just for viola and they wanted pieces that would be good learning pieces for students. So “Speed Etude” is a great, really fun, fast, clearly fast, perpetual motion basically for viola.
It's less than two and a half minutes long, right?
Right.
Which might be appropriate for something that fast?
Exactly, it's like a firecracker! It just sort of explodes and then it's over.
Then the next work is “Duo for Viola and Harp”?
Yes. I think that's my favorite piece, one of my favorite pieces.
What do you like about it?
I think it's just beautiful! It's just so gorgeous! Porter, like myself, had a love for early music. I think that's why he's so wonderful with how he crafts music, because he really has a wonderful understanding of it. And especially with Early Music, it's a vocal, it's long lines it's very stepwise motions and to me very beautiful and touching. And I think you hear a lot of that influence and that appreciation in this piece. It's sort of written ABAB form, so the first part is a slow with that very singing long melodies, and then the B part is twice as fast. It has a lot of jazzy rhythms; he does a lot of interesting combinations with really interesting rhythms, rhythmic passages juxtaposed to those with long lines. So that's something you really hear quite distinctly in the “Duo for Viola and Harp.”
How did you happen to obtain the services of Douglas Roth as the harpist?
I just asked him! I didn't really know him. It's funny too, he studied at C.I.M. with Alice Chalifoux, very renowned harpist at the Cleveland Orchestra way back when and yes, it's funny it's like everything about this CD has a Cleveland connection! It worked out great! It was nice to work with him.
Following that you have “Suite for Viola Alone”, 1930?
Yes, this is a piece that Porter performed a lot by himself. Good thing about being able to play the instrument for the music that you write!
The next one, listed as number 11, is “Blues Lointains for Viola and Piano”?
Yes, actually I think this is the earliest one. Yes, this was written in '28. He was in Paris when he wrote this, and this piece actually was part of a program he gave at one of the really big sort of programs that they would do for composers. It was a really important concert that he had this piece on, and Nadia Boulanger was there with some other fairly well-known composers and she actually wrote him saying “I really enjoyed your music, I enjoyed listening to the concert, and the preparation of everything was really good.”
Now “lointains” I believe means “in the background” or “in the distance”?
Exactly, distance, yes. It's very subtle.
So the “Blues” may involve something generalized or vague or not specific?
Yes, I think it's meant to be subtle. I think a lot of his music, especially the slower, the more rhapsodic and singing music tends to be more quizzical. It's not like a definite kind of statement. I think there's a big searching quality in how he composes.
Well I can see how that would be attractive to the performer!
Yes, that means that the options never end!
The following work is the “Poem for Viola and Piano” that you mentioned earlier?
Yes, yes.
After that is the “Duo for Viola and Harpsichord”?
Right, and that's basically the same piece as the “Duo for Viola and Harp.” He wrote it for both harp and harpsichord, so on the recording we just decided to have both versions. And I think it's kind of interesting to hear both of them, especially if you went from one to the next, because the harp version I think is just so much more soothing and more laid back, but because of the nature of the harpsichord as an instrument, to me the sound changes quite a bit, to be more percussive and a bit more driving.
I see, and then you wrap it up with a “Duo for Violin and Viola”?
Yes.
From 1954 – that would have been one of the later works?
Exactly. Yes, most of the works do come later. Porter was a big educator. He at one point was the Dean of New England Conservatory, he worked at Vassar. He had a lot of these professorial and actually administrative positions in these music colleges.
Didn't he found a couple of music organizations for composers?
Yes, he did a lot with Yaddo. It wasn't until he went back to Yale, his last 19 years of his life basically, where he actually had time to do more writing. I think if he hadn't been a major educator and wasn't so interested in supporting other composers and musicians, he may have written more. So you kind of have this gap – you have the piece from 1928 and '30 and then you have like '48, the late Forties and Fifties.
If I can ask, will there be a CD announcement party?
Well, that would be wonderful, but I'm eight months pregnant, so the CD is being released less than a week before my due date.
The CD date, is it the 29th?
Yes, the 29th and this baby is due on October 3rd.
Is that your first child?
Yes, it is.
Congratulations!
Thank you!
You don't have to buy “Mozart for Genius Babies”; you've already provided the music yourself!
Yes, that's right! It has no option but to hear lots and lots of music!
I'm sure the influence will be very powerful. Is there anything else before we finish up?
I don't think so, I think we covered quite a bit! You asked lots of good questions.
I appreciate that! I think you were very prepared, in spite of your feeling that you hadn't looked at the material in a while.
Well, thank you!






