Pro Musica Colorado reschedules final concert

Farewell concert for conductor Cynthia Katsarelism orchestra will be Sunday, May 5

By Peter Alexander May 22 at 9:50 a.m.

The farewell concert for the Colorado Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra and conductor Cynthia Katsarelis, originally scheduled for April 6 and postponed by weather and a power outage, has been rescheduled.

The concert will take place at Mountain View Methodist Church in Boulder at 4 p.m. Sunday, May 5. The soloist will be guitarist Nicoló Spera. The program will be the same as originally announced (see below). You may read the full original story HERE.

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“Nicolò!”
Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor
With Nicolò Spera, guitar

  • Jessie Montgomery: Starburst
  • Joaquin Rodrigo: Fantasía para un gentilhombre (Fantasy for a gentleman)
  • Louise Farrenc: Symphony No. 3 in G Minor

4 p.m. Sunday, May 5
Mountain View Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

TICKETS

Pro Musica Colorado will reschedule ‘farewell concert’

Please note that the final concert by the Colorado Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra with conductor Cynthia Katsarelis and guest soloist Nicolò Spera, originally scheduled for April 6, was postponed due to inclement weather and the widespread power outage on that date. The concert will be rescheduled pending the availability of the musicians and the venue. The new date will be announced as soon as arrangements have been confirmed.

You may read the original story here. This is the full program for the concert:

“Nicolò!”
Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor
With Nicolò Spera, guitar

  • Jessie Montgomery: Starburst
  • Joaquin Rodrigo: Fantasía para un gentilhombre (Fantasy for a gentleman)
  • Louise Farrenc: Symphony No. 3 in G Minor

Colorado Pro Musica presents farewell concert Saturday

NOW RESCHEDULED for 4 p.m. Sunday, May 5

By Peter Alexander April 2 at 10 a.m.

Boulder will have one less orchestra after this weekend.

Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra strings with conductor Cynthia Katsarelis. Photo by Glenn Ross.

The Colorado Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra will play their last concert Saturday (7:30 p.m. April 6; details below), after 17 years of steadfast leadership from conductor and artistic director Cynthia Katsarelis. Katsarelis recently moved from Colorado to South Bend, Ind., where she is on the faculty of Sacred Music at Notre Dame University.

With Katsarelis, Pro Musica’s philosophy has been to to introduce composers from under-represented groups while featuring local soloists. In keeping with this approach, the final program will present two works by women—Starburst by living composer Jessie Montgomery to open the concert, and the Symphony No. 3 by 19th-century French composer Louise Farrenc—and a soloist from the CU faculty, guitarist Nicolò Spera playing the Fantasía para un gentilhombre (Fantasy for a gentleman) by Joaquin Rodrigo.

Montgomery’s Starburst is a short but colorful piece for strings composed in 2012 that has become a popular concert opener. The composer just won a Grammy for her Rounds for piano and orchestra, in a recording by pianist Awadagin Pratt and the ensemble A Far Cry. Pratt will perform Rounds at the Colorado Music Festival this summer (July 25 and 26 at Chautauqua Auditorium).

“It’s become a canonic piece, and it’s a really fabulous opener,” Katsarelis says of Starburst. Pro Musica played it once before, but “it’s good to repeat repertoire sometime,” she says, “especially if it’s right for the program and to highlight the Grammy win.”

 Rodrigo wrote his Fantasía para un gentilhombre in 1954 for the celebrated guitarist Andres Segovia, who gave the premiere in 1958. It has four movements based on dances written for guitar by the 17th-century Spanish composer Gaspar Sanz. 

Nicolò Spera

It has become one of the best known concertos for classical guitar. Katsarelis and Spera selected it for this concert, in part because she feels that it fits well with Ferrenc’s symphony. “When you’re working with a soloist, you want to give them the choice and then see whether it fits what you are already thinking,” she explains. 

“It works really well with Ferrenc because it is a neo-classical work built on 17th-century pieces,” Katsarelis says. “Ferrenc was an extremely well versed composer, and another part of her was involved in reviving early music for keyboard. Her husband was a publisher, and together they did like 15 volumes of treasures for the keyboard, all stuff that wasn’t being played at the time.”

Ferrenc studied both piano and composition in Paris. A successful concert pianist, she was appointed professor of piano at the Paris Conservatory in 1852, the only woman to hold that rank in the 19th century. Known as an excellent teacher, she had many students who had distinguished careers.

