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81. Red Herring Blog: TED: Eudaimonia
late Friday afternoon, when 14year-old pianist Jennifer lin took the stage . I managed to get to Jennifer lin at Friday night s party at the
http://blog.redherring.com/MT/archives/main/000112.html

The Now

February 29, 2004 TED: Eudaimonia 3 Comments When you're in the middle of the roller-coast ride of TED it's best to just hang on tight. The show presents an extraordinary range of diverse surprises and while the "ah-ha" moments are plentiful, the intellectual and emotional seeds that the presenters plant may germinate days, weeks or even months later. Sometimes, however, the show's complex series of connections come together in a single revelatory moment. That happened late Friday afternoon, when 14-year-old pianist Jennifer Lin took the stage. While most early teens are busy razzing their parents and fretting about pop quizzes in trigonometry, Jennifer has taken her musical gift and grown into a mature artist. Jennifer went back to the piano, laid out of the five cards and paused thoughtfully. "Let me just think about this for a minute," she said. The auditorium went silent. Then she lifted her hands and began to softly and tenderly play an improvised piece of exquisite beauty and inexpressible longing. It was one of the most startling things I have ever seen.
Biologists may write books about the complex neurological, chemical and electrical functions that occur in order for certain stimuli to produce complex human emotions. All I know is that as Jennifer continued to play the hairs on my arm stood on end. A buzz crackled through the audience as the beauty of her composition unfolded. Several people nearby had eyes that were moist with tears.

82. || San Francisco Performances
A pianist himself, Schumann found the prospect of writing for stringed I wrote Lachen Verlernt for ChoLiang lin, to whom it is also dedicated.
http://www.performances.org/encores_note/Koh.asp
Jennifer Koh, violin January 23, 2005 NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Violin Sonata No. 1 in A Minor, Op. 105
ROBERT SCHUMANN Born June 8, 1810, Zwickau
Died July 29, 1856, Endenich Schumann's relation with the violin was never wholly comfortable. A pianist himself, Schumann found the prospect of writing for stringed instruments intimidating, and he appears to have been threatened most of all by the violin-he wrote a number of pieces of chamber music for viola and for cello before he was finally willing to face writing for the violin. Then that music came in a rush-during the final years of his brief creative career Schumann wrote three violin sonatas, a violin concerto, and a fantasy for violin and orchestra. The Violin Sonata in A minor was the first of these. Schumann composed it very quickly-between September 12 and 16, 1851-during a period of personal stress. The previous year he had become music director for the city of Düsseldorf, and by the time he wrote this sonata his tenure there had already become mired in clashes with local authorities and in his own suspicions of plots against him. Schumann himself reported that when he wrote this sonata, he was "very angry with certain people," though the music should not be understood as a personal reaction to artistic squabbles. Instead, Schumann's first engagement with the violin produced a compact sonata in classical forms. The sonata is in three movements that offer Schumann's customary mixture of German and Italian performance markings. The opening

83. The Curtis Institute Of Music
pianist Reiko Uchida performs as a soloist and chamber musician throughout the Ida and Ani Kavafian, ChoLiang lin, Anton Kuerti, and Fred Sherry.
http://www.curtis.edu/html/71000.shtml
Alumni Recital Series
Join the reunion when distinguished alumni return to perform in the intimate Field Concert Hall About the Alumni Recital Series 2005/2006 Season Twenty years of outstanding music performed by distinguished Curtis alumni ABOUT THE ALUMNI RECITAL SERIES
Since 1985/86, the Alumni Recital Series has featured distinguished alumni in benefit performances. The series is copresented by Curtis and the Alumni Society of Greater Philadelphia and supports the next generation of Curtis musicians.
Artists donate their services, and each year Society members work directly with Curtis to decide how proceeds from the recital series can be most beneficial to the students. In recent years, contributions have been made toward the purchase of student tickets to Philadelphia Orchestra concerts, acquisitions for the library, the student travel fund, and instrument repairs.
top
2005/2006 SEASON
Presented in conjunction with the Alumni Society of Greater Philadelphia
All concerts are held in Field Concert Hall Subscriptions: $85 To order tickets, click here

