With the Harman Center for the Arts now principal venue, the Post-Classical Ensemble has its 2009-2010 season planned.
This season includes "Interpreting Liszt," a two-day Post-Classical Ensemble Festival held in collaboration with Georgetown University to explore new perspectives on Romantic art and the Romantic artistic personality. The performances are part of “Interpreting Liszt,” a conference including film, historic recordings, and much more.
The season also includes performances in Chicago for "Beyond Flamenco: Finding Spain in Music," a Post-Classical Productions festival exploring the search for Spanish identity through music, presented by the University of Chicago and sponsored by the Sociedad Estatal de Conmemoraciones Culturales of the Spanish Ministry of Culture with additional support from WFMT radio.
ENCOUNTERS: DAVID TAYLOR
“Left every brass player in the packed house shaking his head in disbelief” – The Chicago Tribune about David Taylor
Thursday, Oct. 1, 2009, 7:30pm
The Harman Center for the Arts, Sidney Harman Hall
610 F Street NW
Washington, DC
www.harmancenter.org
David Taylor, bass trombone
William Sharp, baritone
Angel Gil-Ordóñez, conductor
Are you in the mood for something really edgy? Post-Classical Ensemble showcases one of the world’s great instrumentalists: the bass trombonist DAVID TAYLOR, whose flamboyant virtuosity and eruptive temperament astonishingly transfigure music of every stripe. With P-CE, Taylor performs a medley of harrowing late Schubert songs, plus a pair of jazzy and rambunctious Daniel Schnyder scores: subZERO Concerto for Bass Trombone and Orchestra (DC premiere) and RoTor (world premiere).
Schubert/Mahler: Death and the Maiden (string orchestra)
Schubert: Doppelgänger and other late songs
Stravinsky: Suite from A Soldier’s Tale
Daniel Schnyder: Works for bass trombone and orchestra
Post-concert discussion with the participation of composer Daniel Schnyder
INTERPRETING LISZT
A Post-Classical Ensemble Festival in collaboration with Georgetown University, exploring new perspectives on Romantic art and the Romantic artistic personality.
Evening events at Georgetown University, Gaston Hall (Healy Building)
Liszt Conference at McNair Hall
37th and O Streets NW. (Parking available on campus through Prospect St. and Canal Rd.)
http://performingarts.georgetown.edu/DAVIS/
Friday, Feb. 12, 7:30 pm: LISZT AND ITALY, an illustrated piano concert including poetry by Petrarch and Dante, visual art by Raphael and Michelangeli, Mykola Suk’s harrowing interpretation of Liszt’s Dante Sonata, and Kumaran Arul’s Lisztian improvisation on St. Francis Walking on the Water.
Saturday, Feb. 13, 7:30 pm: ANGELS AND DEVILS
(Illustrated pre-concert on Totentanz by Anna Celenza at 6:30 pm)
Mykola Suk, piano
Georgetown University Chamber Singers; Frederick Binkholder, director
Angel Gil-Ordóñez, conductor
Liszt: Hymne de l'enfant a son reveil and Inno a Maria Vergine, for chorus
Liszt: Piano Sonata in B minor
Liszt: Pastorale from Christus
Liszt: Totentanz for piano and orchestra
Feb. 12, 1:15 to 5 pm, and Feb. 13, 10 am to 4:30 pm: “INTERPRETING LISZT” CONFERENCE, including film, historic recordings, speakers Anna Celenza, Joseph Horowitz, and Thomas Mastroianni, and pianists Mykola Suk, George Barth, and Kumaran Arul. Free admission. For information: http://performingarts.georgetown.edu
“An astonishing blend of muscular power, poetry and utter control – one of the more formidable talents to have appeared in this country in years”– The American Record Guide on Mykola Suk.
THE MAGISTRATE AND THE MILLER’S WIFE
Friday, April 23, 2010, 7:30 pm
The Harman Center for the Arts, Sidney Harman Hall
610 F Street NW, Washington, DC
www.harmancenter.org
(Pre-concert film presentation on “Falla and flamenco” at 6:30 pm)
Pedro Carbone, piano
Angel Gil-Ordonez, conductor
Ramon Oller, choreographer
Dancers from the Spanish National Dance Company
Falla: Fantasia Baetica (solo piano)
Falla: Nights in the Gardens of Spain (piano and orchestra)
Falla: The Magistrate and the Miller’s Wife (dance/pantomime; DC stage premiere)
Manuel de Falla, Spain’s most famous composer, used flamenco to revitalize Spanish music after a century of somnolence. All the music on our program is infused with the haunting cante jondo of flamenco song, and the dramatic exuberance of flamenco dance. The Magistrate and the Miller’s Wife (El Corregidor y la Molinera), a boisterous farce, is an early version of Falla’s best-loved score, The Three-Cornered Hat. This new production, also to be conducted by Angel Gil-Ordonez at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, is Spain’s major American cultural export in celebration of its Spring 2010 Presidency of the European Union.
Benefit Gala
May 20010
A gala benefit for Post-Classical Ensemble will be held in May 2010. Details will be available before the end of the year.
No comments:
Post a Comment