As a composer, she stuck to the traditional forms for the symphony, of which she wrote three, and other genres. “She had modern sensibilities, like Mendelssohn and Schumann,” Katsarelis says, but “she doesn’t go the way of program music. Even though she doesn’t write programs, her themes seem to be kind of epic.”

The symphony is in four movements, following the standard pattern of the 19th century: An opening fast movement in sonata form, followed by a slow movement, a scherzo and a finale. 

“The first movement has two introductions, a slow one that introduces melodic and harmonic ideas, and then a fast introduction whose main role is to build up the energy to the exposition,” Katsarelis says. “The first theme has the feel of a rustic dance, and the second major theme is like a lyrical waltz.

Cynthia Katsarelis. Photo by
Glenn Ross.

“The second movement is what you expect, a slow movement (with) long gorgeous melodies. The third movement is a scherzo, fast and kind of breathless. While it’s moving it’s going through really distant keys, but that gives it the sheen of color, and then the finale has soaring melodies.”

Now settled in South Bend, Katsarelis has already started to build bridges with the local musical community. She has already conducted the South Bend Symphony in a concert with soloists from Notre Dame, and she has plans to continue that collaboration. Looking ahead, “we have aspirations for some pretty big stuff,” she says of her work the the orchestra. “We agreed that we had similar aspirations, and everybody wants more, so that’s really great.”

In the meantime, Saturday’s concert will be a farewell for Boulder for Katsarelis and the Pro Musica. “The plan was to have a really great season and to end with a bang and a party, and to be really proud of everything we accomplished,” Katsarelis says. “I’ll miss the musicians in the orchestra. I’ll miss the patrons and the donors, and the whole vibe of discovery that we always had. 

“My heart is full of gratitude. I want it to be a happy farewell, with happy memories of all that we accomplished.”

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“Nicolò!”
Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor
With Nicolò Spera, guitar

  • Jessie Montgomery: StarburstJoaquin
  • Rodrigo: Fantasía para un gentilhombre (Fantasy for a gentleman)
  • Louise Farrenc: Symphony No. 3 in G Minor

NOW RESCHEDULED:
4 p.m. Sunday, May 5
Mountain View Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

TICKETS

GRACE NOTES: Holiday performances everywhere

Popular themes of the 2023 Holidays include the solstice and music of the Baroque

By Peter Alexander Nov. 29 at 2:41 p.m.

The Longmont Symphony and Boulder Ballet start their 2023 series of Nutcracker  performances Saturday afternoon (1 p.m. Dec. 2) at Vance Brand Civic Auditorium with their annual “Gentle Nutcracker.” 

A shortened, sensory-friendly performance designed for neurodiverse individuals, their families and caregivers, the “Gentle Nutcracker” is approximately 90 minutes in length. 

That special presentation will be followed by two full performances Saturday and Sunday of Tchaikovsky’s beloved ballet, with the Christmas party, the Nutcracker Prince, “The Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy,” and all the other features that have made both the music and the ballet a Holiday favorite (4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2 and 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 3; details below).

NOTE At the time of writing, there are only a few seats left, mostly in the balcony. There is no guarantee that tickets will be available by the time this story appears.

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Longmont Symphony Orchestra, Elliot Moore, conductor
Boulder Ballet

“Gentle Nutcracker”

1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2 NOW SOLD OUT
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS

Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker Ballet

4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2
2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 3
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS

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Conductor Cynthia Katsarelis and the Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra will present the Christmas portion of Handel’s Messiah Saturday (7:30 p.m. Dec. 2) at Mountain View Methodist Church (details below).

In addition to the Christmas section, chorus and orchestra will perform the much loved “Hallelujah” chorus from Messiah. The program opens with “Adoration” by Florence Price and Mozart’s Divertimento in D major, K136.

The Christmas portion of Messiah is one of three major divisions of the work. It comprises 21 separate movements including the opening Overture, choruses including “For unto us a Child is Born” and “Glory to God,” recitatives, and arias for soprano, tenor and bass soloists. Pro Musica will be joined by the Boulder Chamber Chorale and soloists Jennifer Bird-Arvidsson, soprano; Nicole Asel, alto; Steven Soph, tenor; and Ashraf Sewailam, bass.

