Kickstart Your Summer with the Arts!

Edsel and Eleanor Ford House and Daffodil Garden by Stephen J. Brown

WRCJ 90.9 FM and Edsel & Eleanor Ford House invite you to Kickstart Your Summer!

Don’t miss a fun filled event for families, students and arts and cultural organizations. You also can be part of a live radio broadcast on WRCJ 90.9 FM, hosted by Dave Wagner and Chris Felcyn.

Join us on the grounds of the historic Edsel & Eleanor Ford House on the shore of Lake St. Clair on Saturday, June 8, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Among the fun:

  • Free Admission and Free Parking
  • Live entertainment will be provided by musicians from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Livonia Symphony, Macomb Symphony, Cantata Academy Chorale, The Detroit Children’s Choir, Grosse Pointe Community Chorus, Motor City Brass Band and many others
  • Over 40 Exhibitors – Arts, Music, Educational and Civic Organizations
  • Instrument “Petting Zoo” and other children’s activities
  • Tours of the historic Edsel & Eleanor Ford House will be available with an admission fee of $12 for adults, $11 for seniors, $5 for children ages 6 – 12 and free for children under 5.

Families will be able to sample tasty food from Ford House’s Cotswold Café, Dirty Dog Jazz Café and Fresh Farms Market.

Representatives from the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra, Cranbrook Academy of Art & Art Museum, Cranbrook Music Guild, Dearborn Symphony, Detroit Public TV, Grosse Pointe Symphony, Michigan Opera Theatre, Windsor Symphony, and many other arts and cultural organizations will be on hand with activities and information.

The Edsel & Eleanor Ford House is located at 1100 Lake Shore Road, Grosse Pointe Shores. For more information, visit us online at www.wrcjfm.org.

The image above of the Edsel and Eleanor Ford House and the Daffodil Garden is a detail from a photograph by Stephen J. BrownClick here to see it and other photographs by Mr. Brown.

 

20th Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival

Jonathan Biss opens GLCMF

The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival launches its celebratory 20th Anniversary Season with an opening night performance featuring Jonathan Biss and the Pacifica Quartet. The festival opens Saturday, June 8 at the Seligman Performing Arts Center.

Details from the GLCMF:

The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival will celebrate its 20th anniversary season June 8-23 with more than 20 concerts in downtown and metro venues. In celebration of a milestone year, the 2013 Festival will feature the return of favorite artists, five new commissions performed by five returning ensembles, and the return of three legendary composers. The festivities kick off on Opening Night, Saturday, June 8 at Seligman Performing Arts Center. The concert will feature world-famous pianist Jonathan Biss and Grammy Award winning ensemble, the Pacifica Quartet.

Pianist Jonathan Biss performed at the very first Festival in 1994 at the age of 13. His last Festival appearance occurred in 1998.

Jonathan Biss, who appeared on the very first Festival season in 1994 at the age of 13, has since appeared with the foremost orchestras of North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia and released a number of solo albums. The most recent album being the first CD in a nine-year, nine-disc recording cycle of Beethoven’s complete sonatas in January 2012. His last Festival appearance occurred in 1998.

Biss will bookend the concert with a performance of Beethoven’s “Piano Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 16″ with his parents, violinist Miriam Fried and violist Paul Biss, along with cellist Andrés Díaz. Biss will also close out the evening with a performance of Dvořák’s “Piano Quintet No. 2, Op. 81″ – a work widely acknowledged as a masterpiece of its form. Biss will perform the work with the members of the Pacifica Quartet.

 The Pacifica Quartet made their Festival debut in 1998 as part of the Shouse Institute. This year marks their first return engagement.

Also featured on the evening will be a new work by composer Keeril Makan, co-commissioned by the Festival and the Boston Celebrity Series for the Pacifica Quartet. The work was premiered on the Celebrity Boston Series to a sold-out audience in October of 2012 at Bard College. Makan is an Associate Professor of Music at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome and a 2012 Guggenheim Fellowship.

The Pacifica Quartet made their Festival debut in 1998 as a part of the Shouse Ensemble Institute for young and emerging ensembles. This will be their first return performance to the Festival. Named the quartet-in-residence and full-time faculty members at Indiana University’s Jacob School of Music in March 2012, the Pacifica was the quartet-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2009 – 2012) – a position previously held by the Guarneri String Quartet – and received the 2009 Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music Performance.

