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61. Classical Voice Of North Carolina
His honors include prizes at the william Kapell International Piano pianist Jiangwas the soloist in Jorge Calandrelli s arrangement of music A Love
http://www.cvnc.org/reviews/2003/october/ShanghaiSymphony.html
Shanghai Symphony Orchestra's 2003 Tour at ECU
by William Thomas Walker The diverse complexity of Rossini's Overture to William Tel l gave conductor Chen a chance to show off the quality of the 124-year-old orchestra. Based on ECU's previous experience with the Russian National Orchestra, I doubt that Wright Auditorium's shallow stage allowed all of the orchestra's "nearly a hundred veteran players" to be seated, but it was well packed. The solo cellist earned the conductor's acknowledgement with his sensitive and richly phrased playing of the famous opening solo, with divided cello section parts. Though a very string-dominated orchestra, there were fine solos from the woodwinds, horns and - not least - the trumpets. An older patron quipped "the 'Lone Ranger' theme" when he heard the infamous trumpet solo, and I had an urge to go get some Merita bread! The "Polovetsian Dances," from Borodin's opera Prince Igor , were equally well played. Conductor Chen showed confident mastery of a wide range of musical styles. The concert opened with "Night of the Torch Festival," the last of four movements from Xilin Wang's tone poem "Yunnan," which won an Excellence Prize in a 1981 National Competition in China. It is somewhat reminiscent of the regional folk music explorations of Rimsky-Korsakov and Khatchaturian, and the program notes drew attention to "three different themes (that) resonate throughout this movement: strong and vigorous male dancers; mild and graceful female dancers; and the rejoicing and feverish mass dance." The strings played a driving rhythm at the beginning, and there was fine woodwind playing later. In this piece, the solo oboe affected a special "pinched quality" that mimicked a traditional folk instrument. If all the sections of Wang's tone poem are as long as this one, it would make for a substantial portion of any program.

62. Inside Binghamton University
pianist Michael Holober returns to Binghamton to perform with Al Hamme. Binghamton University s 199697 theater season ranges from william Shakespeare s
http://inside.binghamton.edu/September-October/Sept-5-96/OnTap.html
Current Issue Back Issues Sept-1996 Issues
What's on tap for 1996-97 season
Music
Jazz, classics combine for new music season
A piano series, the classics and journeys in jazz are among this year's musical offer ings. Subscription tickets and single tickets are available. For more information, call 777 -ARTS.
THE PIANO SERIES
Five Women Pianists
8:15 p.m. Saturday, September 28
Concert Theater

Five outstanding women pianistsBarbara Garges, Ewa Mackiewicz-Wolfe, Chai-Kyou Mallinson, Margaret Reitz and Diane Richardsonwill perform together in the stunning opening of the Piano Series.

Walter Ponce, Pianist
8:15 p.m. Saturday, November 9
Concert Theater

Acclaimed worldwide, Walter Ponce, who has appeared in recital and as a concert soloist in virtually every major concert hall in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, returns to the Anderson Center stage for a solo recital.
Malcolm Bilson, fortepianist
8:15 p.m. Saturday, April 12
Concert Theater

Malcolm Bilson has been in the forefront of the period instrument movement for more than two decades. His worldwide performances of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven on repli cas and original five-octave late-18th-century pianos have been the impetus for the return of the fortepiano to the concert stage.
THE CHAMBER SERIES
20th Century Classics: Chamber Music New, Newer, and Newest

