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  • In November, the International Contemporary Ensemble is back at Target Margin with a new installation by Nathan Davis, which explores geologic time with ready-to-use building materials, collaborations with Nicholas Houfek’s ColorSynth, Phyllis Chen’s Tone Grove, and more! On November 5th, experience a showcase of Ensemble members’ work with Nicholas Houfek’s ColorSynth, featuring improvisations, compositions, and more synthesizers! The ColorSynth is a software interface built in Max/Msp that converts the musical pitch from an input into a specifically mapped color of light. It’s a throwback to light organs of the early 20th century and looks forward to new options for today. FREE with RSVP. In-person and livestream options available. FROM THE ENSEMBLE: Gareth Flowers, trumpet Levy Lorenzo, percussion Nathan Davis, percussion Dan Lippel, guitar Josh Modney, violin Katinka Kleijn, cello
  • Experience this 22nd annual award-winning showcase of 125 juried artists mastering in clay, fiber, glass, jewelry, leather, metal, mixed media, photography, wearable art, wood, and more! Watch unique craft demonstrations and then create your own with complimentary family art activities sponsored by PNC Arts Alive. Relax in the Beer & Wine Garden with Cape May Brewery and Bellview Winery, listen to live music, and enjoy refreshments from gourmet food trucks. WheatonArts signature Glass Pumpkin Fundraiser* takes place during the Festival as well. *Please Note: due to limited production time during COVID restrictions, pumpkin quantities are limited. All fundraiser proceeds support WheatonArts' educational programming. The Festival of Fine Craft opens on October 2 & 3, 2021, rain or shine. It is included with WheatonArts' general admission. Festival Special: Buy your tickets in advance online & save $2.00 per ticket! Offer ends on Sept. 26, 2021. For more information & advance tickets, visit wheatonarts.org.
  • Find solace and inspiration at WheatonArts! A national cultural treasure, WheatonArts hosts unique exhibitions in the Museum of American Glass and Down Jersey Folklife Center, allows visitors to meet informally with resident artists in the Hot Glass, Pottery, and Flameworking Studios, has award-winning Museum Stores, and a scenic Nature Trail with a beautiful pond-side picnic grove – a true Pineland Sanctuary. For current hours, tickets, and visitor guidelines, visit https://www.wheatonarts.org/tickets/ Photo by Phil Vitale
  • The exhibition features artwork created by the glass artist Paula Meninato. Through the optical qualities of paint on glass, Persistent Memories depicts the human toll behind the criminalization of Latin Americans and the human suffering caused by wars and immigration policies. Some of the artworks are created during an artist residency at Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center and made specifically for this installation. The exhibition also features videos to further emphasize the concepts of disappearance and invisibility. Exhibit Opening Saturday, September 25 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. • Maya Weaving Demonstration: Julia Sánchez • Meet the Artist: Paula Meninato • Blessing for a New Beginning: Genaro Jacinto Calel • Marimba Music: Marimba Maya AWAL WheatonArts is open Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
  • New York Festival of Song’s 2021 Next Festival kicks off with 9 UNDER 34: Composers Younger Than NYFOS, co-curated by baritone Gregory Feldmann. The evening will feature works by composers born after NYFOS’s first program was presented, performed by baritone Gregory Feldmann and mezzo-soprano and 2021 Naumberg Award winner Erin Wagner, together with pianists Nathaniel LaNasa and Shawn Chang and cellist Thapelo Masita. Works include songs by Jake Landau, Sato Matsui, Shawn Chang, Iván Enrique Rodríguez, David Clay Mettens, Emily Cooley, Tariq al-Sabir, Curtis Stewart, and Molly Joyce. Co-curator Feldmann says about the 9 UNDER 34 program, “In building this program, I hoped to present composers from a wide array of backgrounds and demographics that were writing songs about what mattered to them. The final result has had several themes emerge that, while not unique to our generation, are absolutely core conversations of today: Identity, the shifting social and environmental landscape, and our ability to communicate and connect within these new landscapes. The songs feature texts ranging from 19th century Scotland, to the lesser known words of Francis Scott Key, to nonverbal individuals with autism in Chicago, to personal reflections.” Works by composers born after NYFOS’s first program: JAKE LANDAU: “Mary’s Song” from Scotch Lyrics SATO MATSUI: “Fushigi uta” from Songs of Curiosity SHAWN CHANG: “Green” and “Yellow” from Portraits of Unrelated Colors IVÁN ENRIQUE RODRÍGUEZ: “Alabaster Thread” DAVID CLAY METTENS: 2 songs from The sustaining air EMILY COOLEY: Beautiful Small Things TARIQ AL-SABIR: The Sixth Extinction CURTIS STEWART: Do You See the Flag? MOLLY JOYCE: Redesign Our Time Performers: Gregory Feldmann, baritone and co-curator Erin Wagner, mezzo-soprano and 2021 Naumberg Award winner Nathaniel LaNasa, piano Shawn Chang, piano Thapelo Masita, cello Attendees at Kaufman Music Center are currently required to wear masks and provide proof of vaccination. View the current COVID policy at https://www.kaufmanmusiccenter.org/covid/.
