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41. New York Chronicle By Jay Nordlinger
Her pianist, as usual in these recitals, was lambert orkis, who was adequate andlargely supportive, but seldom assertive (meaning, helpfully assertive).
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/21/dec02/jay.htm
New York chronicle
by Jay Nordlinger W begin A-SM Porgy and Bess Her pianist, as usual in these recitals, was Lambert Orkis, who was adequate and largely supportive, but seldom assertive (meaning, helpfully assertive). As a pianist, he has the common tendency of rushing in difficult passages. Why people do this is a mystery, but it is a longstanding fact. Mutter has long been inconsistent; but she has become worryingly more so. Often, she plays like Cecilia Bartoli sings (alarmingly), and she can be as loopy, interpretively, as the latter-day Kathleen Battle. Porgy But surely she must have played Fritz Kreisler Tango, Song, and Dance A Streetcar Named Desire . The concluding Dance is jazz-fueled and kicky. C C The second half of the concert was given over to another C C major, and how many moods he could convey in it. Finally there comes a fugue, which the Guarneri executed deftly. One could see, at last, how they made their reputation. This was first-rate playing, with drive, expertise, and commitment. But the wait had been long. W Zwilich has made two versions of her clarinet concerto, one for chamber ensemble and one for orchestra. Not long after this Chamber Society concert, David Shifrin premiered the latter version with the Buffalo Philharmonic.

42. A Tale Of Two Prodigies By Jay Nordlinger
Accompanying her was the pianist lambert orkis, an amiable American known forhis puckish comments from the stage and his advocacy of contemporary music.
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/18/feb00/NORDLING.htm
A tale of two prodigies
by Jay Nordlinger A s fate had it, the violinists Joshua Bell and Anne-Sophie Mutter gave recitals in New York on consecutive January nights. As fate has also had it, they are about the same age (Bell is thirty-two, Mutter thirty-six), they were famous as teenagers, and they have large and enthusiastic followings. They seem destined to be compared, or at least jointly discussed. cantabile Bell, who enjoyed superb training, has the unteachable: musical judgment, taste. The repertory of the violin is vast, and he can play all of it, with no specialty or deficiency. He recalls a violinist of a past generation, Zino Francescatti, the impeccable Frenchman with the lilting Italian name. Bell, like him, is something better than a violinist: He is a musician. He is also one of the most underrated performers, critically, before the public today, a condition that can hardly last forever. T The second half of the program opened with a work by George Crumb, his Four Nocturnes for Violin and Piano (Night Music II Tzigane Habanera , which she dispatched limply and indifferently.

43. Millsaps College - Performing Arts Department
Bell Concert Series Masterclass lambert orkis, pianist 900 am Gertrude C.Ford Academic Complex Recital Hall Free of charge. Monday, October 18th
http://www.millsaps.edu/pfrmarts/upmus04fall.shtml
Quick Links Millsaps Home Directory Search Visitors Events Catalog Library Department of Performing Arts
Music Events - Fall 2004 View map: Academic Complex Recital Hall (16)
and Christian Center (19
Monday, September 6th

Departmental Recital
3 p.m. - Gertrude C. Ford Academic Complex Recital Hall
Free of charge Friday, September 10t h
Sanjeev Chimmalgi (vocalist) and Milind Pote (tabla player)
Hindustani Music from India
7:30 p.m. - Gertrude C. Ford Academic Complex Recital Hall
Admission charge - Call Sheela Takkallapalli, (601) 853-9638

44. Welcome To Piano.com
orkis, lambert provides information on the pianist. Osinchuk, Juliana - classicalpianist educated at the Juilliard School and offering workshops and
http://www.piano.com/pianist/pianist_classical.cfm
Pianist Classical Pianist Adami, Mirsa - sound clips, biography, and concert schedule for this Albanian pianist.
Albulescu, Eugene
- provides information on the Romanian pianist and educator. Includes performances, discography, and reviews.
Aleksander, Adam
- bio, sound clips, and contact information for the Canadian pianist.
Alexeev, Sasha
- Russian-born composer and classically trained pianist who blends contemporary, New Age sounds into his music.
Alvarez, Carmen
- biography, current projects, sound clips, photos, and more for the pianist from Uruguay.
Anderszewski, Piotr
- provides information on the Polish-born pianist.
Argerich, Martha

Ashkenazy, Vladimir

Astriab, Lou
- provides information on the American pianist.
Ax, Emanuel

Babinsky, Margarete
- provides biography, sound clips, photos, reviews, discography, and more for the Austrian pianist. Badura-Skoda, Paul

