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April 1, 2023

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Arts Arts Arts Notes

Chesapeake Music Hosts Zelter String Quartet

October 7, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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The Zelter String Quartet: Allan Hon, Gallia Kastner, Kyle Gilner, and Nao Kubota

The Zelter String Quartet – back from its dazzling gold-prize winning performance at the 2021 Chesapeake Music International Chamber Music Competition – will play Mozart’s beloved “Hunt” string quartet, among other offerings, at the Ebenezer Theater on October 23rd. The concert will also be live-streamed. The “Hunt” is the fourth of Mozart’s six quartets dedicated to Franz Joseph Haydn. Besides being a mainstay in the canon of classical music, the quartet achieved even greater popularity when it was included in the movie soundtracks of The Adventures of Huck Finn, The Royal Tenenbaums, and Star Trek: Insurrection.

Mozart completed “The Hunt Quartet” in 1785, and it has remained at the core of the quartet repertory ever since. Officially known as the String Quartet in B-flat Major, K. 458, it is easily the most popular of the six “Haydn quartets” that Mozart wrote. Its nickname, supplied by someone other than Mozart, refers to the opening theme of the first movement which suggests a simple hunting call, although it is the first and second violins that mimic the hunting horns. The elegant first movement concludes with a breathtaking finale. The middle movement – a stately minuet with an animated trio – has a marvelous dialogue between first violin and cello. The third movement – an adagio – is both tender and seemingly vulnerable but ultimately powerful. The energetic finale returns to the “hunt” theme and invokes again the excitement of the chase.

The Zelter String Quartet’s program will also include Ravel’s String Quartet in F Major and traditional Nordic folk music.

The Zelter String Quartet
October 23, 2021 at 7:30 PM

Ebenezer Theater, Easton 

TICKET LINK

Filed Under: Arts, Arts Notes

Chesapeake Music to Bring Jazz to its New Home this Summer

July 5, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Alison Crockett

Chesapeake Music is excited to announce its Summer Jazz Concert with vocalist and pianist Alison Crockett on August 7, 2021, in its new home and recently renovated Ebenezer Theatre at 17 South Washington Street in Easton, Maryland. The concert begins at 8:00 P.M. Tickets are available at https://chesapeakemusic.org/.

Crockett will be performing her “Echoes of an Era” show highlighting music from Chaka Khan, Chick Corea and the “American Songbook.”

“We are very excited to be in our new home, the Ebenezer Theatre,” says Don Buxton, Executive Director of Chesapeake Music, “and thrilled with its recent renovation by Bluepoint Hospitality including state of the art audio/visual equipment. I have no doubt that our 180-seat concert venue will provide a true intimacy between Ms. Crockett and her audience.”

A multi-talented singer, songwriter and pianist, Crockett developed her formidable jazz chops from Temple University in Philadelphia while gigging with stalwarts Orrin Evans, Matt Parish and Mike Boone. Later, after moving to New York City to pursue her master’s at the prestigious Manhattan School of Music, she was introduced to the vibrant music scene by fronting hip-hop jazz pioneer Greg Osby’s band.

“I consider myself a musician who comes out of the jazz tradition, the black music tradition where jazz people take established forms and reimagine them in new and different ways,” she says, eschewing strict genre categorizations for herself and her responsive, ever-evolving artistry. To learn more about Crocker, read her complete bio at https://www.alisoncrockett.net/bio/.

About Chesapeake Music

Based in Easton, Maryland, Chesapeake Music is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to bring renowned jazz and classical musicians to delight, engage and surprise today’s audiences, and educate, inspire and develop tomorrow’s. They’ve been doing it for 35 years! To learn more about Chesapeake Music, visit their website at https://chesapeakemusic.org/.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

The Orion String Quartet Comes to the Ebenezer Theater in Easton

June 6, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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The Orion String Quartet, back row, from left to right are Timothy Eddy, cello; Steven Tenenbom, viola; and Daniel Phillips, violin; and in the front row, Todd Phillips, violin.