84. The Curtis Institute Of Music
Richard Goode, Ida and Ani Kavafian, ChoLiang lin, Anton Kuerti, and FredSherry. A native of New York, pianist Richard Goode has been hailed for
http://www.curtis.edu/html/50500.shtml
Alumni Recital Series
Join the reunion when distinguished alumni return to perform in the intimate Field Concert Hall About the Alumni Recital Series 2005/2006 Season Twenty years of outstanding music performed by distinguished Curtis alumni ABOUT THE ALUMNI RECITAL SERIES
Since 1985/86, the Alumni Recital Series has featured distinguished alumni in benefit performances. The series is copresented by Curtis and the Alumni Society of Greater Philadelphia and supports the next generation of Curtis musicians.
Artists donate their services, and each year Society members work directly with Curtis to decide how proceeds from the recital series can be most beneficial to the students. In recent years, contributions have been made toward the purchase of student tickets to Philadelphia Orchestra concerts, acquisitions for the library, the student travel fund, and instrument repairs.
top
2005/2006 SEASON
Presented in conjunction with the Alumni Society of Greater Philadelphia
All concerts are held in Field Concert Hall Subscriptions: $85 To order tickets, click here

85. Commissioner's Circle
Premiered by Jennifer Frautschi, Violinist and Pedja Muzijevic, pianist Sponsoredby JeanPaul Bierny and Premiered by Joseph lin and Svetoslav Stoyanov
http://arizonachambermusic.org/commissioner.htm
AFCM’s Commissioner’s Circle Arizona Friends of Chamber Music has created the Commissioner’s Circle for our audience members who wish to co-sponsor new chamber works with us. Participation gives you the thrill of making a significant contribution to the creation of important new chamber music and of influencing what will be composed in the 21st century. Please contact us for details if you are interested in sponsoring exciting new chamber music. Fazil Say Sonata for violin and piano
Sponsored by Jean-Paul and Chris Bierny February 26, 1997 Fazil Say Sonata for piano
Sponsored by Jean-Paul Bierny and Fred Chaffee July 22, 1997 Gerard Schurmann Piano Quartet No.2
Premiered by the Los Angeles Piano Quartet
Sponsored by AFCM March 6, 1998 Raimundo Penaforte Piano trio “An Eroica Trio”
Premiered (and recorded by) the Eroica Trio
Sponsored by Tony and Ellen Lomonaco and AFCM
Review
February 10, 1999

86. Alumni List
Rulin Lai, National Taiwan College of Arts, Panchiao, Taiwan, t0313@mail1.ntca.edu.tw Su Mi Park-Oh, Freelance pianist, Palo Alto, CA 94306 USA
http://theory.esm.rochester.edu/accompanying/AlumniList.shtml
EASTMAN SCHOOL of MUSIC
Piano Accompanying and Chamber Music
Here is a list of Alumni and their current email addresses. If alumni would like to update and/or add their names to this list, or find out more about other alumni, please use the Accompanying Alumni Access Page , or contact the Department Office (585.274.1570). Please note that the Accompanying Alumni Access Page is password protected. Contact Jean Barr at 585.274.1570 for more information
Name Affiliation City (optional) E-mail (optional) Date received Jennifer Au-Tung Royal Conservatory of Music Toronto ON Canada jennifer.tung@rogers.com Korey Barrett Resident Artist,Minnesota Opera Minneapolis, MN barretk3995@yahoo.com Sylvie Beaudette Eastman School of Music Rochester, NY USA sbeaudette@esm.rochester.edu Diane Birr Ithaca College Ithaca, NY USA dbirr@ithaca.edu David Boehler Luebeck/ Germany david.boehler@gmx.net Christopher Burton Paul Caccamo self-employed pianist p.caccamo@worldnet.att.net Shih-Hsing Chang Taichung, Taiwan R.O.C. shihhsingchang@yahoo.com Tracy Cowden Virginia Tech Blacksburg, VA

87. Welcome To The Music Department
Katharine Snyder, Ilin Lee (assistant director/pianist). Fantaisie sur des motifshongrois, op. 35 Albert Franz Doppler. two flutes and piano (1821 -1823)
http://www.music.buffalo.edu/ensembles/plosion.shtml
General Information Facilities Resources Academic Programs Contact / Search GENERAL INFORMATION
About the Department
Admissions Courses Concert Series ... Degree Programs FACILITIES
Baird Hall
Slee Hall Hiller Studios RESOURCES
Faculty and Staff
Ensembles Music Library MuGSA ... June in Buffalo ACADEMIC PROGRAMS
Performance
Composition Music Theory Historical Musicology ... Music Librarianship University at Buffalo
Department of Music
Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman PLOSION Plosion Concert Quartet 2004:
Chia-En Lee, MM '07;
ChungLin Lee, MM '05;
Jonathan Rogers, MM '06;
Sabatino Scirri, BM '05, MM '07 About Plosion Course Info Plosion Concerts: PLOSION: UB's Flute Ensemble, directed by Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman UB's Concert Flute Quartet is Plosion's primary performing ensemble directed by Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman . Among recent appearances have been performances for Discover UB, WBFO-FM Radio's "OPUS: Classics Live", St. Paul's Cathedral Friday Noon Recital Series, Classics on Elmwood, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, the Rochester Flute Association, Pantasmagoria 2004, UB's Wellness Center, and Adelphia Cable TV's "Crossroads". Additionally, members have participated in the 2003 Coleman Chamber Music Competitions and June in Buffalo Festival concerts. PLOSION was featured in the arts publication ARTVOICE in April 1999. Cheryl Gobbetti Hoffman, flutist