45. Art Of The States: Manchega. Étude De Concert, Op. 38
pianist lambert orkis has achieved international renown for his performances asa soloist and chamber musician and his interpretations on period instruments
http://artofthestates.org/cgi-bin/piece.pl?pid=262

46. Anne-Sophie Mutter: A Discography
with lambert orkis, pianist, Deutsche Grammophon 457619 / Nov 24, 1998; Numberof Discs 4. Beethoven Violin Concerto
http://www.ffaire.com/mutter/mutterdisc.html

USA
UK GERMANY An ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER Discography
NO MORE SEARCHING!!! CLICK ANY UNDERSCORED TITLE TO BUY CD
Click icon at right to buy the SHEETMUSIC. Album Label Solo Albums: WIN FREE CD!!!
Bach: Concertos for Two Violins , etc Emi Classics - #47005 / Jan 1, 1987
Number of Discs: 1 Bartók: Violinkonzert no 2; Moret
Deutsche Grammophon - #31626 / May 12, 1992; Number of Discs: 1 Beethoven: Triple Concerto
Deutsche Grammophon - #15276 / Jul 7, 1987
Number of Discs: 1 Beethoven: The Violin Sonatas GRAMMY 2000 WINNER!!!
with Lambert Orkis, pianist Deutsche Grammophon - #457619 / Nov 24, 1998; Number of Discs: 4 Beethoven: Violin Concerto
Deutsche Grammophon - #13818 / Jul 7, 1987
Number of Discs: 1 Beethoven: Face to Face With Beethoven Deutsche Grammophon - #457861 / Mar 17, 1998 Number of Discs: 2 Berg: Violin Concerto; Rihm: Time Chant Deutsche Grammophon - #37093 / Mar 16, 1993 Number of Discs: 1 Brahms, Debussy, et al: The Berlin Recital

47. WholeNote Discoveries
Beethoven Sonata in f minor, Op. 57 “Appassionata” lambert orkis Gary Graffman,a fine American pianist born in 1928, gives solid partnership in these
http://www.thewholenote.com/discoveries_jun_05/discoveries_dotm.html
DISCS OF THE MONTH
Lambert Orkis
Bridge 9169

All in all an uncommonly worthwhile release.
John Beckwith
Beethoven Sonatas at the Library of Congress
Henryk Szeryng; Gary Graffman
Bridge 9165
Larry Beckwith
DISCS OF THE MONTH
Lambert Orkis Bridge 9169
All in all an uncommonly worthwhile release. John Beckwith Beethoven Sonatas at the Library of Congress Henryk Szeryng; Gary Graffman Bridge 9165 Larry Beckwith

48. DVD Review Of Anne-Sophie Mutter: A Life With Beethoven - DVD Town
Violinist AnneSophie Mutter and pianist lambert orkis devoted all of 1998 toplaying Ludwig van Beethoven’s 10 piano/violin sonatas, a Herculean task
http://www.dvdtown.com/review/anne-sophiemutteralifewithbeet/10522/1217/
Search our DVD database for Login Feedback New reviews All reviews A-Z ... Top DVD reviews by director / genre Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;Ads_channels='_GNM_DVD,_GNM_QLook,_GNM_QPlus,_GNM_RON_Q,_GNM_RON_Top';
Anne-Sophie Mutter: A Life With Beethoven
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By Yunda Eddie Feng (August 20, 2002)
Anne-Sophie Mutter, goddess of the violin, is one of the crown jewels in Deutsche Grammophon’s stable of recording artists. In order to celebrate Ms. Mutter’s career-long kinship with Ludwig van Beethoven, the label has released the DVD “Anne-Sophie Mutter: A Life With Beethoven”. The disc provides an entertaining, even enthralling introduction to the joys of chamber music performed at the highest levels. A recent trip to a local music store yielded the following observation from the classical music department’s handler: “People have this idiotic notion about what classical music is. They think ‘Josh Groban’ or ‘Andrea Bocelli’ or ‘Charlotte Church’. That’s not classical musicthat’s rubbish.” While I don’t share his view that the vocalists whom he named are “rubbish”, I understand his frustration. In order to survive commercially, the classical music world has come to rely on superstar performers who aren’t necessarily the best in their fields of expertise. This trend has lead to the emergence of acts that present “greatest hits” rather than full-fledged compositions. For example, the likes of Josh Groban release albums filled with a couple of show-y songs, but these albums are not cohesive musical wholes (which is the problem with most music created post-1950everyone’s too busy writing 5-minute ditties rather than harnessing energies to create actual works).

