classical, Gay Composers, operaApr 28th, 2010 | No Comments

“Moby Dick,” the latest opera from Jake Heggie (“Dead Man Walking”) premieres Friday April 30 at the Dallas Opera in its spiffy new Winspear Opera House.
Ben Hepner leads the cast as Capt. Ahab. Libretto is by Gene Sheer. Patrick Summers conducts. Stage direction by Leonard Foglia.
I’ll be attending a performance on May 8, as part of the annual convention of the Music Critics Association....
Albany NY, Capital Region, cello, classical, Gay Composers, pianoApr 26th, 2010 | No Comments

Tchaikovsky Spectacular
Albany Symphony Orchestra, David Alan Miller, conductor
with Joshua Roman, cello
Palace Theatre, Albany, NY
April 23, 2010
Spectacular. Advertising copywriters often use that adjective to describe concerts of Tchaikovsky, especially when his 1812 Overture is performed, with or without real cannons.
The Albany Symphony Orchestra’s “Tchaikovsky Spectacular” Friday night at the Palace Theatre didn’t...
Capital Region, classical, GLTB performers, pianoApr 24th, 2010 | 1 Comment
Union College Concert Series
Schenectady, New York
April 24, 2010
Before he launched into his daring and demanding piano recital Saturday night at Union College, Jeremy Denk revealed his way with words, describing the evening’s program as “beauty and the beast.” It was an apt, if not wholly original title for the juxtaposition of monumental works by Ives and Bach.
The beastliness came first, with Ives’ Piano Sonata...
chamber music, classical, Gay Composers, GLTB performers, guitarApr 21st, 2010 | 1 Comment

David Leisner can’t escape Spanish music. He’s a guitarist.
“It’s been a crusade since early in my career to demonstrate that guitar programs don’t need to have Spanish music,” says Leisner. “Most of the guitar repertoire is not Spanish at all! The pieces most people think of by Albeniz and Granados were originally piano pieces.
“The majority of music written for the guitar before the 20th century...
Capital Region, classicalApr 18th, 2010 | No Comments

I’m proud to introduce HudsonSounds.org, a new online resource for music in the upper Hudson Valley, New York’s Capital Region and The Berkshires.
HudsonSounds.org provides calendar listings for hundreds of classical music events, and blogs by a dozen prominent and insight folks from the local musical community. There’s also links to music news headlines and a CD and DVD store.
The listings are already full...
classical, GLTB performers, orchestralApr 16th, 2010 | 4 Comments

Raise your hand if you can name a GLTB community orchestra. (And it doesn’t count if you or your spouse is a member of one!)
Sure, there’s lots of gay choruses. Here in little Albany, New York we’ve actually go two. And GLTB marching bands usually show up out of the woodwork when it’s time for a parade. But gay orchestras??
Well, I can find ten. They’re located in five countries, with two launched...
classical, cooking, GLTB performersApr 14th, 2010 | No Comments

Douglas Quint can’t remember which came first in life, ice cream or music. But he’s made both into professional pursuits.
As a bassoonist he’s got an active freelance career across the northeast and a fine pedigree, having studied at Tanglewood and earned a bachelors from the Manhattan School of Music and a masters from The Juilliard School. He’s a member of the Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra of Boston and with his long-time...
awards, classical, Lesbian ComposersApr 12th, 2010 | 1 Comment

Jennifer Higdon can add the 2010 Pulitzer Prize to her ever-growing list of accolades. She received the award today for her Violin Concerto, which was premiered by soloist Hilary Hahn (her former student at the Curtis Institute) in 2009. It was commissioned by the Indianapolis Symphony, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and The Curtis Institute of Music.
The concerto is published by Lawdon Press,...
classical, experimental, Gay Composers, musical theater, opera, percussionApr 8th, 2010 | 1 Comment

Talk about bringing music to the people! Composer/performer Byron Au Yong is putting opera in bottles (no deposit required).
At least that’s the impression given by the subtitle to a 2008 piece.
But the work’s name – “Kidnapping Water: Bottle Operas” – is actually deceptive. Rather than mass-produced take-home music, the piece is more about making audiences go the distance.
Like a musical Christo and Jeanne-Claude,...
classical, Gay ComposersApr 4th, 2010 | No Comments

If you’re open to noticing it, music of gay composers is being performed all the time. I’ve just made it my job to point it out now and then. And there’s a nice stream of special events during the second week of April in Manhattan. Here’s the run down:
Choral works of JOHN CORIGLIANO and MARK ADAMO.
New York Virtuoso Singers, Harold Rosenbaum, conductor
3 p.m. Sunday April 11 St. Ignatius of Antioch...