Music in NYC: Music of the 18th Century Grand Tour

Music in NYC: Music of the 18th Century Grand Tour

The season finale of the Aspect Foundation concert series features soprano Pascale Beaudin and the Four Nations Ensemble with an illustrated talk by the author and historian John Brewer; at Bohemian National Hall on Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7.30 pm

The Grand Tourist Francis Basset by Pompeo Batoni; Four Nations Ensemble and soprano Pascale Beaudin
The Grand Tourist Francis Basset by Pompeo Batoni; Four Nations Ensemble and soprano Pascale Beaudin / Photo credit David Rogers and Pierre-Etienne Bergeron

Touring the continent while learning its customs, history, and culture first hand was an educational standard for high society young people in the 18th century Europe. Instructive and entertaining, the rite of passage would take them through France and Italy with additional stops in Switzerland, Austria or Germany.

The Aspect Foundation offers to take us back in time on a virtual tour with musical stops in Paris, Venice, Rome, and Naples. An illustrated talk by John Brewer, author of The Pleasures of the Imagination, will accompany the journey. Featuring The Four Nations Ensemble and soprano Pascale Beaudin, the program will celebrate 18th century culture with music closely identified with the time and place.

Music of the Grand Tour on Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 7.30 pm concludes Aspect Foundation’s successful 2018-2019 season of enlightening concerts and talks.

Get tickets at 33% off with code ARTSNY23 at checkout when attending the Aspect Foundation Concert Series for the first time. Please, enter your email before using ARTSNY23 code:

    We will use your email for updates about upcoming events. Check our Privacy Policy for details.

     

    Read More

    Nightlife in NYC: Seven-String Guitar Recital by Oleg Timofeyev at Russian Samovar

    Nightlife in NYC: Seven-String Guitar Recital by Oleg Timofeyev at Russian Samovar on June 27, 2019

    The World’s Leading Expert on the Russian Guitar Oleg Timofeyev performs an instrumental program “The Golden Age of Russian Guitar” at the legendary Russian Samovar on Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 8.30 pm
    Contributed by Lena Khandros
    Guitarist Oleg Timofeyev
    Guitarist Oleg Timofeyev / Image courtesy of the artist

    Perhaps some of you have noticed occasional guitars in the famous masterpieces of Russian literature:  for example, Natasha Rostova dances to her uncle’s guitar playing in Tolstoy’s “War and Peace,” or Telegin plays a polka on his guitar in Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya.” But barely anybody knows that from its very beginning in the 1790s, the Russian guitar tradition has been very different from the Western-European one.  To make the matters worse, by the end of the 20th Century, this unique and exciting tradition was pretty much abandoned in Russia. 

    Oleg Timofeyev is the person behind the world-wide revival of the Russian seven-string guitar (or semistrunka).  In 1999 he defended his Ph. D. dissertation on the subject, at Duke University.  Since then he recorded more than 30 CD albums, featuring different repertoires:  classical, contemporary, Russian-Romani (“Gypsy”), Jewish, and even Georgian.  Since 2006 he produces annual Russian Guitar Festivals, that bring players from Russia, Ukraine, Belorus, Kyrgyzstan, France, Germany, Sweden, Norway, and Australia. 

    But most of Timofeyev’s activities, including his festivals, happen far away from the City.  It is of particular interest for New Yorkers, then, to attend his intimate, engaging performance at the Tolstoy Lounge.  For every piece he will be playing on his original 1912 guitar by Mikhail Eroshkin, Timofeyev will tell a story that will put the music in its historical and cultural context.  For example, he will share with you a shockingly light-wing variations on the Russian anthem “God Save the Czar,” and will explain the roots of the disproportional popularity of Oginski’s Polonaise in Russian and Soviet culture.

    RSVP

     

    Program

    Polonaise melancholique, Ignatz von Held (1766-1814)

    Allegro – Kozaque – Air Russe, A. Swientitsky (ca. 1803)

    Folie d’Espagne, Andrei Sychra (1773–1850) God Save the Tsar!

    Cachucha Pietro Pettoletti,(ca. 1795-ca. 1870?)

