Category: Classical

  • Opera Saratoga announces new Board Members ahead of 2024 season

    Saratoga Springs’ own Opera Saratoga has elected four new members to its Board in preparation of the 2024 summer season, and under the leadership of General and Artistic Director, Mary Birnbaum.

    opera saratoga board

    New board members include: Saratoga Springs Commissioner of Public Works, Jason Golub; Supervising Judge of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial District, Hon. Christina Ryba; local business owner and musician Derek Stannard; and, president and CEO of Empire Media Network, Abby Tegnalia.

    “It is tremendously exciting to have these four new members joining our board. All community leaders in the Capital Region, each new member brings a valuable perspective and talent to our leadership team. I am looking forward to working with them as we continue to take Opera Saratoga forward.”

    board President Steve Rosenblum

    Opera Saratoga shares the following about the new Board Members

    Jason Golub is a lifelong lover of musical theater but relatively new to opera. He currently serves as the Commissioner of Public Works for Saratoga Springs and has held professional roles as an anti-corruption lawyer and chief compliance officer at General Electric, and various leadership roles at hedge funds and law firms. He attended Connecticut College and Columbia Law School. He is excited to help continue to build on Opera Saratoga’s success by expanding the reach of Opera Saratoga to new audiences in Saratoga Springs and beyond, including his two kids, Zoe and Max.

    The Honorable Christina L. Ryba was elected in 2015 to serve as Justice of the Supreme Court of New York in the Third Judicial District and in 2023 she was appointed Supervising Judge of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial District. She also serves as Co-Chair of the Permanent Commission on Access to Justice whose mission is to ensure equal access to justice in New York State. Prior to beginning her judicial term in 2016, she held various positions in the court system for the Office of Court Administration (OCA) and in the NYS Supreme Court Appellate Division, Third Department, including Special Projects Counsel to the Deputy Chief Administrative Judge for Courts Outside New York City and Special Projects Counsel to the Presiding Justice of the Appellate Division, Third Department. Prior to her work with the judiciary, Judge Ryba was an associate at Nixon Peabody. She also served as an Assistant Attorney General for the State of New York Litigation Bureau. Additional public service includes appointments first as General Counsel and then as Deputy Director for the City of Albany Community Development Agency. She began her career in public service with the City of Albany Corporation Counsel’s office. Judge Ryba is Second Vice President of the Association of Justices of the Supreme Court of the State of New York; member of the New York Women Judges Association; past-president of the Albany County Bar Foundation; past-president of the Albany County Bar Association; member of Judicial Friends Association; member of the American Bar Association; and a Trustee of Albany Law School, where she chairs the Law Committee and is a member of the Executive Committee.

    Derek W. Stannard, pianist, organist, tenor, and conductor, is a graduate of the Crane School of Music with degrees in Performance and Music Education. From 2014-2019, Mr. Stannard was the Artistic Director and founder of Auriel Camerata, an acclaimed fully professional choral ensemble in the Capital District. He is currently the organist at Bethesda Episcopal Church, Saratoga Springs, and has served as Organist and Director of Music Ministries at Church of the Immaculate Conception, Glenville, St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Bennington, Christ Church United Methodist, Glens Falls, and Grace Church, Canton, among others. From 2015 to 2021 he served as Associate Conductor of Burnt Hills Oratorio Society (now called Saratoga Voices), and served on their board until 2022. As a soloist, Mr. Stannard has been featured with many ensembles, including with Aoede Consort (Carnegie Hall premier of works by Vladimir Pleshakov), Albany Pro Musica, Burnt Hills Oratorio Society, Battenkill Chorale, Adirondack Voices, Voices of Cooperstown, and the Berkshire Choral Festival. In 2006, Mr. Stannard had the privilege of premiering the opera The Sailor-Boy and the Falcon at the Crane School of Music with Metropolitan Opera mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe. In addition to his vocal and choral work, he has given organ recitals throughout the capital district including Christ Church Methodist, Glens Falls, St. Peter’s Church, Bennington, Silver Bay Chapel, Silver Bay, and the Cathedral of All Saints, Albany. Mr. Stannard is the proprietor of The Pampered Pooch and Pals, a pet supply store in Ballston Spa. He is delighted to be serving on the board of Opera Saratoga.