A treat awaits our 2021 Festival goers!  The renowned Orion String Quartet will perform Beethoven’s “Razumovsky” String Quartet in C Major on June 10. And on June 12, the Quartet will join pianist Robert McDonald, to delight the audience with Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor.

The members of the Quartet, violinists Daniel and Todd Phillips, violist Steven Tenenbom and cellist Timothy Eddy are season artists of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.  They are especially drawn to Beethoven and recorded his complete string quartets over a five-year period.  During 2017-18, their 30th anniversary season as a quartet, they performed all these quartets over six evenings at the Mannes School of Music where they held the position of quartet-in-residence for 27 years.

Daniels Phillips notes, “We are completely exhausted when we play Beethoven.  His music is very demanding, physically, emotionally and spiritually.  At the same time, he uses very simple notes, which everyone can understand to the greatest effect on the listener. It is brilliant. Beethoven famously said to musicians who complained how difficult his music was, that he gave them ‘music from the Gods.’ This is how we feel!”

Admired for their diverse programming that juxtaposes masterworks of the quartet literature with key works of the 20th and 21st centuries, the Orion is on the cutting edge of programming through commissions from composers ranging from Chick Corea to Wynton Marsalis and a creative partnership with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company.  “The collaboration with Marsalis was fortuitous,” Phillips said.  “Given a commission by the Chamber Music Society, Marsalis chose to write a string quartet. We were the lucky recipients. He wove brilliantly the American music he grew up with in New Orleans into classical form. Very challenging for us, but it turned out to be a genius piece of music.”

The Orion Quartet is named after the Constellation Orion as a metaphor for the personality each musician brings to the group in its collective pursuit of the highest musical ideals.

“We each want to play the way we want to play,” Phillips muses.  “To achieve a great sound requires good chemistry, and good ensemble skills; one must learn how to listen, know how much to lead and how much to follow.  If you always follow, you will be late.  If you always lead, the others don’t have a chance to make their voice heard.  It is an ongoing interesting challenge to get the balance right.  Ultimately, it is a very democratic process,” he concludes.

Festival 2021 is thrilled to have the Orion String Quartet join us as a group for the first time to celebrate our 36th Anniversary year. Sponsors of this year’s Festival include Talbot Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, Paul and Joanne Prager, and our donors. Chesapeake Music now has additional tickets for sale for all six in-theater Festival concerts. Please go to chesapeakemusic.org to order tickets for the in-theater or live-streamed performances or for a complete program listing.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music

Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival 2021 Week Two Lineup

June 1, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Orion String Quartet, back row, from left to right are Timothy Eddy, cello; Steven Tenenbom, viola; and Daniel Phillips, violin; and in the front row, Todd Phillips, violin.

Week two of Chesapeake Music’s 36th annual Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival will kick off with a concert on June 10 at 5:30 p.m. by the Orion String Quartet to celebrate the Festival’s 36th Anniversary year. The members of the Quartet, violinists Daniel and Todd Phillips, violist Steven Tenenbom and cellist Timothy Eddy are season artists of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Three concerts featuring 10 artists will be presented live during week two at the Festival’s new permanent home, the Ebenezer Theater, at 17 South Washington Street in Easton, Maryland. The concerts will be held in full compliance with state and local Covid-19 regulations, as well as streamed on the web.

Week Two Schedule

June 10, 5:30 p.m. – Brahms’ Clarinet Quintet in B minor, Opus 115 and Beethoven’s String Quartet in C Major, Opus 59 No. 3 (Orion String Quartet)

June 11, 5:30 p.m.. – Mozart’s Piano Trio in C Major, Beethoven’s Serenade in D Major, Opus 25 for flute, violin, viola, and Schubert’s Fantasia for Piano, Four Hands, in F minor

June 12, 7:30 p.m. – Festival Finale – Beethoven’s Clarinet Trio in B-flat Major, Opus 11,  Prokofiev’s Sonata in D Major for flute and piano, Opus 94, Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor, Opus 34 (Orion String Quartet)