Wednesday, September 16, 2009

"WNYC and PRI Announce New Co-Host for 'The Takeaway'": Celeste Headlee

PRI.org
September 16, 2009
PRESS RELEASE:
“Celeste Headlee to Join John Hockenberry on Morning Drive Radio News Program 'The Takeaway' Beginning Monday, September 21

(Cleveland, OH – September 16, 2009) – Public Radio International (PRI) and WNYC today announced that Celeste Headlee will join The Takeaway as co-host to John Hockenberry. The announcement was made at the annual Public Radio Program Directors (PRPD) Conference in Cleveland, Ohio. The Takeaway, a co-production of WNYC and PRI, in editorial collaboration with the BBC World Services, The New York Times, and WGBH Boston, is public radio’s first new morning drive time news program in almost 30 years. The program launched in April 2008 on seven public radio stations and now airs on 49 nationwide, and is available on XM and Sirius Satellite Radio and at www.TheTakeaway.org as well. Headlee’s first day on the air in her new role will be Monday, September 21, following several stints as guest co-host this past summer.

“Headlee brings to the role experience both on and off the air in local and national public radio productions. Most recently, she was the Midwest Correspondent for NPR’s Day to Day, covering everything from the auto industry to art, the presidential election to toilet smuggling. From 2001-2006, Headlee was a reporter at public radio station WDET Detroit. Previously, she was the local Morning Edition anchor at public radio station KNAU in Flagstaff, Arizona. Her news reports have aired on NPR, the Pacifica Network, National Native News and Public Radio International. She has also reported for the Detroit News. Her work has been honored with multiple awards from the Michigan Chapter of the Associated Press, the Michigan Association of Broadcasters, and the Metro Detroit Society of Professional Journalists. In addition to her journalistic background, Headlee is a classically trained soprano who has performed at the Michigan Opera Theater and various recitals around the country. She has contributed pieces to Chamber Music magazine, and is the granddaughter of “The Dean of African American composers,” William Grant Still.

“'Celeste is a seasoned and accomplished broadcaster, and a woman of many talents,' said Mark Effron, Executive Producer, The Takeaway. 'Her reporting portfolio shows both depth and breadth, and as a host, she brings a natural sense of curiosity and warmth to whatever she does. When Celeste and John first teamed up on the air, I knew we had found the right partner. She and John have the right on-air rapport to draw the audience in and make them comfortable and receptive to our brand of interactive journalism and conversation.' 'I am thrilled to be joining The Takeaway,' said Celeste Headlee. 'I'm excited to have the opportunity to work with John Hockenberry, and I love the show's lively format and commitment to a direct, immediate connection with the audience. I look forward to being part of the national conversation about issues that affect all of us, and to bringing my own experiences and background to the table.'"

Favorably reviewed for his Rachmaninoff 3, Terrence Wilson Has Naxos CD Coming September 29


["Michael Daugherty Metropolis Symphony"; Terrence Wilson, pianist; Nashville Symphony; Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Naxos (2009)]

Rashida Black, Founder/Executive Director of the Myrtle Hart Society, told us Winston-Salem Journal had reviewed a concert Terrence had given with the Wins
ton-Salem Symphony on Sunday. On Sept. 29, 2009 Naxos will release a Michael Daugherty CD on which Terrence Wilson is pianist. The works include “Deus ex Machina”, written for Terrence and commissioned by a consortium of U.S. Orchestras:

Winston-Salem Journal
Rach 3: Pianist Terrence Wilson performs it just right
By Ken Keuffel
JOURNAL REPORTER

Published: September 14, 2009
“The memorable opening bars of Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 3 are relatively easy to play. The rest of the concerto is mostly a bear, because of its length, the difficulty of its capricious material and chords that are so dense and wide that only the most special hands can conquer them. The pianist who takes on this piece better have stamina, concentration and skill. Terrence Wilson, who soloed in Rach 3 yesterday with the Winston-Salem Symphony at the Stevens Center, is one such pianist. He starred in a program called 'The Symphony Shines,' which also featured Christopher Theofanidis' Rainbow Body and the Suite from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake, in which several symphony players put in fine work as soloists. Robert Moody conducted, beginning his fifth season as the symphony's music director. Wilson did all the right things, responding to the work's athleticism, exposing its struggles and letting its sunnier moments shine. Moody led a well-coordinated performance in which the orchestra's players shined as well. They and Wilson helped remind us of why Rach 3's ending is among the most exciting and satisfying in the concerto repertoire.”