The Festival’s opening night performance will set the tone for the two-week festival. Upcoming concerts during the Festival’s first week will include a Sunday, June 9 at 3 p.m. performance at Grosse Pointe Unitarian Church, and four concerts running Tuesday, June 11 through Friday, June 14 at Temple Beth El and Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian Church. The first week concerts will feature many of the opening night artists as well a number of additional artists including: the Jupiter String Quartet, the Parker Quartet, pianist James Tocco and cellists Paul Katz and Robert deMaine. The Festival’s closing night performance will take place on Saturday, June 22. Find out more about these upcoming concerts by calling (248) 559-2097 or going online to www.greatlakeschambermusic.org.

Opening Night is sponsored by Plante Moran. Major sponsorship for the 2013 Festival is provided by JPMorgan Chase.

 

 JUNE 8 CONCERT INFORMATION

Piano Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 16…………………………………… Ludwig van Beethoven

Miriam Fried, violin; Paul Biss, viola; Andrés Díaz, cello; Jonathan Biss, piano

Return ……………………………………………………………………………………………Keeril Makan

The Pacifica Quartet: Simin Ganatra, violin; Sibbi Bernhardsson, violin; Masumi Per Rostad, viola; Brandon Vamos, cello

 Piano Quintet No. 2 in A major, Op. 81…………………………………………..Antonín Dvořák

Jonathan Biss, piano; Pacifica Quartet

ABOUT THE GREAT LAKES CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

The Festival is co-sponsored by St. Hugo of the Hills, Temple Beth El, Kirk in the Hills, and Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings. Subscriptions and single tickets are now on sale. To order or to find out more, please visit www.greatlakeschambermusic.org or call (248) 559-2097.

A Musical Evening in England

Chamber-Music-at-the-Scarab-Club

Chamber Music at the Scarab Club celebrates the final concert of its 15th season with a program of music created by English composers. “An Evening in England” will be performed Sunday, June 2 at the Scarab Club in Detroit, beginning at 7 p.m.

The program includes the Bax Quintet for Harp and Strings, featuring harpist Maurice Draughn; York Bowen’s Quintet for Bass Clarinet and Strings with clarinetist Brian Bowman; and two selections for string quartet by Vaughan Williams and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.

Tickets are $18 if reserved in advance and $22 at the door, $10 for students.

For tickets and more info, call (248) 474-8930 or email chambermusic@scarabclub.org.

 

 The Artists

Maurice Draughn – harp
Brian Bowman – bass clarinet
Velda Kelly – violin
Andrew Wu - violin
Scott Stefanko – viola
Nadine Deleury – cello

The Program

Quintet for Harp and Strings – Arnold BAX (1883-1953)
Phantasy Quintet for Bass Clarinet and Strings – York BOWEN (1884-1961)
Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn Tunes for String Quartet – Ralph VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (1872-1958)
Fantasie-Stücke for String Quartet – Samuel COLERIDGE-TAYLOR (1875-1912)

 

More from Chamber Music at the Scarab Club:

Don’t miss the season finale of Chamber Music at the Scarab Club! Relax in the courtyard garden before and after the concert, view the current art exhibits in both galleries and enjoy Detroit chamber musicians perform English music in a perfect setting.

Arnold Bax is beginning to become a more well-known composer but his music still has not been heard by many. His Quintet for Harp and Strings is an expressive one-movement piece. Bax has a singular and very romantic style with gorgeous expansive themes. This work was written in 1919 around the time of his first visit to Ireland, a country and culture that fascinated him throughout his entire life.

York Bowen is another prolific composer who is relatively unknown. This exceptional work was luckily suggested by one of the CMSC performers. Bowen showcases the bass clarinet, an instrument rarely included in chamber music, especially not with a string quartet! This is a well-structured and exciting piece that will cause you to wonder why the bass clarinet as a chamber instrument isn’t heard more often. Bowen was a pianist, but is said to have played every instrument in the orchestra. No wonder he could write so well for this unusual combination of instruments!

Ralph Vaughan Williams is certainly a name everyone will recognize. The Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn Tunes are truly beautiful and richly melodic. The composer felt a responsibility to write works for different combinations of instruments that could be played by people “whiling away the waiting hours of war’. Written in 1940-41 for string quartet, Vaughan Williams specifically noted in the parts that these preludes could also be played by a variety of other instruments, assuming that people would use whatever they had on hand.

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was an African-British composer who had a short but influential life. He made several trips from his native London to the United States and was greatly admired in this country as well as in England. Composed in 1898, the Fantasie-Stücke (Fantasy Pieces) consists of five relatively short and light-hearted works, each representing a different character or mood.