88. Johnnie Moore's Weblog: Awesome Improv
Jennifer lin is a fourteenyear-old pianist from southern California. She beganher presentation by playing two very difficult classical pieces;
http://www.johnniemoore.com/blog/archives/000241.php
Weblog Home
March 09, 2004
Awesome improv
David Weinberger found this gem of musical improvisation , from the GoodExperience Newsletter. I really recommend following these instructions! Jennifer Lin is a fourteen-year-old pianist from southern California. She began her presentation by playing two very difficult classical pieces; to my untrained ears, she sounded as good as any professional performer two or three times her age. It was her third piece that brought the house down. She announced that she would like to improvise a song... and asked an audience member to select five notes, at random, from the C scale. She got the sequence C, G, B, A, E. Fourteen years old, with a live audience of 800 adults awaiting a brand new piece of music, based on a theme of five notes just handed to her. She had ten seconds to prepare. It was a masterpiece. Chris Anderson, TED conference host, was nice enough to post the performance online at the TED site. I highly recommend spending a few minutes listening to the whole piece, to get a touch of the experience that Jennifer created. 1. Go to http://www.ted.com

89. F&M News
June 5, 6, and 7, will feature soprano Jennifer Davison and pianist Amy lin . On June 12, 13 and 14, pianist Anthony de Mare will perform.
http://server1.fandm.edu/departments/CollegeRelations/PressReleases/1995-96/PR01
ARCHIVED RELEASE ARCHIVED RELEASE
RELEASE #110
ARCHIVED RELEASE ARCHIVED RELEASE ARCHIVED RELEASE
RELEASE #110 19 MARCH 1996 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: MARCY DUBROFF (717) 291-3837
Summer 1996 New Generation Concert Series Lineup Announced
LANCASTER, Pa. - Rising new talent and familiar favorites will be the theme this summer when the New Generation Concert Series returns for its 10th season. This year's series will once again introduce promising new professional artists with unique musical visions to Lancaster and Lebanon County audiences while also featuring previous performers, such as pianist Awadagin Pratt and Bill Kanengiser of the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet, who have moved from the New Generation Concert Series into the concert fast lane. The season will open May 29, 30 and 31 with marimbist Makoto Nakura. Marimba concerts are scarce, but the instrument has great appeal, crossing many musical boundaries from classical to jazz. Nakura was the winner of the 1994 Young Concert Artists International Auditions. He is not only a master of his instrument, but an able and articulate spokesperson for the marimba's history and development. In 1994, Nakura came from Tokyo to the Young Concert Artists and became the first marimbist to win a place on the roster. He was presented in his New York and Washington, D.C., debuts in the 1994-95 Young Concert Artists Series at the 92nd Street Y and the Kennedy Center to rave reviews. Nakura made his New York concerto debut in March with the New York Chamber Symphony conducted by Lawrence Leighton Smith as a recipient of the Aaron and Irene Diamond Soloist Prize of Young Concert Artists.