Week Two Artists

Week 2 Artists

Catherine Cho, Violin/Viola

Marcy Rosen, Cello

Tara Helen O’Connor, Flute

J. Lawrie Bloom, Clarinet

Diane Walsh, Piano

Robert McDonald, Piano

Orion String Quartet

Daniel Phillips, Violin

Todd Phillips, Violin

Steven Tenenbom, Viola

Timothy Eddy, Cello

Sponsors of this year’s Festival include Talbot Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, Paul and Joanne Prager, and our donors. Chesapeake Music now has additional tickets for sale for all six in-theater Festival concerts. Please go to chesapeakemusic.org to order tickets for the in-theater or live-streamed performances or for a complete program listing.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Behind the Scenes at the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival

May 29, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Marcy Rosen on cello, Artistic Co-Director of the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival

Much goes into the planning of the annual Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival, but the true backbone of a successful Festival is the engagement of world-class musicians and the selection of inspiring musical programming that creates an intimate bond between the performers and the audience. This is the responsibility of the Festival’s co-artistic directors, cellist Marcy Rosen and violinist Catherine Cho.

The 36th annual Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival will be held June 4–12 at its new home, the Ebenezer Theater at 17 South Washington Street in Easton, Maryland. The Festival’s two-week program of six concerts featuring 15 artists will be presented live as well as streamed on the web. For this year’s Festival, Marcy and Cathy have created a compelling program of chamber music masterworks by Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, and Schumann, among others, as well as intimate duo performances of music by Joseph Bologne, William Grant Still, William Bolcom, and Amy Beach.

The Festival’s opening extravaganza on June 4 will introduce Chesapeake Music’s new Steinway & Sons concert grand piano and feature Mozart’s Piano Trio in G Major and Dvořák’s Piano Quartet in E-flat Major. On June 11, the piano will again be in the spotlight with performances of Mozart’s Piano Trio in C Major, Beethoven’s Serenade in D Major, and Schubert’s Fantasia for Piano, Four Hands, in F minor.

“I really, really wanted to play the Mozart piano trio in C Major! – but I needed to give it to another cellist [Timothy Eddy],” Marcy exclaimed in a recent interview. “It’s important, after all, to distribute the repertoire fairly evenly among the performers at a festival. It’s going to be beautiful! – I don’t get to play it, but I get to listen. Fortunately, I do get to play in the Mozart G Major piano trio at the opening concert. So, I’m happy with that.”

Catherine Cho on violin, Artistic Co-Director of the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival

After choosing the Festival participants, Marcy and Cathy ask the musicians what they would like to perform, and from those suggestions, they endeavor to create concert programs that are both audience-pleasing as well as interesting for the artists to work on. Given time constraints, the musicians aren’t able to rehearse together until they come to Easton on May 31st. They then spend their time in day-long rehearsals on preparation for the Festival. This was not always the case, as Marcy recalled, “In the early years of the Festival, we only had one or two concerts, so there was time for sailing on the rivers or the bay, but with these expanded concerts, we don’t have time to do that now! It’s the growth of the Festival that is most amazing to me over these 36 years, starting with that first concert which we did in somebody’s house, growing to what is now two weeks of concerts and building the faithful audience that we have.” She later added, “Each year, audience members say, ‘This was the best Festival ever!’ and so we want to try to meet that standard and be the best Festival yet once again!”

There will also be a bit of déjà vu at this year’s Festival. At one of the early Festivals, pianist Diane Walsh, clarinetist Lawrie Bloom, and Marcy performed Beethoven’s Clarinet Trio in B-flat Major, Op. 11. “This was one of the first pieces we played way back when –,” Marcy explained, “and we will play that piece together again – bringing it full circle from when we were kids!”

All chamber music festivals are almost certain to include some of the great masterworks, and this year’s Festival is no exception. However, Marcy and Cathy have also included some little-known compositions as well as compositions by women and composers of color, who historically have been underrepresented in chamber music programming. “Diversity is very important to classical music,” Marcy stated, “and diverse and inclusive programming is now much more prevalent in classical music organizations.” Marcy and Cathy hope to be able to include interesting new works and premiers in future Festival programming.