    Abby Tegnelia is the president and CEO of Empire Media Network, which publishes Saratoga Living and Capital Region Living magazines, a hyper-local Substack email newsletter, and the programs for Albany Symphony Orchestra and the SPAC summer classical season—while also producing a vibrant calendar of community and private events. A lifelong supporter of the performing arts, she attended a magnet school for the arts for dance (and performed in Don Quixote with American Ballet Theater principal dancer Leslie Browne) before moving to NYC to get her masters in journalism at Columbia University and begin her journalism career at New York magazine. She has written for Glamour, Marie Claire, Robb Report and many others, and served as editor-in-chief of several regional magazines on the west coast before moving to Saratoga Springs in 2019 for her work with Empire Media.

  • Albany Symphony Announces Return of Peter and the Wolf: Tiny Tots Concert this Spring

    Albany Symphony announced the anticipated return of Peter and the Wolf: Tiny Tots concert for three shows this spring. The shows will take place on April 30 and May 1 in Albany and May 2 in Saratoga Springs.

    Albany Symphony Tiny Tots Concert
    Peter and the Wolf

    The Albany Symphony Tiny Tots concerts are geared for children between the ages of 18-months and 7 years. Tiny Tots concerts are interactive school day performances that have thrilled preschool audiences, teachers, and parents, presented by the orchestra for over 30 years.

    David Alan Miller and the Albany Symphony plan to take you and your children on a wonderfully interactive, magical adventure. Peter and the Wolf is a classic symphonic fairy tale for children by Sergei Prokofiev. The story will be personified through music for children and adults alike to enjoy. In addition, you and your children will meet and get to hear all the instruments of the orchestra and the amazing musicians who play them.

    Albany Symphony Tiny Tots Concert
    Albany Symphony Tiny Tots Concert

    Albany Symphony is renowned for performances featuring classic orchestral favorites, lesser-heard masterworks, and a diverse array of new music. The symphony strives to present the community with virtuosic talents and homages to all-time classics.

    The Albany Symphony Tiny Tots concert is a prime example of the level of community the organization possesses. The April 30 and May 1 shows are held at Congregation Beth Emeth in Albany. The May 2 performance of Peter and the Wolf takes place at the SPAC School of Arts in Saratoga.

    Tickets for this event are just $5 and are available for purchase on AlbanySymphony.com.

  • Skaneateles Festival Celebrates 45 Years This Summer with Diverse Lineup

    The Skaneateles Festival is celebrating 45 years this summer from July 31 through August 24, 2024, featuring an incredible variety of concerts from jazz to classical to bluegrass.

    The season includes 14 main series concerts, two KidsFest performances, a free music lecture series with Juilliard professor Aaron Wunsch, and several community outreach performances.

    Skaneateles Festival

    The idea for the Skaneateles Festival came together in the spring of 1980 in discussions between musician Lindsay Groves and Skaneateles residents Beth Boudreau and Louise Robinson. The first season, two weeks, was presented that August in the village’s Library Hall. The generous David and Louise Robinson opened their home, Brook Farm, which soon became the Festival’s center.

    At Brook Farm, musicians would live, eat, rehearse, relax, and perform, all because of the Robinsons’ hospitality – which extended to the thousands of concertgoers who sat under the stars and listened to music on Saturday evenings for the first 36 years of the festival. Its mission is to be one of the nation’s outstanding summer music festivals, set in the beauty of the Finger Lakes region.

    Concert evenings at the picturesque Robinson Pavilion offer stunning lake views and are situated at Anyela’s Vineyards, taking place on Friday, August 2, and Saturdays, August 10, 17, and 24. Opening the first vineyard concert of the season is renowned musician Rhiannon Giddens. A two-time GRAMMY winner and recipient of the prestigious MacArthur ‘Genius’ grant, Giddens is known for her iconic folk music and efforts to spotlight overlooked contributions to American musical history. 

