Monday, 27 October 2008

Concert:Nova smashes tradition


October 26, 2008

The Cincinnati Enquirer
By Janelle Gelfand

They call it renegade chamber music - a new kind of performance art merging music, dance, acting and visual media in unexpected places. The founders of Concert:Nova, a chamber ensemble of Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra musicians, say they are tossing traditional classical presentations out the window. The idea, they say, is to close the gap between performers and audience.
"It's no longer about the artist telling the audience about the art. It's taking away the construct of performing and just being able to experience the art," says clarinetist and artistic director Ixi Chen.
Concert:Nova will open its second season on Thursday in the "UnMuseum" at the Contemporary Arts Center, downtown.
The first concert, "Where the Wild Things Are," a takeoff on Maurice Sendak's popular children's book, is emblematic of the group's mission. It's being presented as an "installation" at the CAC, where fantastical illustrations of the tale by Till Lassmann, a German illustrator and animator, will accompany the music that tells the story of Max's journey to the land of the Wild Things.
The musicians will transform into an electro-acoustic ensemble - including Owen Lee on electric bass and Tanya Berman on electric violin - for a fusion of classical, rock and avant-garde by New York composer Randall Woolf.
They hope their collaborative ideas will create a new forum for dialogue about art and break down some of the barriers surrounding classical music.
They have mounted their projects in spaces such as the downtown bar Twist, Below Zero Lounge and Know Theatre in Over-the-Rhine. This year, they hope to branch into alternative venues, such as a parking garage or an airport hangar, "to bring different elements of the city into our art," Chen says.
The five-concert season will include projects with actors, artists and members of Cincinnati Ballet. In December, Concert:Nova will team with artist Trinidad Mac-Auliffe and actor Julianna Bloodgood for a concert of Olivier Messiaen's "Quartet for the End of Time," composed in a World War II concentration camp, paired with Samuel Beckett's "Waiting for Godot."

If you go
What: Concert:Nova: "Where the Wild Things Are"
When: 7 p.m. Thursday
Where: UnMuseum, Contemporary Arts Center, Downtown Cincinnati
Tickets: $20, $10 Enjoy the Arts/Start members or students; 513-321-5073, www.concertnova.com
Halloween revelers: Wear your "Wild Things" costume and stay for a free reception.

Wednesday, 15 October 2008

Preview of "Where the wild things are"



http://www.contemporaryartscenter.org/44

44: Concert: Nova
Monday, October 20, noon - 2 pm
Sneak Preview of Where the Wild Things Are
Can't wait until October 30? Check out up-and-coming renegade chamber group concert:nova to catch a sneak peek at their upcoming show, Where the Wild Things Are. Inspired by the Sendak story, NYC composer Randall Woolf created an eight-part electro-acoutsic ballet, this time set to projected illustrations by German artist Till Lassmann.
See the complete work October 30, 8:00pm at the CAC.

CONCERT:NOVA is a fresh new chamber music ensemble that blends the traditional, the contemporary and the visual arts to explore a modern kinetic musical experience. Concert:nova strives to explore and perform brilliant works from the chamber music repertoire with a creative visual twist that gives the audience a taste of the unexpected. By illustrating the music and charging the atmosphere with relevant works and performances concert:nova reinvents the stage, reinvents the meaning of "play" and places the audience within the movement of sound as it happens.

Saturday, 27 September 2008

October 2, 2008. 11am



Tatiana Berman-Jarvi - Violin
Polina Bespalko - Piano

Schumann: Sonata no. 1, op. 105
Brahms: Sonata no. 3, op. 108
Tchaikowski: Melody op. 42

Symphony Club

Cincinnati Queen City Club






October 2, 2008


C:N Party!
@ The Cincinnati Athletic Club
111 Shilito Place
Cincinnati 45202
Tel: 513 241 00 96
Food and Drinks @ 6pm - Courtesy of Andy's Mediterranean Grill
Performance/Presentation @ 7pm
$10 @ the door

Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Leigo Lakes Festival in Estonia!





August 6, 2008

Music - it's a family business!

It was a memorable experience to have an entire evening of concerts featuring mostly soloists from one family- Jarvi. Tatiana was a soloist in Bach's Double Violin Concerto and the Brandenburg Concerto No 4. She also lead the Vivaldi Piccolo Concerto played by Hayley Jarvi.

Here are a couple of links to newspaper articles about the Leigo Lakes Festival and some photos too...
