As always, each piece on the concert will be introduced by one of the musicians and the performance will be followed by a delicious and friendly reception.

 

33 Variations

PRT-p-33-Variations-i3

First off: Full Disclosure. I am a Beethovenophile, which is a pseudo-intellectually fancy way of saying I’m crazy about all things having to do with the German composer Ludwig van Beethoven: His music. His words. His story.

So, I met with great interest news that Purple Rose Theatre was going to present “33 Variations” by Moisés Kaufman. The drama will be performed on select dates through June 1 at the Purple Rose in Chelsea.

If you have the opportunity: Go! It is an outstanding play that explores important questions almost all of us present in the world may one day face. Even if you don’t care about the Ninth Symphony or the Moonlight Sonata, go! You will experience theater at its finest.

Personally, “33 Variations” represents a transformative experience that left me a better person. Why? I witnessed many of the ideas expressed through Beethoven’s music and life brought to life through the stage. In the process, I also learned new lessons that I will never forget.

Playwright Kaufman may be best known as a co-writer of The Laramie Project, a dramatization of a community’s real-life responses to the brutal murder of Matthew Shepard, a young University of Wyoming student. Kaufman and his colleagues at the Tectonic Theater Project interviewed hundreds of people in the town of Laramie to create characters for the stage. Through a series of sketches, the community reveals a complicated tragedy and details its own unique response to hate.

The idea, perhaps, is to use the important lessons remembered by the people who knew Mr. Shepard and his attackers in order to create a better world for all. Similarly, we find lessons for us all in 33 Variations. The work illustrates how the very passions that threaten to overwhelm us can also save us. It is a rare theatrical treat, filled with surprises for the heart and mind.

33 Variations centers on an acclaimed fictional musicologist, Katherine Brandt, and the object of her professional passion: Ludwig van Beethoven. The story is set in two times: 19th century Vienna, where we experience scenes from the city where Beethoven lived most of his professional life; and 21st century Bonn, the city of Beethoven’s birth and home to one of the world’s great archives — the original manuscripts and sketch pads on which Beethoven composed and we today can discern “the Master’s” thoughts.

The lives of the great composer and an obscure music publisher come into our world as Katherine discovers the story behind some of the most sublime music ever created, the Diabelli Variations. After achieving fame as a composer, Beethoven in the story and in real-life wrestled for years with a commission he could not immediately complete: a variation on a simple waltz created by his music publisher and friend, Anton Diabelli, whom Beethoven, according to his biographer and secretary Anton Schindler, on occassion called “Diabolus.”

In the present day, Katherine struggles to unlock the mystery behind Beethoven’s obsession with the simple waltz. Unlike Mozart who composed in his imagination and transcribed his thoughts almost directly to paper, Beethoven committed his ideas to paper, writing and re-writing the musical ideas that often came to him in the natural splendor of Austria.

Using Beethoven’s own writings — the compositions he created, the quotes recorded by his friends and family, and the “Conversation Books” he used to communicate after he became deaf — Katherine explores the drive of the creative genius. The written record serves as a map that preserves his complicated music. What’s more, the documents reveal his thinking and his intentions.

It all sounds complicated. And it is complicated, as revealed in one remarkable scene where several characters speak simultaneously across the vast gulf of time and space and person. Yet, we in the audience understand, hearing the signal emerge loud and clear from the noise.

As she races against time and her failing health, Katherine discovers the true nature of Beethoven’s genius and gains insight into the other great mystery in her life: her daughter.

33 Variations premiered at Washington D.C.’s Arena Stage and later opened on Broadway in March 2009. The Broadway production featured Jane Fonda in the leading role and received five Tony Award nominations.

The Purple Rose Theatre is, itself, one of the world’s artistic treasures. The house is an intimate experience, by which I mean every seat is outstandingly close to the action on stage. Seats surround an outcropping, a Yooper or Troll might say “a penninsula,” on three sides. A traditional stage connects along the back wall.The Purple Rose staff know how to treat the public, from Box Office Bob III to the kind intern thanking by name before the show each of the sponsors and supporters who help make modern, professional theater possible. Every one there treated guests better than gold – like human beings.

Let me add a word about the audience: They were world-class, too. During the 95-minute production, there was not one cough. No cell phones beeped. No one talked or even whispered. They were there for the performance.

Directed by Guy Sanville, the cast includes David Bendena (Chelsea, MI), Daniel C. Britt (Hamilton, OH), Lauren Knox (Macomb, MI), Richard McWillams (Dayton, OH), Michelle Mountain (Grass Lake, MI), Michael Brian Ogden (Berkley, MI), and Rhiannon Ragland (Flint, MI).