    Skaneateles Festival

    During week two, the festival proudly welcomes Syrian clarinetist Kinan Azmeh and invites audience members to grab a glass of wine and bring a picnic for Beethoven Under the Stars. Appearing at the Festival for the first time on August 17 is Chris Thile – a GRAMMY Award-winning mandolinist, singer, and songwriter. Thile is a highly regarded musician celebrated for his mastery of the mandolin and innovative approach to bluegrass, folk, and classical music. 

    The Festival Finale features the highly anticipated return of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis on August 24.

    For concerts at the vineyards, audiences are welcome to arrive as early as 6:00 pm and bring picnic dinners to enjoy on the lawn overlooking the lake. Wine and beer will be available at Anyela’s Vineyards; outside alcohol is not. On August 3, the Skaneateles Festival presents its largest-ever orchestral concert at one of the area’s high schools. The program, Music of the Americas, features colorful music from North and South America, including Alberto Ginastera’s Harp Concerto featuring Bridget Kibbey, Gabriela Lena Frank’s celebration of Inca warriors, and music by Aaron Copland and Gershwin’s beloved Rhapsody in Blue.

    This season’s outreach initiative, “Searching for Home” invites performers, composers, and audiences to reflect on the nature of home and consider what it means to those who must search out a new one. It will highlight performers, composers, and musical traditions from those who resettled in Central New York: Syrians, Somalians, Afghans, and Ukrainians. The outreach initiative will include free performances open to the public between Syracuse and Auburn. 

    2016 Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis.

    Chamber concerts at the First Presbyterian Church (97 East Genesee Street, Skaneateles) are performed on Thursday and Friday nights (except August 2). Two celebratory opening concerts at the church will feature favorite musicians from the festival’s past, including violinist Joe Genualdi, cellists Steven Doane and Rosemary Elliott, and pianist Andrew Russo.

    Violinist James Ehne will make his Festival debut on August 1 with pianist Andrew Armstrong. He is one of the most sought-after violinists in the world, performing regularly with leading orchestras, and recently won a GRAMMY Award for Best Classical Instrumental Solo. 

    The Dover Quartet will perform on August 8 and 9. August 8 will bring together two dearly beloved string quartets and August 9 presents a premiere performance of a new collaboration between bass-baritone Davóne Tines and the quartet where they will explore spirituality and mysticism through varied cultural lenses. The Claremont Trio takes the stage on August 15 and 16 performing a new work by Kinan Azmeh, commissioned by the Skaneateles Festival, and a “Queen of Hearts” program which will highlight regal trios by Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel.

    The Westerlies debut at the Festival on August 22, joined by the young violinist-fiddler, George Meyer. Together they’ll present Songbook – music of John Prine, Randy Newman, Woody Guthrie, spirituals by the famous Golden Gate Quartet, and more.

    The final week highlights this year’s Young Artist in Residence, the Ivalas Quartet – the current graduate quartet-in-residence at The Juilliard School. There will be several free outreach performances from the quartet and a ticketed evening concert by candlelight on August 23.

    Tickets range from $32-70 for adults based on concert and seating choice. Youth under 18 are free in Section B (lawn). College students may purchase $10 student tickets at the door of the concert. Season Passes are on sale now. Week Passes and Vineyard Passes go on sale Monday, April 1, and individual tickets go on sale May 1.

  • Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra To Presents “Roman Holiday” This Spring 

    The Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra has announced a “Roman Holiday” concert at the Broome County Forum Theatre in Binghamton on April 6.

    On Saturday, April 6, 2024 at 7:30pm, the Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra will presents the final concert of its 2023-2024 M&T Symphonic Series with “Roman Holiday,” a crowd-pleasing program exploring musical depictions of the countries of the Mediterranean.

    Led by Maestro Daniel Hege, the Philharmonic will perform Tchaikovsky’s brilliant showpiece Capriccio Italien; “Fandangos,” by living Puerto Rican composer and Cornell professor Roberto Sierra, bringing a distinctly Latin-American twist to 18th-century Spanish dances; and Ottorino Respighi’s uplifting and atmospheric The Pines of Rome, a symphonic tone poem that takes audiences on a sonic tour of the Eternal City. 