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Pro Musica Colorado Chamber Orchestra, Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor
With the Boulder Chamber Chorale and Jennifer Bird-Arvidsson, soprano; Nicole Asel, alto; Steven Soph, tenor; and Ashraf Sewailam, bass

  • Florence Price: Adoration
  • W.A. Mozart: Divertimento in D major, K136 
  • G.F. Handel: Messiah, Part I
  • —“Hallelujah” chorus

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2
Mountain View Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

TICKETS

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The CU College of Music presents its annual Holiday Festival this coming weekend, Friday through Sunday in Macky Auditorium (Dec. 8–10; details below).

One of the most popular Holiday events in Boulder, the Holiday Festival features numerous ensembles from the College of Music, each presenting their own selections. Featured groups in this year’s program are the Chamber singers, the Holiday Festival Chorus made up of singers from several groups in the college, the Holiday Festival Orchestra, the Trombone Choir, Holiday Festival Brass, Holiday Festival Jazz, and the West African Highlife Ensemble.

NOTE: At the time of writing, there are limited tickets available for the four performances of the Holiday Festival program. Performances generally sell out, so interested persons should check the CU Presents Web page for availability.

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Holiday Festival, Donald McKinney, artistic director
CU College of Music Ensembles

Chamber Singers, Leila Heil, conductor
Noelle Romberger, graduate conductor

Holiday Festival Chorus
Galen Darrough, Raul Dominguez and Jessie Flasschoen, conductors 
Jun Young Na and Noelle Romberger, graduate conductors

Holiday Festival Orchestra, Gary Lewis, music director 
With Donald McKinney and Nelio Zamorano, conductors

Trombone Choir, Sterling Tanner, conductor

Holiday Festival Jazz, Brad Goode, director

Holiday Festival Brass, Lauren Milbourn, conductor

West African Highlife Ensemble, Maputo Mensah, director

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 8
1 and 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 9
4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 10
Macky Auditorium

TICKETS

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Cellist Charles Lee, the principal cellist of the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra, will join Ars Nova Singers and conductor Tom Morgan for “Evergreen,” the latest edition of their annual celebration of the winter solstice.

The program will be presented four times, once in Longmont (Saturday, Dec. 9), once in Denver (Sunday, Dec. 10) and twice in Boulder (Thursday and Friday, Dec. 14 and 15; times and locations below). The program includes music by the medieval Benedictine abyss Hildegard Bingen, the English Renaissance master William Byrd, and the north German early Baroque composer Heironymus Praetorius. 

Not to be confused with his better known younger contemporary Michael Praetorius, Heironymus is known for his elaborate multi-voices motets. Also on the program are more contemporary works by the living composers Eriks Esenvalds, Jocelyn Hagan and Taylor Scott Davis. 

In a written news release, Morgan sets the stage for this concert timed to nearly coincide with the solstice, writing: “Dark and light, motion and stasis, intimate and universal, deeply familiar and refreshingly new—our season searches for the balance point in all of these, through the power and majesty of the human voice.”

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Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, director
With Charles Lee, cello

“Evergreen”

  • Hildegard of Bingen: O frondens virga
  • Two 15th century English carols
  • Heoronymus Praetorius: In dulci jubilo (à 8)
  • William Byrd: O magnum mysterium
  • Ola Gjeilo: Serenity (O Magnum mysterium)
  • Andrea Casarrubios: Caminante
  • Taylor Scott Davis: Solstice
  • Eriks Esenvalds: Rivers of Light
  • Jocelyn Hagen: Mother’s Song
  • Dan Forrest: The Sun Never Says
  • Michael Head: The Little Road to Bethlehem
  • Arrangements of Holiday songs by Tom Morgan, Joanna Forbes, Alexander L’Estrange and others

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 9
United Church of Christ, 1500 9th Ave., Longmont

12:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 10
St. Paul Lutheran Church, 1660 Grant. St., Denver

7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 14 and Friday, Dec. 15
Mountain View United Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

TICKETS

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CU Presents will round out the university’s holiday performances with Christmas with the Canadian Brass at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 13 in Macky Auditorium.

The Canadian Brass generally announce their program from the stage. Nonetheless, the Christmas set list is more predictable and will likely feature some Canadian Brass favorites, including “Ding Dong Merrily on High,” evergreen Holiday music including “White Christmas” and “Carol of the Bells,” and jazzy arrangements including “Glenn Miller Christmas.”

