Ol6CAMBRIDGE, MASS., FRIAY, DECEMBER 2, 1927 Price Five Cents Vol first violinist, Mr. W~alter Edelstein, second violinist, Mr. Mitja As was the custom in the last toro years, Mr. whiting wrill give a short http://www-tech.mit.edu/archives/VOL_047/TECH_V047_S0318_P001.txt
BBC Radio 1 - John Peel - Peelenium 1920-1929 Composer Jolson Rose whiting. Main Events The boy violinist, Yehudi Menuhin aged only 10, wowed audiences in Paris. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/alt/johnpeel/peelenium_1920.shtml
Extractions: Main Events Car tax was introduced at £1 per horsepower on privately owned vehicles. Two compulsory signals were also introduced - to signal a turn and one to brake. In the US, F. Scott Fitzgerald caught the spirit of the fast-living youth in his film 'This Side Of Paradise'. 18th amendment to the US constitution prohibiting the manufacture and sale of alcohol went into force. Track 1
All | The Allegany Arts Council The F. Brooke whiting Museum of Art Archives Opening Music at Penn Alps presents violinist Jonathan Carney pianist Enrico Elisi. Music on the Mountain http://www.alleganyartscouncil.org/eventcategory.php?categoryid=165
Princeton University Music Department Concert Credits Performances with Margaret whiting, The Ken Peplowski Quartet, Lionel Compositions/Arrangements commissioned by christopher Lamb, http://www.music.princeton.edu/pages/ugradPrivateTeachers.htm
Extractions: The Department of Music manages a non-credit, extracurricular program for the private study of vocal and instrumental performance for all students. Departmental concentrators and students in the Program in Musical Performance are expected to pursue some kind of performance study and therefore the department subsidizes the entire cost of weekly lessons taken with teachers under contract with the department. Partial subsidies, one-half the cost of lessons, are available to other students who are participating either in the Glee Club (Concert Choir), Orchestra, or Jazz Ensembles, or are enrolled in music courses on theory or music history for which credit toward concentration is given. Geoffrey Burleson Concert Credits: Solo appearances throughout North America and Europe, including prominent venues in Paris, New York (Merkin Hall, Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall), Rome, Athens (Mitropoulos Hall), Mexico City (National Museum of Art), Rotterdam (De Doelen), Chicago, Boston, Switzerland, England and Spain. Recent concerto performances with Boston Musica Viva, New England Philharmonic, Arlington Philharmonic, and Holland Symfonia in the Netherlands. Member, Boston Musica Viva. Duo performances with violinist Malcolm Lowe, flutist Jacques Zoon and soprano Maria Tegzes. Silver Medal, International Piano Recording Competition; Special Commendations; VMM International Performers Competition.
Extractions: 26 Jul 2005 With Lord of the Rings, Expect an "Event" Rather Than a "Musical" 27 May 2005 Lord of the Rings Musical Is Something Precious to Theatregoers; Sales Hit $7 Million 17 May 2005 Go, Go, Go, Frodo! Lord of the Rings Musical Takes $1 Million in First Day of Sales 16 May 2005 Tickets Now On Sale for Lord of the Rings Musical 15 Mar 2005 Lord of the Rings Musical to Bow in Toronto Precious News! Tony Award Winner Will Play Gandalf in Lord of the Rings Musical; Cast Announced By Kenneth Jones photo by Aubrey Reuben Brent Carver, who won a Tony Award for playing Molina in the musical Kiss of the Spider Woman, will be wizened wizard Gandalf in the new 2006 musical, The Lord of the Rings, the producers announced July 25. The world premiere musical condensation of the J.R.R. Tolkien fantasy trilogy will have a cast of 55 at Toronto's Princess of Wales Theatre. Performances begin Feb. 2, 2006. "Having auditioned 4,000 actors over four months across Canada, followed by in-depth recall auditions with 350," the creative team led by director Matthew Warchus and producer Kevin Wallace announced a cast drawn from across Canada and the United Kingdom. Carver is a Canadian theatre star and a veteran of the Stratford Festival and many resident theatres there. Director Matthew Warchus said, "Following two years of design, script and music pre-production, arriving at a cast is a thrilling and auspicious moment. I am particularly proud of the huge diversity of skill in the company. Wonderful, experienced actors will be working alongside acrobats, stilt-walkers and outstanding singers, all pooling their talents to bring this magical story alive on the stage. Given the size of the show, this is bound to be the most grueling production process any of us has been through, but when I look at this company, I am eager to begin!"