  • The 92nd Street Y, one of New York's leading cultural venues, announces its spring classical concert season. With 18 concerts, the spring season includes two appearances by world-renowned pianist Angela Hewitt; two performances by The Knights as 92Y's inaugural Ensemble in Residence; the eagerly anticipated New York City main stage debut of pianist Eric Lu; the Grammy Award-nominated Israeli mandolin wizard Avi Avital; two co-presentations with the New York Philharmonic; and the return of guitarist Pablo Sainz-Villegas. Concerts are for fully vaccinated audiences. For more information, including purchasing tickets and COVID-19 protocols for in-person performances, please visit 92Y.org/Concerts. The season will feature one of the first NYC performances of the Gateways Music Festival, co-presented by 92Y, presenting works reflecting on the theme of enslavement; the New York premiere of 92Y co-commission, Dido Reimagined by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Melinda Wagner, performed by the Brentano String Quartet and soprano Dawn Upshaw; the world premieres of Cazon's Revenge by Gonzalo Grau and Arum der Fayer by Osvaldo Golijov, both for mandolin and string quartet, performed by Brooklyn Rider; the New York premiere of A Shattered Vessel by Richard Danielpour, performed by an ensemble from the Curtis Institute of Music; the New York premiere of Acabris! Acabras! Acabram! written and performed by Stewart Goodyear; and award-winning composer Joel Thompson's In Response to the Madness, performed by the New York Philharmonic String Quartet.  The Tisch Spring 2022 Classical Concert Season: THE KNIGHTS ERIC JACOBSEN, conductor AARON DIEHL, piano Wednesday, January 19, 2021, 7:30 PM Pianist Aaron Diehl joins The Knights for a pair of works probing the interconnectivity of jazz and classical music: Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue and Mary Lou Williams' Zodiac Suite. The program also features The Knights' coupling of Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 with selections from Ravel's Le Tombeau de Couperin. Stravinsky's Firebird Suite closes this program. Eric Jacobsen, conductor Aaron Diehl, piano BACH: "Brandenburg" Concerto No. 3 in G Major, BWV 1048 RAVEL: Selections from Le Tombeau de Couperin  GERSHWIN: Rhapsody in Blue (arr. Atkinson) Mary Lou WILLIAMS: Selections from Zodiac Suite  STRAVINSKY: Firebird Suite (arr. Atkinson) STEVEN ISSERLIS, cello CONNIE SHIH, piano Thursday, January 27, 2022, 7:30 PM World-renowned cellist Steven Isserlis and award-winning pianist Connie Shih perform a rich program of Russian jewels including two of the great works for cello – Shostakovich's D-minor Sonata, and the sonata by Rachmaninoff. Opening the concert is Kabalevsky's 1962 sonata, written for Mstislav Rostropovich. KABALEVSKY: Cello Sonata in B-flat Major, Op. 71 SHOSTAKOVICH: Cello Sonata in D Minor, Op. 40 RACHMANINOFF: Cello Sonata in G Minor, Op. 19 CURTIS INSTITUTE AT 92Y IDA KAVAFIAN, violin LUN LI, violin CARA POGOSSIAN, viola PETER WILEY, cello FRANCIS CARR, cello Friday, February 18, 2022, 7:30 PM In this first concert in a new alliance between 92Y and the world-renowned Curtis Institute of Music, an ensemble comprising esteemed faculty – including Ida Kavafian on violin and Peter Wiley on cello – and recent alumni of Curtis perform Schubert's C-Major Quintet. The quintet is followed by the New York premiere of a new work by another member of Curtis' faculty, with Grammy Award-winning composer Richard Danielpour's A Shattered Vessel. Written 190 years after the Schubert work for the same instrumentation of two violins, viola and two cellos, A Shattered Vessel contemplates crisis and struggle, loss and healing, renewal and gratitude. Curtis on Tour is the Nina von Maltzahn Global Touring Initiative of the Curtis Institute of Music. RICHARD DANIELPOUR: A Shattered Vessel (NY Premiere) SCHUBERT: String Quintet in C Major, D. 956 KIRILL GERSTEIN, piano GARRICK OHLSSON, piano Friday, February 25, 2022, 7:30 PM World-renowned piano virtuosos Kirill Gerstein and Garrick Ohlsson combine forces for a two-piano concert featuring great showpieces of the duo-piano repertoire. Their program includes Busoni's transcription of the finale of Mozart's F-Major Piano Concerto, the two-piano version of Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances, Busoni's Fantasia Contrappuntistica – conjuring Bach with a 20th century sensibility – and Ravel's La Valse in its two-piano version. THOMAS ADÈS: Powder Her Face Suite RACHMANINOFF: Symphonic Dances BUSONI: Fantasia Contrappuntistica  RAVEL: La Valse ANGELA HEWITT, piano BACH ODYSSEY XI Wednesday, March 2, 2022, 7:30 PM World-renowned pianist Angela Hewitt returns to 92Y's stage for the final two concerts in her acclaimed – and pandemic-interrupted – four-year Bach Odyssey, performing all of the composer's keyboard works. For this penultimate concert, Hewitt performs two of Bach's best-known keyboard works, his monumental French Overture and the iconic Italian Concerto, homages to the musical style of each country, along with several of his small works, including the "little" preludes. BACH: Four Duets, BWV 802-805  Eighteen "Little" Preludes Fantasia and Fugue in A Minor, BWV 944  Italian