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Filtering by: “2023 January”

Jan. 2023: Festival Series — Music of Strauss, Simon, Mendelssohn, and Montgomery
Jan
15

Jan. 2023: Festival Series — Music of Strauss, Simon, Mendelssohn, and Montgomery

Richard Strauss (1864-1949)

String Sextet, Op. 85, TrV 279a, From Capriccio (1941)

Andante con moto

Jessie Montgomery (b. 1980)

Voodoo Dolls (2008)

for String Quartet

Jessie Montgomery (b. 1980)

Strum (2006)

for String Quartet

Carlos Simon (b. 1986)

Loop (2021)

for String Trio

— Intermission —

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)

Piano Trio in C minor, Op. 66 (1845)

I. Allegro energico e con fuoco

II. Andante espressivo

III. Scherzo: Molto allegro quasi presto

IV. Finale: Allegro appassionato

Artists: Timothy Christie, viola; Puget Sound Piano Trio: Alistair MacRae, cello; Ronaldo Rolim, piano; Maria Sampen, violin; Vital Quartet: William Frampton, viola; Alberto Parrini, cello; Philip Payton, violin; Orlando Wells, violin

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Jan. 2023: Special Event — Vital Quartet
Jan
14

Jan. 2023: Special Event — Vital Quartet

Like many arts organizations, WWCMF moved its programming online during the worst of the pandemic. But we didn’t want “musicians in boxes.” Instead, WWCMF opted for a different strategy. We shipped lights and cameras to the action, capturing performances by WWCMF chamber ensembles in eight different locations around the United States. For the second of these eight performances, Vital Quartet gathered in a vintage clothing shop across the Hudson River from Manhattan. They donned masks, and showed up at the shuttered store with their instruments and a beat-up box containing lights and a couple cameras. They played for the vintage boots and handbags in the room, but also for an audience a couple of thousand miles to the west. All the theaters in New York remained closed, but chamber music, for one night, was alive and well. And so the WWCMF audience was introduced to these musicians, and to the extraordinary music of their core repertoire.

Tonight, Vital Quartet makes its Walla Walla debut, surrounded not by lights, cameras and vintage clothes, but by you, me and vintage wines from the Walls Winery. Welcome to Walla Walla, Vital Quartet! Featuring music by William Grant Still, Trevor Weston, Florence Price and Jesse Montgomery.

Artists: Vital Quartet: William Frampton, viola; Alberto Parrini, cello; Philip Payton, violin; Orlando Wells, violin

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Jan. 2023: Tasting Music — Mendelssohn Piano Trio in C minor, Op. 66
Jan
13

Jan. 2023: Tasting Music — Mendelssohn Piano Trio in C minor, Op. 66

It’s Friday the 13th. And you’ll feel it in the roiling, anxiety-ridden opening bars of this extraordinary work by Felix Mendelssohn at the height of his powers. But you’ll be reassured and uplifted by the song without words, duet really, of the second movement; tickled by the impishly scurrying third; and ultimately transformed by the triumphant Finale. WWCMF Founder and Artistic Director leads an exploration of the music along with the Puget Sound Piano Trio, making their long overdue Walla Walla debut.

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)

Piano Trio in C minor, Op. 66 (1845)

I. Allegro energico e con fuoco

II. Andante espressivo

III. Scherzo: Molto allegro quasi presto

IV. Finale: Allegro appassionato

Artists: Timothy Christie, moderator; Puget Sound Piano Trio: Alistair MacRae, cello; Ronaldo Rolim, piano; Maria Sampen, violin

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Jan. 2023: Portrait of an Artist — Orlando Wells, Violin
Jan
12

Jan. 2023: Portrait of an Artist — Orlando Wells, Violin

New York is the City That Never Sleeps. As it says in the old Sinatra song, “If I can make it there, I’ll make it anywhere.” Violinist and violist Orlando Wells has done the former. He’s made it in New York as a member of the Harlem Chamber Players, in recordings and performances with the likes of Harry Connick Jr., as concertmaster for Broadway shows, and as violist of the acclaimed Sweet Plantain Quartet.

And tonight, Orlando does the latter. “Anywhere” is Foundry Vineyards in Walla Walla, Washington. And he’ll make it in works for violin and piano, joined by Brazilian pianist Ronaldo Rolim. This brings to mind the lyric to another Sinatra song: “They put coffee in the coffee in Brazil.” If we did that in Walla Walla, we’d never sleep, which would make us a lot like New York. So instead, we put wine in the wine, and that makes us the City That Gets A Solid Eight Hours. Welcome, Orlando! And good luck to WWCMF Founder & Artistic Director Timothy Christie, who negotiates the anagrammatic names Orlando and Ronaldo while moderating the conversation.

All works will be announced from the stage.

Artists: Timothy Christie, moderator; Ronaldo Rolim, piano; Orlando Wells, violin

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