Tickets and reservations can be made by calling The Purple Rose Theatre Company Box Office at (734) 433-7673 or online at www.purplerosetheatre.org. Please know: This play contains adult language and content. Regular performances for the duration of the run are Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. with Wednesday and Saturday matinees at 3 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m.
The Purple Rose Theatre
Founded in 1991 by actor and Chelsea native, Jeff Daniels, The Purple Rose Theatre Company is a leading American theatre dedicated to producing the new American play and creating opportunities for Midwest theatre professionals. The PRTC is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit professional theatre operating under a Small Professional Theatre agreement with the Actors’ Equity Association. The PRTC promotes the development of new American theatre and its practitioners, provides valuable educational opportunities for young artists, and, through consistently high quality production values, has earned the respect of both local and national theatre communities.

The photo above includes Richard McWilliams, Michelle Mountain, David Bendena and Daniel C. Britt who will perform in the Purple Rose Theatre Company production, “33 Variations.” The image is a detail from a photograph by Sean Carter Photography.

If I believed in subjective rating scales, I’d give “33 Variations” at the Purple Rose Five Stars out of Five Stars. In memory of the great Siskel and Ebert, who I believe in for their appreciation of cinema and the narrative arts, I’d say: “Two thumbs up.”

 

Beethoven in Michigan
The stars of Beethoven have aligned in 2013 over Southeast Michigan.
This weekend, the Chamber Music Detroit presents two of the world’s most eminent classical musicians, cellist Lynn Harrell and pianist Anne-Marie McDermott. They will perform three Beethoven cello sonatas in concert on Saturday, May 18 at the Seligman Performing Arts Center. The music begins at 8 p.m. A pre-concert conversation begins at 6:45 p.m.
We have been treated to the Michigan Opera Theatre production of Fidelio. Beethoven’s only opera, the work is considered a masterpiece for both its music and the themes of democratic justice and true love told through its story.
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Maestro Leonard Slatkin, hosted a Beethoven Festival which included performances of the complete series of nine symphonies, the 32 piano sonatas and many other outstanding works. Unparalleled piano virtuoso Emanuel Ax performed a special one-night engagement with the DSO Civic Orchestra at The Max M. Fisher Music Center.
The Warren Symphony Orchestra performed Ta-Ta-Ta-Tum, the magnificent Fifth Symphony. Beethoven said the work evokes the Hand of Fate, knocking on one’s door.
Pro Musica Detroit presented Dr. Richard Kogan, M.D. and Inside the Mind and Music of Beethoven,” in which the Juilliard trained virtuoso pianist and Harvard-trained psychiatrist performed three sonatas representing three creative periods in Beethoven’s life.
The Tuesday Musicale of Detroit is proud to present pianist Maria MeirellesThe world reknown artist performed “The Hammerklavier,” considered one of the most difficult pieces to perform in all music, as part of her recent program.
The good people who present Palmer Woods Music in Homes presented Beethoven & Beyond,” a concert featuring pianist Pauline Martinand violinist Yehonatan Berick.
More stars and constellations are ahead. Please let me know of Beethoven and the others in the classic and jazz firmament you sight at dperforms@dptv.org. I’ll share them through Detroit Performs.
– Frank J. Bunker, editor, Detroit Performs

F i d e l i o

MOT presents Fidelio

The Michigan Opera Theatre production of Fidelio was a  one-of-a kind masterpiece when it appeared on the stage of the magnificent Detroit Opera House.

The music was divine, with some of the most difficult vocals written performed beautifully by Christine Goerke as Leonore on the night I attended, Saturday, April 20. Ileana Montalbetti also performed the demanding roll. John Mac Master performed Florestan and Carsten Wittmoser was Count Pizzarro. Click here for the full cast.

His only opera, Beethoven is said to have remarked the work took him an entire creative lifetime. The work mixes two moods, one the playful joy of love that Beethoven’s heart pursued in life and the bitter struggle between absolute power and justice.

Representing the apogee of creative genius, Fidelio, unfortunately is rarely staged. Thanks to David DiChiera, we got to enjoy a story about justice, freedom and love, as well as an orchestral score and aria that shine among the most beautiful in all opera. Christian Badea was conductor of the MOT Orchestra, which sounded sublime.

Click here to hear a conductor John Pascoe take us through Beethoven’s Fidelio. In the podcast, we discover just how amazing it is to sing while lying down on the job.