Concerto in F Major, BWV 971  French Overture in B Minor, BWV 831 ANGELA HEWITT, piano BACH ODYSSEY XII The Art of Fugue Saturday, March 5, 2022, 8 PM The long-awaited finale in the four-year Bach Odyssey that Angela Hewitt began in 2016 presents the composer's ultimate and final masterpiece, The Art of Fugue. Hewitt brings new revelations to Bach at his most complex in this culminating presentation in the odyssey of the Bach pianist of our time. BACH: Art of Fugue, BWV 1080 MUSICIANS FROM THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC GILLES VONSATTEL, piano SHERYL STAPLES, violin REBECCA YOUNG, viola EILEEN MOON-MYERS, cello Sunday, March 6, 2022, 3 PM 92Y continues its collaboration with the New York Philharmonic with an extension of the orchestra's new Schumann Connection series centered on the music of Robert Schumann and new works reflecting on the Robert-Clara relationship. This intimate chamber music concert, featuring musicians from the New York Philharmonic and award-winning pianist Gilles Vonsattel, explores the intimacy of the Clara Schumann/Brahms connection. Featuring a selection of Clara Schumann's solo piano works and her Three Romances, Op. 22, juxtaposed with Brahms' C-Minor Piano Quartet, which magnificently captures his unrequited love for Clara in music. Also on the program, an early Beethoven work, the composer's G-Major String Trio.  C. SCHUMANN Notturno, Op. 6, No. 2 C. SCHUMANN Scherzo No. 2, Op. 14 BEETHOVEN: String Trio in G Major, Op. 9, No. 1  C. SCHUMANN: Three Pieces for violin and piano, Op. 22  BRAHMS: Piano Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60  BROOKLYN RIDER AVI AVITAL, mandolin Tuesday, March 15, 2022, 7:30 PM Grammy-nominated Israeli mandolinist Avi Avital teams up with the string quartet Brooklyn Rider (two of its four members are also with The Knights) for a program that traverses late 18th century Spanish-inflected Boccherini, a powerful contemporary statement about the US-Mexico border crisis by Matan Roberts, selections by Bach, a world premiere by internationally renowned Argentine composer Osvaldo Golijov and more, concluding with a tarantella by Lev "Lyova" Zhurbin, BOCCHERINI: La Musica Notturna Ritratta di Madrid  SOLLIMA: Prelude for solo mandolin MATANA ROBERTS: borderlands...  COLIN JACOBSEN: Time and Again BACH: selected Sinfonias and Inventions GONZALO GRAU: Cazon's Revenge, world premiere for mandolin and string quartet  OSVALDO GOLIJOV: Arum der Fayer, world premiere for mandolin and string quartet LEV ZHURBIN: Love Potion, Expired RAFAŁ BLECHACZ, piano Tue, Mar 29, 2022, 7:30 pm Young Polish pianist and International Chopin Competition winner Rafał Blechacz returns to the 92Y stage with a program of works moving from Bach to early and middle Beethoven, chronicling a musical evolution of works composed in C minor before an exploration of B-minor works, with Bach-inspired Franck building to one of Chopin's all-time great piano compositions, his Third Sonata. BACH: Partita No. 2 in C Minor, BWV 826 BEETHOVEN: Sonata in C Minor, Op. 10, No. 1 BEETHOVEN: 32 Variations on an original theme in C Minor, WoO.80 FRANCK: Prelude, Fugue and Variations in B Minor, Op. 18 (trans. Bauer) CHOPIN: Sonata No. 3 in B Minor, Op. 58 PABLO SAINZ-VILLEGAS, guitar Saturday, April 2, 2022, 8 PM Pablo Sainz-Villegas returns to the stage that launched his US career. Performing selections by Granados, Rodrigo, Tárrega, Albéniz and more, this program showcases the brilliant technique, deep musicality and passionate intensity that define the Spanish guitar artform. ALBÉNIZ: Sevilla GRANADOS: Danza Española No. 10, "Danza Melancólica"       Danza Española No. 5, "Andaluza" RODRIGO: Invocación y Danza    Homage to Manuel de Falla – TÁRREGA: Capricho Árabe      Lágrima    Adelita  ALBÉNIZ: Torre Bermeja - Piezas Características    Mallorca, "Barcarola"    Asturias, "Leyenda"    Suite Española  GIMENEZ: La boda de Luis Alonso BRENTANO STRING QUARTET DAWN UPSHAW, soprano DIDO REIMAGINED  Sunday, April 3, 2022, 3 PM Dido – the proud, heroic mythological figure brought down by love – is the inspiration behind this musical exploration of her story and character by the Brentano Quartet and soprano Dawn Upshaw. The program begins with songs by Purcell and his Baroque contemporaries, including "Dido's Lament," interspersed with string quartet iterations of early English works for consort of viols. The program then leaps forward nearly 350 years to the New York premiere of a new work by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Melinda Wagner. Dido Reimagined is Wagner's new consideration of Dido, looking anew at her psyche, her vulnerability, her strength, and her choices. The concert continues the Brentano Quartet's artistic collaboration with Dawn Upshaw and the unusual pairing of soprano and string quartet. PURCELL: Oh let me weep PURCELL: Fantasia No. 5 LOCKE: Suite No. 2 for four viols: Fantazie DOWLAND: Come again, sweet love doth now invite LOCKE: Suite No. 2: Courante DOWLAND: Can she excuse my wrongs LOCKE: Suite No. 2: Ayre DOWLAND: Weep you no more, sad fountains LOCKE: Suite No. 2: Saraband TOMKINS: Aleman  BYRD: Though Amaryllis dance in green JOHNSON: The Witty Wanton PURCELL: Fantasia No. 7 PURCELL: Dido's Lament MELINDA WAGNER: Dido Reimagined (NY Premiere; 92Y co-commission) STEWART GOODYEAR, piano