Founded in 1970, the Canadian Brass has been a recognized and esteemed part of the musical scene for more than 50 years. Touring world-wide, they have made the repertoire of chamber music for brass, and specifically brass quintets, widely appreciated. 

There is still one original member of the quintet, tubist Chuck Dellenbach, while other members have joined over the years. The most recent addition, making her Canadian Brass debut this year, is trumpet player Ashley Hall-Tighe, who first met the members of the Canadian Brass in 2001 as a student in their chamber music residency at the Music Academy of the West.

With more than 10 Christmas albums, the Canadian Brass are especially well known for their holiday performances. Their total recording history currently totals more than 130 albums and more than 2 million sold worldwide.

NOTE: At the time of writing, there are limited tickets available.

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Canadian Brass

“Christmas with the Canadian Brass”

  • Program to be announced from the stage may include:
  • “Ding Dong Merrily on High” (arr. Henderson)
  • Gabrieli: Canzona per sonare No. 4
  • “White Christmas” (arr. Henderson)
  • Mykola Leondovich: “Carol of the Bells” (arr. McNeff)
  • Vince Guaraldi: “Christmas Time is Here” (arr. Ridenour)
  • Glenn Miller: “Glenn Miller Christmas” (arr. Dedrick)

7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 13
Macky Auditorium

TICKETS

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The Longmont Symphony will look back to the 18th century for Candlelight: A Baroque Christmas at 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16, in Vance Brand Civic Auditorium.

Under the direction of Elliot Moore, the featured work on the program will be the Gloria of Antonio Vivaldi. Composed around 1715, it is one of the Venetian composer’s most frequently performed works. Its 12 movements, divisions of the “Gloria” text from the Catholic Mass ordinary, call for chorus, orchestra, and soprano and alto soloists.

Celebrating the holiday season, the Candlelight Concert has long been a part of the Longmont Symphony’s season. There will be candles again this year, although the orchestra has announced that they will be battery-operated this year, rather than relying on a flame.

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Longmont Symphony and Chorus, Elliot Moore, conductor

“Candlelight: A Baroque Christmas”

  • Corelli: Concerto Grosso
  • Handel: “Rejoice greatly” from Messiah
  • Scarlatti: Christmas Cantata for soprano and strings
  • Vivaldi: Gloria

4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS

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All the choirs of the Boulder Chorale and Boulder Children’s Chorale will join together to present “Season of Light,” their annual concert of music for the holidays, Saturday and Sunday (Dec. 16 and 17; details below).

The concert title refers to the tradition found in many different cultures to use light to counteract the dark of winter and forecast the return of the light in the weeks to come. In the words of the Boulder Chorale’s press information, the program “traces the history and development of many of the world’s most endearing holiday customs, all of which involve lighting up the winter season—from the burning Yule log, sparkling Christmas tree lights and candles in windows, to the lighting of luminaries (often called luminarias) in the American Southwest and the traditional ritual of the Hanukkah menorah.”

Tickets are available both at the door and through the Boulder Chorale Web page. The Sunday performance will also be presented through live streaming, available at the same Web page.

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Boulder Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, artistic director
With Boulder Children’s Chorales, Nathan Wubbena, artistic director

“Season of Light”

Children’s Chorale Bel Canto
Nathan Wubbena, conductor

  • John Rutter: “Angels’ Carol”
  • Flory Jagoda: “Ocho Kandelikas” (arr. Joshua Jacobson)

Children’s Chorale Volante
Kiimberly Dunninger, conductor

  • Franklin J. Willis: “Be the Light “
  • Robert Cohen and Ronald Cadmus: “The Joy of Simple Things”

Chamber Chorale
Vicki Burrichter, conductor

  • John Newell: “Light of Heaven” (text based on the Buddhist vajra guru mantra)

Chamber Choir, Bel Canto and Volante
Nathan Wubbena, conductor

  • Ryan Main: “Go! Said the Star”

Children’s Choir Piccolini
Melody Sebald, conductor

  • “Winter Canon” (arr. Andy Beck)
  • John Henry Hopkins Jr.: “We Three Kings”

Children’s Choir Prima Voce
Anna Robinson, conductor

  • Ruth Ann Schram: “Winter Solstice”
  • “This Little Light of Mine” (arr. Masa Fukuda)