    In addition, the orchestra will also be presenting two free community events in conjunction with “Roman Holiday”. On April 4, Forum Theatre will host a Family Symphony Session, “Fandango!” a free family-friendly chat about how European, African, and Indigenous traditions joined to create Caribbean music. And on April 6, the Forum Theatre will host a Pre-concert chat, “Music and Politics: The Case of Ottorino Respighi,” with Dr. Julia Grella O’Connell, Director of Education and Community Engagement.

    The Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra was established in 1955 at the Binghamton Symphony and Choral Society by Fritz and Marianne Wallenberg. It later merged with the B.C. Pops, an orchestra established by Russell Hawkes and David Agard, and now hosts an annual series of chamber, classical, and pop music concerts in Downtown Binghamton and throughout Broome County. The Philharmonic’s professional musicians are from the Southern Tier, New York City, and the surrounding states. They are represented by Local 380 of the American Federation of Musicians. In 2018, Maestro Daniel Hege was named their Music Director.

    Tickets are $25 to $65, while kids 17 and under attend free. For more information, fans can contact the Binghamton Philharmonic Box Office at 607-723-3931 or visit www.binghamtonphilharmonic.org.

  • Chelsea Music Festival is “Connecting the Dots” this Summer

    Chelsea Music Festival has announced its 15th season of events with all new Connecting the Dots performance this Summer. The festival consists of nine evenings of shows from June 21 to 29.

    Chelsea Music Festival

    This summer festival is led by Artistic Directors Melinda Lee Masur and Ken-David Masur. Connecting the Dots consists of concerts, conversation, visual and culinary arts over the span of the nine nights. The festival will focus on the restorative powers of the arts in the ways that music and art both calm and reinvigorate the brain and nervous system.

    The festival sees a multitude of talented and diverse performers and artists. Each exhibit and performance take place at various locations around NYC and some locations are yet to be announced. Each night of the festival will be different from the last and the diversity allows all types of audiences to be included and wowed.

    Chelsea Music Festival
    Aizuri Quartet
    2024 CHELSEA MUSIC FESTIVAL LINE-UP
    • Connecting the Dots— 15th Season Opening Night 

    Friday, June 21 at 7pm – location to be announced 

    World Premiere of A Night at Birdland by composer Nicky Sohn performed by WindSync 

    Featuring Aizuri Quartet, pianist Andrea Lam, violinist Max Tan 

    Chamber works by John Williams & Tebogo Monnakgotla 

    Performance of Dancing Stars by Augusta Read Thomas with conductor Ken-David Masur 

    • My Super Awesome Brain | Family Night 

    Saturday, June 22 at 10:30am at Pier 57, 25 11th Avenue, NYC 

    10:30am – Family Event featuring WindSync 

    • Jazz Doubleheader | Birnbaum & the Bach Preludes and Cardume Trio 

    Saturday, June 22 at 7pm – location to be announced 

    7pm – Preludes Album (Chelsea Music Festival Records label) featuring pianist Adam Birnbaum, percussionist Keita Ogawa (Snarky Puppy), bassist Matt Clohesy (Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society) based on 12 preludes from Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier 

    8:30pm – Late Night with Cardume Trio featuring jazz percussionists Rogério Boccato (Orquestra Jazz Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo), Keita Ogawa, and Brazilian bassist Cleber Almeida 

    • Festa Junina 

    Sunday, June 23 at 7pm at Pier 57, 25 11th Avenue, NYC 

    Traditional Brazilian Forró music to celebrate summer featuring percussionist Rogério Boccato, Brazilian bassist Cleber Almeida, and accordionist Vitor Goncalves 

    • Patitucci & Friends — 15th Season special event with Jazz, Song & Chamber Music 

    Monday, June 24 at 7pm at High Line Nine, 507 W. 27th Street, NYC 

    Jazz bassist John Patitucci and pianist Renee Rosnes – with Caleb Hudson on trumpet 

    Austrian duo baritone Daniel Gutmann (prize winner at Elīna Garanča’s ZukunftsStimmen) & pianist Maximilian Kromer (International Brahms Competition winner) 

    Featuring pianist Robert Fleitz (1st Prize in 2022 John Cage Award) 

    Reception curated by Chef Rachel Snyder 

    • Midsummer Night Magic— Visions & Stories 

    Tuesday, June 25 at 7pm at Czech Center, 321 E. 73rd Street, NYC 

    Selections from The Lee Trio album “Midsummer Night Magic” (Chelsea Music Festival Records label releasing June 2024) 