Saturday, April 9, 2022, 8 PM Canadian pianist Stewart Goodyear returns to the 92Y stage to perform the New York premiere of his own composition, Acabris! Acabras! Acabram!, modeled on a French-Canadian folktale; Beethoven's Diabelli Variations; Bach's French Suite in G Major; and Joseph Bologne's Adagio in F minor. STEWART GOODYEAR: Acabris! Acabras! Acabram! (NY Premiere) BOLOGNE: Adagio in F minor BACH: French Suite No. 5 in G Major, BWV 816 BEETHOVEN: 33 Variations on a waltz by Anton Diabelli, Op. 120 TAKÁCS QUARTET JULIEN LABRO, bandoneon  Wednesday, April 20, 2022, 7:30 PM Bandoneon player Julien Labro joins the Takács Quartet for a program blending new works with a Ravel masterpiece. Labro joins the quartet for new works by contemporary composers Bryce Dessner and Clarice Assad, and performs a short solo set displaying the heartbeat of tango. The Takács is featured in Ravel's String Quartet. BRYCE DESSNER: Circles for bandoneon and string quartet (NY Premiere) JULIEN LABRO: Meditation #1 for bandoneon and string quartet (NY Premiere) SELECTED SOLO WORKS for bandoneon and accordina RAVEL: String Quartet in F Major CLARICE ASSAD: Clash for bandoneon and string quartet (NY Premiere) THE MARIAN ANDERSON STRING QUARTET Co-presented with the GATEWAYS MUSIC FESTIVAL  Friday, April 22, 2022, 7:30 PM In collaboration with the renowned Eastman School of Music's Gateways Music Festival's "Around the Town" Series, the award-winning Marian Anderson String Quartet presents a concert in the intimate Buttenwieser Hall. The critically-acclaimed all-female ensemble has performed at presidential inaugurations, the Library of Congress and more, making history in 1991 when they won the International Cleveland Quartet Competition – the first African American ensemble to win a classical music competition. "On Being Enslaved" RHIANNON GIDDENS: At the Purchaser's Option with Variations (arr. J. Garchik)      JONATHAN MCNAIR: Follow the Drinking Gourd                                      SAMUEL ADLER: In Memoriam: Marian Anderson     DAVID WALLACE: In Honor of Marian Anderson                                                         ANTONIN DVOŘÁK: String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96 "American"     JOHN ROSAMON JOHNSON: Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing (arr. J.W. Johnson) THE KNIGHTS ERIC JACOBSEN, conductor EDGAR MEYER, double bass  Saturday, April 30, 2022, 8 PM Double bassist and composer Edgar Meyer earned a MacArthur "Genius" Award for his work fusing classical and bluegrass forms and styles into his own uniquely American music. He joins The Knights for the New York premiere of his second concerto. The concert opens with a performance of Jamaican-born British composer Eleanor Alberga's Shining Gates of Morpheus. Closing it and continuing the American character of Meyer's work is Copland's Appalachian Spring. Eric Jacobsen, conductor Edgar Meyer, bass David Byrd-Marrow, French horn ELEANOR ALBERGA: Shining Gates of Morpheus EDGAR MEYER: Concerto No. 3 in E Major for Double Bass and Orchestra  COPLAND: Appalachian Spring DOVER STRING QUARTET (Curtis) Friday, May 6, 2022, 7:30 PM Works of Mozart, Tania León, and more. ERIC LU, piano Friday, May 20, 2022, 7:30 PM Twenty-four-year-old Leeds Competition first prize winner and Chopin Competition prizewinning pianist Eric Lu makes his eagerly anticipated New York City main stage debut with this recital. The centerpiece of his program is Schubert's A-Major Sonata. CHOPIN: Nocturne in C Minor, Op. 48, No. 1 SCHUMANN: Waldszenen, Op. 82 BRAHMS: Theme with Variations in D Minor, Op. 18b SCHUBERT: Piano Sonata No. 20 in A Major, D. 959 THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC STRING QUARTET BEATRICE RANA, piano Tuesday, June 7, 2022, 7:30 PM 92Y's second co-presentation with the New York Philharmonic this season features the New York Philharmonic String Quartet joined by Beatrice Rana. Their program spans nearly 250 years and focuses on music written in response to dark times and ideas. The concert opens with award-winning contemporary composer Joel Thompson's In Response to the Madness, his quartet capturing the angst of our early 21st century universe. Mozart's "Dissonance" Quartet follows. The program's final work features Rana in her first appearance on the 92Y stage, following her pre-pandemic Carnegie Hall debut. JOEL THOMPSON: In Response to the Madness  MOZART: String Quartet in C Major, K. 465 "Dissonance"  SHOSTAKOVICH: Piano Quintet in G Minor, Op. 57  About 92nd Street Y:  The 92nd Street Y (92Y) is a world-class center for the arts and innovation, a convener of ideas, and an incubator for creativity. 92Y offers extensive classes, courses and events online including live concerts, talks and master classes; fitness classes for all ages; 250+ art classes, and parenting workshops for new moms and dads. The 92nd Street Y is transforming the way people share ideas and translate them into action all over the world. All of 92Y's programming is built on a foundation of Jewish values, including the capacity of civil dialogue to change minds; the potential of education and the arts to change lives; and a commitment to welcoming and serving people of all ages, races, religions, and ethnicities. For more information, visit www.92Y.org. 
  • Nduduzo Makhathini Quartet at the Vermont Jazz Center