Concert Chorale
Vicki Burrichter, conductor

  • Enya and Nicky Ryan: “Amid the Falling Snow” (words by Roma Ryan, arr. Audry Snyder)
  • Craig Carnahan: “Dancing on the Edges of Time” (words by Rabindranath Tagore)
  • Stephanie K. Andrews : “On Compassion” (words by the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso)

Combined Choirs
Kim Dunninger and Vicki Burrichter, conductors

  • Benji Pasek and Justin Paul: “Do a Little Good” (from Spirited)
  • Franz Gruber/David Kantor: “Night of Silence” (includes “Silent Night”; arr. Nathan Wubbena; Spanish text by Cynthia Garcia-Barrera)

4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 16 and 17
First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St., Boulder

TICKETS

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The Boulder Chamber Orchestra will combine its holiday celebration with the music of Beethoven in a program featuring pianist Adam Zukiewicz.

Their “Holidays Celebration with Beethoven” will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16 in the Boulder Seventh-Day Adventist Church. Zukiewicz will perform Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with the orchestra and conductor Bahmann Saless. 

Other works on the program are Mozart’s Overture to The Marriage of Figaro, conducted by Nadia Artman; Chocolats Symphoniques (Symphonic chocolates) by Maxime Goulet; and the world premiere of the Concerto for Flute and Orchestra by Sylvie Bodrova with the BCO’s principal flutist Cobus DuToit as soloist. 

Part of the reason for combining the holiday music with Beethoven is that the composer’s birthday is believed to be Dec. 16. The date is not certain, since the only documents record his baptism on Dec. 17, but the birthday is traditionally observed on Dec. 16. That would make Dec. 16, the date of the concert, the 253rd anniversary of his birth.

As it happens, the full 2023–24 season has three of Beethoven’s five piano concertos listed. the Third Concerto was played by Petar Klasan Sept. 1, and the Concerto No. 5 (“Emperor:) will be performed with the BCO by  Jennifer Hayghe Feb 3 (7:30 p.m., Boulder Seventh-Day Adventist Church).

Goulet’s Chocolats Symphoniques was previously performed by the BCO on their holidays concert in 2021. The work’s four movements refer to four different flavors of chocolate: “Caramel Chocolate,” “Dark Chocolate,” “Mint Chocolate” and “Coffee-infused Chocolate.”

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Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless, conductor
With Cobus DuTois, flute, and Adam Zukiewicz, piano
Nadia Artman, conductor

“Holidays Celebration with Beethoven”

  • Mozart: Overture to The Marriage of Figaro
  • Maxime Goulet: Chocolats Symphoniques (Symphonic chocolates)
  • Sylvie Bodorova: Concerto for Flute and Orchestra (world premiere)
  • Beethoven: Concerto No. 2 for Piano and Orchestra

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16
Boulder Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 345 Mapleton Avenue

TICKETS  

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The Boulder Bach Festival (BBF) will present “Handel’s Messiah Reimagined” in their very own version, based on an edition created by music director Zachary Carrettin.

Messiah will be performed by a string orchestra from the BBF’s Compass Resonance (CORE) Ensemble with harpsichord and chamber organ continuo and a 16-voice choir. Five featured solo singers will also perform within the chorus. The entire performance will be presented without conductor.

The program also incudes two a cappella vocal works and a violin concerto b Antonio Vivaldi. The concerto will be played by BBF’s artistic director, Zachary Carrettin, with Baroque guitar continuo played by Keith Barnhart.

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Boulder Bach Festival CORE ensemble
Mara Riley, soprano; Sarah Moyer, soprano; Claire McCahan, mezzo-soprano;
Daniel Hutchings, tenor; and Adam Ewing, baritone
With Zachary Carrettin, violin, and Keith Barnhart, Baroque guitar

“A Baroque Christmas: Handel’s Messiah Reimagined”

4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 17

Gordon Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center, Boulder

TICKETS  

GRACE NOTES: Chamber music, orchestras, operas and chorus, all in one weekend

Piano Quartet returns with guest violinist, Pro Musica plays world premiere

By Peter Alexander Oct. 26 at 6:35 p.m.

The Boulder Piano Quartet, one of Boulder’s most creative musical groups, has been silent since the untimely death of violinist Chas Wetherbee last year. 

