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11/28/2006
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15, Students $10, MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
Thursday, November 30th 8:30 PM
Noa Guy Drops of Consciousness – part one
Using her still photography and pre-recorded string quartet as points of departure, composer–performer Noa Guy collaborates with friends in a journey exploring the edges of audiovisual information processing. This performance examines the emotional reaction to an image of sound and silence, of light and darkness, of being and not being.
Noa Guy’s works include pieces for solo voice to symphonic orchestra as well as multimedia work and music for film and the theatre. This is her first concert after being injured in a car accident 13 years ago.
Guy studied music theory in the Rubin Academy of Music in Jerusalem and composition and electronic music in Berlin. A recipient of several international prizes, she worked with Karlheinz Stockhausen for four years. For three years she performed with American and Dutch composers in concerts of live electronic improvisation. In 1993 she suffered a severe brain injury in a car accident. The process of recovery opened new doors, which led to her active interest in neuroscience, psychology and painting and her search for the temporarily lost land of music. This performance is a break of 13 years of silence.
Producer, pianist and composer Alon Leventon came to the US in 2001 from his native Israel. He since has worked on numerous projects ranging from electronic and pop music, to acoustic jazz to experimental avant-garde music. Alon has been featured on films, radio, TV and many albums both as a producer and performer and as one half of the duo The Bursers.
Lio Spiegler is an Israeli filmmaker living and working in NY. Lio started his career as copywriter in a TBWA affiliated agency in Israel where he's written and creatively directed dozens of radio and TV commercials. In the late 90s Lio moved to NY and after receiving his BFA from the School of Visual Arts, he became head of the Creative Strategy Department at ink&co Branding & Advertising. In the past few years, Lio's attention was devoted to film and TV. In 2003 he wrote and directed "Rattlesnakes & Heatwaves," which opened the HOWL! Film Festival. In 2004 he produced and directed a pilot for a half-scripted-half-reality-half-baked cooking show. In 2005 Lio traveled to Sri Lanka to interview Sir Arthur C. Clarke for a feature length docudrama. Early this year, he produced a viral campaign for GenSpec Vitamins and shot and edited a short film for the Tribeca Film Institute and Abas Kiarostami. Limiko Films, the company he co-founded, now is developing a new drama series for NBC.
Kim Spiegler was born in Israel. She received her Associate Degree in Communications from the Open University in Tel-Aviv and developed her production skills while working as Assistant Producer at a TBWA affiliated ad agency. In 2000 Kim moved to the US and expanded her alternative vocabulary while working with the J. Mandle Performance Group. In 2006 she graduated from Hunter's film department, while working as Associate Producer at Tamouz Media. “Hijacked!,” which she helped produce, recently aired on PBS. Kim was an ambassador of the TriBeCa Film Institute's exchange program in Marrakech, in collaboration with Martin Scorsese and Abas Kiarostami. She just has finished working on “In the Name of the Victims,” a TV documentary for Channel 10 in Israel. She is one of the founders of Limiko Films.
posted by Coming Events
11/28/2006 02:50:00 PM
11/15/2006
Contact: Ellen Pfeifer Public Relations Manager New England Conservatory 617-585-1143 epfeifer@newenglandconservatory.edu
For Immediate Release: November 15, 2006
New England Conservatory Presents World Premiere of Robert Xavier Rodriguez’s El Día de los Muertos New Percussion Work Fourth in Series Commissioned by Bradford and Dorothea Endicott
Piece Evokes Joyous Mexican Folk Holiday
The New England Conservatory Percussion Ensemble will present the world premiere of Robert Xavier Rodriguez’s El Día de los Muertos (The Day of the Dead), Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m. in NEC’s Jordan Hall. Frank Epstein, Chair of Brass and Percussion and longtime member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, will conduct. The work is the fourth in a series of new percussion pieces commissioned by Bradford and Dorothea Endicott for Epstein and the Percussion Ensemble. Previous works in the series have been composed by Joan Tower, Gunther Schuller, and Jennifer Higdon. Based in Dallas, Robert Xavier Rodriguez was born on June 28, 1946 in San Antonio, Texas, where he received his earliest training in piano and harmony. Subsequent musical education included study in composition with Hunter Johnson, Halsey Stevens, Jacob Druckman, and Nadia Boulanger. He gained international recognition in 1971 when awarded the Prix de Composition Musicale Prince Pierre de Monaco by Prince Rainier and Princess Grace at the Palais Princier in Monte Carlo. Other honors include the Prix Lili Boulanger, a Guggenheim Fellowship, four National Endowment for the Arts grants, and the Goddard Lieberson Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. Rodríguez's music embraces all genres and often combines Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque techniques with ethnic and contemporary materials. He has had particular success with his seven operas. His most recent opera, Frida, based on the life of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, has enjoyed successful runs at the American Music Theatre Festival, The American Repertory Theatre in Cambridge, the Brooklyn Academy's Next Wave Festival, and the Houston Grand Opera. Written last summer