TerrenceWilsonpiano.com:
“In September 2009, Terrence Wilson's first commercial recording will be available when Naxos (touted as the world's leading classical record label) releases an album of orchestral/concerto music by famed American composer
Michael Daugherty. On the recording, Wilson is featured as piano soloist with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, conducted by its Music Director Designate, Giancarlo Guerrero (who begins officially as Music Director in September 2009) in the world-premiere recording of Daugherty's Deus ex Machina for Piano and Orchestra. Daugherty's Metropolis Symphony, which brought him to international stardom after a performance by the Baltimore Symphony and conductor David Zinman at Carnegie Hall in 1995, is also featured on the new Naxos disc (performed by the NSO/Guerrero). Both pieces on the album were recorded live in performance at Laura Turner Concert Hall at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, in Nashville, TN. The recording is being released as part of Naxos' American Classics series.”

Written especially for, and premiered by Wilson, Deus ex Machina was commissioned by a consortium of orchestras which included the Rochester Philharmonic, as well as the Charlotte, Nashville, New Jersey and Syracuse Symphonies. The world premiere was given with the Charlotte Symphony on March 16, 2007, with Giancarlo Guerrero conducting. Written in three movements, Deus ex Machina (Latin for "god of the machine") finds its inspiration in the world of trains.”






Eliesha Nelson's CD 'Quincy Porter: Complete Viola Works' Highlights Overlooked American Music

[Quincy Porter, Complete Viola Works; Eliesha Nelson, viola; John McLaughlin Williams, violin, piano, harpsichord; Northwest Sinfonia, John McLaughlin Williams, conductor; Dorian Recordings DSL 90911 (73:47) (2009)]

The African American violist Eliesha
Nelson is principal soloist on a forthcoming CD, “Quincy Porter, Complete Viola Works"; Dorian Recordings DSL 90911 (2009). We hope readers will find it as informative and fascinating as we did! This is Part I of the interview:

If I could start by asking where you were born?
Alaska! Actually I was born on Eielson Air Force Base, even though my birth certificate doesn't really say that. I kind of came quickly and my father was with the military and was stationed there.
You stayed there while you were growing up, right?
Yes, I was born and raised there, so I didn't really leave Alaska until I started my studies. I went to the Cleveland Institute of Music Young Artists Program when I was 16. That's basically when I left home. The town I grew up in was called North Pole. My parents soon after left Eielson for North Pole, which is right outside of Eielson Air Force Base. I usually don't tell people I'm from North Pole, Alaska – too many jokes!
You said at 16 you said you went to the Cleveland Institute of Music?
The Young Artists Program.
Was that equivalent to prep school or college?
Yes, it's more like prep school. They have an agreement – the Program's still going on – they have an agreement with four of the local Cleveland private schools. So I went to Hathaway Brown for the morning and early afternoon to get my core classes. Then I would go to C.I.M. for theory and Dalcroze and lessons for all the music.
When did you start studying music, Eliesha?
When I was six.
What was your first instrument?
Violin. I started violin at six, then piano came at eight, and viola came at – I don't know what, like 22 or 23. Little bit late!
You're probably at least the third violist who has told me of making a transition from the violin.
Yes, it's pretty common. I think most professionals tend to switch a little bit earlier than in their twenties, but you know, it's very common.
Let's resume your explanation of your education after you went to Hathaway Brown and Cleveland Institute of Music.
I stayed at C.I.M. for my Bachelor's. Then I had a Fulbright Grant and I studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London with György Pauk, wonderful Hungarian violinist, and on coming back to the United States I had a great year in London but didn't really think ahead. One year is rather short! I ended up eventually finding my way back to C.I.M., but on viola. I did two years, did a Master's in viola, and then ended up winning a job in the Florida Philharmonic, which unfortunately doesn't exist any more, but I was their Acting Principal Violist.
That must have been quite an accomplishment for someone starting out?
Yes, I guess. It really is quite difficult to win a job. I was in Florida for one year, and I won a position with Detroit and three weeks later won a position with Cleveland.
You didn't actually come to Detroit then?
No, I didn't.
When was it that you were in Florida?
Gee, that was 1999 to 2000, just one season.
Then you had the position in Cleveland. Is that the same position that you hold today?
Yes.
I think I read that you were pleased to be in one of the “Top Five” orchestras in the United States?
Yes.
It does seem to have a high profile.