Friday, 27 June 2008

Tchaikowsky: Souvenir d’un lieu cher


Here is a link to a review from this performance:
July 23, 2008

David Oistrakh Festival
Estonia, Pärnu - Elisabeth Church

Paavo Järvi - conductor
Tatiana Berman - violin
St. Peterburg Festival Chamber orchestra
Neeme Jarvi Summer Academy conductors

The programme:
W.A.Mozart - Eine kleine Nachtmusik
D.Shostakovich - Chamber Symphony op. 110a in c (arr. By Stasevich)
Tchaikowsky: Souvenir d’un lieu cher, Op. 42 Meditation, Scherzo, Melodie

Benjamin Britten - Simple Symphony

An excerpt from the review: "It was the first of two concerts this month led by members of Neeme Jarvi's Summer Academy, an annual conducting master course held in conjunction with the Oistrakh Festival since 2000.Guest artist was violinist Tatiana Berman in Tchaikovsky’s “Souvenir d’un lieu cher,” which was conducted by Academy instructor Paavo Jarvi. Consecrated in 1750, St. Elizabeth Church hosts concerts each summer by the 37-year-old festival, named for legendary Russian violinist David Oistrakh, who summered in Parnu from 1955-70. This year’s festival commemorates the 100th anniversary of Oistrakh’s birth. There could have been no more fitting tribute to his memory than Russian-born Berman’s performance of Tchaikovsky’s three-part work. Originally for violin and piano (performed here in the arrangement for violin and strings by Alexandru Lascae), it was dedicated to Tchaikovsky’s “beloved place,” his patroness Nadezhda von Meck’s county estate in Poland, where he could spend time composing in the summer. Born in Moscow, Berman trained at the Yehudi Menuhin School (with Menuhin and Natalia Boyarsky) and London’s Royal College of Music (Yossi Zivoni). She plays with exquisite taste, style and precision. Here she brought every facet of the composer’s small gem to light. There were sweetness and purity of tone in the opening “Meditation,” where she climbed to a silvery high D at the end (five ledger lines above the staff). The “Scherzo” was a mini-steeplechase, with her bow bounding across the strings like an agile young filly, engaging in some beautiful dialogue at one point with SPFO concertmaster Alexander Shustin. The concluding, very familiar “Melodie” was exquisite from start to finish. There was a breathtaking moment at the return of the opening melody where she lengthened the tempo in precise sync with Jarvi and the orchestra. And why not, since Jarvi and Berman are husband and wife?"

Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Concert:nova @Cincinnati Opera Kick-off Party






By Mary Ellyn Hutton

Jun 10, 2008

Cincinnati Opera Center Stage, a social group comprising young operaphiles age 40 and under, helps the Opera launch its 2008 summer festival with a kick-off party from 8 p.m. to midnight June 14 at the Contemporary Arts Center, Sixth and Walnut Streets downtown. The party will have a rain forest theme highlighting Mexican composer Daniel Catan's "Florencia en el Amazonas," tree frog, Amazonto be given its regional premiere by Cincinnati Opera July 10 and 12 at Music Hall. There will be music, dancing, a tapas buffet and full cash bar.

Special guests will be members of concert:nova, the versatile new chamber ensemble comprising members of the CSO and Cincinnati Chamber Orchestras, who will perform Brazilian and Cuban music. Learn about the group and their mission at
http://www.concertnova.com/. Cincinnati Opera young artists will also weigh in during the evening, and there will be Latin cuts for dancing by DJ/VJ Will Benson. Tickets are $10, available online at http://www.cincinnatiopera.org/, at the Cincinnati Opera box office in Music Hall, 1241 Elm St. downtown, or call (513) 241-2742. For $25, you get admission to the party and Center Stage membership for one year (application can be made online). Members enjoy discounted tickets to the Opera and invitations to special events including post-performance parties, Opera Raps, wine tastings and so on, year-round. Ticket discounts are structured according to a five-year plan whereby members are entitled to 50% off up to two Cincinnati Opera season subscriptions during the first three years, tapering to 33% in the fourth year and regular price in the fifth. Discounts for single tickets are 50% off up to two tickets per production in the first two years, 25% off in the third and fourth years and regular price in the fifth. For further information call (513) 768-5500 or contact Julie Bergantino at jhttp://jbergantino@cincinnatiopera.org
© Copyright 2008 by Music in Cincinnati