and scored for six players, “El Día de los Muertos” is a musical evocation of the joyous Mexican folk celebration. As the composer explains, “The Mexican version of All Souls Day has a distinctively playful and nostalgic identity, which sets it apart from the ghostly images of the American and European Halloween, as exemplified in Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain and Saint-Saens’ Danse Macabre. Following Aztec legends, the Mexican tradition represents the dead as sleeping in a cool, quiet place called Mictlán. To begin the holiday, the living send their children (symbolically those farthest away from death) to the cemetery to invite the spirits of the dead to come out for a day to cavort with the living. The living prepare ceremonial dishes and create home altars with memorabilia of their departed loved ones. The skeletons then rise from their graves, and the spirits of the dead are reunited with the living. There is joyous celebration with singing, story-telling, feasting and dancing. At the end of the day, bells ring again and the revels end. The living, again led by the children, say goodbye to the dead and the spirits return to their graves…” Eschewing all drums except timpani, the score “utilizes a rich assortment of pitched percussion instruments, with prominent use of two marimbas (the marimba being the national instrument of Mexico as well as an apt musical representation of skeletons),” according to the composer. It also makes use of several popular Mexican folk songs, most prominently A la puerta del cielo (At the Gate of Heaven) and La realidad (Reality). “All of the Mexican melodies are combines in a quodlibet at the center of the work, where the living and the spirits of the dead are united.” Also featured on the concert are: Antonin Dvorak, Song To The Moon from the opera Rusalka adapted by Nathan Daughtrey; Ralph Vaughan Williams, Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, arranged by Blake M. Wilkins; Nathan Daughtrey, Adaptation (2005); Andrew Beall, Deliverance; and Jennifer Higdon, Splendid Wood (2006). The last work is also an Endicott commissioned work and was given its world premiere in April.
The concert is free and open to the public.
For further information, check the NEC Website at: www.newenglandconservatory.edu/concerts or call the NEC Concert Line at 617-585-1122. NEC’s Jordan Hall, Brown Hall, Williams Hall and the Keller Room are located at 30 Gainsborough St., corner of Huntington Ave. St. Botolph Hall is located at 241 St. Botolph St. between Gainsborough and Mass Ave.
ABOUT NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY
Recognized nationally and internationally as a leader among music schools, New England Conservatory offers rigorous training in an intimate, nurturing community to 750 undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral music students from around the world. Its faculty of 225 boasts internationally esteemed artist-teachers and scholars. Its alumni go on to fill orchestra chairs, concert hall stages, jazz clubs, recording studios, and arts management positions worldwide. Nearly half of the Boston Symphony Orchestra is composed of NEC trained musicians and faculty.
The oldest independent school of music in the United States, NEC was founded in 1867 by Eben Tourjee. Its curriculum is remarkable for its wide range of styles and traditions. On the college level, it features training in classical, jazz, Contemporary Improvisation, world and early music. Through its Preparatory School, School of Continuing Education, and Community Collaboration Programs, it provides training and performance opportunities for children, pre-college students, adults, and seniors. Through its outreach projects, it allows young musicians to engage with non-traditional audiences in schools, hospitals, and nursing homes—thereby bringing pleasure to new listeners and enlarging the universe for classical music and jazz.
NEC presents more than 600 free concerts each year, many of them in Jordan Hall, its world- renowned, 100-year old, beautifully restored concert hall. These programs range from solo recitals to chamber music to orchestral programs to jazz and opera scenes. Every year, NEC’s opera studies department also presents two fully staged opera productions at the Cutler Majestic Theatre in Boston.
NEC is co-founder and educational partner of “From the Top,” a weekly radio program that celebrates outstanding young classical musicians from the entire country. With its broadcast home in Jordan Hall, the show is now carried by National Public Radio and is heard on 250 stations throughout the United States. ###
posted by Ellen C. Pfeifer
11/15/2006 11:16:00 AM
11/13/2006
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Sunday, December 17th
Jim Staley, Ikue Mori & John Zorn
Playing together for twenty-six years, and still not out of breath…
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 02:02:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Thursday, December 14th
Hans Tammen & Third Eye Orchestra - Available Forms for Jazz
Hans Tammen’s latest project, the Third Eye Orchestra, is inspired by Earle Brown's Available Forms. In tonight’s performance, various sections of players are given scores with various modules, but the conductor is free to choose which ones to juxtapose. Combining improvisational aspects with open form composition, the conductor uses the orchestra as an instrument, while each performer shapes the music through virtuosic improvisation and the individual stylization of musical performance. Hans Tammen (conduction & concept) with Mari Kimura, Jason Hwang, Stephanie Griffin, Tomas Ullrich, Herb Robertson, Ned Rothenberg, Robert Dick, Detlef Landeck, Dafna Naphtali, Ursel Schlicht, Denman Maroney, Stomu Takeishi and Satoshi Takeishi.