Well absolutely, it's definitely considered one of the best orchestras worldwide and we do tour quite a bit to Europe and the typical things that a major orchestra does. I get to work with really wonderful musicians, people who really strive to make music at the highest level.
How did you become interested in the music of Quincy Porter?
When I first won the job in Cleveland, my friend whom I think you know, John McLaughlin Williams...
I certainly do!
Yes, he suggested that I make a recording and I thought, “I've been playing viola for three years, I just won this wonderful job and I don't know the repertoire, so that's a nice idea but not now.” Then finally I started doing more research with viola repertoire, finding lots of really wonderful pieces written for the instrument. So I thought, well for a recording I would really like to do something of one composer and preferably American because I just feel a lot has been overlooked in American music. So that was basically why I ended up with Porter.
Wasn't he also associated with Cleveland?
He was! He taught at the Institute of Music, in the Twenties I believe. He was a member of a quartet, and he taught on the faculty of C.I.M.
This recording is entirely of viola works. Are any of them premieres?
Some of them I believe are. A lot of them haven't been recorded in a while. For example, the Viola Concerto which is sort of the meat and potatoes of the recording, I think there's only been one previous recording and that was done in the Fifties. Some of the smaller pieces like “Poem” and “Blues Lointains,” I don't think those have been recorded.
The “Concerto for Viola and Orchestra,” I believe, is the first piece?
Yes.
It was composed in 1948?
I believe so, yes.
I have to say that you landed with a label, Dorian, which is distributed by the largest classical music label in the world!
Yes, I'm very pleased by that! I'm very grateful to be with Dorian. I'm really happy they were interested in the project, interested in the music, they really liked it and yes, I'm really happy that they decided to take the project.
So this is a four-movement concerto. Is it the only work on which the Northwest Sinfonia is involved?
Yes, yes it is.
Where is that?
They're a Seattle Orchestra. Yes John, who is a good friend of mine, as I asked him to sort of wear many hats for this CD.
If you could just remind us what those are?
Oh, sure. Actually he went to C.I.M. as well. We both went there at the same time. So I've known him for many years, and we both played violin at C.I.M. So of course when it came to doing the violin and viola duo I asked him to do that, and also he's an incredible pianist and I asked him to serve as pianist and harpsichordist as well on the recording.
On the front of the recording it looks like you're walking on water, or else maybe in water?
Yes, I'm in water!
I know that your husband's research sometime involves Lake Erie.
That's true, it does!
That's not Lake Erie you're in, is it?
It actually is!
Really?
Yes, I have a friend, Mathew Gregor, who does a lot of film work and I told him – this is about a year ago when I was towards the end of everything with the recording – and he asked “Oh, well what are you doing for the art work?” And I said “Well, I haven't quite gotten there yet.” And he suggested the woman who made the dress and did my hair and makeup and whatnot, and the photographer, Darryl Strong. So they sort of came up with this idea of my being in the water, and having a dress that was billowy enough so that, however the waves would catch the dress, you could sort of see that kind of movement.
Does that represent something, or is that associated with some mythical figure?
Not really, but it is kind of interesting that Quincy Porter did a lot of his composition around Squam Lake. I actually believe “On Golden Pond” was filmed there as well, which is kind of funny! But yes, that's a very loose connection!

Monday, September 14, 2009

'The Mask in the Mirror', Chamber Opera by British-Born Black Composer Richard Thompson, Sept. 19



[Photos, from the top: Richard Thompson, Alice Ruth Moore and Paul Laurence Dunbar]

John Malveaux has brought to our attention “The Mask in the Mirror”, a chamber opera by Richard Thompson, a Black pianist and composer born in Scotland. Its subject is the courtship and marriage of the celebrated African American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore. Byron Singleton plays the role of Paul Laurence Dunbar; Christine Moore performs the role of Alice Ruth Moore. Also performing are
Lucie Bradford, Kyle Gonyea, Yvonne Hatchett, Anthony Glaun, Sonya Headlam, Djoré Nance and Lucy Yates. 'The Mask in the Mirror' is also described as “a concert version of the opera.” The performance will take place at 8:00 pm on Saturday, September 19, 2009. The venue is St. Michael's Church, 225 W. 99th Street, New York, New York. Tickets are $20 for General Admission and $15 for Students and Seniors. For more information, contact maskinthemirror@yahoo.com.