    L’illusion perdue and the Orphan’s song, Nikolay Alexandrov (1818-1884)

    Polonaise in E Major, Michał Ogiński

    Polonaise in G Minor, (arr. by Sychra)

    Waltz, Pavel Ladyzhensky

    As Beyond the Dear River, Mikhail Vysotsky

    Ukrainian Song (1791-1837)

    Ukrainian Dance, Vasily Sarenko (1814-1881)

     

    Stay in the know about future events and offers by subscribing to ARTS-NY newsletter     

     

    Date & Time: Thursday, June 27, 2019 – doors open at 7.30 pm / music from 8.30 pm

    Venue: 256 W 52nd St, New York, NY 10019   

    The Next Festival of Emerging Artists with Miranda Cuckson

    The Next Festival of Emerging Artists with Miranda Cuckson

    Submitted by Jennifer Wada

    Violinist Miranda Cuckson
    Violinist Miranda Cuckson ; Photo credit John Rogers, Spectrum

    The Next Festival of Emerging Artists has been described as holding a “unique place in the vastly diversifying field of new music.” Led by the festival’s founder and artistic director, Peter Askim, the young musicians of Next Festival 2019 are joined by violinist and contemporary music star Miranda Cuckson for a program including the U.S. premiere of Toshio Hosokawa’s “Hika” (2015) for violin and string orchestra, and Toru Takemitsu’s “Nostalghia” (1987) for violin and string orchestra; as well as three works for string orchestra alone: Aaron Jay Kernis’s “Sarabanda in Memoriam” (2004), Reena Esmail’s “Teen Murti” (2018); and the world premiere of a work by Peter Askim. www.next-fest.org
    National Sawdust
    Date: Sunday, June 2, 2019, at 7:00 pm
    Tickets: $25 in advance, $29 at the door
    Venue: https://nationalsawdust.org/event/the-next-festival-of-emerging-artists/

    Art in NYC: Like Life – Sculpture, Color, and the Body at The Met Breuer

    Art in NYC: Like Life – Sculpture, Color, and the Body at The Met Breuer

    History of Sculpture from 1300 until Now on view from March 21 – July 22, 2018 

    Like Life sculpture color body Met Breuer Museum
    Tip Toland, The Whistlers, 2005, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of Dale and Doug Anderson, 2011 / Image courtesy of The Met Breuer

    This truly fascinating exhibition at The Met Breuer covers seven hundred years of history from 1300 till now of sculptures, casts, tableaus, masks and even automatons to illuminate the perfection of likeness and its distortion. Covering a vast time window and the diversity of the approaches, the show is organized into 8 thematic sections located on 2 floors of the museum. Each section includes works from various places and times connected by either similarity or extreme contrast in the concept. About 120 works by old and new masters are selected including Donatello, El Greco, Rodin, Degas, Kusama, Koons, Cattelan and many many other.

    One may agree or disagree with the overarching thesis about the use of colors and the influence of religion and societal biases on how we perceive the body in its nakedness and likeness, but it all comes back to how we see ourself and how we are perceived by others. Allow yourself enough time to observe, compare and read. Read More

    Music in NYC: Hommage à Chopin by Daniil Trifonov, piano at Carnegie Hall

    Music in NYC:  Hommage à Chopin by Daniil Trifonov, piano at Carnegie Hall

    Perspectives Series by Daniil Trifonov: Next Concerts are on April 25-26, 2018   

    Chopin by Daniil Trifonov Carnegie Hall NYC
    Daniil Trifonov; Photo credit Dario Acosta, DG / Image courtesy of Carnegie Hall

    Daniil Trifonov, 26-year old Russian pianist, is giving a seven-concert Perspectives series at Carnegie Hall 2017-2018 season opening it with a solo recital on October, 28, 2017. The next concert will take place on March 1, 2018. Book your tickets here. 

    After winning the first prize in 2011 Tchaikovsky competition and becoming an international sensation, Trifonov gave his first Carnegie Hall recital two month later and had regularly returned to dazzle and delight New York music fans. This coming season he is dedicating much of his Perspectives concerts to the oeuvre of Chopin and the compositions inspired by Chopin’s music. Read More