90. WNPR - Welcome To WNPR: Sunday Spotlight: Recently In The Spotlight
The Chamber Music Society of lincoln Center; With ChoLiang lin, violin; pianist Margreet Francis is the guest performer; Program Ginastera String
http://wnpr.org/RadioSundaySpotlightArchive.asp
Recently in the Spotlight: September 11
BBC Proms; Tchaikovsky: Francesca da Rimini; Mahler: Rückert-Lieder; Tubin: Toccata; Sibelius: Symphony No. 5 in E flat major - performers: Anne Sofie von Otter (mezzo-soprano) and The Gothenberg Symphony Orchestra conducted by Neeme Järvi; Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis; Tippett: Piano Concerto; Holst: The Planets; Colin Matthews: Pluto - performers: Steven Osborne (piano), the New London Chamber Choir (40 women’s voices), the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Martyn Brabbins; Visit
this webpage
for information on the first performance and this webpage for information on the second show.
September 4
Pete Seeger - Sing Out!; a benefit concert for Sing Out! magazine; Performers included Bruce Cockburn, Judy Collins, Ronnie Gilbert, Ginny Hawker, Tracy Schwarz, Janis Ian, Natalie Merchant, Holly Near, Odetta, Stephan Smith, and Bernice Johnson Reagon; hosted by National Public Radio's Scott Simon; Visit the Sing Out! webpage
August 28
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center; Demarre McGill, flute; Jennifer Frautschi, violin; Fred Sherry, cello; Kent Tritle, harpsichord - Telemann: Quartet No. 4 in B Minor for Flute, Violin, Cello and Harpsichord; Ransom Wilson, flute; Anne-Marie McDermott, piano - Randall Woolf: Everything is Gree; Aaron Jay Kernis: Air; Ransom Wilson, piccolo; Ani Kavafian, Colin Jacobsen, violins; Paul Neubauer, viola; Fred Sherry, cello; Kurt Muroki, bass; Kent Tritle, harpsichord - Vivaldi: Concerto for Piccolo, Strings and Continuo in C Major, RV 443; Visit the

91. Student Musicians In Awe Of Carnegie Hall 07/17/03
It was exciting, agreed her brother Timothy lin, a Northwood High sophomore My hands were shaking when I started, confessed Wu, a pianist for almost
http://www.irvineworldnews.com/Bstories/july17/carnegie.html
NEWS SPORTS CONNECTIONS OPINIONS ... HOME July 17, 2003
Carnegie Hall was fun. It was also unexpected. I didn't expect our orchestra would do something like this, play in Carnegie Hall. This is big-scale stuff.
Edward Wang Student musicians in awe of Carnegie Hall By Michael Rydzynski
For Irvine World News
Timothy Lin (This is the third and final installment on the Carnegie Hall trip, this time as experienced by a few members of the University High School Orchestra and La Primavera, two Irvine ensembles making their Big Apple debut.) For six members of the University High School Orchestra and two of La Primavera, recently returned from their first invitational trip to New York City, it was exciting, inspiring, great, fun, amazing, overwhelming, totally fantastic and "wow" to be performing on stage at Carnegie Hall. And mention was made of the fabled Carnegie Hall acoustics. "I thought it was very inspiring to be playing on the same stage where all those famous people played," said Francisca Wufu, a senior who played tenor trombone with the University High orchestra, one of five ensembles that participated in the first annual New York Youth Orchestra Festival on June 30 at America's most famous concert venue. "And the acoustics were really impressive." "It was a great experience." agreed Benjamin Wang, also a senior, who was the associate concertmaster for the orchestra, which was invited for the first time in its history to Carnegie Hall.

92. Public Broadcasting Atlanta
Atlanta Chamber Players / Paula Peace, pianist artistic director / Laura violinists JunChing lin and Jay Christy / violist Paul Murphy / cellist
http://www.wabe.org/radio/shows/ams.html
window.station="WABE_FM"; window.localize=true; window.station="WABE_FM"; window.localize=true; Schedule Station Profile Local Hosts Local Programs ... Search Playlists
Atlanta Music Scene
Live concerts recorded all around metro Atlanta produced by Dr. Tommy Joe Anderson of ACA Digital Recording, and hosted by WABE's Robert Hubert airs Monday nights at 9:00 p.m. over WABE 90.1 FM
September
September 5, 2005, 9:00pm
Roger McVey, piano
Beethoven: Sonata No. 21 in C major, Op. 53, "Waldstein"
Alexander Scriabin: Sonata No. 9, Op. 68 "Black Mass"
Johannes Brahms: Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24 September 12, 2005, 9:00pm
Slava Prudchenko, flute, Jui-Wen Ginger Chen, piano / Kathy Farmer, flute
J. S. Bach: Suite in C Minor.
Jules Demerssemann: Solo de Concert, Op. 82, No. 6
Albert Roussel: Joueurs de Flute
Leonardo De Lorenzo: Apollo, from Suite Mythologique, Op.38, No. 3
Franz Doppler: La Sonnambula, Op. 42 September 19, 2005, 9:00pm Martha Thomas, piano

