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A Walk on Chamber Music’s Wild Side
June 4, 2008 – 3:01 pm
Don’t get me wrong: Tuesday’s generous Chamber VIII concert had lots of terrific traditional music going for it – but, between plums by Vivaldi and Schumann came a piece from Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer that temporarily turned my musical world upside down.
But first came a well-known item from the so-called “red priest” of [...]
Oh, The Waves!
June 3, 2008 – 11:56 pm
It was back to the Piccolo Spotlight Concert Series for me this evening, with a big bonus in the form of attending this concert with my family! The welcoming environs of New Tabernacle Fourth Baptist Church proved a wonderful site for hearing the full Piccolo Spoleto Conservatory Orchestra, again under the able baton of Maestro [...]
St. Petersburg Quartet does right by Debussy, Messiaen
June 2, 2008 – 11:28 pm
At last! — I finally made it to my first Piccolo event today. As I’ve told you, my marching orders are to cover the classical end of the big festival — ALL of it — and that means I miss the many world-class acts that have been gracing Piccolo for many years. But I absolutely [...]
Oooops — Link problems!
June 2, 2008 – 11:44 am
I beg pardon, dear blogophiles, in case you’ve had trouble with my links: some of the the ones I’m posting from that dodo bird of a PC I’m stuck with at home aren’t “taking” — but I’m faithfully editing them back in from my work machine at Millennium the following day. So scroll down and [...]
SFO Stars get their Chance to Shine (plus More from Ingram Marshall)
June 1, 2008 – 10:26 pm
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 [...]
Chamber VII: Rare Birds
June 1, 2008 – 10:26 pm
The seventh program of the Bank of America Chamber Music Series blew into town early this afternoon, providing a choice selection of delights. Dr. Wadsworth slated some rare birds in with more familiar material, opening a lot of eyes (and hopefully ears as well!). A hot day did nothing to dampen the audience’s spirits, and [...]
Swimming in Water Music: Soundscapes from Music In Time
June 1, 2008 – 10:15 pm
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 [...]
He Who Laughs Last…
May 31, 2008 – 10:46 pm
After the searing and emotionally draining Piano Quintet by Alfred Schnittke on Thursday, it was with a decidedly dubious sense of anticipation that I approached this afternoon’s concert by the St. Petersburg String Quartet. I “enjoy” Schnittke (quite a lot, actually…), but actively listening to his biter sarcasm can easily become an emotional marathon; barefoot [...]
Choicest Chamber Yet
May 31, 2008 – 10:12 pm
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 [...]

More Chamber Pleasures — and a Special Intermezzo Treat
Wednesday’s bout of overheated Spoleto-hopping netted two prime events — let’s begin with Chamber the Program IX, where it turned out to be proven classics all the way.First up was J.S. Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5, one of the pinnacles of Baroque orchestral writing; musicians never tire of playing the six glorious Brandenburgs … nor [...]