Columbia, SC : Tchaikovsky & Sibelius : Sept 15

Started by Scion7, August 22, 2015, 09:26:06 PM

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Scion7

I'm probably going. I've been looking at her performances on YouTube. She's competent.
I wasn't there, but she performed the Rachmaninoff in Charlotte, NC several months ago, and it got good notices.

USC Symphony Orchestra opens season with guest artist Natasha Paremski
The September 15 concert includes music of Tchaikovsky and Sibelius

The University of South Carolina's premier orchestra ensemble, led by acclaimed music director Donald Portnoy, receives accolades for its fine performances and guest artists. The first concert of the 2015-2016 season brings guest artist pianist Natasha Paremski, called "empress of the keyboard" by the Kalamazoo Gazette.
The San Francisco Classical Voice wrote Paremski, "Š has a real feeling for lush romantic music, the ability to handle blazingly rapid passagework, beautifully executed trills, and all made to look very easy."

Paremski will play Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor.
The concert takes place at the Koger Center for the Arts on Tuesday, September 15 at 7:30 p.m.
------------The Concerto nearly brought the composer and his friend Nikolay Rubinstein to blows. The work was met by harsh criticism from his friend, whom he had asked for advice. The suggested changes did not sit well with Tchaikovsky and were not made. Tchaikovsky dedicated the work, not to Rubenstein as was first intended, but to Hans von Bülow, the famous German pianist and conductor who already liked Tchaikovsky's music.
Ironically, it was Rubinstein who eventually showed the Concerto off to its best advantage, admitting he had been wrong about it several years later. The eccentricities of the First Piano Concerto, some of which may have caused Rubinstein's disparagement, are now considered some of its greatest charms.
------------Also on the September program is Finnish composer Jean Sibelius' Symphony No. 2 in D major, his most popular symphony. The symphony, associated with the Finnish landscape and a patriotic program, was a work the composer actually conceived in Italy.
The symphony was begun in winter 1901 in Rapallo, Italy, finished in Finland in 1902 and first performed by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society in March 1902. Finland was undergoing turmoil at the turn of the 20th century and was experiencing a nationalistic fervor against the oppression of its Russian occupiers. Although the composer claimed no patriotic intent was inherent in the work, Helsinki audiences had understood the new symphony to be an overt expression of the political conflict reigning over Finland.

Tickets now on sale
Single concert tickets are $30 general public; Discounts: $25 senior citizens, USC faculty and staff; $8 students. Call 803-777-7500 or Koger Box Office, corner of Greene and Park Streets (M-F 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) or:  http://www.kogercenterforthearts.com/event.php?id=67
When, a few months before his death, Rachmaninov lamented that he no longer had the "strength and fire" to compose, friends reminded him of the Symphonic Dances, so charged with fire and strength. "Yes," he admitted. "I don't know how that happened. That was probably my last flicker."

Scion7

I didn't make it to this, has anyone else attended a show on this tour?
When, a few months before his death, Rachmaninov lamented that he no longer had the "strength and fire" to compose, friends reminded him of the Symphonic Dances, so charged with fire and strength. "Yes," he admitted. "I don't know how that happened. That was probably my last flicker."