New Harmony Theatre-Reviews As the Coghill Trio, violinist Navida Stein, pianist Elizabeth Stanley and Rounding out the Sylvia cast is David christopher Wells, who will play http://www.usi.edu/nht/reviews.asp
Extractions: August 1, 2004 NEW HARMONY, Ind. n Classical conceit takes a honky- tonk, trailer park holiday in New Harmony Theatre's final production of the season. The strains of culture clash pitched together in comic counterpoints and resonated with some surprising harmonies in Friday's 2¼-hour opening of "Cowgirls." Mary Murfitt and Betsy Howie's comic musical revolves around six women struggling to make the best of what starts out looking like an impossible situation. It all plays out on the stage of Hiram Hall, a faded, failing country-western joint in Rexford, a Kansas town best known as home to the world's largest ball of string. The Coghill Trio, a classical chamber group winding up a problem-tangled three-month tour, rolls into Rexford when Jo Carlson, Hiram Hall's owner, thinks she's hired the Cowgirl Trio, a hot, new, all-girl country act to play her hall. Carlson is counting on the trio's concerts to pack the house and help pay off the landslide of loans her late father piled up n debts that now have the bank threatening foreclosure. That prospect, and the likelihood her father's music hall may become a gift shop for Rexford's behemoth string ball, helps propel the Coghill Trio's extreme make-over from classical to country.
ALA | NLW 2004 Events See and hear Jeremy Kittel, violinist extraordinaire winner of the Daniel Pearl Robin whiting Children s Specialist Williamson Free Public Library http://www.ala.org/ala/pio/piopresskits/nationallibraryweekpresskits/nationallib
Extractions: At Starbucks Coffee, 141 N. Atlantic - The library and Starbucks will have a Family Reading Festival. There will be storytelling, balloon art, face painting, Starbucks coffee and pastry samples. Anyone who donates a new or almost new children's book will be entered into a drawing for a free gift. Linda Wilson
Jazzcorner's Speakeasy - July 2005 Birthdays MARK FELDMAN violinist with John Zorn - 50 MARGARET whiting - singer - 81 DENNIS WILSON - trombonist - 53 23 DANNY BARCELONA - drummer with Armstrong http://jazzcornertalk.com/speakeasy/showthread.php?t=11339
This List Reflects The Programming Of WUNC Radio All Things January 25, 1997 Weekend Edition Susan Stamberg profiled the violinist and PT s guest host Melinda whiting for another trip to the PT Basic Library. http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/academic/music/album-reviews/1997/1-January/97.01.20-
W. McNeil Lowry Joseph Fuchs, violinist; Walter Piston s Violin Concerto No. 2 written for him christopher Tunnard, Department of City Planning, Yale University http://web.library.uiuc.edu/ahx/ead/ua/2620096/2620096series11.html
Extractions: Previous: HUMANITIES AND THE ARTS PROGRAM SUBJECT FILE Box Lists of H/A Program Conferences and Meetings, 1958-76 Conference on the Economic and Social Position of the Artist and His Institutionstranscript of discussion, January 3-4, 1958 Participants include: Jean Dalrymple, Director, City Center of Music and Drama, Inc. John J. Emery, President, Cincinnati Institute of Fine Arts Howard Hanson, Director, Eastman School of Music Kenneth E. Hudson, Dean, School of Fine Arts, Washington University Milton Katims, Conductor, Seattle Symphony Orchestra Stewart Klonis, Executive Director, Art Students League of New York Archibald MacLeish, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Harvard University Perry T. Rathbone, Director, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Boston Conservatory | Programs Of Study whiting Fellowship, 199495. Paper on Mahler s First Symphony delivered at New Orchestral violinist Handel and Haydn Society, Boston Modern Orchestra http://www.bostonconservatory.edu/programs/music_bio.html