    Saturday June 11, 2022
    8 pm

    Nduduzo Makhathini, piano
    Logan Richardson, alto sax & flute
    Lonnie Plaxico, bass
    Francisco Mela, drums

    This show will be both in-person and livestreamed

    “As a player and a composer, he sits right beside McCoy Tyner and Pharoah Sanders, playing a forceful but lyrical style of modal jazz that incorporates African rhythmic concepts… The pieces they performed had a swelling, passionate quality, exploratory but never losing an essential earthbound feeling.

    Makhathini is at the head of a small but powerful movement of young South African jazz players, and the higher his international profile rises, the better it will be for that country’s music scene and jazz as a whole. He’s a major talent.” –Phil Freeman, Stereogum

    In Makhathini’s artistic world, like in much of African culture, there are no boundary lines drawn between creating art and living in harmony with the natural world. His presentations are musical experiences as opposed to concerts. They are expressions of a deeper life, a means to create shared, intentional, spiritual experiences where the energy of the audience is inclusive and pervasive. Makhathini has tried to capture that experience in his recent Blue Note Records debut, Modes of Communication: Letters from the Underworlds.

    Musical influences for Makhathini include the venerable legends of South African jazz: Bheki Mseleku, Moses Molelekwa, and Abdullah Ibrahim. His mentor Mseleku, introduced Makhathini to the music of John Coltrane’s classic quartet with McCoy Tyner. “I came to understand my voice as a pianist through John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme,” he says. “… I had always been looking for a kind of playing that could mirror or evoke the way my people danced, sung and spoke. Tyner provided that and still does in meaningful ways.”

    Makhathini is a member of Shabaka Hutchings’ band Shabaka and the Ancestors, appearing on their 2016 album Wisdom of Elders. He has recorded or toured with Logan Richardson, Nasheet Waits, Tarus Mateen, Stefon Harris, Billy Harper, Azar Lawrence, and Ernest Dawkins. Makhathini has released eight albums a a leader: Ikhambi won Best Jazz Album at the South African Music Awards (SAMA).

    His Blue Note debut Modes of Communication: Letters from the Underworlds was released in 2020 to wide critical acclaim. The New York Times naming it one of the “Best Jazz Albums of 2020” and DownBeat naming Nduduzo among their “25 for the Future” list.

    Letters from the Underworld also cinches a partnership between Blue Note Records and Universal Music Group Africa that has led to the creation of Blue Note Africa.

    Mahkhatini has performed at festivals around the world, at the Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City, and appeared as a guest with Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra on their 3-night musical celebration The South African Songbook. He is the head of the Jazz Studies department at Fort Hare University in the Eastern Cape.

    You may purchase in-person tickets, $20-40 sliding scale, and/or donate to the livestream. 

    Please give generously and support live music.

    Sponsored by Julian Gerstin & Carlene Raper, Vermont Arts Council, Vermont Humanities Council, & New England Foundation for the Arts.

    https://vtjazz.org/upcoming-events/sliding-scale-ticket-policy/
    https://vtjazz.org/covid-protocols/ Mask required.
    https://www.facebook.com/events/313965094244512