63. Pianist: Definition And Much More From Answers.com
A performing classical pianist usually starts playing piano at a very young age, Bruno Canino; Robert Casadesus; Jiyang chen; Sa chen; Shura Cherkassky
http://www.answers.com/topic/pianist
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Dictionary WordNet Wikipedia Translations Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping pianist Dictionary pi·an·ist pē-ăn ĭst, pē ə-nĭst
n. One who plays the piano.
WordNet
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words. The noun pianist has one meaning: Meaning #1 a person who plays the piano
Synonym: piano player
Wikipedia
pianist
This article deals with those who play the piano. For other uses, see pianist (disambiguation)
A pianist is a person who plays the piano A professional pianist can perform solo pieces, play with an orchestra or smaller ensemble , or accompany one or more singers or solo instrumentalists A performing classical pianist usually starts playing piano at a very young age, some as early as three years old. Many well-known classical composers were able pianists themselves; for example, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Ludwig van Beethoven Franz Liszt Johannes Brahms ... Robert Schumann , and Sergei Rachmaninoff were all virtuoso pianists. Most pianists specialize in certain composer(s)'s music or a certain period to some extent.

64. The Cleveland Orchestra
The performances of works by chen Yi and Georg Friedrich Haas mark the will be performed by pianist Leif Ove Andsnes and The Cleveland Orchestra,
http://www.clevelandorch.com/html/PressRoom/pressreleases.asp?ID=69

65. Peabody Institute : Voice Department Handbook
City Paper Best of Baltimore 2004 Audrey chen (BrynJulson) Music must begiven to the pianist well in advance to ensure adequate time for learning or
http://www.peabody.jhu.edu/index.php?pageID=1359

66. The New Yorker: PRINTABLES
56 at 8 The pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, the flutist James Galway, offers agroup of contemporary works (including chen Yi’s “Fiddle Suite,” with the
http://www.newyorker.com/printables/goingson/050808gocl_GOAT_classical
Issue of 2005-08-08 and 15
Posted 2005-08-01
NEW YORK GRAND OPERA
with Luciana LaMonico, Maria Knapik, and Christopher Jackson in the leading roles. (Naumburg Band Shell, enter at 72nd St. Aug. 3 at 7:30. No tickets required.) BARGEMUSIC
Every few weeks, Olga Bloom fills the little stage in her converted coffee barge with as many players as she can and presents an orchestral concert. The latest, a mostly Mozart program including the Symphony No. 29 in A Major and the Piano Concerto in E-Flat Major, K. 449 (with Steven Beck), is the highlight of the next two weeks at the floating chamber-music series. (Fulton Ferry Landing, Brooklyn. 718-624-2083. Aug. 6 at 7:30 and Aug. 7 at 4. For full schedule, see www.bargemusic.org.) AMY X NEUBERG / EMILY BEZAR
SUMMERGARDEN
MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL
Aug. 5 at 10:30: Thibaudet repairs to the Kaplan Penthouse to perform an intimate recital of solo works by Debussy, Ravel, and Satie.
COOPERSTOWN CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL
BRIDGEHAMPTON CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL
TANGLEWOOD Aug. 6 at 8:30: Neville Marriner conducts the B.S.O. in an all-Mozart evening that includes performances of the Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major (with Jonathan Biss), a pair of concert arias (with the soprano Veronique Gens), and the Symphony No. 39.