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 02:02:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Sunday, December 10th
Jennifer Choi, Marco Cappelli & Vongku Pak
The adventurous and unrelentingly innovative violinist Jennifer Choi, known for her soulful and direct interpretations of classical new music and for her improvisations in the Susie Ibarra Trio, plays alongside the imaginative, ultra-dexterous Marco Cappelli (Extreme Guitar Project) and fuses their virtuosic string playing with the dynamic folk rhythms of Vongku Pak (Korean drums) in composed and improvised collaborations. Choi breaks through the conventional boundaries of solo violin, chamber music and creative improvisation. She has performed and recorded over 50 new compositions and has taken her traditional training at Juilliard to her groundbreaking collaborations with John Zorn, Ikue Mori, Wadada Leo Smith, Erik Friedlander and others. Check out: www.jenniferchoi.com, www.marcocappelli.com, www.koreandrum.org.
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 02:02:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Saturday, December 16th
Joel Harrison - The Wheel
Dubbed “the music of the future” (Irish Times,) composer/guitarist Joel Harrison’s compositions blend Appalachian, African and modern classical sensibilities. Praised as a “brilliant, take-it-anywhere guitarist” (Village Voice,) Harrison’s new work, The Wheel comes from a longstanding determination to make music that equally represents improvisation and notation, balancing the joy of spontaneity with the structural rigor of composition, as realized by two classic ensembles from their respective worlds, string quartet and jazz quartet. The improvisation stems from a bedrock of notation, and comes in a variety of forms, allowing for seamless transitions between the soul and spontaneity of improvising and the structure of written notes, resulting in a kind of music that truly is its own new world. Check out: www.joelharrison.com
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 02:02:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Friday December 15th
Sylvie Courvoisier & Mark Feldman
Pianist Sylvie Courvoisier, known for her work with John Zorn, Ikue Mori, Yusef Lateef, Tim Berne & her own group, Abaton or Mephista, performs with violinist Mark Feldman for an evening of exciting improvisations and new compositions. Feldman has performed with John Zorn, John Abercrombie & Dave Douglas, among others, and is known for his entirely original and self-made approach to violin improvisation. Courvoisier and Feldman have been performing together internationally since 1996, with regular appearances throughout the USA and Canada.
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 02:02:00 PM
For immediate release ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Friday, December 1st
JUDY DUNAWAY Judy Dunaway: Mother of Balloon Music CD Release Party
In celebration of her upcoming CD on Innova Records, Roulette presents a concert featuring Judy Dunaway (balloons) in improvisational duets and trios with Tom Chiu (violin) and Damian Catera (electronics.) Since 1990, Dunaway has created over forty compositions for balloons as sound producers, her main instrument for improvisation. She has presented her work throughout North American and Europe at many well-known venues and festivals including Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors, The Edna and Roy Disney Center, the Bang On A Can Festival, the Guelph Jazz Festival, Podewil and ZKM. Her discography includes recordings on the CRI and Outer Realm labels. Ms. Dunaway holds a M.A. in Music from Wesleyan University and a Ph.D. in Music Composition from SUNY Stony Brook.
RYUKO MIZUTANI Ryuko Mizutani
Ryuko Mizutani studied both classical and modern koto music under the world-renowned koto masters Kazue and the late Tadao Sawai. As a member of the Kazue Sawai Koto Ensemble, she has performed in Europe, South Asia, and the US in festivals of traditional and new music. In 1999 Ryuko received a fellowship from the Japanese Government Overseas Study Program for Artists, to study improvisation and new music with Anthony Braxton and Alvin Lucier at Wesleyan University.
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Friday, December 8th
Christopher McIntyre
Composer and trombonist Christopher McIntyre has been developing a number of large ensemble projects in the past few years, both as a leader and collaborator. Several of them will fill Roulette's stage this evening, including TILT Brass Band, Lotet and Ne(x)tworks. A thread that carries through each group is both technical and spiritual: mapping the space between composition and improvisation. Tonight's program offers a full evening of this repertoire, as well as new works commissioned by Roulette and the Jerome Foundation. Performed by an impressive array of new music’s heaviest-hitters, including Joan La Barbara, Cornelius Dufallo, Miguel Frasconi, Peter Evans and Nate Wooley.