    www.vtjazz.org
    gingervjc@vtjazz.org
    802 258 9088

    Vermont Jazz Center
    72 Cotton Mill Hill #222
    Brattleboro VT 05301
  • A new opera by Gordon Getty, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, will receive its New York premiere—as an opera reimagined for film—on Wednesday, March 2, 2022, at 7 p.m. The public screening, co-presented by New York City Opera (NYCO) and Festival Napa Valley, will take place at the Walter Reade Theater, Lincoln Center, 165 W. 65th Street, New York, NY 10023.  Getty's fourth opera is based on the popular 1934 novella Goodbye, Mr. Chips and other stories by James Hilton. The film, directed by Brian Staufenbiel, was given its world premiere screening on November 14, 2021, in California, presented by Festival Napa Valley in partnership with the Mill Valley Film Festival. Goodbye, Mr. Chips tells the heart-warming story of a teacher at Brookfield, an all-boys English boarding school to which "Chips" dedicates most of his adult life. The opera chronicles Chips' story of love, loss and learning over his decades-long tenure at Brookfield. The film features Nathan Granner in the titular role of Mr. Chips, Marnie Breckenridge singing Kathie and Linford, Lester Lynch as Merrivale, and Kevin Short as Ralston and Rivers. The orchestra of stellar San Francisco Bay Area players is conducted by Nicole Paiement. Members of The Young People's Chorus of New York City, conducted by Francisco J. Núñez, represent the boarding school's students. The opera's premiere was originally planned as a fully-staged, live performance, but COVID-19 cancellations gave the production team an opportunity to try something new. Rather than put the project on hold, the team reimagined the work as a film. This new medium allowed for seamless storytelling, with Chips moving fluidly between his later life and flashbacks of his early years at Brookfield.  As a result of pandemic safety protocols, the main cast, orchestra, and chorus were all recorded separately. The cast then filmed on a live set in San Francisco, while the boys were captured as projections in New York City, vividly appearing in the film as Chips remembers them. New York City Opera and Festival Napa Valley presents: Goodbye, Mr. Chips An opera reimagined for film Music and libretto by Gordon Getty Based on the book Goodbye, Mr. Chips and other stories by James Hilton  Directed by Brian Staufenbiel Conducted by Nicole Paiement New York Premiere Screening Wednesday, March 2, 2022, 7 p.m. Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center 165 W. 65th Street, New York, NY 10023 Cast: Nathan Granner (tenor) – Mr. Chips Marnie Breckenridge (soprano) – Kathie/Linford Lester Lynch (baritone) – Merrivale Kevin Short (bass-baritone) – Ralston/Rivers Young People's Chorus of New York City; Francisco J. Núñez, Founder and Artistic Director  Advance tickets available through New York City Opera: https://newyorkcityopera.yapsody.com/event/index/708511/goodbye-mr-chips; individual tickets for the screening are $25.  Running time: 1 hour, 55 minutes Background Information: (Bios courtesy of the artists) About Gordon Getty With the November 2021 premiere of his operatic film Goodbye, Mr. Chips, composer Gordon Getty adds a fourth opera to his list of compositions, which also includes works for orchestra, chorus, vocal and instrumental soloists, and chamber ensembles. His staged works have been mounted by Leipzig Opera, Welsh National Opera, San Francisco Opera, Los Angeles Opera, and Bolshoi Ballet, while his orchestral repertoire has been recorded and performed by the likes of the San Francisco Symphony under Michael Tilson Thomas, Mikhail Pletnev leading the Russian National Orchestra, and Sir Neville Marriner with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields. Getty's life in music is the subject of Peter Rosen's 2016 documentary There Will Be Music. Recent honors include the European Culture Prize and an inaugural induction into Opera America's Hall of Fame. Gordon Getty is a Pentatone artist and his music is published by Rork Music. For more information, visit www.gordongetty.com.     About Nathan Granner (Mr. Chips): Nathan Granner is a world-renowned leading tenor, headliner, solo and collaborative artist, specializing in Contemporary Opera and late Bel-Canto repertoire. The San Francisco Chronicle recently described Mr. Granner's singing as possessing a "sinewy, ringing tone; splendidly flexible" and the San Francisco Classical Voice extolled "tons of squillo on his top notes, his honeyed tone, and his sensitive dynamic choices..." In addition to singing roles like Puccini's Rodolfo, Mozart's Ferrando and Verdi's Jacopo Foscari, Granner's intense performance style hits all of his characters. He has originated numerous roles in world premieres, including Korey Wise in Anthony Davis' 2020 Pulitzer Prize-winning opera The Central Park Five and Aubrey Wells in Opera Parallèle's beautiful work Today it Rains, by the Laura Kaminsky, Mark Campbell and Kimberly Reid team.    Gaining chart-topping success as a founding member of the Sony Classical group "The American Tenors," Nathan has also toured extensively as a solo artist accompanied by classical guitarist/record producer Beau Bledsoe. Together they've brought arrangements of Lieder and Chanson, Flamenco, Tango, Turkish styles and new compositions to such remote places as Glendive, Montana and Perm, Russia, a city of more than a million people held secret until the Cold War between the USSR and the United States. Find out more at www.nathangranner.com About Marnie Breckenridge (Kathie): Marnie Breckenridge is renowned for her beautiful, pure soprano, grounded storytelling, deeply expressive score interpretations, excellent musicianship and layered characterizations. She is a go-to performer of critically acclaimed new works, praised for her "bell-like ring over an enormous range and personality spilling from every note" (The Globe and Mail), "lovely soprano" voice (The New York Times), and "lyrical poignancy and dramatic power" (The Chicago Tribune). She won the 2020 DORA award for "Outstanding Performance by an Individual in an Opera" for Jacqueline by Luna Pearl Woolf and Royce Vavrek about the life of Jacqueline Du Pré, written for her and cellist, Matt Haimovitz (Tapestry Opera). Other favorite roles (in addition to Kathie in Getty's Goodbye, Mr. Chips film): Mother in Little's Dog Days (LA Opera & Ft. Worth Opera, Prototype Festival), Sierva Maria in Peter Eötvös's Love and Other Demons(Glyndebourne Festival Opera), Emily in Ned Rorem's Our Town, Margarita Xirgu in Golijov's Ainadamar, the title role in Milhaud's Médée, La Princesse in Glass's Orphée, Beck Strand in Kaminsky's Today it Rains (Opera Parallèlle), and Cunegonde in Candide (English National Opera and Prague State Opera) deemed "simply terrific" (Opera Magazine, UK) and "note perfect" (Prague Post). Breckenridge is a featured soloist on New World Records' album of Victor Herbert songs, on Dimitri Hvorostovsky's CD "Heroes and Villains," the "Vocal Music Of David Conte," "Summer Songs" by Robert Paterson, DOG DAYS (Little) and several other recordings by American composers. Her solo Holiday EP, "Happy Golden Days," can be found on all streaming platforms. https://marniebreckenridge.com About Lester Lynch (Merrivale): Acclaimed by opera and concertgoers worldwide, dramatic baritone Lester Lynch is regarded as that most prized of operatic singers, a true Verdi baritone. He is also one of today's foremost interpreters of American spirituals and contemporary opera. An accomplished pianist and arranger, his musicality was nurtured early. Whether performing an aria, song or a hymn, his powerful voice and commanding presence move audiences universally. His debut album, released in 2017, On My Journey Now, is the first of two albums that represent the African American spirituals that are most meaningful to him. Significantly, Lester has been heard on many other recordings, Otello as Iago, Cavalleria Rusticana as Alfio, Il Tabarro as Michele, a DVD of Porgy and Bess released by San Francisco Opera as Crown, and finally as Pierre Cauchon in the Cantata, Joan and the Bells, by American composer Gordon Getty.  