67. The New Yorker: Goings On About Town: Classical Music
56 at 8 The pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, the flutist James Galway, “Death inVenice,” with william Burden singing the role of Aschenbach and David
http://www.newyorker.com/goingson/music/
changeHeaderSpot("/images/spots/sp_calendar_050905_lastweek.gif")
Issue of 2005-09-12
Posted 2005-09-05
NEW YORK CITY OPERA
a company favorite, begins its annual run. With Jee Hyun Lim (in the title role), Kathryn Friest, Brandon Jovanovich (as Pinkerton), and Jake Gardner; Ari Pelto. (New York State Theatre. 212-721-6500.) AMATO OPERA
BARGEMUSIC
COUNTER)INDUCTION:
AUSTRIAN CULTURAL FORUM:
The Forum, which uses its sleek little concert hall to proudly promote Viennese music old and new, begins a wide-ranging festival of modern and contemporary works with an all-Webern recital (including the Three Songs, Op. 25, set to poems by Hildegard Jone) offered by the soprano Anna Maria Pammer and the pianist Clemens Zeilinger. (11 E. 52nd St. Sept. 9 and Sept. 12 at 8. For free tickets, which are required, call 212-319-5300.) ARGENTO CHAMBER ENSEMBLE:
almglocken, or cowbells). (Merkin Concert Hall, 129 W. 67th St. 212-501-3330. Sept. 10 at 8:30.) JUPITER SYMPHONY CHAMBER PLAYERS
MUSICIANS FOR HARMONY This impromptu fall concert, first offered in the wake of 9/11, has become an annual tradition that aims to bridge the gap between the musical styles of East and West. The violinist Arnold Steinhardt and the cellist Peter Wiley (both of the Guarneri Quartet), the Shanghai String Quartet, the Iranian ney SOUTH MOUNTAIN CONCERTS RECITALS OUT OF TOWN MOVIES THE THEATRE ... RECORDINGS Use of this Site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and

68. MidAmerica Productions - Weill Recital Hall Chamber Music Series
percussion; The Three Concertmasters with william Ransom, piano Cecylia Arzewski, Mihai Craioveanu, violin; Irinia Kats, piano; Melvin chen, piano
http://www.midamerica-music.com/weill_artists.htm
Artists Who Have Appeared on Midamerica's
Weill Recital Hall Series 1989-2005
  • Jean Jordan , soprano; Desmond Kincaid , piano
  • Manhattan Philharmonic Chamber Players
  • Peabody Camerata with Gene Young, conductor; Elaine Bonazzi, speaker
  • Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne with Lorraine Vaillancourt, conductor
  • University of Georgia Contemporary Chamber Ensemble with Lewis Nielson, conductor
  • Stanley Irwin , baritone; Claude Cymerman , piano
  • Elysium String Quartet : Leonid Levin, violin; Jennifer Tiboris, violin; Lisa Heffter, viola; Lutz Rath, cello
  • Stanley Drucker , clarinet; L. William Kuyper , French horn; Joseph Robinson , oboe; with David Carroll, bassoon; Gerald Robbins, piano
  • Ravina String Quartet : Oscar Ravina, violin; Allan Schiller, violin; Peter Kenote, viola; Qiang Tu, cello; with Harold Seletsky, clarinet
  • Brass Mosaic : David Workman, director/trumpet; Brendan Kierman, trumpet; Ken Soper, French horn; Nathaniel Dickey, trombone; Paul Erion, tuba
  • Elysium String Quartet : Robert Chausow, violin; Jennifer Tiboris, violin; Lisa Ralia Heffter, viola; Lutz Rath, cello; with Eleonor Bindman, piano
  • Albemarle Ensemble : Margaret Newcomb, flute; Kristen Hadden, oboe; Matthew Morris, bassoon; Dwight Purvis, horn; Content Sablinsky, piano

69. Wbur.org Arts - Music - July Classical Music Choices
In this concert the Amernet String Quartet and pianist Alpin Hong play quartets String Quartet and Frank s Piano Quintet, with pianist Melvin chen.
http://www.wbur.org/arts/2005/49102_20050707.asp

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Music :: July Classical Music Choices
Western Massachusetts hosts Tanglewood and many other excellent festivals this month.
by Mark Kroll
Bang on a Can. Photo: Katherine Myers Boston - July 07, 2005 - For the best of this month's classical music, travel to the Berkshires, the home of Norman Rockwell, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Serge Koussevitsky, Edith Wharton and countless other artists. Rockwell never painted musicians and Hawthorne hated the mosquitoes, but this part of Massachusetts has long been a favorite destination for music lovers. Although Tanglewood is the dominant force here, these beautiful hills are dotted with many other excellent festivals. Berkshire Opera Company at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center, Great Barrington, MA, at 8 p.m. on July 7and 9, 2005