Extractions: Music Dance Theater Liberal Arts ... Faculty Biographies Elizabeth Abbate matteo@aol.com Laura Ahlbeck (Oboe) B.M., Ohio State, M.M., Manhattan School of Music. Performs with Boston Symphony, Boston Pops. Former member Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, New York City Opera Touring Orchestra, Concerto Soloists of Philadelphia, Orquesta Sinfonica of Maricaibo, Columbus (OH) Symphony. Scott Andrews (Chair, Woodwind Department; Clarinet) B.M with Honors, New England Conservatory. Former student of Harold Wright. Appointed to the position of second clarinetist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the 1995-1996 season. Mr. Andrews has also performed with Boston area musical organizations including the Cantata Singers, the New England and Gardner Chamber Orchestras and AUROS Group for New Music. Former studies at the Virginia Governor's School for the Arts and at the Interlochen Music Center in Michigan where he was the Jonathan Cohen Scholarship recipient. He participated as the Fellowship Artist-in-Residence at the Kneisel Hall Chamber Music Festival in 1992 and was twice awarded fellowships to the Tanglewood Music Center. He also participated in an NEC musical exchange with the Toho Gakuen School of Music in Japan, spending part of the summer of 1993 performing and teaching in Tokyo. He has given recitals and c hamber music concerts throughout the United States. Mr. Andrews currently teaches at the Tanglewood Music Center and at The Boston Conservatory.
November 16 Birthdays In History November 16, 1917 John whiting, British dramatist/actor, Saint s Day November 16, 1766 Rodolphe Kreitzer, France, composer/virtuoso violinist, http://www.brainyhistory.com/daysbirth/birth_november_16.html
Welcome To Tango Meydl Shtil, Mayn Corazon, at Marylhurst University with Kira whiting, Right in the middle of an Argentine tango was a violin playing the melody to Zol http://www.tangomeydl.com/performers.shtml
Extractions: Tango Meydl Productions Jenny Levison has been participating in the klezmer and Yiddish music revival since 1993. She has studied Yiddish singing and Jewish musical arranging and composition with Michael Alpert, Alan Bern, and other members of Brave Old World, the Klezmatics, and the Klezmer Conservatory Band. Her passion for Yiddish tango is the synthesis of her love for Yiddish music and for Argentine tango. Jenny has been researching, collecting, and performing Yiddish tango music since 1993. In January 1998, she traveled to Buenos Aires to study tango dancing and to research Jewish influence in tango composition and performance. To date, she has collected over 150 tangos with Yiddish lyrics, as well as dozens of tangos by Jewish composers. With David Robboy, she was a founding member of the Portland Yiddish Theatre Ensemble. In the Spring of 1996, her 20th century classical composition A Klezmer Suite: Trern, Ayz, Mabl was performed at Portland State University by Andrew Ehrlich, Mike Curtis, and Genia Shadrin. In the Spring of 1999, she performed her 20th-century classical composition, Shtil, Mayn Corazon, at Marylhurst University with Kira Whiting, Mzuri Robertson, and Jim Ormond.