The live-streaming of the Festival concerts from the Ebenezer Theater is also new for Chesapeake Chamber Music. Marcy is very interested in this opportunity, “I think that virtual concerts—like the Virtual Virtuosi! concert last year— helped Chesapeake Chamber Music broaden its exposure tremendously. So, we now will reach more people than we ever have. The Virtual Virtuosi! concert was really one of the first to make the necessary shift during the pandemic from live to virtual. And it was all due to the musicians’ willingness to make ‘home movies’ or stream available pre-recorded concerts. But that was low-tech, and now everything is wonderfully high-tech. There’s been a quick learning curve on everybody’s part to make virtual concerts better and better.  I believe that concerts will continue to be live before an audience as well as live-streamed as we go forward. I hope Chesapeake Chamber Music will continue to do both, and I think the new theater will make this possible. But I do think that people are still most interested to attend concerts in person.”

“We have programmed a lot of really exciting music for this Festival,” Marcy added. “I’m very excited to watch Diane Walsh and Ieva Jokubaviciute perform the two Schumann pieces for four hands seated at the same piano. And Diane and Robert McDonald will do the same, performing Schubert’s beautiful Fantasy in F minor at another concert.” Cathy added, “And for the first time we’ll have violist Molly Carr, who was recently featured in the ‘Rising Stars’ concert, as well as the Orion String Quartet playing Brahms’ great Piano Quintet in F minor – this is very exciting!”

“I’m excited about all the performances,” Marcy remarked, “those I’m in and those I watch. It will be wonderful to go back to doing what we do; these have been very lean times for all of us. Playing for an empty hall – you have to give every ounce of your being and imagine that there’s an audience enjoying and responding to this incredible music. Having a real live audience opens huge doors for us! And what’s great about the Festival is the time we get to spend with one another – performers and audience members. We are greatly looking forward to being able to share this music with as many people as possible this summer.”

Sponsors of this year’s Festival include Talbot Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, Paul and Joanne Prager, and our donors. Chesapeake Music now has additional tickets for sale for all six in-theater Festival concerts. Please go to chesapeakemusic.org to order tickets for the in-theater or live-streamed performances or for a complete program listing.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival 2021 Kicks Off June 4 in Ebenezer Theater

May 21, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Catherine Cho, Violin/Viola

Chesapeake Music announces the 36th annual Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival will be held June 4–12, 20201 at its new permanent home, the Ebenezer Theater, at 17 South Washington Street in Easton, Maryland. The Festival’s exciting two-week program of six concerts featuring 15 artists will be presented live, in full compliance with state and local Covid-19 regulations, as well as streamed on the web.

Week One

June 4, 7:30 p.m. – Festival Opening Extravaganza! – Mozart’s Piano Trio in G Major, Anton Webern Langsamer Satz (Slow Movement)  and Dvořák’s Piano Quartet in E-flat Major

June 5, 7:30 p.m. – Bologne’s, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Sonata No. 3 in A Major for two violins, Still’s “Mother and Child” from the Suite for violin and piano, Bolcom’s Graceful Ghost Rag, Beach’s Romance for violin and piano, Opus 23, and Schumann’s Six Studies in Canon Form and Bilder aus Osten “Pictures from the East” for piano, four hands

June 6, 5:30 p.m. – Haydn’s Trio No. 30 in F Major, Hob. XV:17, Beethoven’s String Trio in C minor, Opus 9 No. 3, and Schumann’s Piano Quartet in E-flat Major, Opus 47

Week One Artists

Catherine Cho, Violin/Viola

Francesca de Pasquale, Violin

Molly Carr, Viola

Marcy Rosen, Cello

Marcy Rosen, Cello

Peter Stumpf, Cello

Peggy Pearson, Oboe

Ieva Jokubaviciute, Piano

Diane Walsh, Piano

Sponsors of this year’s Festival include Talbot Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, Paul and Joanne Prager, and our donors. Chesapeake Music now has additional tickets for sale for all six in-theater Festival concerts. Please go to chesapeakemusic.org to order tickets for the in-theater or live-streamed performances or for a complete program listing.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival 2021 Debuts in Ebenezer Theater

