the 2016-17 brochure - Chamber Music Society of
Transcription
the 2016-17 brochure - Chamber Music Society of
PAID 2016-2017 Foy Concert Hall 2016-2017 Season 610-435-7611 www.cmsob.org [email protected] Return service requested Priscilla Payne Hurd Campus for Music and Art Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 PO Box 4336 Bethlehem, PA 18018-0336 NON-PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE Lehigh Valley, PA Permit No. 129 Season Cathedral Church of the Nativity 321 Wyandotte Street Bethlehem, PA 18015 Program information and single ticket sales at www.cmsob.org Trio Solisti Friday, September 16, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall Aizuri Quartet Friday, October 14, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall Modigliani Quartet Friday, November 18, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Cathedral Church of the Nativity Signum Quartet Friday, February 10, 2017, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall Euclid Quartet Sunday, April 2, 2017, at 3:00 p.m. Foy Concert Hall Borealis Wind Quintet Sunday, April 30, 2017, at 3:00 p.m.. Cathedral Church of the Nativity Claremont Trio with Melissa Reardon, viola Sunday, May 21, 2017, at 3:00 p.m. Foy Concert Hall Please note: all programs throughout the Season are subject to change. The mission of the Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem is to further appreciation of chamber music by presenting concerts to the greater Lehigh Valley community featuring world-class ensembles. Donations Season 2016-2017 We are extremely appreciative of the generous donations we receive from our many friends each year. Your donations are vital to the continued success of the Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem. All donations are tax deductible. Please check to see if your employer has a matching gift program. These donations are acknowledged in our concert program in these gift denominations: About the concerts • Rubato. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,000 and above Season. We are privileged to present a series of seven • Fortissimo . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,000 - $4,999 The Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem invites you to experience the performances of world-class ensembles as it celebrates its 65th anniversary with the 2016-2017 concerts, which include the highly anticipated return of some audience favorites and the warm welcome of • Crescendo . . . . . . . . . . . . . $500 - $999 others for their first introduction to our audience. • Allegro. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $250 - $499 Four Friday evening concerts - three at Foy Concert Hall • Espressivo . . . . . . . . . . . . . $50 - $249 • Tranquillo . . . . . . . . . . . . . up to $49 and one at Cathedral Church of the Nativity - will begin at 7:30 p.m. Three Sunday afternoon concerts - two at Foy Concert Hall and one at Cathedral Church of the Nativity - will begin at 3:00 p.m. Contact You can reach the Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem at: 610-435-7611 [email protected] www.cmsob.org Concertgoers can enjoy significant savings by purchasing a full subscription for 7 concerts or packages of 4, 5 or 6 tickets. All tickets are flexible and can be used at any concert. You might also consider purchasing a subscription package as a gift for someone special. Single tickets can be purchased at the door or online. The Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem receives state arts funding support through a grant from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency funded by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency. We invite you to join us for our traditional post-concert receptions, where you can enjoy refreshments as you chat with the artists and fellow concertgoers. Program information and single tickets sales at www.cmsob.org Subscription Subscribe and SAVE! We offer several cost-saving subscription options listed in the table below. In addition, concertgoers aged 25 and younger will enjoy complimentary admission to all of our concerts. Subscription tickets can be used at any concert during the season. Your subscription tickets will be available at the ticket desk at Foy Concert Hall from 6:30 p.m. until 7:20 p.m. before the first concert on September 16, 2016. If you are unable to attend this concert, your tickets