Recent Articles And Reviews St. christopher Chamber Orch. of Lithuania (FLUER DE SEON FDS57921), 260; (July/August 1997) revs. of Samuel Barber, Concertos for Violin and for Piano http://www.american-music.org/publications/bullarchive/artic233.htm
Extractions: (Sp 96): Revs. of Reif Badger's A Life in Ragtime: A Biography of James Reese Europe , 72, and Steve Gelfand's Television Theme Recordings: An Illustrated Discography 1951-1994 , 74, both by Tim Brooks; rev. of The Chronological Stan Kenton and His Orchestra: 1940-1944 (CD-Classic Records 848), by Gary Galo, 89. (Fall 96): Raymond R. Wile, "The Gramophone Becomes a Success in America, 1896-1898," 1939; rev. of Ross Laird's Tantalizing Tingles: A Discography of Early Ragtime, Jazz and Novelty Syncopated Piano Recordings, 1889-1934 , by Tim Brooks; rev. of The Judy Garland Show: The Original Recordings Recorded from the CBS Series 1963-1964 (5 CDs, Laserlight, 1995) and The Best of Judy Garland (3 CDs, Eclipose, 1995), by Lawrence Schulman, 256.
The Curtis Institute Of Music Richard Hickox, christopher Hogwood, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Michael Stern, Christoph Eschenbach, Pamela Frank, Violin, Chamber Music (Strings) http://www.curtis.edu/html/30330.shtml
Extractions: Mr. Aldwell received his bachelor's and master's degrees from the Juilliard School, where he studied piano with Adele Marcus. He studied theory and Schenkerian analysis privately with Carl Schachter and later with Ernst Oster. He taught keyboard studies at Juilliard from 1966 to 1970 and has been on the Mannes College of Music faculty since 1969. Mr. Aldwell performs recitals throughout the United States, many of them devoted to the works of Bach. He has recorded both books of The Well-Tempered Clavier , as well as the Goldberg Variations Harmony and Voice Leading . Mr. Aldwell joined the faculty of The Curtis Institute of Music in 1971.
Past Gigs violinist BK stole one show with her rendition of Jingle Bells (in D). violinist NP stole a different show with my violin/guitar arrangement of We Wish You http://home.tir.com/~gtwright/pastgigs.htm
Extractions: "Remember, when they say 'you didn't miss a note,' it means they didn't notice 12/16,17,18,19/03 (flute, soprano sax, alto sax, baritone sax, conductor, Santa): Flint's Dort, King, Merrill and Civic Park Elementary Schools held their Holiday Programs. Recorder (AKA "flute-o-phone") students played Mary Had a Little Lamb Jingle Bells , school bands played Good King Wenceslas and Jolly Old St. Nicholas , violin students played Jingle Bells and Good King Wenceslas , and Santa played Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree "You know, there is a real problem if you want to play the sax with a beard like mine." "My name is Santa Claus, and I'm having trouble with my beard." 12/13/03 (euphonium): Tuba Christmas! The University of Michigan-Flint hosted a Tuba Christmas event which rehearsed at 10:30 AM. I hadn't seen the music since 1995, but we performed that day, 2:00 PM in the Genesee Valley Mall. Being able to read music is important! Jingle Bells was the crowd's ( literally crowd ) favorite tune; we played it three times. People were smiling, clapping, and almost dancing. Tubas and euphoniums are not limited to "oom-pah" marches. We
Music (122700) In addition, champions of the Syracuse scene such as Joe whiting and Mark Doyle These indie champions infused The Moon with turntable scratches, violin, http://newtimes.rway.com/2000/122700/music.shtml
Extractions: In addition, champions of the Syracuse scene such as Joe Whiting and Mark Doyle showed that they can still rip, turning in a sizzling set at the Hotel Syracuse's Imperial Ballroom during the New York State Budweiser Rhythm and Blues Festival. Even though rain showers drenched the July festival's daytime programming, the classic soul and blues of headliners Little Milton and Bobby "Blue" Bland packed the ballroom with blues fans of all shapes, sizes and color. The Salt City got a second helping of the blues when the Great Northeast Blues Festival took the stage in front of the Museum of Science and Technology in August. Festival promoter Kyle Shirley brought the likes of Pinetop Perkins, Jimmy Thackery, the Nighthawks, Chris Cain and Big Bill Morganfield to Armory Square. New faces emerged on the local scene, too. The Skaneateles Festival welcomed Diane Walsh as its new artistic director. Longtime Pastabilities pals Beth Mulligan and Matt Burt took over for Eileen and Michael Heagarty at Armory Square's Styleen's Rhythm Palace, transforming it into Armory High (after operating as the Red Door for only a few weeks). The aggressive rock and energetic stage show of Auburn's Thumb helped the band win $2,000 and walk away as the top dog in the Greater New York Band Competition in June. And the otherwise-unheard-of Live No Pets from Skaneateles landed a spot in front of more than 10,000 fans at summer's K-Rockathon concert.