For the coming season, they will have four concerts with four different guest violinists who are at least informally auditioning to take the quartet’s empty seat. The first program—Friday night at the Academy in Boulder (7 p.m. Oct. 27, 970 Aurora Ave., Boulder)—will feature violinist Hilary Castle Green, who teaches strings at the Shining Mountain Waldorf School in Boulder. 

Green maintains a private virtual teaching studio based in New York and is also a faculty member at Bow and Heart, a program dedicated to providing ensemble opportunities to string students in New York City. She has performed extensively on the east coast, including appearances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher and Alice Tully halls, and Bargemusic.

Friday’s program offers two works: the Piano Quartet in A major by Brahms, and the “Spanish” Quartet for piano and strings by Louise Héritte-Viardot.  The granddaughter of renowned tenor and singing instructor Manuel Garcia and the niece of soprano Maria Malibran, Héritte-Viardot came from a renowned musical family. She was a composer, largely of chamber music, as well as singer, pianist and conductor.

Remaining concerts by the quartet during the 2023–24 concert season will be Dec. 15 with violinist Jubal Fulks from the University of Northern Colorado; Jan. 19; and May 3, all at the Academy. Performances at the Academy are free with prior registration. You may register for Friday’s concert HERE.

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Boulder Piano Quartet
Hilary Castle Green guest violinist; Matthew Dane, viola; Thomas Heinrich, cello; and David Korevaar, piano

  • Louise Héritte-Viardot: Quartet No. 2 in D major for piano and strings (“Spanish Quartet)
  • Brahms: Quartet in A major for piano and strings

7 pm. Friday, Oct. 27
The Academy, Boulder

Free with reservation, available HERE 

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The Boulder Symphony will present its first “Curiosity Concert” of the season Saturday (3 p.m. Oct. 28) at the group’s home base, Grace Commons Church at 1820 15th St. in Boulder. Devin Patrick Hughes will conduct the program that ranges from Mozart to Bille Eilish. 

The orchestra’s “Curiosity Concerts” are family-oriented programs designed to provide an introduction to music for young listeners. The Boulder Symphony offers a “Curiosity Concert” in the fall, and another in the spring, the latter scheduled for 3 p.m. Saturday, March 23, 2024.

Titled “Perfectly Imperfect,” Saturday’s performance is a program of the classical music education producer Extra Crispy Creatives. With music ranging from Mozart to Billie Eilish, “Perfectly Imperfect” explores “what makes Earth’s music the best in the galaxy.” The performance with full orchestra and an alien named “Blip” will last approximately 45 minutes.

# # # # #

Fall Curiosity Concert: “Perfectly Imperfect”
Boulder Symphony, Devin Patrick Hughes, conductor
Production of Extra Crispy Creatives

Program includes original music and arrangements from:

  • Sia: “Cheap Thrills”
  • Mozart: Symphony No. 40 in G minor
  • Rossini: Overture to William Tell
  • Richard Strauss: Also sprach Zarathustra
  • Billie Eilish: “Bad Guy”

3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28
Grace Commons Church, 1820 15th St., Boulder

TICKETS

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Boulder Chorale will explore the music of the Nordic countries in their season-opening “Nordic Lights” concert, at 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday (Oct. 28 and 29 at First United Methodist Church). Under the direction of Vicki Burrichter, the concert will feature Ola Gjeilo’s Sunrise Mass and other choral works from Nordic countries.

The music of Scandinavia stands somewhat apart from the mainstream of classical concert music. While the names of Edvard Grieg, Jan Sibelius and Carl Nielsen are known, there are many younger composers writing music today, particularly choral music, who are not well known outside of their home countries. 

One of those successful young Scandinavian composers, Gjeilo grew up and first studied music in Norway. Later a graduate of both the Royal College of Music in London and the Juilliard School in New York, he currently lives in Manhattan, where he works as a freelance composer.

His Sunrise Mass is in four movements that evoke aspects of the rising sun rather than movements of the traditional mass. The movements are titled “The Spheres,” “Sunrise,” “The City” and “Identity.”

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“Nordic Lights”
Bouder Chorale, Vicki Burrichter, conductor

  • Ola Gjeilo: Sunrise Mass
  • Other choral works from Nordic traditions

4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28, and Sunday, Oct. 29
First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St., Boulder

TICKETS

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Boulder Opera will present one of the best known and most popular of operas from the 18th, or any, century Saturday and Sunday (7 p.m. Oct. 28 and 3 p.m. Oct. 29) at the Dairy Arts Center: Mozart’s Magic Flute.