49. Theatre: January-May 2003 Schedule
Grammy Award winning pianist lambert orkis and violinist LisaBeth lambert, whowas a member of the National Symphony Orchestra for six seasons before
http://www.theatre-washington-va.com/Schedule.cfm?TheScheduleID=20

50. Theatre: September - December 2003 Schedule
Grammy award winning pianist lambert orkis and Philadelphia Orchestra violinistLisaBeth lambert play the final concert in their three-concert series to
http://www.theatre-washington-va.com/Schedule.cfm?TheScheduleID=19

51. Piano300 May 1-June 3 2001 Events
May 28, lambert orkis, classical. Tues. May 29, Anthony Walker, classical and jazz Alexandra Eddy and pianist (and exhibition cocurator) Edwin Good,
http://piano300.si.edu/perform05.htm
Celebrating Three Centuries of People and Pianos
Piano Grand Finale!
May 1-June 3, 2001 Events
During final month of the Piano 300 exhibition at the Smithsonian International Gallery there are many opportunities to hear superb pianists in a variety of musical styles. The "Piano Grand Finale!" will include extra performance tours and gallery talks, a reprise of last year's popular Art Night on the Mall featuring students from the Levine School, and more. Most of the programs listed below are free, and many take place in the exhibition itself, affording visitors a final opportunity to hear many of the historic instruments on display. Over 225,000 have visited the exhibition (through early April 2001), thousands more have visited the exhibition's website (www.piano300.org), and special public programs presented at various venues around the Smithsonian have been enormously popular. Though the exhibition will close on June 3, the National Museum of American History will continue its long-standing tradition of providing a wide variety of exhibition-related programs (visit www.americanhistory.si.edu

52. RedLudwig.com: Grace Notes
For pianist lambert orkis (who is also adept with the synthesizer and the archaicfortepiano), the piano is an instrument still in transition.
http://www.redludwig.com/gracenotes/archive/120503.html
Home News Reviews Spotlight ... Who Is RedLudwig? By Joe McLellan, classical music critic emeritus of The Washington Post. Music for San Marco in Venice offers music inspired by the great basilica
CD'S FOR THOSE WHO HAVE EVERYTHING
If your Christmas shopping list includes a proverbial "man (or woman) who has everything," there are a number of CDs available that he (or she) probably doesn't have. They tend to be very old or very new music, and at the top of the list is an opera about a character from Greek mythology, the Cyclops Polyphemus. Your friend is unlikely to have this opera because its first recording (on a rather obscure label) was issued on Nov. 25.
Jean Cras: Polypheme (Timpani, 3 CDs with libretto). In Homer's "Odyssey," the one-eyed giant Polyphemus is, to say the least, unpleasant. He traps Ulysses and his men in a cave and begins gobbling them, one by one, until Ulysses puts out the one eye in the middle of his forehead. In a variant story that was popular in the 18th century, he is marginally less brutal; he is the loser in a love triangle with the sea nymph Galatea and the shepherd Acis. He kills Acis in a fit of jealous rage, but Galatea does what she can to repair the damage; she uses her supernatural power to turn Acis into a fountain. This story was set to music by composers in France and Italy as well as by Handel in his charming pastoral masque, Acis and Galatea

53. Classical Voice Of North Carolina
pianist lambert orkis has been with the NSO since 1982. He is an acclaimed chambermusician who has received numerous accolades for his performances and
http://www.cvnc.org/reviews/2005/032005/NSOChamber.html
NSO Chamber Musicians Reveal Intimate Truths by Ken Hoover The second piece on the program, Beethoven's Trio in B-flat, Op. 11, for clarinet, cello and piano, featured Kitt, Young, and Orkis. It begins with a longish Adagio con brio that focuses on interplay among the three instruments. Beethoven states his theme, opens it up, takes it apart, passes it among the instruments, and puts it back together again. As given, the musical conversation in this piece was impressive. The adagio second movement begins with a dramatic theme and develops through conversations between the cello and clarinet, with the piano commenting and chiming in. A beautiful cello solo was the highlight. The third movement finds Beethoven, the performers, and the audience having fun with a theme and variations on an aria that caught Beethoven's fancy –"Pria ch'io l'impegno," from Joseph Weigl's L'amor marinaro , which has something to do with eating. This movement was a really delightful departure from the norm.