May 6, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Marcy Rosen on cello, Artistic Co-Director of the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival

Chesapeake Music announces the 36th annual Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival will be held June 4–12, 20201 at its new permanent home, the Ebenezer Theater, at 17 South Washington Street in Easton, Maryland. The Festival’s exciting two-week program of six concerts featuring 15 artists will be presented live, in full compliance with state and local Covid-19 regulations, as well as streamed on the web. Artistic directors Marcy Rosen and Catherine Cho have created a compelling program of chamber music masterworks by Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, and Schumann, among others, as well as intimate duo performances of music by Joseph Bologne, William Grant Still, William Bolcom, and Amy Beach.

 

The Festival’s opening extravaganza on June 4 will introduce Chesapeake Music’s new Steinway & Sons concert grand model D piano and feature Mozart’s Piano Trio in G Major and Dvořák’s Piano Quartet in E-flat Major. And on June 11, the new piano will again be in the spotlight with performances of Mozart’s Piano Trio in C Major, Beethoven’s Serenade in D Major, and Schubert’s Fantasia for Piano, Four Hands, in F minor.

 

Catherine Cho on violin, Artistic Co-Director of the Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival

Performing at this year’s Festival are both distinguished artists well-known to Festival attendees and outstanding new musicians. Among them, Festival favorites, the brother violinists Daniel and Todd Phillips, and violist Steven Tenenbom, are joined by cellist Timothy Eddy and return as the Orion String Quartet, performing Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor with another Festival favorite, acclaimed pianist Robert McDonald, on June 12.

 

Internationally renowned pianists Diane Walsh and Ieva Jokubaviciute also return to join cellist Marcy Rosen, violinist Catherine Cho, and other artists. Walsh and Jokubaviciute are featured together on June 5 playing Schumann’s Six Studies in Canon Form and Bilder aus Osten “Pictures from the East” for piano, four hands. Acclaimed flutist Tara Helen O’Connor is also featured in several performances, and rising star, violist Molly Carr, joins the Festival for the first time.

 

The roster of artists performing at this Festival is J. Lawrie Bloom, clarinet; Molly Carr, viola; Catherine Cho, violin/viola; Timothy Eddy, cello; Ieva Jokubaviciute, piano; Robert McDonald, piano; Tara Helen O’Connor, flute; Peggy Pearson, oboe; Daniel Phillips, violin; Todd Phillips, violin; Marcy Rosen, cello; Francesca dePasquale, violin; Peter Stumpf, cello; Steven Tenenbom, viola; and Diane Walsh, piano.

 

 

 

Orion String Quartet, back row, L-R: Timothy Eddy, cello; Steven Tenenbom, viola; and Daniel Phillips, violin; and in the front row, Todd Phillips, violin.

Sponsors of this year’s Festival include Talbot Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council, and Paul and Joanne Prager. Visit the Chesapeake Music website, www.chesapeakechambermusic.org, where there are complete program listings.  Tickets will go on sale May 1, 2021.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Chesapeake Music Announces Winners of Virtual 9th Biennial Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition for Young Professionals

April 13, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Zelter String Quartet of Los Angeles, California was awarded the Lerman Gold Prize.

Four ensembles, which included the Aya Piano Trio of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Dior Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana; Soma Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana; and Zelter String Quartet of Los Angeles, California, competed for the $10,000 Lerman Gold Prize and the $5,000 Silver Prize at the Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition for Young Professionals in Easton, MD on April 10, 2021. The Lerman Gold Prize was awarded to the Zelter String Quartet and the Silver Prize was awarded to the Dior Quartet, which was also awarded the Competition’s Audience Choice Award.

Postponed from April 2020 due to the global pandemic, this year’s event was rescheduled and held online. The ensembles, which included members as young as 21 and no older than 31, represented a wide range of instrumental combinations including winds, strings, and mixed instruments. Chesapeake Music Executive Director, Don Buxton, commented, “During this very challenging year, we have all learned new ways of experiencing inspiring music celebrations. Chesapeake Music finds itself presenting this wonderful day as a virtual experience . . . we have tried to include some of the excitement you would get out of a live competition.”