70. World Piano Pedagogy Conference
Ellen Tryba chen teaches beginners through advanced students, william Westneyholds two endowed faculty positions at Texas Tech University,
http://www.pianovision.com/wppc/index.php?congid=3&task=fac

71. Jazz News: Serial Underground – The Non Sequitur 6-pack Brought To You By C
As a globe trotting new music virtuoso, chen effortlessly sails through the Artistic Director of CCi ComposersCollaborative inc, composer/pianist Jed
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=6680

72. Jazz News: This Week At Cornelia Street Cafe May 16 Thg 22 (Music)
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS Arnold Barkus, director David Lovett, lighting designerJustine chen, composer Jed Distler, pianist/composer Joshua Fried,
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=6075

73. Artists
Susan chen Trio, Susan chen, piano; Mark Kennedy, bass; Tom Hassett, drums Greg Goodman, improvising pianist. Lance Grabmiller, Computer music
http://www.bayimproviser.com/artists.asp
Bay Area Improvisers Network
A list of musicians living and performing in the Bay Area. Select an artist's name for details. Name Description Bruce Ackley Saxophonist, composer, Rova member, band leader Steve Adams Saxophonist, composer, Rova member, band leader Ashley Adams bass Josh Allen Saxophones Scott Amendola drums, percussion, composer, band leader Vijay Anderson drums James Armstrong Pianist, composer Aurora Voice (aka Aurora Rising, Aurora Josephson) Jen Baker Trombone Patrick David Barber Vocalist, Composer, Performer Aaron Bennett Winds Tom Bickley Recorder, Vocals, Electronics Miko Biffle Guitarist, composer John Bischoff Computer and Electronic Music Blevin Blectum Electronics Jorge Boehringer composer, sound artist Myles Boisen Guitarist, composer, band leader C. J. Reaven Borosque noise pedals, turntables, guitar,misc. electronics Bob Boster/Mr. Meridies Electronics Bottomfeeders Danielle DeGruttola and Ashley Adams Brassiosaurus Toyoji Tomita, Ron Heglin, Tom Djll Admiral Ted Brinkley Title: Admiral Ted Brinkley (semi-ret.) directs the Verrugoso Vista Junior Junior College Grads of '77 Chris Brown electronics and piano Christopher Brown bass Kyle Bruckmann Oboe, English Horn, analog electronics

74. CD/Label Detail
Shaun Naidoo, Composer, pianist. Reel Change, Plays live soundtracks Classic Piano Trio performs standards, featuring Susan chen piano, Mark Kennedy
http://www.bayimproviser.com/cd_label_detail.asp?label_id=61

75. Pianist -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
A pianist is a person who plays the (A stringed instrument that is played by (Click link for more info and facts about Jiyang chen) Jiyang chen Sa chen
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/p/pi/pianist.htm
Pianist
[Categories: Pianists]
This article deals with those who play the piano. For other uses, see (Click link for more info and facts about pianist (disambiguation)) pianist (disambiguation)

A pianist is a person who plays the (A stringed instrument that is played by depressing keys that cause hammers to strike tuned strings and produce sounds) piano
A professional pianist can perform solo pieces, play with an (A musical organization consisting of a group of instrumentalists including string players) orchestra or smaller (A group of musicians playing or singing together) ensemble , or accompany one or more (A person who sings) singer s or solo (Someone who plays a musical instrument (as a profession)) instrumentalist s.
A performing (Click link for more info and facts about classical) classical pianist usually starts playing piano at a very young age, some as early as three years old. Many well-known classical (Someone who composes music as a profession) composer s were able pianists themselves; for example, (Prolific Austrian composer and child prodigy; master of the classical style in all its forms of his time (1756-1791))

