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March 23, 2011, City Classics

Music and Dance through March

Tue, Mar 22, 2011

Vocal music highlights dominate Kansas City’s classical music scene as March ends. The Friends of Chamber Music presents Trio Mediaeval, a group of a cappella women singers in ancient masterworks, the combined University of Kansas forces present Mendelssohn’s giant oratorio "Elijah." Also, you have an unusual chance to hear excerpts from Handel’s "Radamisto" at William Jewell College. On a lighter note, the Heartland Men’s Chorus sings jazz works with guest artist Marilyn Maye. On the instrumental side, the Kansas City Symphony performs Romantic favorites by Berlioz, Ravel, and Elgar under the baton of guest conductor Larry Rachleff and soloist Ingrid Fliter. Kanako Ito and Martin Storey return to town to play with Quartet Accorda at Park University. It will be great to hear these returning artists again.

Ingrid FliterVocal music highlights dominate the Kansas City’s classical music scene as March ends.  The Friends of Chamber Music presents Trio Mediaeval, a group of a cappella women singers in ancient masterworks, the combined University of Kansas forces present Mendelssohn’s giant oratorio Elijah. Also, you have an unusual chance to hear excerpts from Handel’s Radamisto at William Jewell College. On a lighter note, the Heartland Men’s Chorus sings jazz works with guest artist Marilyn Maye.

On the instrumental side, the Kansas City Symphony performs Romantic favorites by Berlioz, Ravel, and Elgar under the baton of guest conductor Larry Rachleff with soloist Ingrid Fliter. Kanako Ito and Martin Storey return to town to play with Quartet Accorda at Park University. It will be great to hear these returning artists again.


UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Conservatory Wind Symphony and Conservatory Orchestra

Wednesday, March 23 at 7:30 p.m.
White Recital Hall, James C. Olson Performing Arts Center
4949 Cherry, Kansas City, MO
For tickets call 816-235-6222 or visit online at www.umkc.edu/cto.

The UMKC Conservatory Wind Symphony under the direction of Steven Davis joins with the UMKC Conservatory Orchestra as directed by Robert Olson, with graduate director Andrew Putnam, for a performance which includes music of Husa, Dvorak and Elgar.


UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Faculty Recital: Rebecca Sherburn, Marita Abner, and Patricia Higdon

Thursday, March 24 at 7:30 p.m.
White Recital Hall, James C. Olson Performing Arts Center
4949 Cherry, Kansas City, MO
For more information call 816-235-2799 or visit http://conservatory.umkc.edu.

Several times a year the UMKC Conservatory features outstanding faculty members in free recitals. Once such opportunity is coming up on Thursday, when you will have a chance to hear not one, but three, faculty members in recital: soprano Rebecca Sherburn, bassoonist Marita Abner and pianist Patricia Higdon.

Accompanied by Abner and Higdon, Sherburn will sing the “Alleluiah" from Mozart’s Exsultate jubilate, lieder by Hugo Wolf, song selections from Camargno Guarnieri, “Fantasiestucke” by Robert Schumann, and the ever-popular coloratura favorite “Glitter and be Gay,” from Bernstein’s Candide, among other selections.


William Jewell College
William
Jewell College Opera Workshop: Handel’s Radamisto

Thursday, March 24 at 7:30 p.m.
Gano Chapel on the William Jewell College Campus
500 College Hill, Liberty, MO
For more information visit http://www.jewell.edu/william_jewell/gen/william_and_jewell_generated_pages/Music_Department_Welcome_p5400.html

This column ordinarily does not list undergraduate student performances, but in this case we will make an exception, as this may be one of your rare opportunities to hear excerpts from Georg Frideric Handel’s opera Radamisto.  Considered one of the premiere operas by the English composer, Radamisto is rarely done these days and performances in this country, in particular, are almost unknown (although there are some excellent recordings available, including an outstanding one featuring Kansas City’s own Joyce DiDonato).  For the uniqueness of the opportunity alone, this one should be worth checking out.


Kansas City Symphony
Elgar’s
Enigma Variations plus Ravel

Friday and Saturday, March 25 and 26, at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, March 27 at 2:00 p.m.
Lyric Theatre
11th St and Central Ave, Kansas City, MO
For tickets call 816-471-0400, or visit online at www.kcsymphony.org.

The Symphony concerts of March 25–27 bring guest conductor Larry Rachleff to town for a series of European favorites, including works of Berlioz, Ravel and Elgar, as well as American composer Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings. While Barber is hardly European, his famous Adagio, much championed by expatriate Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini, brings to mind some of the finest traits of classic European music with its beautiful progressions of tonal chords.

Berlioz is represented by the overture to his opera Benvenuto Cellini, a revelation for its time (1838) because of its adventurous musical tonality and heavily orchestrated musical palette. While rejected by the audiences of its day, the opera has come to be seen as a classic of the repertoire, and its sparkling overture to this day remains an orchestral favorite.

Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G Major dates from almost 100 years later when French music had taken on the flavor of Impressionism under the leadership of Ravel, Dukas, Poulenc and Debussy, among others. Ravel was actually on a tour of America when he wrote the concerto, and had fallen under the spell of American jazz. Thus the concerto, which was premiered in this country, is deeply infused with jazz idioms and harmonies. This performance features Argentine pianist Ingrid Fliter as soloist.