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Thursday, December 7th
Ben Goldberg
Clarinetist/composer Ben Goldberg presents new works for quintet and pieces from his recent CD, the door, the hat, the chair, the fact (Cryptogramophone.) The recording and tonight’s program feature a set of compositions dedicated to Steve Lacy, with whom Goldberg studied and worked closely. Dubbed “one of the greatest clarinetists I've ever heard" by John Zorn, Goldberg’s New Klezmer Trio “kicked open the door for radical experiments with Ashkenazi roots music” (San Francisco Chronicle.) He currently works with the Tin Hat Trio, the Myra Melford Quintet and the trio, Plays Monk. A leading figure in “Radical Jewish Music,” Goldberg has played with everyone from George Lewis to Masada to Alvin Curran. Tonight with Carla Kihlstedt (violin,) Rob Sudduth (tenor saxophone,) Trevor Dunn (bass) and Ches Smith (drums.)
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
For immediate release ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
Friday, December 1st Judy Dunaway "Mother of Balloon Music" CD Release Party -and- Ryoko Mizutani Contemporary koto music
Saturday, December 2nd Brenda Hutchinson Long Tube performance
Sunday, December 3rd Adam Rudolph Go: Organic Orchestra
Thursday, December 7th Ben Goldberg Clarinetist/composer Ben Goldberg with Carla Kihlstedt (violin,) Rob Sudduth (tenor saxophone,) Trevor Dunn (bass) and Ches Smith (drums.)
Friday, December 8th Christopher McIntyre Composer/trombonist Christopher McIntyre with TILT Brass Band, Lotet and Ne(x)tworks.
Saturday, December 9th Robert Dick & Ursel Schlicht Flutist/composer/inventor Robert Dick (flute) and Ursel Schlicht (piano)
Sunday, December 10th Jennifer Choi, Marco Cappelli & Vongku Pak Jennifer Choi (Susie Ibarra Trio) and Marco Cappelli (Extreme Guitar Project) with Vongku Pak (Korean drums) in composed and improvised collaborations.
Monday, December 11th Aaron Siegel & Chris Peck Process-based compositions for a large, unorthodox ensemble
Thursday, December 14th Hans Tammen & Third Eye Orchestra - Available Forms for Jazz Hans Tammen (conduction & concept) with Mari Kimura, Jason Hwang, Stephanie Griffin, Tomas Ullrich, Herb Robertson, Ned Rothenberg, Robert Dick, Detlef Landeck, Dafna Naphtali, Ursel Schlicht, Denman Maroney, Stomu Takeishi and Satoshi Takeishi.
Friday December 15th Sylvie Courvoisier & Mark Feldman Sylvie Courvoisier (piano) with Mark Feldman (violin).
Saturday, December 16th Joel Harrison - The Wheel Composer/guitarist Joel Harrison performs with two quartets - string and jazz.
Sunday, December 17th Jim Staley, Ikue Mori & John Zorn Playing together for twenty-six years, and still not out of breath…
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Saturday, December 9th
Robert Dick & Ursel Schlicht
Flutist/composer Robert Dick and internationally acclaimed pianist Ursel Schlicht, “…two virtuosi whose talent for stretching their instruments and minds allows them to paint with more colors and textures than flute and piano have any right to expect," (Gene Santoro) present an evening of music that integrates composition and improvisation and radically expands the sound world and expressive possibilities of flute and piano, featuring piccolo to contrabass flute with inside & out piano. Schlicht has played improvised music, jazz, new music and world music throughout Europe, the Americas and Australia, and has recorded extensively. Robert Dick, improviser, composer, author, teacher and inventor is known worldwide for redefining the flute, creating revolutionary visions of its musical role. Please visit www.robertdick.net & www.urselschlicht.com
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
ROULETTE presents 20 Greene St (between Canal and Grand St) 8:30 PM Admission $15 Students $10 MEMBERS FREE TICKETS/RSVP: 212.219.8242 Roulette 228 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 contact: press@roulette.org http://www.roulette.org/
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Sunday, December 3rd
Adam Rudolph Go: Organic Orchestra
Go: Organic Orchestra is a thirty-piece ensemble of winds, strings and drummers/percussionists, including traditional western and non-western instruments. The orchestra combines many of LA’s leading performers, from both jazz and classical backgrounds, as well as young, developing musicians. The group “combines lush harmonies & vivid structures … to produce a surging, shifting sound with plenty of room for individual spark” (LA Weekly.) Check out: www.metarecords.com/adam.html www.metarecords.com/go.html