Lester Lynch has appeared with most of Europe's and North America's leading opera houses, Teatro alla Scala, Covent Garden, Semper Opera in Dresden, Baden Baden, Dusseldorf Oper am Rhein in Germany, Welsh National Opera and English National Opera in the United Kingdom, Dom Musiki in Moscow, Tater Opera and Ballet in Kazan Russia, San Francisco Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Seattle Opera, Detroit Metro Opera, Minneapolis Opera, LA Opera, Houston Grand Opera, New York City Opera, and Washington National Opera. He has sung with the leading orchestras of the world, among them, the Berlin Philharmonie with famed conductor, Sir Simon Rattle, New York Philharmonic, Gulbenkian Orchestra, National Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, and the Houston Symphony, to name a few. Upcoming performances include Tonio in I Pagliacci in Russia, the Forrester in The Cunning Little Vixen in England, a concert and recital in Bilbao, Spain, not to mention a return to Scarpia in Tosca in Germany and Wotan in Das Rheingoldin the USA. About Kevin Short (Ralston/Rivers): Versatile bass-baritone Kevin Short is thrilling audiences around the globe in repertoire ranging from the depths of Osmin in Die Entführung aus dem Serail to Escamillo in Carmen and Der Fliegende Holländer. A sample of Kevin's North American operatic and symphonic appearances include performances with the Metropolitan Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Houston Grand Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Washington National Opera, Seattle Opera, Florida Grand Opera, Canadian Opera Company, Vancouver Opera, Edmonton Opera, Opéra de las Americas, Boston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, and the National Symphony. His European and Asian engagements include performances with Paris' Opéra Comique, Welsh National Opera, Oper der Stadt Köln, Stadttheater Stuttgart, Teatro di San Carlo, Grand Theatre du Luxembourg, Swiss and Italian RAI Orchestra, Bregenzer Festspiele, Savonlinna Festival d'Aix en Provence, Matsumoto Festival, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Prague Radio Symphony, Marseille Philharmonic, Radio France Orchestra, New Japan Philharmonic, Hiroshima Symphony, and the symphony orchestras in Moscow and St. Petersburg, Russia. Kevin received his training at Morgan State University, The Curtis Institute of Music, and the Juilliard School of Music's American Opera Center. While training at these institutions he won top prizes in the Metropolitan Opera Competition, Internazionale Concorso per Voci Verdiane, Rosa Ponselle International Competition and the Bruce Yarnell Competition for Basses and Baritones. About Brian Staufenbiel Brian Staufenbiel is the creative director for Opera Parallèle where he has directed and spearheaded the conceptual designs of the company's productions since it was founded in 2010. Specializing in multimedia, immersive, and interdisciplinary productions, he actively works across a wide range of artistic disciplines collaborating in film and with media designers, choreographers and dancers, circus and fabric artists, and designer fabricators. His progressive approach to stagecraft has garnered critical acclaim for many of the company's productions, including Wozzeck, Orphée, Champion and Dead Man Walking. Staufenbiel recently directed films for the online festival season of the Sun Valley Music Festival, a film of Dove/Angelis' Flight for Seattle Opera, and a graphic novel film of Talbot/Scheer's Everest with Opera Parallèle. Other projects include the premiere of Miguel Zenon's Golden City Suite with SF JAZZ, a project with L'Opéra De Montréal, and a documentary about the life of Frederica Von Stade with Paper Wings Films. Staufenbiel will be co-directing, with choreographer Yayoi Kambara, Ikkai, a dance installation about Japanese incarceration camps in the United States during World War II. Staufenbiel enjoys an ongoing relationship with composer Philip Glass, having directed a number of his operas including In the Penal Colony for Philip's own festival. The production is currently streaming on a new platform, Philip Glass Days and Night's Festival Presents, and was named a New York Times Top Ten pick. About Nicole Paiement Conductor Nicole Paiement is widely acclaimed for her interpretations of contemporary operas. As Founder and Artistic Director of Opera Parallèle (OP) in San Francisco, Mo. Paiement has conducted many new productions, commissions and world premieres including Laura Kaminsky's Today it Rains; John Harbison's The Great Gatsby; Blanchard's Champion; Dove's Flight; Tarik O'Regan's Heart of Darkness; Osvaldo Goljov's Ainadamar and John Rea's reorchestration of Wozzeck. Most recently Paiement conducted OP's new film production Everest - A Graphic Novel Opera by Joby Talbot, a work she originally premiered on stage at The Dallas Opera. An active guest conductor, Mo. Paiement made her debut at Lyric Opera of Chicago in 2019 with Heggie's Dead Man Walking and at Opéra de Montréal with the Canadian premiere of Benjamin's Written on Skin in 2020. Other guest conducting engagements have brought her to Fort Worth Symphony, Atlanta Opera, Washington National Opera, Seattle Opera, Glimmerglass Festival, Lyric Opera of Kansas City, Monterey Jazz Festival, and the Hollywood Bowl. Upcoming engagements include her UK premiere in November 2022 at the English National Opera before returning to London in June 2023 to conduct Talbot's Everest with the BBC Symphony at the Barbican Center. Mo. Paiement will also return to the Dallas Opera, where she is Principal Guest Conductor in April 2022 and to Opéra de Montréal in 2023. In addition to being a leader in contemporary opera, Paiement is also a specialist in early 20th Century French music and regularly conducts music from the Baroque and Classical repertoire. About The Young People's Chorus of New York City: The Young People's Chorus of New York City (YPC) is a multicultural youth chorus internationally renowned for its superb virtuosity, brilliant showmanship, and innovative model of diversity. Founded by Artistic Director Francisco J. Núñez, a MacArthur Fellow and Musical America's 2018 Educator of the Year, YPC's spectacular artistry has been showcased in award-winning performances around the world.  