76. TAP: Vol 11, Iss. 8. Jazz's Changing Of The (Avant) Garde. Bill Shoemaker.
The trio s first album melds the mournful portamento of chen s erhu (a a duo reading by chen and Jang of the pianist s tender Two Flowers on a Stem.
http://www.prospect.org/print/V11/8/shoemaker-b.html
This is an archived page of The American Prospect. For other pages: Print Issue
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Jazz's Changing of the (Avant) Garde By Bill Shoemaker
Issue Date: 0.0.00
Print Friendly Email Article Jazz rode the 1990s surprisingly well. It was a decade in which the recorded-music market was flat compared to other media; and traditionally, jazzwhich has a perennial single-digit market shareis an early casualty of the budget cuts and corporate take-overs that market slumps spawn. But that didn't happen in the 1990s. Moreover, jazz benefited from plunging CD production costs and e-commerce, which created a slew of independent labels and direct marketing conduits. And tens of millions of dollars from public and philanthropic sources, combined with increased corporate sponsorships of jazz festivals from coast to coast (a bid for the jazz audience's alleged upscale demographics), sustained a healthy live performance market throughout the decade. Yet boom times did little to counter jazz's "condition of epilogue," the syndrome of "virtuosic deconstruc-tions and recapitulations" that art critic Gary Indiana observed plaguing modern art in general. In particular, jazz seems to have lost its political edge. Protest against social injustice is no longer the drivingand artistically revitalizingforce it once was in the music. Wynton Marsalis's 1997 Pulitzer Prize-winning oratorio on the horrors of slavery, Blood on the Fields (Columbia), was an exception. But in a period of arch retrospection, it's noteworthy that the industry-anointed divas aren't singing Billie Holiday's plaint about lynching, "Strange Fruit," nor are the young lions playing Charles Mingus's biting satire about segregation, "Fables of Faubus."

77. January 2005 Music Calendar (Northwestern University News)
Owen Carman) in addition to pianist James Giles and horn players william During his performance, pianist and School of Music alumnus Winston Choi,
http://www.northwestern.edu/univ-relations/media_relations/releases/2004/12/janu
Search Northwestern Search Help University Relations UNIVERSITY RELATIONS Media Relations Site Map University Relations Media Relations Press Release About Media Relations Who we are and what we do News Headlines Current headlines from Media Relations and Northwestern media coverage Press Release Archive Complete catalogue of Press Releases Newsfeed/Audio Faculty commentary and guest speakers Observer Online Northwestern's faculty and staff newspaper Media Guide to Experts Find faculty experts on a variety of subjects Northwestern Fact Sheet Northwestern facts and history Media Contact Information E-mail addresses and phone numbers Northwestern News text only MEDIA CONTACT: Judy Moore at 847-491-4819 or jkm229@northwestern.edu December 1, 2004 January 2005 Music Calendar January also marks the beginning of the Segovia Classical Guitar Series (Jan. 15 to May 7) with a duo performance by guitarist Eliot Fisk and flutist Paula Robison. A series subscription to the six concert 2005 Winter Chamber Music Festival is $114 for the general public; $104 for senior citizens and Northwestern faculty and staff; and $54 for students. A series subscription to the five concert 2004-05 Segovia Classical Guitar Series is $90 for the general public; $80 for senior citizens and Northwestern faculty and staff; and $38 for students.