First performed in 1791, the last year of Mozart’s life, The Magic Flute is based on Masonic ideals and symbolism. It features Tamino, a young prince who gets caught up in a conflict between the Queen of the Night and Sarastro, respectively representing evil and wisdom. Tamino is initiated into Sarastro’s temple in a scene that reflects traditional Masonic initiation rites. In the end, he is paired with Pamina, the daughter of the Queen of the Night who rejects her mother in order to embrace Sarastro’s wisdom.

Other characters in the opera include Tamino’s sidekick Papageno, a simple but good-hearted birdcatcher; his mate-to-be Papagena; the malicious slave Monostatos; a trio of ladies who serve the Queen of the Night; and a trio of young boys who represent goodness and innocence.

In spite of the serious aspects of the plot, The Magic Flute is broadly comic, especially the role of Papageno. The libretto was written by Emanuel Schikaneder, a multi-talented comic actor, singer and impresario who was Mozart’s Masonic brother in a lodge in Vienna, and who played the role of Papageno in the original production at Vienna’s Theater an der Wien.

Boulder Opera will present The Magic Flute in a family-friendly production that will feature an orchestra on stage in the Dairy Arts Center’s Gordon Gamm Theater. It will be sung in the original German with English titles. The performance will be conducted by Steven Aguiló-Arbues. The stage director is Madeleine Snow.

# # # # #

Boulder Opera
Steven Aguiló-Arbues, conductor
Madeleine Snow, stage director

  • W.A. Mozart: The Magic Flute

7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28
3 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 29
Gordon Gamm Theater, Dairy Arts Center

TICKETS

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Conductor Cynthia Katsarelis is back in Colorado, visiting from her position as professor of conducting at Notre Dame University in South Bend, Ind., to lead the Colorado Pro Musical Chamber Orchestra (CPM)in their opening concert of the 2023-24 season.

Titled “Passione!” the program includes a symphony by Haydn with that nickname, as well as the world premiere of a new piece by CU composition student Jessie Lausé and Mozart’s “Turkish” Violin Concerto played but the CPM’s concertmaster, Stacy Lesartre.

Lausé’s Stretch in Periphery was the winner of the most recent CU-PMC composition competition, a contest started by the PMC which every year premieres a work that is selected by Katsarelis and the CU composition faculty from among submissions by their students. The winner receives a performance by PMC and an award of $1000.

PMC’s program notes explain that Lausé’s score “uses color, improvisatory devices, and traditional harmonies that ‘push out’ into spicy dissonances, to tell a story of the last four years, both autobiographically and in our common life here in the US. It is dedicated to ‘anyone who lives their lives in the margins’.”

Haydn’s Symphony No. 49 is one of a group of symphonies written in the 1760s that have been associated with a literary movement known as Sturm und Drang (“storm and stress“). The works associated with that title are generally in a minor key with a lot of  forceful rhythmic activity creating an anxious—or “stormy”—mood. 

Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 has the nickname “Turkish” from a march section that interrupts the minuet finale. The march uses cymbals and other percussion instruments that give it a quality that was conventionally known as alla turca (in a Turkish style) in the late 18th century. The style was popular in operas of the time and was used to evoke the music of the Middle Eastern countries as an exotic element.

In addition to her role with PMC, Lesartre is concertmaster of the Cheyenne Symphony and has played with the Houston and the Colorado symphonies. She is also a member of the Amber Quartet and teaches private violin students and chamber music in Colorado.

Because of her recent appointment out of state, Katsarelis has announced that she will leave PMC at the end of this program year. She will return to Colorado for all three planned concerts, including Handel’s Messiah Dec. 2 (7:30 p.m., Mountain View Methodist) and a concert featuring guitarist Nicoló Spera April 6 (7:30 p.m., Mountain View Methodist).

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“Passione!”
Pro Musica Colorado ChamberOrchestra
Cynthia Katsarelis, conductor, with Stacy Lesartre, violin

  • Jessie Lausé: Stretch in Periphery (world premiere)
  • W.A. Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 5 in A major, K219 (“Turkish”)
  • Joseph Haydn: Symphony No 49 n F minor (“Passione”)

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 18
Mountain View Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

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