will be mailed to you before October 1. Single tickets purchased online or at the door are $27. Trio Solisti Friday, September 16, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall, Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 While the seamlessly perfect ensemble music-making of the Trio Solisti has caused critics to applaud the group’s “signature intensity” (The New Yorker) and compare it favorably to the Beaux Arts Trio (The Wall Street Journal), the exciting diversity of the individuals who compose the trio—three amazing and distinct soloists, as the name insists—may be the spice that consistently piques the passions of their audiences. Schooled at the finest American institutions— Curtis, Juilliard, Yale—these musicians bring to their collaboration interests and skills as different as the instruments they play. Violinist Maria Bachmann is the Artistic Director of the Telluride Musicfest in Colorado, where the trio has performed annually since founding that chamber music festival a decade and a half ago. Cellist Alexis Pia Gerlach makes music for dancers, performing directly on stage with the Paul Taylor Dance Company, for example, and New York City Ballet principal dancer Damian Woetzel. Pianist Adam Neiman is also a successful composer, who is especially intrigued with composing for television and film. He scored the PBS documentary “Forgiveness: A Time to Love and a Time to Hate” in 2010. Together since 2001, these three individuals beautifully blend their talents in both fresh realizations of works from the traditional chamber repertoire and cutting-edge commissions like a piano trio by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Jennifer Higdon, projected for 2017. In fall 2015, the Trio Solisti extended their collaborative mojo to include “and friends,” guest artists who joined them at Carnegie Hall for a series presenting Brahms’ complete piano chamber music. The Bethlehem audience will be treated to a broad range of periods and styles by this practiced collective of three exceptional soloists. PROGRAM Beethoven Turina Liebermann Arensky Piano Trio No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3 Piano Trio No. 2 in B Minor, Op. 76 Piano Trio No. 3 Op. 122 (2012) (Trio Solisti commission) Piano Trio No. 1 in D Minor, Op. 32 Please print clearly Name Street Address City, State and Zip Code Daytime phone Evening phone Email address FOR DONORS: Your name as it should appear in the Program: SUBSCRIPTION OPTIONS PRICE HOW MANY COST Seven-ticket package: (save $29) $160 x =$ Six-ticket package: (save $22) $140 x =$ Five-ticket package: (save $15) $120 x =$ Four-ticket package: (save $8) $100 x =$ Please add my tax-deductible donation $ TOTAL AMOUNT $ Please complete this form and mail with your check made payable to: Chamber Music Society of Bethlehem (CMSOB) P.O. Box 4336, Bethlehem, PA 18018-0336 Directions Cathedral Church of the Nativity 321 Wyandotte Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015 The Cathedral is located on Wyandotte Street (Route 378) just south of the Hill-to-Hill Bridge in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. FROM ALLENTOWN and points west take Route 22 East to Route 378 South. Follow 378 South across the Hill-to-Hill Bridge through the 2nd traffic light. The Cathedral is located on the left. FROM EASTON and points east take Route 22 West to Route 378 South. Follow 378 South across the Hill-to-Hill Bridge through the 2nd traffic light. The Cathedral is located on the left. FROM QUAKERTOWN take Route 309 North to Route 378 North. Follow 378 North into Bethlehem. At the bottom of the Wyandotte Street hill stay on Route 378 North through the next traffic light. The Cathedral is located on the right. FROM HELLERTOWN take Route 412 into Bethlehem. Bear right onto Third Street and continue to the intersection with Wyandotte Street (Route 378). The Cathedral is located on the left. FROM PHILADELPHIA take the Northeast Extension of the PA Turnpike to the exit for Allentown/Route 22 East and follow the directions from Allentown. PARKING: The Cathedral’s upper lot is accessed from Wyandotte Street. The lower lot (with elevator access to the Cathedral) is accessed from Third Street. On-street metered parking is available on streets surrounding the Cathedral— Third Street, Fourth Street, and the 400 block of Wyandotte Street. An off-street metered lot is next to Lehigh Pizza at the corner