With repertoire that spans Renaissance and classical traditions through gospel, folk, jazz, pop, contemporary and world music, YPC also continually invigorates its catalogue of music for young voices by commissioning pieces of diverse music from many of the most distinguished and emerging composers of our time. The chorus frequently inspires invitations from a wide range of cultural institutions and festivals, and most recently performed in front of a national televised audience during the 9/11 20th Anniversary Memorial and at the renowned Global Citizen Live festival this fall.  Among YPC's many awards is America's highest honor for youth programs, a National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award, which was presented to members of YPC at the White House. Under the direction of YPC's Associate Artistic Director, Elizabeth Núñez, YPC also earned the distinction of "Choir of the World" in July 2018 at the International Choral Kathaumixw (Powell River, British Columbia), marking the first time a North American chorus has ever won this title in the 34-year history of Kathaumixw. YPC has received a Chorus America Education Outreach Award, two Chorus America/ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming and a 2017 Margaret Hillis Award for Choral Excellence.  About New York City Opera Since its founding in 1943 by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia as "The People's Opera," New York City Opera (NYCO) has been a critical part of the city's cultural life. During its history, New York City Opera launched the careers of dozens of major artists and presented engaging productions of both mainstream and unusual operas alongside commissions and regional premieres. The result was a uniquely American opera company of international stature. For more than seven decades, New York City Opera has maintained a distinct identity, adhering to its unique mission: affordable ticket prices, a devotion to American works, English-language performances, the promotion of up-and-coming American singers, and seasons of accessible, vibrant and compelling productions intended to introduce new audiences to the art form. Stars who launched their careers at New York City Opera include Plácido Domingo, Catherine Malfitano, Sherrill Milnes, Samuel Ramey, Beverly Sills, Tatiana Troyanos, Carol Vaness, and Shirley Verrett, among dozens of other great artists. New York City Opera has a long history of inclusion and diversity. It was the first major opera company to feature African American singers in leading roles (Todd Duncan as Tonio in Pagliacci, 1945; Camilla Williams in the title role in Madama Butterfly, 1946); the first to produce a new work by an African-American composer (William Grant Still, Troubled Island, 1949); and the first to have an African-American conductor lead its orchestra (Everett Lee, 1955). A revitalized City Opera re-opened in January 2016 with Tosca, the opera that originally launched the company in 1944. Outstanding productions during the four years since then include: the world premieres of Iain Bell and Mark Campbell's Stonewall, which NYCO commissioned and developed, legendary director Harold Prince's new production of Bernstein'sCandide; Puccini's beloved La Fanciulla del West; and the New York premiere of Daniel Catán's Florencia en el Amazonas — the first in its Ópera en Español series. Subsequent Ópera en Español productions include the New York premiere of the world's first mariachi opera, José "Pepe" Martinez's Cruzar la Cara de la Luna, Literes's Los Elementos, and Piazzolla's María de Buenos Aires. In addition to the world premiere of Stonewall, the productions in NYCO's Pride Initiative, which produces an LGBTQ-themed work each June during Pride Month, include the New York premiere of Péter Eötvös's Angels in America and the American premiere of Charles Wuorinen's Brokeback Mountain. New York City Opera has presented such talents as Anna Caterina Antonacci and Aprile Millo in concert, as well as its own 75th Anniversary Concert in Bryant Park, one in a series of the many concerts and staged productions that it presents each year as part of the Park's summer performance series. City Opera's acclaimed summer series in Bryant Park brings free performances to thousands of New Yorkers and visitors every year. New York City Opera continues its legacy with main stage performances at Jazz at Lincoln Center's Rose Theater and with revitalized outreach and education programs at venues throughout the city, designed to welcome and inspire a new generation of opera audiences.  New York City Opera: www.nycopera.com Instagram: @nycopera  facebook.com/NewYorkCityOpera Twitter: @nycityopera About Festival Napa Valley:  Blending the beauty and bounty of Napa Valley with the very finest performing arts, Festival Napa Valley offers programs that enrich the economic and cultural vitality of the region and make the arts accessible to all. The Festival presents world-class performances staged in iconic venues and inspiring educational programs offered digitally and at Napa County schools year-round. It is presented by Napa Valley Festival Association, a nonprofit organization governed by a board of prominent vintners and local leaders. More than 200 artists, wineries, resorts, theaters, restaurants, chefs and vintners participate each year. The 16th edition of the annual summer festival takes place July 15-24, 2022. www.festivalnapvalley.org
  • In the WheatonArts Down Jersey Folklife Center, this exhibition provides a visual comparison between traditional textiles of two indigenous communities of Latin America—the Chilean Mapuche people and the Guatemalan Maya. Both Mapuche and Maya artists create artworks about identity and cultural heritage in a modern interconnected world, weaving ancestral knowledge and wisdom into present-day ways of life. The story of the spider who taught the first woman how to weave in the mythological past is present in both cultures. Many designs and motifs are interpreted in similar ways. However, the creative process reflects differences in techniques and materials employed in the two different geographic regions. Revealed in the exhibition are the complex characters of Mapuche and Mayan garments with weaving patterns interpreted in the context of a broad spectrum of regional, social, ritual, and aesthetic meanings and viewed from the perspective of our shared humanity. The exhibition also features Chilean horsehair (crin) miniatures of religious and secular objects—flowers, animals, or human figures—that aim to engage viewers in a conversation about the dynamics of living traditions over time, their social, artistic, and ritual messages conveyed by the artworks and by the nature of the creative process. For current hours, tickets, and visitor guidelines, visit https://www.wheatonarts.org/tickets/ Developed in partnership with the Embassy of Chile to the United States, the Foundation of the Folk and Traditional Artists in Chile, the “Friends of the Ixchel Museum” (FOIM), and local collectors and artists.
  • THIS EVENT CELEBRATED JAZZ MONTH WITH SOME OF THE TOP PERFORMERS IN NYC INCLUDING j ALVIN FLYTH TENOR SAX, YAYOI IKAWA, AND JOHN LANDER ON PIANO, TARIK SHAH ON BASS, JAIME AFFOUMADO DRUMS, LEE OLIVE TUCKER, AND SUSAN KRAMER ON VOCALS HEADED BY JOHN S MANNAN VOCALS AND SOPRANO SAX
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