From MOT:

FIDELIO

18th century Spain sets the scene for this dramatic tale of the nobleman Florestan, wrongly condemned to die in prison after exposing the political corruption of the tyrant Pizarro. That is until Florestan’s wife Leonare, disguised as a male prison guard named Fidelio, gains employment at the prison. Under the watchful eyes of husband’s captors, Leonare ultimately risks her life in an attempt to save her husband’s. Ludwig van Beethoven’s only opera, Fidelio is a stirring story of heroism, justice and love that is not to be missed.

 

Fidelio

Opera by Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827)

Libretto by Joseph Sonnleithner and Georg Friedrich Sonnleithner

Based on the drama by Jean Nicolas Bouilly

Premiered in Vienna, 1805

Final revision premiered in Vienna, 1814

Sung in German with English translations projected above the stage

Running time about 2½ hrs

 

Performances:

Saturday, April 13, 7:30p

Wednesday, April 17, 7:30p

Friday, April 19, 7:30p

Saturday, April 20, 7:30p

Sunday, April 21, 2:30p

The image above is a detail from a photograph by John Grigaitis. The image includes Angela Theis (Marzellina), on the left, and Christine Goerke (Leonore) of the Michigan Opera Theatre production, Fidelio.

 

 

 

Dimitris Kotronakis

Dmitris Kotronakis presented by Pro Musica of Detroit

He didn’t stick to the program and still classical guitarist Dimitris Kotronakis made his Detroit debut a knock out. The virtuoso and musicologist performed Friday, May 3, before Pro Musica of Detroit.

The audience inside the Music Box of the Max M. Fisher Music Center were expecting to hear Aguado and Paganini. Instead, we were treated to works by two modern composers instead. Hearing and seeing Mr. Kotronakis perform incredibly complex  pieces helped create one of the most moving and memorable concerts.

Kotronakis’s guitar playing has received praise from around the world. Guitar International said, “Kotronakis performs with perhaps one of the most virtuosic techniques in modern times.”

Born on the Greek Island of Crete in 1973, Kotronakis’s studies in classical guitar began at the age of seven. Since, he has obtained degrees in classical guitar from the prestigious Athens Conservatory as well as the University of Athens. His career has included a number of prizes at international competitions including the Volos Guitar Festival, the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Guitar Festival and the Web Concert Hall Competition, among others.

Over the course of his career, Kotronakis has been involved in the recording of six different albums. One album was for his guitar quintet, Epsilon, for which he is the lead guitar. Kotronakis has performed in recitals throughout Greece and around the world. He has been the featured soloist with the Philharmonic Orchestra of Kielce (Poland), the Philharmonic Orchestra of Craiova in Romania, and many others. Upcoming performances will take him to Portugal, Ukraine, Italy Mexico, Trinidad, Venezual and the United States.

Kotronakis currently is an instructor in classical guitar with the Panarmonio Conservatory and at the Conservatory of Athens.

An afterglow reception of hors d’oeuvre and beverages will follow the concert. All concert attendees are invited to attend the afterglow where they will also have the opportunity to meet Mr. Kotronakis.

For more information and to learn more about Pro Musica’s upcoming concerts, please visit promusicadetroit.com. Tickets may be purchased on the Detroit Symphony Orchestra website at dso.org or by calling the Max M. Fisher Box Office at (313) 576-5111. Patron level Pro Music of Detroit ticket holders receive complimentary valet parking by showing their patron ticket.

CONCERT PROGRAM (Orginal – Revised to Follow):

 Andante & Rondo, Opus 2……………………………………………DIONISIO AGUADO (1784-1849)

 Ciaccona (Chaconne)………………………………………………..BACH (1685-1750) arr. Kotronakis

 Capricci # 1, 20, 16, 24…………………………….NICOLO PAGANINI (1782-1840) arr. Kotronakis

 Nine Sketches for solo guitar (No. 8 & No. 1)…………………..THANASSIS MORAITIS (b. 1956)

 ”Kaygorod” (Russian Waltz)……………………………………………………STEPAN RAK (b. 1945)

 “Swan Song of a Dying Guitar”…………………………………………………STEPAN RAK (b. 1945)

 Suite Troileana………………………………………ASTOR PIAZZOLLA(1921-1992) arr. Dario Bisso

 “Hommage a Villa-Lobos”.…………………………………………………..ROLAND DYENS (b. 1955)

 “Andantinostalgie”…………………………………………………………….ROLAND DYENS (b. 1955)

 

ABOUT PRO MUSICA OF DETROIT

Now in its 86th season, Pro Musica of Detroit is the city’s oldest presenter of chamber music. Past artists have included some of the most well-known names in chamber music including: composers Béla Bartók, Maurice Ravel, and Aaron Copland; and musicians Joshua Bell, Jessye Norman and the Guarneri String Quartet.

