« January 2008 | Main | March 2008 »

February 29, 2008

The Main Street Sessions: March 1, 2008

CarolinaParakeet%28HBW%29.jpg
The Carolina Parakeet

Here's more information about the music and performers on The Main Street Sessions airing Saturday, March 1, 2008 at 2 p.m. To compliment Ken Frazelle's new set of songs, Vanishing Birds, images of and information about the extinct or endangered birds described in his music is included below.

Click here to LISTEN to the show. (Be patient. It may take a moment.)

PERFORMER/COMPOSER LINKS:

Composer, Kenneth Frazelle
Soprano, Marilyn Taylor
Opus Two (William Terwilliger, Violin and Andrew Cooperstock, Piano)
Composer, Paul Schoenfield
Composer, William Stevens III
Composer, William Stevens IV
Flutist, Laura Dangerfield Stevens
Clarinetist, David Kirby
Violinist, Joseph Meyer
Cellist/Producer, Evan Richey
Pianist, Fred Pivetta

PLAY LIST:

Kenneth Frazelle: Vanishing Birds:

Carolina Parakeet (intro)
Red-cockaded Woodpecker
The Piping Plover
Parakeeto

(Performed by Kenneth Frazelle, piano and Marilyn Talyor, soprano)

Paul Schoenfield:

Four Souveniers: Tin-Pan Alley, Tango
Partita: Sinfonia, Nigun

Cafe Music: Rubato
(Performed by Opus Two. Andres Diaz performs with them on Cafe Music, from their CD.)

William Stevens III: Quodlibet
(Performed by Laura Stevens, flute; David Kirby, clarinet, Joseph Meyer, violin, Evan Richey, cello)

William Stevens IV: Aria from Insomnia
(Performed by Evan Richey, cello and Fred Pivetta, piano)

Kenneth Frazelle:

Elixir (Performed by Ken Frazelle, piano)

carolina%20parakeet.jpg

The Carolina Parakeet, extinct since 1918. (By John James Audobon, 1883.)

keet2.jpg

Carolina Paroquet (Conuropsis carolinensis) - Duke specimen #B831, from GM Gray's collection, collected in Florida, no date.

The Carolina Parakeet died out because of a number of different threats. To make space for more agricultural land, large areas of forest were cut down, taking away its habitat.

The colorful feathers (green body, yellow head, and red around the bill) were in demand as decorations in ladies' hats, and the birds were kept as pets. Even though the birds bred easily in captivity, little was done by owners to increase the population of tamed birds. Finally, they were killed in large numbers because farmers considered them a pest, although many farmers valued them for controlling invasive cockleburs.

A factor that contributed to their extinction was the unfortunate flocking behavior that led them to return immediately to a location where some of the birds had just been killed. This led to even more being shot by hunters as they gathered about the wounded and dead members of the flock.

woodpecker.jpg

A Red-cockaded Woodpecker.


In the mid-l800s, naturalist John Audubon reported that the Red-cockaded Woodpecker (Picoides borealis) was found abundantly in the pine forests of the southeastern United States. Historically, this woodpecker's range extended from Florida to New Jersey, as far west as Texas and Oklahoma, and inland to Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee.

Today it is estimated that there are about 4,500 family units (groups) of Red-cockaded Woodpeckers, or 10,000 to 14,000 birds, living in clusters (groups of cavity trees) from Florida to Virginia and west to southeast Oklahoma and eastern Texas, representing about 1 percent of the woodpecker's original range.


200px-Piping_plover2.jpg

Piping Plover

The bird's name is derived from its plaintive bell-like whistles which are often heard before the bird is visible. This bird is endangered and its range has reduced recently due to habitat loss and human activity near nesting sites. Some critical nesting habitat is now protected. In coastal areas such as Cape Cod, beach access by ORVs is prohibited near nesting piping plovers - a cause of some conflict over the years - as a result of management plans. In Eastern Canada, the Piping Plover is only found on coastal beaches. In 1985 it was declared an endangered species by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada[1]. In 1986 it was declared to be endangered within the watershed of the Great Lakes and threatened in the remainder of its range in the United States, which resulted in the permanent closing of Moonstone Beach in South Kingston, Rhode Island.

February 22, 2008

Events Calendar Video! Guitarist, Thomas Viloteau

Guitarist Thomas Viloteau performs next Wednesday evening (February 27th) at 7:30 at CPCC. He's the winner of the 2006 Guitar Foundation of America annual competition. For more information about his visit to Charlotte, click here.

February 19, 2008

For Mozart Cafe Listeners: A Keyed Trumpet

keyed%20trumpet.jpg

As promised, a photograph of the "keyed trumpet" for which Haydn's Concerto in Eb was written.