Dior Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana was awarded the Silver Prize and the Competition’s Audience Choice Award.

This year’s competition judges included J. Lawrie Bloom, Ieva Jokubaviciute, and Michael Kannen. Bloom, founding artistic co-director of Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival and the Chesapeake Chamber Music Competition, commented, “After waiting an entire year to hear them, these groups did not disappoint. The level of technical facility and musical sophistication was spectacular . . . trying to make a decision with such wealth was a pleasure – not an easy thing to do.”

The Zelter String Quartet, comprised of violinists Kyle Gilner and Gallia Kastner, violist Nao Kubota, and cellist Allan Hon, formed in Los Angeles in 2018. The quartet presented three string quartet works in chronological order.  The Dior Quartet formed their ensemble at Indiana University in 2018, but hail from Israel, Canada, St. Lucia, and the U.S. Members Noa Said, violin; Tobias Sales, violin; Caleb Georges, viola; and Joanne Yesol Choi, cello showcased the evolution of the string quartet and how its repertoire portrays a variety of human stories across centuries.

“We read and hear that the future of classical music is in danger and then you hear groups of this level at this age. I hope that it gives you the same pleasure and hope for the future as I get from it,” Bloom concluded.

The Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition, a program of Chesapeake Music, is underwritten by the Talbot County Arts Council, the Maryland State Arts Council, and private benefactors. For further information about the Competition events or to view this year’s Competition performances, visit ChesapeakeMusic.org or call 410-819-0380.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Virtual 9th Biennial Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition for Young Professionals

March 29, 2021 by Chesapeake Music

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Aya Piano Trio of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Postponed from April 2020 due to the global pandemic, this year’s rescheduled Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition for Young Professionals will be held on-line on April 10, 2021, due to continued performance restrictions. Four ensembles will compete for the $10,000 Lerman Gold Prize and the $5,000 Silver Prize. The average age of an ensemble must be under 31, and some include members as young as 21.  The ensembles represent a wide range of instrumental combinations including winds, strings, and mixed instruments, including percussion. The Competition finalist ensembles include Aya Piano Trio of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Dior Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana; Soma Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana; and Zelter String Quartet of Los Angeles, California.

Based in Philadelphia, the Aya Piano Trio was formed in 2013 by three students at the Curtis Institute of Music. The trio has performed extensively across the United States, and in 2018 they were semifinalists in both the M Prize Chamber Arts Competition and the Fischoff Competition. They were also winners of the 2018 Young Chamber Musicians Competition in North Carolina, where they were invited for a residency of recordings and concerts and made their New York City debut in 2019 at the Mannes New School Concert Series.

Dior Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana

Hailing from Israel, Canada, St. Lucia, and the US, the members of Dior Quartet formed their ensemble at Indiana University in 2018 and won the Bronze Medal at the 2019 Fischoff National Chamber Competition (Senior Division). They have also won first prize at the 9th Plowman Chamber Music Competition (Senior Strings), first prize at the 2019 Kuttner Quartet Competition, and runner-up at the Beethoven-Haus Competition at the Jacobs School of Music, as well as held the 2019 Fellowship String Quartet at Wintergreen Summer Music Festival in Virginia. They are currently the new Kuttner Quartet, the student string quartet-in-residence at Indiana University Jacobs School of Music.

 

 

Soma Quartet of Bloomington, Indiana

Based in Bloomington, Indiana, Soma Quartet was formed at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music under the guidance of Otis Murphy. In addition to being the Grand Prize winners at the 2019 Plowman Chamber Music Competition, they were First Runner-Up in the 2018 Classic Alive Young Artist Competition; First Prize winners in the 2017 Chicago Woodwind Ensemble Competition; and were also finalists in the 2018 North American Saxophone Alliance Quartet Competition. The ensemble is committed to performing new works to expand quartet repertoire and has collaborated with several composers from Indiana University.