78. Melvin Chen
Melvin chen. Piano. A native of Tennessee, pianist Melvin chen is recognized asan important young artist, having received acclaim for performances
http://www.concordiaplayers.org/Chen.htm
Melvin Chen Piano A native of Tennessee, pianist Melvin Chen is recognized as an important young artist, having received acclaim for performances throughout the United States and abroad. As a soloist and chamber musician Mr. Chen has performed at major venues in the United States, including Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Merkin Concert Hall, Weill Recital Hall, the Frick Collection, the Kennedy Center, Boston’s Jordan Hall, in addition to other appearances throughout the country, Canada and Asia. In recent years Mr. Chen’s concerts included his New York debut recital at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, performing Bach’s Goldberg Variations and Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations, solo recitals in Korea, and Taiwan, and other solo and chamber music performances throughout the United States. Highlights of last season include a second solo recital at Weill Recital Hall, lecture/recitals on Bach’s Goldberg Variations, a recording of Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations, and performances with the American Symphony Orchestra. An enthusiastic chamber musician, Mr. Chen has collaborated with such artists as Ida Kavafian, Steven Tenenbom, David Shifrin, Robert White, Pamela Frank, Peter Wiley, with members of the Tokyo, St. Lawrence, Mendelssohn, Miami, Orion, Borromeo, and Arditti quartets, and in contemporary music collaborations with the Da Capo chamber players and the St. Luke’s Chamber players. Mr. Chen was selected to be a member of Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center: Chamber Music Society Two, where he appeared with members of the Chamber Music Society in performance and educational programs for two seasons. A performer in numerous music festivals, he has performed at the Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival, Chautauqua, Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, Chamber Music Northwest, Bard Music Festival, and Music from Angel Fire, among others.

79. Millsaps College - News & Events
chen is on the Yale University piano faculty and is a visiting professor at BardCollege. Jazz pianist Willis Delony and bassist Bill Grimes will present an
http://www.millsaps.edu/news_events/releases/july/bell05.shtml
Quick Links Millsaps Home Directory Search Visitors Events College Catalog Library Virtuoso Performances To Distinguish the Bell Concert Series
Millsaps faculty artist Rachel Heard will join the Degas Quartet for a performance of the Fauré C minor Piano Quartet, Op. 15 on Thursday, Sept. 22, in the Recital Hall of the Ford Academic Comples. Also on the program is one of the fiery middle-period "Rasumovsky" quartets of Beethoven. They will repeat the Fauré the same weekend with Rachel Heard on this season's opening UBS Chamber Classics concert series in Hickory, N.C. The remarkable Melvin Chen will perform Thursday, Nov. 17. A true polymath, Chen earned master's degrees in both violin and piano from the Juilliard School, a double bachelor of science degree in chemistry and physics from Yale, and a doctorate in chemistry from Harvard. His performance will include selections from Beethoven, Chopin, Gershwin and Shostakovich. Chen is on the Yale University piano faculty and is a visiting professor at Bard College. Jazz pianist Willis Delony and bassist Bill Grimes will present an eclectic selection on Thursday, Jan. 26. Delony has won national and international acclaim as a jazz and classical pianist, conductor, chamber player, commercial composer, and arranger. Delony is an associate professor of piano and jazz studies and coordinator of music in general studies at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. He is the director of the LSU Jazz Ensemble, which is one of the premier college big bands in the region.

80. UNCW CAS: Department Of Music - Events
February 16, 3 PM william Street, saxophone and Roger Admiral, piano Dr.Barry Salwen is an international concert pianist, giving performances and
http://www.uncw.edu/music/events-special.html
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Special Events Events Calendar Printed Programs Summer Programs This season's Special Events features the Artist Recital Series with UNCW faculty members Richard Thomas (cello), Bridgid Eversole (soprano) and Steve Bailey (bass), to name a few. We have also invited several special guests to perform including saxophonist William Street, who will be joined by world-renown saxophone pedagogue, Jean-Marie Londeix, for a Master Class presentation and lecture. Jazz guitarist and jazz pedagogue, Jack Petersen, is scheduled to perform with the UNCW Big Band during our annual Jazz Festival, and WOOP! (UNC Wilmington Opera Outreach Program) performs Act II of Dei Fledermaus. All events are held at 8 PM in Kenan Auditorium and have a $5 General Admission charge, unless otherwise indicated. For additional information about these events as well as a complete listing of other events presented by the UNCW Department of Music this semester, including our many ensemble concerts and student recitals, please visit our Web site, www.uncw.edu/music or call the events hotline at 910/962-7416. February 16, 3 PM

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