93. Cheskin - Fresh Perspectives: Girls On Top
Her name is Jennifer lin and she is a creative genius capable of bringing a Jennifer is a pianist, who first played a couple of difficult pieces that
http://weblog.cheskin.net/blog/archives/000189.html
Fresh Perspectives Search
Girls on top
I noted earlier this week that I was attending TED , a conference built around Technology, Entertainment and Design. The event was started in the early 90's by Richard Saul Wurman a man who knew how to host a conference, but who apparently didn't know how to find talented women to speak at one. Every year, I'd look at the list of speakers and count the number of women on one hand (and usually at least 3 were singers). One year, a brave soul in the audience asked Wurman why he showcased so few women. He replied that there were none talented enough for this particular conference. I've remembered that statement for years, so it was with profound satisfaction that I watched at least a dozen excellent presentations by females, and in particular, one performance by a 14 year old girl. Her name is Jennifer Lin and she is a creative genius capable of bringing a roomful of CEOs, VCs and wild inventors to tears. Jennifer is a pianist, who first played a couple of difficult pieces that caught our attention and made us think "this girl can play." But, what stole our hearts was her improvisation. Using 5 notes randomly selected on stage, Jennifer sat at the piano and said, "I'll see if I can make something of this." What followed was one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard, a hauntingly romantic, extraordinarily elegant piece of music that lingered in my mind for the remainder of the conference. I'm searching the web hoping that someone captured the song and will make it available for download. In the meatime, there are a couple blogs of TED that do a good job of relating the conference highlighs. Check out my friend

94. Performer S Bios For 4.22.2000
Winston performs frequently in solo recitals, as a collaborative pianist, Lydia has been coached several times by ChoLiang lin and performed in master
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cyoungk/42200bios.htm
Performers bio for 4.22.2000 Brave New Works McIntosh Theatre
School of Music
Earl V. Moore Building WElcome WHo NExt PAst ... STuff Performer's Bios Back to Are You Brave Too ? Festival Winston Choi
for Tom Schnauber 's "The Walrus & the Carpenter" Anne Adams
Dawn Kulak
is currently principal flute with the Toledo Opera Orchestra and has served as acting principal with the Toledo Symphony. Among her awards and honors, she recently won first prize in the Frank Bowen Flute Competition, which led to a performance as featuerd soloist with the Santa Fe Symphony. She has been a fellow at the Sarasota Music Festival, the Bach Aria Festival, and the William Bennett International Flute Seminar in England. Dawn resides in Ann Arbor where she teaches privately and is pursuing studies in flute performance on a fellowship at the University of Michigan. Her teachers include John Wion, Leone Buyse, and Jeffery Zook. Elliott Dailey Ross, clarinet
is currently a junior in clarinet performance at the University of Michigan studying with Deborah Chodacki. He has been Principal Clarinet of the Pontiac-Oakland Symphony for two years and is in his sixth semester as a member of the University of Michigan Symphony Band. An Ann Arbor native, he tries to not be in Ann Arbor during the summer, because of this he has attended the Colorado College Summer Music Festival and the Brevard Music Center. Aaron Sherman
is currently finishing up his undergraduate studies at the University of Michigan where he is receiving degrees in Percussion Performance and Philosophy. While there, his primary teachers have been Michael Udow and Salvatore Rabbio. He has been Timpanist and Principal Percussionist with the Missouri Chamber Orchestra and Third Percussionist with the Flnt Symphony Orchestra since 1998. Under the auspices of a number of Boston-area orchestras, he has toured Asia, North America, South America and Scandinavia.

95. TCU School Of Music
Arnaud Sussman, and is a founding member of the CastroBalbi/lin Duo and ofthe Momentum Piano Trio with pianist Gloria lin and violinist Jennifer Choi.
http://www.music.tcu.edu/faculty_j_castro-balbi.asp
Since 2003
Assistant Professor of Cello BM-Conservatoire National Superieur, France
Artist Diploma-Indiana University
MM-Yale University
DMA-The Juilliard School j.castro-balbi@tcu.edu
Website: www.jcbcello.com Return to Full-time Faculty Homepage
TCU School of Music