 

 

 

Zelter String Quartet of Los Angeles, California

The Zelter String Quartet, comprised of violinists Kyle Gilner and Gallia Kastner, violist Nao Kubota, and cellist Allan Hon, formed in Los Angeles in 2018. In 2019, they were awarded a full scholarship to participate in the St. Lawrence String Quartet Chamber Music Seminar, culminating in a performance at the Campbell Recital Hall at Stanford University. The quartet has collaborated with the Verona String Quartet, Mixtape Series, tenor Drake Dantzler, and has future collaborations set with pianist Lucinda Carver. In addition, they were recently invited to participate in the Juilliard String Quartet Seminar, and in August 2021, the quartet is scheduled to participate in the Rencontres Franco-Américaines de Musique de Chambre, as winners of the USC Ofiesh Chamber Music Competition.

This year’s competition judges include J. Lawrie Bloom, Ieva Jokubaviciute, and Michael Kannen. Bloom, founding artistic co-director of Chesapeake Chamber Music Festival and the Chesapeake Chamber Music Competition, recently retired as a bass clarinetist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (CSO).  Lithuanian pianist Jokubaviciute’s performances have earned her critical acclaim throughout the U.S. and Europe on major stages around the world, such as Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, and London’s Wigmore Hall. Cellist Kannen has appeared at chamber music festivals across the country and with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.

The Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition, a program of Chesapeake Music, is underwritten by the Talbot County Arts Council, the Maryland State Arts Council, and private benefactors. For further information about the Competition events, visit ChesapeakeMusic.org or call 410-819-0380. The Competition will be aired free of charge and timing and links to the event are posted on the Chesapeake Music website, www.chesapeakemusic.org.

Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, local news

Jazz is Alive with Bria Skonberg

August 1, 2020 by Chesapeake Music

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Trumpeter/vocalist Bria Skonberg is a remarkable force in the jazz scene—notorious for her “tradfusion” sound and steadily earning the reputation as Louis Armstrong’s modern-day counterpart.

And, thanks to the Easton-based non-profit Chesapeake Music, you can catch her in action, virtually, as part of their continuing series, “Jazz Is Alive.”

The free performance is available via Chesapeakemusic.org.

“We’re so delighted to have Bria join us on our virtual stage,” says Joe Fischer, Chairman of the Jazz Committee Chesapeake Music. “She’s got such an engaging personality and the musical talent to match!”

Skonberg’s specialty is old jazz—proven by her solid repertoire of 1900s to 1940s tunes—but her songs draw influence from a variety of genres, from blues to Dixieland to pop.

“I like to be influenced by what’s around me,” she said in a 2017 interview with Chesapeake Music. “That’s jazz. You listen and react.”

Described by Vanity Fair as “a millennial shaking up the jazz world,” Skonberg’s rising-star status was confirmed when she won the 2017 Juno Award for Jazz Vocal Album of the Year for her 2016 crowd-funded album, Bria.

“Basically, it’s a Canadian Grammy,” she explained. “It’s been a wild ride.”

Bria Skonberg

The trailblazing trumpeter has performed at more than a hundred festivals around the world, including New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, Monterey Jazz Festival, Newport Jazz Festival, and Montreal Jazz Festival—to name a few!

She graced the Avalon Theatre stage a few years ago, when she kicked off the 2017 Monty Alexander Jazz Festival with an expressive and lively performance. She fondly recalls her experience during her introduction to her virtual show.

“Driving into such a cute little city and having probably the best crab cakes I’ve ever had in my life,” she says, with a laugh. “And then taking that energy to the stage and meeting your fantastic, wonderful audience.”

Skonberg was slated to headline this year’s Monty Alexander Jazz Festival. Held annually over Labor Day weekend, the 2020 festival has been canceled. Still, she looks forward to her inevitable return—not only to meet with musicians and attendees alike, but, admittedly, for the crab cakes, too!

“We will undoubtedly be bringing Bria back to Easton for a live performance as soon as possible, but for now, let’s enjoy her wonderful music as best, and as safely, as we can,” Fischer says.

Skonberg takes the virtual stage with an introduction and engaging selection of songs that includes her newest music video “So Is The Day.“

To start listening, visit Chesapeakemusic.org.

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Filed Under: Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Music, Chestertown Spy, local news

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