FREE Concert - Chamber Music Series Featuring Frank Pavese and Alan Weinstein
Friday, March 1st at 7:00PM
Cost: FREE, but donations are accepted
They will be playing works by Beethoven and Chopin.
Where:
The Randolph Performing Arts Center
The Music Den
1030 Route 10 West
Randolph, New Jersey 07869
973-927-5800
Artist Information:
Frank Pavese
FRANK PAVESE is originally from Ramsey, New Jersey. He is a graduate of
the Interlochen Arts Academy in Interlochen, Michigan and the William
Paterson University of New Jersey where he is a faculty member. He
credits his studies with Bulgarian pianist Elka Gurova Kirkpatrick as
having had the greatest influence upon him. His professional debut was
at Carnegie Recital Hall in New York. The New York Times described him
as a pianist with "Energy and Commitment" and called his playing
"persuasive and especially sonorous." He first came to the attention of
the European musical world after acclaimed concerts at London's Wigmore
Hall and the Queen's Hall in Edinburgh. The press and public followed
his career with great interest as he gave his Viennese debut in the
Brahms-Saal of the Musikverein in 1990 and toured Hungary.
The
following years have included return engagements to Vienna, a third tour
of Hungary presented by the National Philharmonic, tours of France and
Poland and appearances on Hungarian State Radio and Polish National
Television. Orchestral appearances have included a tour of Poland where
he performed Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3 with the Olsztyn
Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Maestro Piotr Borkowski.
As founder and director of the Hindemithon festival (now in it's 10th
season) at WPUNJ, celebrating the life and works of composer Paul
Hindemith, Pavese received high critical acclaim for his performance of
Ludus Tonalis. Classical New Jersey wrote- "Pavese played the enormous
work with an ease which was in itself awesome, given the obvious
difficulties of the music. Because the composer wrote fugue subjects
which were easily identified through their contours and character, the
pianist went for the music and not the didacticism, understanding well
that there was no need to underline the obvious. Technical and musical
difficulties abound in the course of the hour, and Pavese met them all
with a full understanding of the score and what Hindemith had set out to
accomplish. It was one of the most impressive solo piano performances
of a single work I have heard in a long time."
In 2010, Pavese
performed recitals of the works of Samuel Barber on tour in honor of the
composer's centennial celebration. He concertizes every year in Europe
and this year makes his first Pacific tour performing in Guam and Japan.
Alan Weinstein
Alan Weinstein, Assistant Professor of Cello and Bass at Virginia Tech,
holds degrees in music performance from the New England Conservatory of
Music and the Eastman School of Music. His principal teachers include
Steven Doane, Robert Sylvester, Timothy Eddy and chamber music studies
with the Cleveland Quartet, Menachem Pressler, Walter Trampler, and
Eugene Lehner.
Mr. Weinstein is a founding member of the
Kandinsky Trio, winner of national awards such as the Chamber Music
America Residency Award. Mr. Weinstein has performed throughout North
America and Europe in venues such as Carnegie Hall, Merkin Hall, Miller
Theatre, Spivey Hall, the Kennedy Center, the Edinbrough Fringe Festival
and the Arnoff Center. He frequently collaborates with internationally
acclaimed artists including Dawn Upshaw, Ida Kavafian, Theodore Bikel
and Gunther Schuller.
He has appeared on television and radio
broadcasts throughout the United States and Canada, including the
McNeil/Lehrer Report, WNYC, and Performance Today on National Public
Radio. Mr. Weinstein has served as a faculty member at the Hindemith
Institute in Blonay, Switzerland, InterHarmony International Music
Festival in Arcidosso, Italy, and has given over 200 master classes at
institutions including Penn State, the Interlochen Arts Academy, and
Vanderbilt University. He has performed with the Portland String
Quartet, the Rochester Philharmonic and served as principal cellist of
the Eastman/Dryden Orchestra.
His dedication to new music has
led him to premiere compositions by artists such as Mike Reid (“Tales of
Appalachia” performed in over 150 cities), John D'Earth, Gunther
Schuller, and Richard Danielpour. Along with the Kandinsky Trio, he is
the recipient of an NEA Meet the Composer Award. His jazz collaborations
have included performances with Larry Coryell, Kurt Rosenwinkle, Dave
Samuels, and as a harmonica player with Ray Charles.
Virginia
Tech has awarded Mr. Weinstein the Alumni Teaching Award and inducted
him into the Academy of Teaching Excellence. He has also been the
recipient of the Sturm Award for Faculty Excellence in the Creative Arts
and the Certificate of Teaching Excellence Award. He has recorded for
Arabesque Records, OmniTone and the Brioso labels and plays a cello
attributed to Albani circa 1680.
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