Richard Thompson's Faculty Biography,
http://jazz.sdsu.edu/faculty/thompson
:
Richard Thompson is a performer and composer whose work resists a single stylistic category. His compositions combine European and African-American styles, so that the formal structures of European classical music develop ideas, which are essentially jazz in nature. Originally from Aberdeen, Scotland, Mr. Thompson made his debut at the Purcell Room, in the Royal Festival Hall in London.” “In 1999 Mr. Thompson was awarded the first Individual Artist Award for classical music composition from The Brooklyn Arts Council. The winning piece, Legend Of The Moors, is a musical depiction of the presence and influence of the Moors in Spain during the Middle Ages.” “A discussion of some of his compositions appears in the 1998 textbook entitled, 'African-American Music, An Introduction' by Dr. Earl Stewart, published by Simon and Schuster Macmillan/Prentice Hall International.”

The Manhattan Chamber Orchestra under the direction of Richard Auldon Clark, with Christine Moore, soprano, gave the world premiere performance in 2000 of Mr. Thompson’s song cycle The Shadow of Dawn at Merkin Hall, New York City. The inspiration for this work was the work of African American poet, Paul Laurence Dunbar.” This cycle is published by M.M.B. Music of St. Louis. Richard Thompson’s CD, Poetry Prelude, of original compositions, was released in March 2006, on the Visionary Records label, distributed by Albany Records.”






Sunday, September 13, 2009

Afro-French Soprano Magali Leger Sings Handel on WHPK-FM Tuesday, Sept. 15, Noon-3PM




[Magali Leger; "Motteti - Sonate De Chiesa"; George Frideric Handel, composer; Magali Leger, soprano; RosaSolis, ensemble; Musica Ficta (2009)]

Sergio Mims is an African American radio host of a classical music program on WHPK-FM 88.5 in Chicago and streamed on the Internet. He sends us this news of his program for Tuesday, September 15, 2009 from Noon to 3 PM:

HELLO! This is Sergio Mims at WHPK-FM in Chicago and I thought that you and your readers would be interested to know that on my upcoming classical music show this Tuesday (From Noon to 3PM Central Standard Time - 88.5-FM Chicago and live streamed online at http://www.whpk.org) I will be playing selections from the new Musica Ficta CD of Handel's motets and sonatas with the Afro-French soprano Magali Leger and the period music ensemble RosaSolis (along with Hans Werner Henze's Symphony No.7 and Bruckner's Symphony No. 4). Sergio






Applicants Sought For Longfellow Chorus Master Class by Angela M. Brown & Robert Honeysucker


[Angela M. Brown. Photo by Roni Ely]


Longfellow Chorus Seeks Student Participants for Vocal Master Class Featuring Angela M. Brown and Robert Honeysucker
MaineBusiness.MaineToday.com

Released 9/8/09
Longfellow Chorus, Inc., of Portland, Maine, seeks vocal student workshop applicants for participation in a vocal master class to be given by Metropolitan Opera soprano Angela M. Brown and baritone Robert Honeysucker at 4:30 PM, February 26, 2010, in The First Parish in Portland, 425 Congress Street.

Angela M. Brown is best known as "the Aida of the Metropolitan Opera." A soloist with a powerful command of drama, register and dynamic, her rise from Baptist gospel singer to international opera sensation is an extraordinary one. Her vocal workshops, which inspire diversity among traditional opera audiences — especially, "Opera from a Sistah's Point of View" — are dynamic, humorous, engaging and insightful. Robert Honeysucker, long one of America's best-known African-American baritones, celebrated for his "brilliant opera, concert and recital performances," began his vocal studies in the early sixties as a student at Tougaloo College in Mississippi. Now, a distinguished faculty member at New England Conservatory, he offers nuanced instruction in standard opera classics and, in particular, champions the underperformed music of African-American composers.

These two artists will tandem teach select participants during this student vocal master class, which will be presented before a public audience. Additionally, Ms. Brown and Mr. Honeysucker will share with students and audience alike personal reflections about their careers.

Participation is open tuition free to any Maine high school or college student of voice based on audition and teacher recommendation. Interested students must send an audio sample of a major aria or solo song, as well as a written letter of recommendation from a qualified vocal instructor or coach, to: Charles Kaufmann, Director, The Longfellow Chorus, Inc., PO Box 5133, Portland, ME 04101, no later than December 31, 2009. This material may also be sent via email to director@longfellowchorus.com. Alternatively, students may audition in person if they provide their own piano accompanist. For this option, call 207-232-8920 to schedule an audition time.

The Angela M. Brown and Robert Honeysucker Vocal Master Class will be the kickoff event of The Longfellow Chorus Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 203rd Birthday Choral Concerts, February 26-27-28, 2010.