For perspective here are photos of natural trumpets (has neither keys nor valves) and a trumpet with valves:
natural%20trumpet%201.jpg valved%20trumpet%201.jpg

Harrell and Ngwenyama Perform with the CSO this Weekend

Cellist Lynn Harrell is joined by violist/violinist Nokuthula Ngwenyama ("en-gwen-ya-ma") this weekend for performances with The Charlotte Symphony of Richard Strauss' Don Quixote. Here's a video clip of Ngenyama performing the Prelude from Bach's Suite No. 1 (originally for cello):

To get a feel for the work Harrell and Ngwenyama will perform together, here's a portion of Strauss' Don Quixote. Mstislav Rostropovich is the cellist. Seiji Ozawa conducts the Saito Kinen Orchestra. In the piece, the cello plays the role of Don Quixote. The viola is Sancho Panza.

February 11, 2008

Classical Grammy Winners Announced; Local Cellist Shines Alongside

kendall.jpg
Charlotte cellist Kendall Ramseur performed at the Grammys last night.
(Photo: Donald Dietz)

Below you'll find a full list of winners in classical music categories from last night's 50th annual Grammys.

To explore different perspectives on the event, here are two articles of interest:

Grammys at 50: Bring the magic back

Sunday's award show has a chance to tap the special way music can touch people. (Ann Powers, Los Angeles Times)

The Baton's Been Passed Over: The Grammys pretty much ignore classical music these days, and vice versa. (Anne Midgette, Wasington Post)

Of local interest is news that young Charlotte cellist, Kendall Ramseur, who now studies at the North Carolina School of the Arts, was chosen to be in the ensemble that accompanied performances at the Grammys by Lang Lang, Herbie Hancock, Alicia Keys, Josh Groban and Andrea Bocelli. Kendall performed for WDAV's The Main Street Sessions last March. We're proud of him! A full article about Kendall and others from the NCSA who performed at the Grammys is here. Click here to read the article that appeared in The Charlotte Observer.

Classical Album: "Tower: Made in America," Leonard Slatkin,
conductor; Tim Handley, producer; Tim Handley, engineer/mixer (Nashville Symphony).

Orchestral Performance: "Tower: Made in America," Leonard Slatkin, conductor (Nashville Symphony).

Producer of the Year Classical:, Judith Sherman.

Engineered Album, Classical: "Grechaninov: Passion Week," John Newton, engineer (Charles Bruffy, Phoenix Bach Choir & Kansas City Chorale).

Opera Recording: "Humperdinck: Hansel & Gretel," Sir Charles Mackerras, conductor; Rebecca Evans, Jane Henschel & Jennifer Larmore; Brian Couzens, producer (Sarah Coppen, Diana Montague & Sarah Tynan; New London Children's Choir; Philharmonia Orchestra).

Choral Performance: "Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem," Simon Rattle, conductor; Simon Halsey, chorus master (Thomas Quasthoff & Dorothea Roschmann; Rundfunkchor Berlin; Berliner Philharmoniker).

Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (With Orchestra): "Barber/Korngold/Walton: Violin Concertos," Bramwell Tovey, conductor; James Ehnes (Vancouver Symphony Orchestra).

Instrumental Soloist Performance (Without Orchestra): "Beethoven Sonatas, Vol. 3," Garrick Ohlsson.

Chamber Music Performance: "Strange Imaginary Animals," Eighth Blackbird.

Small Ensemble Performance: "Stravinsky: Apollo, Concerto in D; Prokofiev: 20 Visions Fugitives," Yuri Bashmet, conductor; Moscow Soloists.

Classical Vocal Performance: "Lorraine Hunt Lieberson Sings Peter Lieberson: Neruda Songs," Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (James Levine; Boston Symphony Orchestra).

Classical Contemporary Composition: "Made in America," Joan Tower (Leonard Slatkin, conductor; Nashville Symphony Orchestra).

Classical Crossover Album: "A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane," Turtle Island Quartet.

February 8, 2008

Watch Your Radio II: Overture to Beatrice and Benedict

Sir Neville Marriner leads Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. The Overture to Berlioz's opera, Beatrice and Benedict:

(Carnegie Hall, 1994)

February 5, 2008

Netrebko's Expecting, Marrying

netrebko2.jpg

Opera. On stage and off, a proven source for intrigue (not to mention juicy gossip). The latest news is no exception.

Hearts are breaking across the globe. A beloved diva for the modern day, the ravishing Russian soprano Anna Netrebko, is pregnant and plans to marry. Read the full story here.

Her fiancee is Uruguayan baritone Erwin Schrott. In case you get any big ideas about trying to upstage him, be sure you size up your competition first:

schrott.jpg

Better hit the gym, boys.

February 4, 2008

Carmen at the Superbowl

Why watch the Superbowl? For the ads, of course. Classical music--opera, no less--was featured in at least one. This, by the way, was an "amateur" ad entered in a contest last year and held over for broadcast this year:

Doritos Super Bowl Commercial: Giant Mouse Trap

The music in this unsettling Audi ad (which parodies the horse head scene from The Godfather) also employs an orchestra as we know it. The first few seconds hint at a trumpet theme from the finale to Mahler's Symphony No. 9. Then Mahler collides with Jaws and other cinematic terrors:

In other Superbowl music news, there's no doubt in my mind the national anthem was lip synched by American Idol winner Jordin Sparks. Seems a shame:


At least Tom Petty sang live. I'll take flat over fake any day.