    Fern Flowers by Uljas Pulkkis 

    Five Trios by Edmund Finnis 

    Piano Trio No. 2 in F Major, Op. 80 by Robert Schumann 

    Fantasiestücke, Op. 88 by Robert Schumann 

    Robert Schumann lieder with Austrian duo baritone Daniel Gutmann and pianist Maximilian Kromer 

    Performance of the Dumky Piano Trio No. 4 in E minor, Op. 90, B. 166 by Antonín Dvořák (120th anniversary of his death) 

    • Completed Resonances— Vu, Beranek, Fauré & Smetana 

    Wednesday, June 26 at 7pm at Czech Center, 321 E. 73rd Street, NYC 

    World Premiere commissioned by the Festival by Czech composer Jacob Beranek 

    Music by Ania Vu featuring soprano Marisa Karchin, pianist Robert Fleitz 

    Piano Trio in G Minor by Bedřich Smetana (200th anniversary) performed by pianist Andrea Lam, violinist Max Tan, and cellist Angela Lee 

    Piano Quartet No. 2 in G minor by Gabriel Fauré (100th anniversary of his death) 

    • Closing Reception | 2024 Art Exhibition – Kelly S. Williams 

    Thursday, June 27 at 7pm at High Line Nine Gallery 8, 507 W. 27th Street, NYC 

    Closing Reception for Kelly S. Williams, 2024 Visual Artist-in-Residence 

    Art Exhibition open June 3-29 at High Line Nine 

    Featuring Harlem Quartet performing Jessie Montgomery and Dizzy Gillespie 

    • Reimagined Gems— Vignettes Across Time 

    Friday, June 28 at 7pm at St. Paul’s German Church, 315 W. 22nd Street, NYC 

    Featuring Harlem Quartet performing Caroline Shaw and Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel 

    World Premiere by Ania Vu 

    Soprano to Marisa Karchin and Caleb Hudson on trumpet 

    Pieces from Caleb Hudson’s 2024 album, Nothing Less, including Corelli arrangements 

    Reception curated by Chef Rachel Snyder 

    • Superhero Brain | Family Event 

    Saturday, June 29 at 10:30am at St. Paul’s German Church, 315 W. 22nd Street, NYC 

    10:30am – Family Event featuring family-friendly, interactive activities led by music neuroscience scholar Dr. Jessica Phillips-Silver (Growing Brains) 

    • Festival Finale | Jazz Plasticity with Helen Sung 

    Saturday, June 29 at 7pm at DiMenna Center, 450 W. 37th Street, NYC 

    JazzPlasticity features the Helen Sung Quartet with pianist Helen Sung (2021 Guggenheim Fellow), drummer Kendrick Scott, saxophonist/clarinetist John Ellis, an bassist David Wong; this program was inspired by Helen’s time as jazz artist-in-residence at the Columbia University Zuckerman Mind Brain Institute and in partnership with Arts & Minds. 

    Reception curated by Chef Rachel Snyder 

    John Patitucci

    Tickets for Chelsea Music Festival’s Connecting the Dots go on sale Wednesday, May 15, 2024. For more information, visit ChelseaMusicFestival.org.

  • Albany Symphony to Present Works Composed by Viet Cuong and Beethoven this April

    The Albany Symphony presents works from alluring composer Viet Cuong and sound-shifting legend Beethoven this Spring. The shows take place Saturday, April 13 and Sunday, April 14 at Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.

    Albany Symphony Viet Cuong
    Composer Viet Cuong

    The show features extraordinary new works by composer Viet Cuong, who has captivated audiences across the globe. Mastermind Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4 is showcased for both dates as well. Beethoven’s Symphony No. 4 is particularly memorable for its humor and brilliant virtuosity, along with its powerful rhythms and structure. Cuong’s works will also be recorded for Albany Records and will complete an important new disc that also includes his Sub-marine, a gorgeous, commissioned work, premiered by the orchestra last season.