British composer Sir Edward Elgar represented, along with Arthur Sullivan, the finest that British music had to offer in the late 19th century. His Enigma Variations is one of the most popular orchestral pieces from that period, representing his take on an ancient musical form of theme and variations.

According to legend (perhaps apocryphal), Elgar sat down at the piano one day and, to unwind, began improvising. His wife Alice liked the tune that emerged, and Elgar responded by suggesting how certain of their friends might play it. Out of that spontaneous exchange grew the idea of the Enigma Variations. Each of the variations is apparently a “take” on a different family friend. Elgar never named the individuals involved, and thus the Variations have generated a virtual industry of speculation among music aficionados ever since, trying to guess which of the large Elgar circle of acquaintances is represented by which of the movements.


The Friends of Chamber Music
Trio Mediæval

Saturday, March 26 at 8:00 p.m.
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
416 W 12th St, Kansas City, MO
For tickets call 816-561-9999 or visit online at www.chambermusic.org

Trio Mediaeval consists of three Scandinavian singers who perform mostly medieval vocal works with occasional modern works added to the mix. The group’s flawless singing and impeccable musicianship has led it to be described by The Wall Street Journal as “breathtaking—arresting, vivid, calm but never peaceful, with every moment ready to bring surprise.”

In this concert, the ensemble will present Fragments: A Worcester Ladymass, a Mass to the Virgin Mary constructed from 13th–century manuscripts left by the medieval musicians of the Cathedral in Worcester, England. 


Marilyn MayeHeartland Men’s Chorus
Misbehavin’

Saturday, March 26 at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, March 27 at 4:00 p.m.
Folly Theater
12th St and Central Ave, Kansas City, MO
Tickets available online at www.hmckc.org.

The Heartland Men’s Chorus welcomes guest artist Marilyn Maye to the stage for this tribute to the jazz hits that made Kansas City jazz great.  The group will “bebop to the hits of Charlie Parker, Count Basie, Glenn Miller and Duke Ellington.”


Philharmonia of Greater Kansas City
Musical Animals and Fairy Tales

Sunday, March 27 at 3:00 p.m.
Graham Tyler Memorial Chapel, Park University
8700 NW River Park Dr, Parkville , MO
For more information visit http://www.kcphilharmonia.org/

The Philharmonia Orchestra of Greater Kansas City, conducted by Travis Jurgens, performs a concert oriented towards young people.  In the featured number on the program, the orchestra will collaborate with the Kansas City Youth Ballet in a performance of Ravel’s classic Mother Goose Suite.  Also on the concert are the overture to Johann Strauss’s The Fledermaus and Prokofiev’s ever-popular Peter and the Wolf, with narration by David York.

We understand that there will be audience participation activities, so it should be great fun for the youngsters.


University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra and Choirs
Mendelssohn’s
Elijah in Concert

Tuesday, March 29 at 7:30 p.m.
Lied Center, University of Kansas
1600 Stewart Dr, Lawrence, KS
For tickets call 913-864-3464 or visit online at www.lied.ku.edu.

The combined forces of the University of Kansas School of Music’s Symphony Orchestra and Choirs present Felix Mendelssohn’s monumental oratorio Elijah.  Guest conductor Paul Tucker will lead the groups in this ambitious work, one of the major oratorios of the 19th century.

Inspired by the works of Georg Frideric Handel (The Messiah, among others) and his beloved Johann Sebastian Bach, Mendelssohn wrote Elijah as a tribute to these greats and a testimony to his own mastery of choral music. He succeeded admirably, creating one of the most beloved of all oratorios.

By Don Dagenais

Don Dagenais

City Classics Music and Dance Columnist; Classical Contributor

A lifelong classical music fan, Don Dagenais is a frequent preview speaker for the Lyric Opera of Kansas City and has taught classical music and opera courses at several Kansas City venues. He has served on the boards of directors of a number of performing arts organizations including the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, the Lyric Opera Guild, UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance, Opera Volunteers International, the Civic Opera Theater of Kansas City, Inspiration Point Fine Arts Colony, Octarium, and the Friends of the Symphony.  He has been the past president of most of these organizations and is current the president of the Friends of the Symphony. 

Dagenais co-authored a history of the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, published on the occasion of its 50th anniversary (2007) and has written books on the histories of both the Lyric Opera Guild and Opera Volunteers International, as well as an introductory book for opera novices (Your Passport to the Opera).  He has received several local and national awards for outstanding volunteer work for the arts, including a lifetime achievement award from The Coterie Theatre in 2000, the Kansas City Musical Club's annual award in 2001, a Partners in Excellence Award from Opera Volunteers International in 2002, a Bravo Award from Opera Volunteers International in 2004 and a community service award from the Daughter of the American Revolution in 2008 honoring him for his community service to the arts.

In addition to his music interests, Don is president of the board of directors for the Metropolitan Ensemble Theater and has served on the boards of The Coterie Theatre and the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival, serving as president of each organization.  He publishes newsletters for seven arts organizations.  When not involved in the performing arts, Don is a senior real estate attorney with Lathrop & Gage LLP in Kansas City, Missouri, where he has practiced law since 1976 after graduating from the Cornell Law School.

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