of Third and New Streets. Aizuri Quartet Friday, October 14, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall, Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 Philadelphia-based, world-traveled, and cosmically-attuned, the Aizuri Quartet has established an impressive reputation andÊ pursued unexpected projects in the short time since its 2012 inception. String Quartet-in-Residence at the Curtis Institute and an active participant in Curtis-on-Tour, with strong ties toÊ the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia and the PhiladelphiaÊ Chamber Music Society, the ensemble has brought its art toÊ world audiences and international students of music not only in person but virtually—through “The World of the StringÊ Quartet,” a free seven-hour Curtis-Coursera online courseÊ hosted by Arnold Steinhardt of the fabled Guarneri Quartet.Ê Since the group is named for a Japanese method of woodblockÊ printing, mostly in blue, it is not surprising that their partnershipsÊ and appearances often feature a marriage of the visual and musical arts. As the 2015 ensemble-in-residence at the BarnesÊ Foundation, the musicians premiered or presented three worksÊ commissioned for the Aizuri at the openings of four special exhibitions of art and artists throughout the year. Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, New York’s Morgan LibraryÊ and Museum, and Philadelphia’s Museum of Art are also includedÊ among their concert venues—as is Philly’s World Café Live,Ê where the Aizuri added poetry to its artistic fusion, collaboratingÊ with award-winning poet Denice Frohman and composer Andrew Lipke in premiering two more specially commissionedÊ works. About music education, the group confesses to being “passionate.” This mission produced a series of “Curiosity Concerts,” for example, at Connecticut’s Byram Shubert Library,Ê where musicians and students chatted happily together aboutÊ friendship in Mozart’s K. 575, trains in Janacek’s “Kreutzer,”Ê and watery shapes and forms in Debussy’s String Quartet. For further information, see www.nativitycathedral.org. PROGRAM Mozart String Quartet No. 14 in G Major, K 387 Paul Wiancko Lift (2016) (Aizuri commission) Mendelssohn String Quartet No. 2 in A Minor, Op. 13 378 Directions Foy Concert Hall Priscilla Payne Hurd Campus for Music and Art Moravian College South Campus at Main and Church Streets, Bethlehem PA, 18018 FROM THE NORTH Follow Route 378 South to the Center City Exit (#3). Turn left onto Third Avenue; then turn left onto West Broad Street. Turn right onto Main Street and continue south, through the light beyond the Hotel Bethlehem. Foy Concert Hall will be on your left. Modigliani Quartet Friday, November 18, 2016, at 7:30 p.m. Cathedral Church of the Nativity Bethlehem, PA 18015 Dumas’ three musketeers plus d’Artagnan have nothing onÊ the four Frenchmen of the Modigliani Quartet for égalité andÊ fraternité, and local concertgoers who were thrilled by theirÊ CMSOB performance three years ago are at liberté to relishÊ their smooth sound and continental élan on this return visit toÊ Bethlehem. Fresh listeners are also welcome—and may expectÊ to become instant fans. Together since schooldays (thus, fraternité), they formed the ensemble in 2003 and immediately impressed critics with their “balance” (there’s theÊ égalité), which has only seasoned with the passage of time.Ê Asked in a 2015 interview with LibérationÊhow the quartetÊ had aged in a dozen years, they replied that, “We know ourselves better; we are in accord with our choices. Our decisions are collegial.” One of those decisions was to take onÊ the artistic direction of the revived summer festival RencontresÊ Musicales d’Evian, once famously helmed by Mstislav Rostropovich, and they are justly proud of the festival’s newÊ success. Recording for Mirare for eight of the ensemble’s thirteen years together, the Modigliani has garnered numerousÊ accolades for its CDs, the most recent of which (2015) includesÊ Dvor?k’s “American” string quartet, which the Bethlehem audience will hear. About the CD, the Guardian reviewerÊ wrote: “Fast passages . . . are full of spontaneity and buoyancy,Ê with a great conversational bravura between the players plus an added refinement . . . . The sound is mainly light and shiny . . . the litheness is invigorating, and there’s a stripped-back beauty in the slow movements that stopped me in my tracks.” PROGRAM Mozart