    The dates see soloists like Justin Benavidez on Tuba and Sandbox Percussion. The Tuba Concerto is performed by soloist Justin Benavidez and begins with him performing a bass line that blossoms upward with every note. The two awe-inspiring shows from the Albany Symphony include several unique and soul-altering performances that cannot be missed.

    “The Albany Symphony and I are so proud and excited to be collaborating with Viet Cuong on this beautiful concert and on Viet’s first full commercial recording.  Viet is fast becoming one of America’s most celebrated and performed composers, and he is absolutely one of our favorite partners!  We commissioned his breakthrough piece, Re(new)al, seven years ago, and have marveled at the way it has been taken up by orchestras EVERYWHERE!”

    Music Director, David Alan Miller

    For more information on this April’s events from the Albany Symphony and to purchase tickets for the performances by Viet Cuong, click here.

  • Bernadette Peters Hosts Shubert Foundation’s 10th Anniversary High School Theatre Festival

    Bernadette Peters from Hello, Dolly!, and Follies fame will host the 10 Anniversary High School Theatre Festival for NYC public schools on March 25 at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway. 

    The Shubert Festival celebrates six outstanding high school student productions from the 2023-24 school year, selected from more than 20 productions across the city by professional theatre artists and theatre educators. Throughout the festival’s ten-year history, school productions from all five boroughs have performed at the event.

    The Broadway Festival is hosted by Bernadette Peters – author, actress, and singer famously known for her role in a broadway star-packed movie tick, tick…Boom! alongside Academy Awards nominee Andrew Garfield. Apart from theatre and music, Peters was presented with the Animal Medical Center Brooke Astor Award in 2018 in recognition of her lifetime dedication to animal welfare, which includes the “over 2,000 adoptions” she has made at Broadway Barks events.

    Other guest Broadway presenters will include James Caverly, Miguel Cervantes, Charlotte d’Amboise, Jeanna de Waal, Treshelle Edmond, Drew Gehling, Tamar Greene, Anika Larsen, Apollo Levine, Julian Elijah Martinez, Gary Perez, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Seth Rudetsky, Brandon Uranowitz, and Kara Young.

    This year, student presentations will present excerpted scenes and musical numbers, including Titanic by Professional Performing Arts High School from Manhattan, Joseph, And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat by Lexington School For The Deaf from Queens, Mamma Mia! By Curtis High School from Staten Island, Zanna Don’t! by Repertory Company High School For Theatre Arts from Manhattan, Titanic by Frank Sinatra School Of The Arts from Queens, and Urinetown by Brooklyn High School For The Arts from Brooklyn. 

    The Shubert High School Theatre Festival highlights the vital lives and theatrical skills of collaboration, artistry, discipline, focus, literacy, student voice, self-awareness, presence, and empathy, in addition to showcasing the outstanding theater currently being produced in NYC public high schools. The evening’s main focus is how a dedicated theater program may benefit students and school communities by encouraging them to consider theater and the arts as possible career options.

    This year’s annual theatre education experience for NYC students is presented by The Shubert Foundation and the NYC Department of Education Arts Office and for more information fans can visit www.shubertfoundation.org.

  • New York Philharmonic Announces Jam-Packed 2024-25 Season

    The New York Philharmonic has announced their 2024-2025 season of events. The season is packed with hearty, unique, and diverse talent with Music and Artistic Director Gustavo Dudamel leading three weeks of subscription concerts.

    New York Philharmonic season
    Gustavo Dudamel

    The New York Philharmonic presents a wide range of new compositions, including 13 World, US, and New York Premieres this season. This consists of five World Premieres, two US Premieres, and six New York Premieres. These premieres encapsulate the diversity and broad perspectives of the Philharmonic’s community.

    For the first time, Dudamel leads New York Philharmonic Concerts in the Parks, presented by Didi and Oscar Schafer. The Philharmonic explores programming from a variety of musical perspectives. Pianist Yuja Wang appears in contexts that reflect her musical interests, including her first NY Phil appearances in
    which she leads the Orchestra from the piano.

    Also new for the upcoming season, New York Philharmonic musicians were invited to act as an Artistic Partner, curating a program that reflects their varied musical interests, and also celebrates the Orchestra’s brilliant history.