54. Back To The Future
AnneSophie Mutter (violin) with lambert orkis (piano) and Daniel as well asbeing the only item with lambert orkis, Mutter s regular recital pianist.
http://www.musicweb-international.com/SandH/2000/apr00/mutter2.htm
Concert Review Anne-Sophie Mutter (violin) with Lambert Orkis (piano) and (cello) Back to the Future including world premiere of Penderecki's Violin Sonata No. 2. Barbican Centre, 28/29 April 2000.
Anne-Sophie Mutter 's survey of 20 th Century music in her repertoire is being promoted in a series of recitals and orchestral concerts, in association with the release of a 4-CD Deutsche Grammophon compilation of recordings from 1988-1997. She commands a wide following and was able to fill the Barbican for music by Bartok, Webern, Crumb, Penderecki and others who may be less off-putting to a general audience, but with nothing really to pull them in apart from her own reputation. It was an inspired choice to begin with Webern's Four Pieces Op 7 (1910), tiny elusive miniatures which established immediately that the audience had to actively listen. The third 'hovers on the edge of inaudibility' and coughs which broke the spell sounded like gunfire! Respighi's sonata did not demonstrate that its neglect is undeserved. George Crumb's characteristic Four Nocturnes (1964) required a separate prepared piano for its kaleidoscopic colouristic effects

55. John Smith (example Website)
lambert orkis Arlington. Explore many-faceted career of pianist lambert orkis,noted for concerts, and recordings as recital partner, chamber musician
http://www.classicol.com/piano/Links.cfm?ID=624

56. Washingtonian Online
lambert orkis. pianist. Classicalmusic lovers can get jaded. Why buy a newversion of a time-honored composition when stores already stock hundreds of
http://www.washingtonian.com/people/bestandbrightest.html
PEOPLE
Best and Brightest
Edited by Drew Lindsay and William O'Sullivan We found scores of such people in places expected and unexpected. You might not guess Washington is home to a crossword-puzzle champion, an internationally renowned bagpipe band, or a snail farmer whose product is coveted by four-star restaurants. Here's a chance to meet them, to learn what inspires their work and drives them to excellence. Roots of Mental Illness: E. Fuller Torrey
The Natural:
Alan Webb
Geeks Rule:
Vinton Cerf and Robert Kahn
Who Wrote the Book of Life?:
Craig Venter and Francis Collins
Eye of the Storm:
Carol Guzy
Everybody Into the Pool:
Beth Scott
In the Beginning:
Hershel Shanks
Edge-of-Your-Seat Music:
Lambert Orkis
Redefining the Garden:
Wolfgang Oehme and James van Sweden
Master of China's Seas:
Bud Cole
Unwavering on AIDS:
Anthony Fauci Finding Beauty in Pain: Lucille Clifton Letter of the Law: Jolande Goldberg Seeing the South as It Is: William Christenberry Our Man on the Middle East: Thomas Friedman Watching Tomorrow's Terrorists: Dorothy Denning A Ballerina's Encore: Suzanne Farrell Making Babies: JoGayle Howard Big Subjects on the Big Screen: Charles Guggenheim An Eye for India's Treasures: Vidya Dehejia Taming the Atom: Bill Phillips Mending the Nation's Papers: Norvell Jones "We Risk a Life to Save a Life":

57. 98.7WFMT Radio Network | The Kennedy Center Fortas Chamber Music Concerts
Mr Kalichstein is a renowned pianist and artistic director of the Fortas Chamber ARTIST(S)Leonard Slatkin and lambert orkis, piano Igor Stravinsky
http://www.wfmt.com/radionetwork/fortas.html
Home Playlists Programs A to Z Hosts ... Search
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Carriage Agreement

Program Grid
The Kennedy Center Fortas Chamber Music Concerts Length: Approx. 59 minutes Duration: 13 weeks (April-June)
DELIVERY:
Wednesdays @ 1700 ET, beginning March 26, 2003
Saturdays @ 0900 ET, beginning March 29, 2003
Digital Frequency: Galaxy IV-R, B72.0 Optional Breaks: One
The Kennedy Center Fortas Chamber Music Concerts , produced by WETA-FM, bring you the world's best known artists, along with the most exciting emerging artists, and artists who come too rarely to Washington - or may never have been heard here at all.
The virtuoso artists you will hear in this season's Kennedy Center Fortas Chamber Music Concerts come to you from around the globe - but they share a passionate commitment to and an extraordinary gift for great music. They also reflect our commitment to bring you unique artists.
On a more intimate scale, this 13-part series offers an unparalleled mixture of carefully chosen repertoire performed by great artists as well as exciting selections by rising talent.