String Quartet No. 21 in D Major, K. 575 Schumann String Quartet No. 3 in A Major, Op. 41 Dvorák String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96 “American” FROM THE SOUTH Follow Route 378 North to the Main Street Exit, which is just north of the Lehigh River. At the end of the bridge, turn right onto Main Street. Foy Concert Hall and parking lot will be on your left. PARKING Lighted parking lots are adjacent to the Foy Concert Hall and under the Hillto-Hill Bridge. City parking garages are located at Walnut Street and North Street. FOY CONCERT HALL Signum Quartet Friday, February 10, 2017, at 7:30 p.m. Foy Concert Hall, Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 Claremont Trio with Melissa Reardon, viola Sunday, May 21, 2017, at 3:00 p.m. Foy Concert Hall, Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 Like the Euclid Quartet, the Claremont Trio is named for a street: New York City’s Claremont Avenue, near where all three musicians once studied and now live with their families. Fortunately, the trio is also familiar with Interstate Highway 78 and no stranger to Lehigh Valley audiences. The Claremonts are huge CMSOB series favorites, and new concertgoers will soon fall under their charm as the trio returns with special guest artist, violist Melissa Reardon. Founded in 1999, the ensemble soon established itself as “one of America’s finest young chamber groups” (Strad Magazine). The Boston Globe has described a Claremont concert as playing “with passion and precision” and making “quieter passages . . . as interesting as the climaxes.” The group’s half-dozen recordings have been consistently and highly praised. First winner of the KalichsteinLaredo-Robinson International Trio Award, the Claremont is the only piano trio to receive the Young Concert Artists International Auditions Award. The trio (twin sisters Emily and Julia Bruskin and Andrea Lam) extends its repertoire through frequent collaborations with individual artists (as at this season’s Bethlehem concert), as well as with large orchestras (especially for its frequent performances and recent recording of Beethoven’s “Triple” Concerto). The Claremonts are also active in the commissioning of new works and will perform one of them at the Bethlehem concert. Melissa Reardon, who joins the Claremont Trio for a Mozart quartet, is currently a sort of classical idol, as evidenced by her touring with Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble and Musicians from Marlboro. She has earned her buzz, however, with an impressive body of work. Violist for the Grammy-nominated Enso String Quartet, she is the recipient of plenty of rave reviews and competitive awards solo. PROGRAM Mozart Sean Shepherd Dvorák Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, K. 493 Trio (2012) ( Claremont Trio commission) Piano Trio in F Minor, Op. 65 The Signum Quartet dates from 1994, when its founders—its current violinist and cellist—formed the ensemble as teenagers, both already a decade into the mastery of their instruments. Three members are German; the violist is from South Africa. Each boasts impressive individual credentials of musical education, competition, and collaboration. Together they have performed widely across Europe, less so in the United States until recently. An American foray in 2013 took them to Boston and Santa Fe. In 2015 and 2016, they came to New York City and, most interestingly, performed in Princeton, where they launched the #quartweet project with the Princeton Symphony Orchestra in October 2015. On its website, Signum invites “quartweeters”—composers of any age, ability, or level of renown—to tweet 140-note (or less) quartets to be considered for performance. The #quartweets are electronically broadcast on Periscope and YouTube and regularly performed at concerts (including the Bethlehem engagement) by the ensemble. As might be expected of such innovators, the Signum Quartet works closely with contemporary composers of even longer compositions, yet the traditional repertoire is hardly neglected, as the Bethlehem program and the group’s discography indicate. The Strad reviewer of Signum’s latest recording—alla czeca— describes the playing as “both clean in its clarity of ensemble and interpretatively full of freshness and life, and its ebullience of spirit in the exhilarating finale is infectious.” Winner of the German Music Competition, Premio Paolo Borciani, and