    The Philharmonic examines music of the African diaspora in America from the latter half of the 20th century through the present day. Artistic Partner International Contemporary Ensemble presents the beauty of Afromodernism. The program is curated by artistic director George Lewis; and a Young People’s Concert.

    Over the 2024–25 season the New York Philharmonic shines a spotlight on two French composers who transformed the musical landscape and left enduring legacies. The Pierre Boulez Centennial and Ravel’s 150th Anniversary are two programs that pay deep tribute to the French composers.

    The upcoming season sees several debuts from conductors and soloists alike. Along with this, there are many returning friends and favorites. The New York Philharmonic welcomes all those returning and the unfamiliar faces as well.

    For more information on the New York Philharmonic’s upcoming 2024-25 season, click here.

  • Caroga Arts Announces 2024 Spring Residency

    From April 11-13, Caroga Arts will welcome back its world-class musicians for its exciting Spring Residency Concert series, featuring performances of major chamber music works.

    Caroga Arts

    The Spring Residency concerts are completely free of charge, but donations are encouraged to support arts programming in the community. The mission of Caroga Arts Collective is to reimagine the Caroga experience through the power of the arts, founded in 2012 by Kyle Price when he invited friends to his grandmother’s house on Caroga Lake – where they presented a week of free concerts, calling themselves the Caroga Lake Music Festival (CLMF). Today, Caroga Arts presents over 50 performances and community events annually bringing world-class artists from various genres of music, visual art, poetry, and film to the Southern Adirondacks.

    On Thursday, April 11 and Friday, April 12, Caroga Arts welcomes Aaron Schwartz (violin), Stephanie Price-Wong (viola), Ken Kubota (cello), Kyle Price (cello), and Chi Wei Lo (piano), performing music by Arensky and Brahms, plus a mix of jazz and pop favorites. The performance is at 7 p.m., but audiences are encouraged to come early at 6:30 p.m. for a special Season Preview where Executive & Artistic Director, Kyle Price, will unveil the thrilling 2024 Caroga Lake Music Festival lineup. April 11th’s show takes place at Karpeles Museum in Gloversville and the other at the Cobleskill United Methodist Church.

    You can also catch saxophonist Eddie Barbash, former member of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert’s house band, with the Caroga-based KASA Quartet on the road at the Louis Armstrong House Museum in Queens on April 13 and Ravinia Festival at Highland Park, IL. For tickets, visit here.

    For more information about Caroga Arts, visit here.

  • SPAC Announces Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Summer Season

    Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) has announced Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center’s 2024 summer season with six Sunday afternoon programs from June 16 to  August 18 at the infamous Spa Little Theater

    Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center’s summer season will open with “Romantic Masterpieces,” showcasing works from Brahms and Arensky on June 16, followed by “Musical Mosaics” featuring Mozart, Puccini, Brahms and Dvořák on June 23.

    “Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Brahms” with the Escher String Quartet will follow on July 14,  an “Enchanting Winds” program on July 21 and “Beethoven, Ravel, and Schumann” on August 11. The season will close with “The Carnival of the Animals” on August 18, in its original instrumentation for chamber ensemble.  

    Announcing the exciting season, Elizabeth Sobol, the President and CEO of Saratoga Performing Arts Center shared that the summer season will “open the the Spa Little Theater doors for our community to experience world-class chamber music – now year round — is an important part of our expanded mission” and they’re also looking forward to continuing this new tradition with their partners at CMS under the brilliant direction of Wu Han and David Finckel. 

    Anchored by Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Artistic directors Wu Han (piano) and David Finckel (cello), this season’s guest artists also include violinists Bella Hristova, Chad Hoopes, Kristin Lee, Adam Barnett-Hart, Brendan Speltz, Danbi Um, and Francisco Fullana; violists Paul Neubauer, Pierre Lapointe, Matthew Lipman, and Guillermo Figueroa; cellists Dmitri Atapine, Brook Speltz, Nicholas Canellakis, and Sterling Elliott; double bassist Nina Bernat; pianists Wu Qian, Anna Geniushene, Evren Ozel, and Michael Stephen Brown; clarinetists Romie de Guise-Langlois and David Shifrin; flutists Demarre McGill and Sooyun Kim; Hugo Valverde on horn; bassoonist Peter Kolkay; harpist Bridget Kibbey; percussionists Ian David Rosenblum and Ayano Kataoka, and The Escher String Quartet. 