TCU Home Page

School of Music
Comments or Questions? Contact our webmaster

96. I Should Give You My Advice Upon The Subject Willy-nilly
ALEX BARYLSKI (Rehearsal pianist) Alex invites you all over for an an evening JENNIFER lin (Ticket Manager) Jennifer never counts her chickens before
http://hcs.harvard.edu/~hrgsp/productions/rud94/rud94bios.htm
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www hcs.harvard.edu
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97. Statistics And Lists
The Charles S. Miller Prize, to a gifted pianist who has done outstanding work Steven lin (BM New England Conserv. of Music 2003), Yorba linda, Calif.
http://www.yale.edu/bulletin/html/music2005/statistics.html
Honors and Recipients, 2001
The date when the scholarship fund was established at the University is given, followed by the name of the donor.
Stephen and Denise Adams (1999). Awarded to Jennifer Ahn, Gwendolyn Patricia Burgett, Liza Hee-Sun Chung, James Heard DeVoll, Jeremy James Eig, Ariana Scott Falk, Ann Fontanella, Jee-Youn Hong, Gerald Sylvester Johnson, Er-Gene Kahng, Wing-chong Kam, Chao-Chun Liu, Nathaniel Robinson, Caleb Slocomb Stokes, Emily Jane Stewart Taubl, and Adam Brett Ward.
Laura D. Barney (1928). Awarded to Maria Anissovets.
Maxwell M. Belding Fellowship Fund (2002). To support students enrolled in the Master of Musical Arts Degree Program who are pursuing the Doctor of Musical Arts Degree. Awarded to Sarita Kityee Kwok.
Virginia Belding Apprenticeship Awards (1978). Maxwell M. Belding, B.A. 1945, of Hartford, Connecticut, in memory of his sister. Several awards: to assist students in their exploration of the many dimensions of the music profession. Awarded throughout the year.
Mauriel Birkhead (1999). Estate of Mary Jean Parson. To a female voice student. Awarded to Margaret Rebecca Ringle.

98. Lori Laitman Winter 2004
and pianist Cheryl S. lin, at the Westwood United Methodist Church, A new CD by soprano Sonya Gabrielle Baker and pianist Vicki Berneking will
http://www.sai-national.org/pubs/win04/llaitman04.html
The 2004 American Composers Update
as published in PAN PIPES, Volume 96, Number 2
Lori Laitman
"David Bamberger, General Director of The Cleveland Opera, has created an opera from my art songs titled Come to Me in Dreams . The tale of a Holocaust survivor, it will premiere June 2004 at the Ohio Theatre in Cleveland with Sanford Sylvan in the lead. In February of 2003, I served as Guest Composer in the Music Department of Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA. The next month radio host George Shangrow of KING-FM in Seattle interviewed me and played selections from my Dreaming CD. As part of the 'Songs Across the Americas 2003 Festival,' Maya Frieman Hoover presented lecture/recitals on my music in La Paz and Cochabamba (Bolivia)."
Premieres
One or Two Things (poetry of Mary Oliver), was introduced February 14, 2003, at the Sumner School Museum, Washington, D.C., by mezzo-soprano Karyn Friedman, accompanied by the composer. In an April 7 concert at the Juilliard School of Music, New York, NY, soprano Jennifer Check and pianist Craig Terry presented Early Snow (poetry of Mary Oliver).

99. ABCNY Entertainment Evening #2
Joel Truex Camche is a classically trained pianist who has been playing piano to Nelson lin, when not conjuring magic, serves as Vice President of
http://www.cinemavii.com/Events/ABNYC20APRIL2004.htm
ABCNY's ENTERTAINMENT EVENING #2 the program The Association of the Bar of The City of New York Presents Amateur Night And Talent Show Tuesday, April 20, 2004 6:30 p.m. The House of the Association 42 West 44 th Street New York, New York SPONSORED AND PRODUCED BY THE COMMITTEE ON ENTERTAINMENT MARTHA COHEN STINE, Chair The Performers, In Order of Appearance Arthur J. Greenbaum Clean and Politically Correct Stand-Up Comedy “Que Reste T’il De Nos Amours?” Music by Leo Rita Wasserstein Warner Chauliac, Lyrics by Charles Trenet; “La Vie en Joel Truex Camche, Piano Rose,” Music by Louiguy, Lyrics by Edith Piaf; “La Parapluies de Cherbourg,” Music by Michel Legrand, Lyrics by Jacques Demy; “If I Loved You,” Music by Richard Rogers, Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II The Argentine Tango Tioma “El Ruso” Maloratsky Israella F. Mayeri Piano, Figleaf Rag, Scott Joplin Bonnie Beth Greenball “I Love You Much,” Music and Lyrics by Peter W. Peter W. Dizozza, Piano Dizozza; “Peel Me a Grape,” Music and Lyrics by Dave Frishberg

100. Duo Debuts Sonata At Festival | Www.azstarnet.com ®
Cotton approached lin afterward about writing a new work for him. That s whenlin suggested going beyond a standard violin and piano sonata and writing a
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/ent_thearts/64498.php
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