Author Archives: Lindsay Koob

About Supergeek – aka Lindsay Koob: His was a fantasy-ridden army-brat upbringing, featuring culture-soaked interludes (with music lessons) in places like Vienna. Cap that with a Citadel education, and the resulting clash of the military and the musical can seem downright schizoid. But the only thing he gets militant about any more is music. It’s his whole life: the day job at Millennium Music supports busy sidelines as a freelance musician and critic. And it’s times like Spoleto that justify Supergeek’s existence … may his musings and blogservations here bear passionate and wondering witness to the musical miracles that come to Chucktown for a few fleeting weeks every year – proof positive that some of the best eargasms can still happen at home.

SFO Stars get their Chance to Shine (plus More from Ingram Marshall)

John Kennedy — acclaimed conductor, composer and host of Music in Time — took the podium at Saturday’s Intermezzo III, offering two choice plums by 20th-Century English master Ralph Vaughan Williams and a neat number from contemporary wizard Ingram Marshall: a composer I’d heard from just the day before in MIT (just below).
I can’t [...]

Swimming in Water Music: Soundscapes from Music In Time

I use the word “soundscapes” – well, mostly because series host John Kennedy used it while introducing program IV of the ever-adventurous Music in Time series yesterday; but also because some of this material struck me as being more soundscapes than music. The term applied in particular to the opening work, Six Japanese Gardens, by [...]

Choicest Chamber Yet

My ‘puter woes continue in the wake of my recent laptop loss (by theft): I’m reduced to commandeering my roommate’s old dinosaur of a PC to work on from home — and all it’s got is wordpad. Forgive me if I omit some of those fancy accent marks and assorted squiggles that go with exotic [...]

Another Classy Intermezzo

Here’s guest blogger Sam Sfirri’s first post this year — you may recall his contributions to Eargasms last festival. He’s a gifted jazz pianist and composition major at the college.
Just walking into St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church stirred up many wonderful memories of last Spoleto season. With the familiar excitement and beautiful ghost-sounds still resonating [...]

The Imani Winds – By Themselves

Lucky Lindsay: I got to hear the terrific Imani Winds – not just once, but twice. Thursday’s third Music in Time program was devoted entirely to them – and I was part of their absolutely enchanted Simmons Recital Hall audience. It was quite a different experience, compared to their big gig at the Gaillard [...]

Chamber Champs Do it Again

Forgive me if I don’t include as many of my usual artist links for awhile. I’m in the throes of a temporary crisis: my laptop was stolen Thursday, and my only backup for now is an old dinosaur of a PC at home that runs with all the speed of an arthritic turtle – and [...]

Hear ‘Em While You Can – and a Fresh Eargasm Alert

If you haven’t heard vivacious violist Hsin-yun Huang or super-tenor Paul Groves yet, you’ve got one more chance: tomorrow’s 11:00 p.m. concert will be the last outing for Program IV – the final one featuring these fab festival newcomers. I had the unqualified joy of catching it this morning.
After years of bugging Dr. Wadsworth [...]

More Cutting-Edge Marvels from Music in Time

Tuesday’s second Music in Time installment brought us three very different and appealing creations from cutting-edge composers of right NOW. All three items were scored entirely for strings – save for the winsome addition of a lone clarinet in the second number.
Series host (and justly famed composer) John Kennedy kicked things off with Baghdad [...]

A Fresh Dose of Chamber Charm

This afternoon’s first go at our cherished chamber series’ third program sported the usual assortment of musical “cherries” – and the usual happy crowd of chamber music nuts was there to pick them. All administrative details have –hallelujah – been attended to: the program board was where everybody could see it, and Dr. Wadsworth was [...]

Quickie Eargasm Alert

I almost forgot to tell you about another of the upcoming chamber series works that Dr. Wadsworth leaked to me. Show up for tomorrow afternoon’s program III at 1:00, and you’ll hear (among other things) Franz Schubert’s Auf dem Strom , a lovely song for voice, horn and piano. Tenor Paul Groves will do [...]

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