    SPAC is a very special place to hear music. We always find the brief journey from the highway into the park totally transformative, preparing us to experience the greatness of music surrounded by the glories and miracles of nature. SPAC is so much more than a park: it’s a place for communal appreciation of the finest the world has to offer, and CMS is immensely proud to be a part of it.

    CMS Artistic Directors Wu Han and David Finckel

    The summer season follows two previously announced spring concerts offered by CMS. The final spring performance is slated for May 11 with pianist Wu Han, violinist Chad Hoopes, and cellist David Finckel featuring works by Mozart, Mendelssohn and Smetana.

    The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center residency is presented by Charles Schwab – Maureen Parker from June 16 – August 18

    June 16: Romantic Masterpieces

    Wu Han, piano

    Wu Qian, piano

    Bella Hristova, violin 

    Dmitri Atapine, cello

    Arensky – Six Children’s Pieces for Piano, Four Hands

    Arensky – Trio No. 1 in D minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello

    Brahms – Selections from Hungarian Dances for Piano, Four Hands

    Brahms – Trio in C major for Piano, Violin, and Cello

    June 23: Musical Mosaics

    Chad Hoopes, violin

    Kristin Lee, violin

    Paul Neubauer, viola

    Matthew Lipman, viola

    David Finckel, cello

     Dvořák – Drobnosti (Miniatures) for Two Violins and Viola

    Puccini – Crisantemi for String Quartet 

    Mozart – Quintet in C minor for Two Violins, Two Violas, and Cello

    Dvořák – Selections from Cypresses (Echo of Songs) for String Quartet

    Brahms – Quintet in G major for Two Violins, Two Violas, and Cello

    July 14: Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Brahms

     Escher String Quartet

    Adam Barnett-Hart, violin

    Brendan Speltz, violin

    Pierre Lapointe, viola

    Brook Speltz, cello

    Anna Geniushene, piano

    Mozart – Quartet in B-flat major for Strings

    Mendelssohn – Quartet No. 1 in E-flat major for Strings       

    Brahms – Quintet in F minor for Piano, Two Violins, Viola, and Cello

    July 21: Enchanting Winds

    Evren Ozel, piano

    Demarre McGill, flute

    Romie de Guise-Langlois, clarinet

    Juri Vallentin, oboe

    Hugo Valverde, horn

    Peter Kolkay, bassoon 

    Rossini – Quartet No. 4 for Flute, Clarinet, Horn and Bassoon in B-flat major

    Saint-Saëns – Sonata for Oboe and Piano

    Taffanel –  Quintet in G minor for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, and Horn

    Poulenc –  Sonata for Flute and Piano

    Mozart – Quintet in E-flat major for Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn, and Piano

    August 11: Beethoven, Ravel, and Schumann

    Michael Stephen Brown, piano 

    Nicholas Canellakis, cello 

    Danbi Um, violin 

     Beethoven – Sonata in G minor for Cello and Piano

    Ravel – Sonata for Violin and Cello  

    Schumann – Trio No. 1 in D minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello

    August 18: The Carnival of the Animals

    Wu Han, piano 

    Wu Qian, piano 

    Sooyun Kim, flute 

    David Shifrin, clarinet 

    Bridget Kibbey, harp 

    Ian David Rosenbaum, percussion 

    Ayano Kataoka, percussion 

    Richard Lin, violin 

    Francisco Fullana, violin 

    Guillermo Figueroa, viola 

    Sterling Elliott, cello 

    Nina Bernat, double bass 

    Biber – Sonata representativa in A major for Violin and Continuo

    Bach – Concerto in A major for Keyboard, Strings, and Continuo

    Vivaldi – Concerto in D major for Flute, Strings, and Continuo 

    Ravel – Introduction et allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet, and String Quartet 

    Saint-Saëns – Le carnaval des animaux for Ensemble

    All summer 2024 CMS events will be held at the Spa Little Theatre in Saratoga Springs, with tickets and subscriptions being available starting March 13, and fans can visit spac.org for more information