London International String Quartet Competition, the Signum Quartet received the International Classical Music Awards 2014 “Best Chamber Music Recording” for its 2013 release No. 3. PROGRAM Mozart Mozart Adagio and Fugue in E Major K. 405/3 after J.S. Bach BWV 878 String Quartet No. 17 in B-flat Major, K. 458 “The Hunt” #quartweets Jörg Widmann String Quartet No. 3 “Jagdquartett (Hunt Quartet)” (2003) Beethoven String Quartet No. 9 in C Major, Op. 59 No. 3 Borealis Wind Quintet Sunday, April 30, 2017, at 3:00 p.m. Cathedral Church of the Nativity Bethlehem, PA 18015 Euclid Quartet Sunday, April 2, 2017, at 3:00 p.m. Foy Concert Hall, Moravian College Bethlehem, PA 18018 The Euclid Quartet is named for Cleveland’s famed Euclid Avenue, not for the 4th-century BCE Greek mathematician, although the translation of the Greek name—“renowned, glorious”—certainly applies. Founded in 1998 by four graduate students at Kent State University in Ohio and in residence at Indiana University South Bend since 2007, the ensemble has regularly garnered critical accolades, won international competitions, and earned “American Masterpieces” grant support from the National Endowment for the Arts for educational work with young audiences. Reviewers tend to use terms like “fierce,” “ferocity,” “fearless,” and “fervent” to describe the group’s playing, but they also notice a lovely, “feathery” quality (Washington Post) and a “romantic élan” (Palm Beach Daily News). Despite its solid home base in America’s heartland, the quartet’s current membership hails from four corners of the world: violinists Cooper and Murphy, founding members of the Euclid, from the United Kingdom and Unites States, respectively; violist Vargas from Venezuela; and cellist Li from China. Local audience members familiar with the Allentown Symphony Orchestra’s “El Sistema Lehigh Valley” program for underserved and special needs youth will be interested to know that Vargas is a proud product of the original “El Sistema” in Venezuela. He joined the Euclid Quartet in 2001, and Li came aboard in 2009. The four musicians have become exquisitely attuned to each other during their years performing and recording together. Bartók’s complete cycle of six string quartets has been recorded by the group, as have four of Hugo Kauder’s nineteen string quartets, lesser known than the Bartók but as enthusiastically received by listeners of the Euclid’s recordings. The Bethlehem audience will be treated to a live performance by the ensemble of Bartók’s first. PROGRAM Bartók Schubert String Quartet No. 1 in A Minor, Op. 7 String Quartet No. 14 in D Minor, D. 810 “Death and the Maiden” The Borealis Wind Quintet returns to the CMSOB concert series after fifteen years, and we are excited about welcoming them back and also introducing this widely known ensemble to new Lehigh Valley listeners. Maybe it is the Moravian tradition of trombone choirs that provides local audiences with a practiced ear for the wind repertoire and a deep appreciation for its purveyors. This group is one of the best. Although the quintet aptly compares itself to the aurora borealis in deed as well as name, describing its own musical output as “a brilliant array of sparkling color and magic” (with a Grammy nomination to support the boast), its name, of course, derives from Boreas, the name the Greeks bestowed on the god of the cold north wind. This wind ensemble does, indeed, blow in from our north—New York and New England—though tours since its 1976 founding have circled the nation many times. Classical music lovers with a, perhaps, secret yen for popular musicals will note an even more specific northern base: Broadway. Three of the Borealis musicians have played in the pits of The Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables, or Beauty and the Beast. The New York Times has described the group as “polished,” “elegant,” and “scintillating”; The Philadelphia Inquirer as “demonstrat[ing] the sort of rapport that characterizes the very best chamber playing”; and The Washington Post as “sensitive,” “sophisticated,” and “cosmopolitan.” After 40 years of experience in pleasing audiences, the quintet promises ours a thoughtful and moving program, friendly commentary, and a few surprises. PROGRAM Charles Lefebvre Eric Ewazen Nino Rota Samuel Barber Carl Nielsen Suite, Op. 57 Roaring Fork Quintet Petite Offrande Musicale Summer Music, Op. 31 Wind Quintet, Op. 43