58. Jorja Fleezanis And Michael Steinberg Interview: Saint Paul Sunday Feature
Cyril is a fine musician and pianist, an Arrau student, who, like me, When AnneSophie Mutter and lambert orkis did their cycle last season they did it
http://saintpaulsunday.publicradio.org/features/0102_jorja_fleezanis/
Jorja Fleezanis and Michael Steinberg Interview
Jorja Fleezanis
Michael Steinberg: : Why? Jorja Fleezanis: I am an orchestral musician and I suppose I am that fairly rare bird, an orchestra player who really loves playing in an orchestra and loves that repertoire; even so, I feel the need to refresh myself and keep my mind and my chops in trim by taking on other challenges. Doing all the Beethoven sonatas is a good one. You find people doing cycles of the nine symphonies and of all the quartets and even of all thirty-two piano sonatas, but a survey like that of the ten violin sonatas is really rare. Michael Steinberg: Jorja Fleezanis: Michael Steinberg: A special aspect of these concerts is that you will be trying to get close to the sounds one would have heard around 1800 or just after, when the sonatas were new. Jorja Fleezanis: Michael Steinberg: You’ll be using your regular violin, though, yes? Jorja Fleezanis: Michael Steinberg: Jorja Fleezanis: No, he won’t, and that’s where, as I mentioned before, the generosity of the Schubert Club comes in. They have a good collection of pianos (also a gamelan, among other treasures), and for the concerts here Cyril will be using one of their instruments, probably a modern copy of an 1824 Conrad Graf, who built several pianos for Beethoven, or possibly a Broadwood from about 1820, which the Schubert Club may have acquired by then. Malcolm Bilson is going to lend us a fortepiano for our New York concert, and at this point I’m not quite sure of the arrangements for the West Coast.

59. Dickinson College - Department Of Music
piano with Professor Harvey Wedeen and accompanying with Mr. lambert orkis . the youngest pupil of Gilberto Tinetti, a prominent pianist in Brazil.
http://www.dickinson.edu/departments/music/eunaebaikkim.html
Eun Ae Baik-Kim
Staff Accompanist and Instructor in Piano
baikkime@dickinson.edu
Ms. Kim received the B.M. and M. M. degrees both in Piano Performance and Accompanying/Chamber Music from Temple University in Philadelphia PA. She studied piano with Professor Harvey Wedeen and accompanying with Mr. Lambert Orkis. Born in the Republic of Korea, her family immigrated to Brazil when she was eleven years old. There, she studied music theory and chamber music in the Conservatorio Municipal de San Paulo and became the youngest pupil of Gilberto Tinetti, a prominent pianist in Brazil. Ms. Kim has won many awards and competitions such as "Concurso para Jovens Solistas" and "Concurso Estadual para Instrumentistas e Cantores." She has performed with San Paulo Symphony Orchestra and has had numerous solo and chamber recitals in San Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. She has extensive accompanying experience in chamber and vocal music including operas and choirs. Ms. Kim joined Dickinson College in the fall, 2000. She is an accompanist for the Dickinson College Choir and the Dickinson Collegium Musicum. She teaches piano in the Performance Studies program and assists faculty and student performances.

60. CONCERT REVIEW: Too Much Of A Good Thing -- Yet Another Anne-Sophie Mutter Recit
acknowledged the audience and continued on with the opening piece to her “Songand Dance” recital with pianist lambert orkis at Boston Symphony Hall.
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V122/N51/Anne-Sophie_Mut.51a.html
CONCERT REVIEW
Too Much of a Good Thing
Yet Another Anne-Sophie Mutter Recital
By Andrew Wong Staff Writer Anne-Sophie Mutter Symphony Hall Oct. 16, 8 p.m. Sonata for Violin and Piano Anne-Sophie Mutter has come a long way since her child-prodigy years with mentor Herbert von Karajan. She is renowned as a champion of modern music with such accomplishments as her Mutter Modern Album a work written specifically for her. Last year, she finished off her Beethoven sonata cycle, having extensively toured with Orkis in a full exposition of the ten sonatas. She has even managed to record a full-length DVD on the subject. Hungarian Dances Porgy and Bess Suite (arranged by Jascha Heifetz). During each piece, Mutter played with full intensity and wit, polarizing all dynamic contrasts to the extremes of her instrument. However, the seductive glissandos, the ultra-wide vibrato, and the hollowness of the piano sections somehow detracted from the overall performance. At times, especially in the Hungarian Rhapsody Violin Concerto Spring Sonata Having been a huge fan of her playing, I was shocked to find myself leaving the concert unimpressed and a bit empty. Yes, her technique is truly amazing and she is one of the finest violinists of our time, but in a concert situation, the effect is a saturation of style.

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