posted by Coming Events
11/13/2006 01:10:00 PM
11/10/2006
On Monday, December 4th, at 7:30 p.m. at Christ and St. Stephen's Episcopal Church 120 West 69th Street, New York City, the New York Viola Society will present a concert of music featuring violists Daniel Avshalomov and Tim Deighton. Entitled “Mixed Doubles” the program will feature works for viola and piano, viola and saxophone and viola duet. Mr. Avshalomov, with pianist Joanne Polk, will perform his own arrangement of Haydn’s String Quartet, Op. 77, No. 2 as a sonata for viola and piano, the Sonatine by his father, composer and conductor Jacob Avshalomov, and Dark Dances by Robert Sirota. The saxophone and viola duo “The Irrelevants” - Mr. Deighton and saxophonist Carrie Koffman - will present violist/composer Michael Kimber’s Dialog, Libby Larsen’s Bid Call, Paul Seitz’s Relevant Dialogues and the world premiere of the Duo Concertante by another violist/composer, Russell Podgorsek. In addition, Messrs. Avsholomov and Deighton will give the world premiere of Michael Kimber’s Three Canons for Two Violas. For more information about the New York Viola Society's events, as well as information about viola-related events of interest in the New York metropolitan area, please visit our website: www.nyvs.org. You may also contact us by email at nyvs@earthlink.net.
posted by Coming Events
11/10/2006 12:52:00 PM
11/4/2006
Keys to the Future (www.keystothefuture.org) Festival of Contemporary Piano Music Evening 1: Tuesday, November 7, 2006 @ 8PM
Pianists Blair McMillen, Lisa Moore and Joseph Rubenstein perform music of Howard Skempton, Leo Ornstein, Henri Dutilleux, Bruce Stark, Radiohead, and Fred Hersch
Greenwich House Music School’s Renee Weiler Concert Hall 46 Barrow St. (just West of 7th Avenue) (212) 242-4770 Take the 1 train to Christopher Street, walk south two blocks and make a right on Barrow St. The school is about a half block down on the right. General Admission: $15 per concert Seniors/Students: $10 per concert Visit www.keystothefuture.org for complete info
Tickets are not sold in advance. Admission to Renee Weiler Concert Hall will begin at 7:30 on the evening of each concert, and people will be seated on a first-come, first-serve basis.
posted by Coming Events
11/04/2006 02:16:00 AM
Keys to the Future (www.keystothefuture.org) Festival of Contemporary Piano Music Evening 2: Wednesday, November 8, 2006 @ 8PM
Pianists Tatjana Rankovich, Joseph Rubenstein, and Lora Tchekoratova perform music of Franghiz Ali-Zadeh, Philippe Hersant, Luciano Berio, Joseph Fennimore, Arvo Part, Bruce Stark, Radiohead, Lowell Liebermann, Phil Kline, Toru Takemitsu
Greenwich House Music School’s Renee Weiler Concert Hall 46 Barrow St. (just West of 7th Avenue) (212) 242-4770 Take the 1 train to Christopher Street, walk south two blocks and make a right on Barrow St. The school is about a half block down on the right. General Admission: $15 per concert Seniors/Students: $10 per concert Visit www.keystothefuture.org for complete info
Tickets are not sold in advance. Admission to Renee Weiler Concert Hall will begin at 7:30 on the evening of each concert, and people will be seated on a first-come, first-serve basis.
posted by Coming Events
11/04/2006 02:14:00 AM
Keys to the Future (www.keystothefuture.org) Festival of Contemporary Piano Music Evening 3: Thursday, November 9, 2006 @ 8PM Pianists Polly Ferman, Tatjana Rankovich, and Joseph Rubenstein perform music of Bruce Stark, Pierre Jalbert, Sarah Kirkland Snider, Ricky Ian Gordon, Brad Mehldau, Joseph Rubenstein, Astor Piazzolla, Juan Ramos, Pedro Saenz, Daniel Binelli, Osvaldo Golijov Greenwich House Music School’s Renee Weiler Concert Hall 46 Barrow St. (just West of 7th Avenue) (212) 242-4770 Take the 1 train to Christopher Street, walk south two blocks and make a right on Barrow St. The school is about a half block down on the right. General Admission: $15 per concert Seniors/Students: $10 per concert Visit www.keystothefuture.org for complete info Tickets are not sold in advance. Admission to Renee Weiler Concert Hall will begin at 7:30 on the evening of each concert, and people will be seated on a first-come, first-serve basis.
posted by Coming Events
11/04/2006 02:12:00 AM
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