Among the highlights of this, the fourth annual Longfellow birthday event, will be two rare performances of "The Death of Minnehaha," a cantata based on Longfellow's "Song of Hiawatha," by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912), featuring Ms. Brown and Mr. Honeysucker as soloists, The Longfellow Chorus and The Longfellow Chorus Orchestra. Additionally, winning entries in the cantata, choral and solo song categories of the 2010 Longfellow Chorus International Composers Competition will be presented. Please visit http://www.longfellowchorus.com for more information. [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is profiled at AfriClassical.com]





Saturday, September 12, 2009

Jacob's Jazz Blog: 'James P. Johnson Rent Party at Smalls in NY' October 4, 2009


[Victory Stride: The Symphonic Music of James P. Johnson; The Concordia Orchestra; Marin Alsop, Conductor; Music Masters 67140 (1994)]

Jacob's Jazz Blog
By Jacob Teichroew,
About.com Guide to Jazz
James P. Johnson, the father of the Harlem school of stride piano, is buried in an unmarked grave in Maspeth, Queens. On October 4th, 2009, Smalls Jazz Club in New York's Greenwich Village will host a 'rent party' to raise money for a monument to the pianist. The event runs from 1:00 to 9:00 pm, and will feature an exhibit from the James P. Johnson archive at the Rutgers Institute for Jazz Studies, a symposium by Johnson scholar Scott Brown, and solo piano performances by Dick Hyman, Ethan Iverson, Ted Rosenthal, Terry Waldo, Mike Lipskin, Ehud Asherie, Conal Fowlkes, Spike Wilner, and Aaron Diehl.

For more information go to http://www.jamespjohnson.org [James P. Johnson (1894-1955) was an African American composer and pianist of jazz and classical music who is profiled at AfriClassical.com. Prof. Dominique-René de Lerma wrote the liner notes for the CD "Got the Saint-Louis Blues: Classical Music in the Jazz Age", Clarion CLR907 (2004), which includes a performance of Johnson's "Yamekraw: A Negro Rhapsody" (15:49) by pianist Paul Shaw and the VocalEssence Ensemble conducted by Philip Brunelle. Dr. De Lerma relates that Johnson's music studies with Bruto Giannini were followed by piano lessons from Eubie Blake. He continues: “Toward the end of the 1920s, Johnson began devoting time to the study of orchestration, counterpoint, and harmony.”]





Thursday, September 10, 2009

Los Angeles Times: 'Hollywood Bowl's Thomas Wilkins a classical case of beating the odds'

[Conductor Thomas Wilkins (Ken Hively, Los Angeles Times / June 20, 2008)]

LATimes.com
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Classical Music
CLASSICAL MUSIC
Hollywood Bowl's Thomas Wilkins a classical case of beating the odds
He's one of the few African Americans leading major orchestras.
By Greg Braxton
September 9, 2009
When conductor Thomas Wilkins takes his place at the podium in front of a major orchestra, he knows what he
won't be doing. 'I used to wave my arms a lot when I was starting out my conducting career,' said Wilkins, principal guest conductor of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. 'It was a very physical thing for me. But ultimately I learned that less is more. There are physical benefits of not over-conducting.' He added, 'It's about trusting the orchestra, which allows me to put more focus on the essence of the music, the shape of the sound. The better the orchestra, the less need for them to be timed.'

“Wilkins, who will guide the orchestra Friday through Sunday in the Bowl's fireworks finale, 'Blame It on Rio,' is also aware that no matter what he does with his arms, he instantly attracts attention -- not only of musicians, but of audiences -- in another, more subtle way: He is one of the few African American conductors leading major orchestras. As music director of the Omaha Symphony and resident conductor of the Detroit Symphony, Wilkins is gaining recognition as the ranks of major conductors grow more culturally diverse.”

“Nonetheless, Wilkins and others bemoan the fact that the number of professional African American conductors is still small. 'There certainly are not a lot at the upper lever professionally,' Wilkins said. 'At my level, there's probably less than 10 in the country.' Among the most prominent African American maestros are James DePreist, director of conducting and orchestral studies at the Juilliard School and laureate music director of the Oregon Symphony; Paul Freeman, founding music director of the Chicago Sinfonietta; and Michael Morgan, music director of Oakland East Bay Symphony. Kay George Roberts, founder and music director of the New England Orchestra in Lowell, Mass., is one of the few female African American conductors.” [Full Post] [Paul Freeman and James DePreist are profiled at AfriClassical.com]