The mission of Pro Musica of Detroit is to present to its members works that are rarely or infrequently heard–contemporary as well as classical. For more information, please visit www.promusicadetroit.com.

The image above is a detail of “Guitar” by Pablo Picasso. To learn more about the work, click here.

DSO @ Carnegie Hall on WRCJ 90.9 FM

Maestro Leonard Slatkin

Catch the Detroit Symphony Orchestra performance at Carnegie Hall today on WRCJ 90.9 FM. The program features the complete cycle of four symphonies by American composer Charles Ives. The program begins at 4 p.m.

Maestro Leonard Slatkin calls Ives the first American composer to possess a uniquely American voice.

Details from the DSO:

The second performance consists of all four Charles Ives symphonies, a debut for the DSO as well as for Carnegie Hall. Music Director Leonard Slatkin chose an immersion into Ives in pursuit of showcasing the strength, sound, ensemble and style that is uniquely Detroit.

Long known for celebrating American repertoire through recordings and commissions, telling Ives’ biographical story through the consecutive performances of all his symphonic works serves as a tribute to both Slatkin’s affinity for American compositions and Detroit’s longtime acquaintance with the American school. Slatkin, who considers Ives to be one of America’s most progressive composers of his time, imagined the four-symphony program as a way to familiarize the audience with his style.

 

An invitation to the symphony…on your radio…this morning

Maestro Leonard Slatkin

To thank our supporters for all of your support, WRCJ 90.9 FM would like to invite you to the symphony…The Detroit Symphony Orchestra

…this morning…at 10:45

…right at your desk, your kitchen table…or your favorite big, soft comfortable chair.

…right from your favorite radio station, WRCJ 90.9FM

This morning and this weekend, Leonard Slatkin leads the DSO in Dvorak’s Concerto for Cello featuring virtuoso cellist Lynn Harrell. Can’t get to Orchestra Hall? Join WRCJ for our live radio broadcast at 10:45 a. m. on WRCJ 90.9 FM and worldwide at wrcjfm.org.

Thanks, Detroit, for all of your incredible support.

– Rich Homberg/President and CEO

 

 

Emanuel Ax with DSO Civic Orchestra

Emanuel Ax pianist photo by Maurice Jerry Beznos

Unparalleled piano virtuoso Emanuel Ax performed a special one-night engagement with the DSO Civic Orchestra on Monday, March 25 at The Max M. Fisher Music Center.

The performance featured Beethoven’s Egmont Overture, Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major, Op.73 “Emperor” and the Civic Slatkin String Quartet performing Mendelssohn’s String Quartet No.4, Op.44.

WRCJ 90.9 FM will broadcast the concert with Emanuel Ax and the Detroit Symphony Civic Orchestra at 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 27; and at noon on Sunday, April 28. Civic violinist Daisha Mosely and WRCJ’s Jimmy Rhoades host.

Artist-in-Residence with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Emanuel Ax first gained recognition when he won the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Competition in Tel Aviv in 1975.

The DSO Civic Orchestra is recognized as Michigan’s premier youth orchestra. The program will be conducted by Maestro Leonard Slatkin.

The image above is a detail of a photograph by Maurice Jerry Beznos.

 

Maestro Slatkin spells out ‘Why Detroit?’

Maestro Leonard Slatkin

Maestro Leonard Slatkin, music director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, wrote a most interesting blog for the Huffington Post in which he talks about the arts, the metropolis, and the people who live here. An excerpt:

Nearly every subscription program is broadcast via a series of free HD webcasts. Last season we became the first orchestra in the world to offer such a product, with viewers in 75 countries and a cumulative audience approaching 300,000.

That’s not the best of it, though. Click here to read the rest of My Town by Maestro Slatkin.

The webcasts are produced in partnership with Detroit Public Television Channel 56 and WRCJ 90.9 FM. Here’s the link to the DSO archive, courtesy of DPTV.

What’s not spelled out in the Huffington Post piece is why the Motor City adores Maestro Slatkin. As Artur Schnabel wrote about the spaces between the notes being the region where art resides, that indescribable bond is writ loud and clear between the lines.