1939 In Music: Information From Answers.com 2 (the only violin concerto known to be by him at the time) is premiered by Jerome Kern Introduced by Frances Mercer and Jack whiting in the musical http://www.answers.com/topic/1939-in-music
Extractions: showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping 1939 in music Wikipedia 1939 in music See also: 1938 in music other events of 1939 1940 in music and the list of 'years in music' "Address Unknown" w.m.
Kurt Rohde By Melinda whiting. New Discs of Note. Kurt Rohde Oculus Cenotaph for example, is a solo violin elegy over sustained chords. http://www.kurtrohde.com/resume_bio.html
Extractions: The New Century Chamber Orchestra Energetic, impeccable, beautifully recorded accounts of 'brilliant' music These three pieces, each of them scored for strings, offer a stunning display of a formidable compositional imagination. Kurt Rohde is young, but no slave to fashion. You could even say there's something charmingly old-fashioned about his language, which share an anxious and sinuous ambiguity of harmony with Berg, Nicholas Maw, Frank Martin and Britten in his more exploratory vein. Rohde's is a rare muse in that the idiom is original but not prickly or pretentious, the vocabulary not obviously tonal yet at the same time consistently anchored. Lest this makes him sound like a compromiser, let it be said that Rohde is master of his compositional worlds, and each score loses no time in carving out its own course. The music is skittery, conflicted, self-doubting, peripatetic. It plays host to gestures and riffs rather than melodies. Yet the lines of action are tightly drawn, and the eight movements of Oculus (for string orchestra) trace a sure arc over their 30 minute span. The fifth, Stretto , artfully weaves in a quote from The Rite of Spring before we land in the oasis-like Cenotaph
BoatWeek - Mackinac 2005 - Thetimesherald.com Gary and LoAnn whiting, both 63 of Port Huron, said they like to come early before the sun goes His daughter, Taylor, 8, plays violin at the school. http://www.thetimesherald.com/news/blogs/boatweek/
Extractions: OAS_sitepage = 'news.thetimesherald.com/mackinac'; OAS_listpos = '234x60_1,234x60_2,120x600_1,468x60_3'; OAS_query = ''; OAS_target = '_top'; = 11) document.write(''); //> pageName = "BoatWeek blog"; Home News Entertainment Communities ... Customer Service site = "MIPOR"; section="HOME"; gnsSite ="thetimesherald"; Archive The final classes in the Port Huron-to-Mackinac Island Sailboat Race started successfully by 3:53 p.m. today. The inaugural run for the catamaran Wahoo started behind crowd-favorite Earth Voyager, a trimaran. Both started in the final class, the Open Class. POSTED BY Chris Sebastian AT 3:58 PM comments By 2:55 p.m. today, 15 of 21 starts had taken place in the Port Huron-to-Mackinac Island Sailboat Race. The final two Port Huron Yacht Club boats, Delphinus and Mattali, were at the starting line ready to begin the race in the Cruising A class. A total of 31 local boats are participating in the race. After lack of wind delayed the race start by about an hour earlier today, the wind was beginning to shift more favorably. On the horizon, sporadic spinnaker sails were visible from boats that started in earlier class times. The last class was expected to start about 3:50 p.m. POSTED BY Chris Sebastian AT 3:01 PM comments