![]() Her training comes from famed coloratura Marilyn Cotlow. MARJE PALMIERI, a favorite of the Washington chapter of the Nelson Eddy-Jeanette MacDonald Fanclub and the Southwest Chamber Players, boasts a repertoire of art songs ranging from Argento through Zemlinsky., in fact, she’s even mastered the Queen of the Night in Magic Flute. Nancy, a product of the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, has a teaching studio in Falls Church and has participated in a wide variety of orchestras and clarinet choirs around the region. NANCY GENOVESE brings her highly expressive clarinet to our team again. Before crossing the Atlantic, she’s done recitals and chamber music in Belarus, Moldova, Germany, South Korea, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia since then, has been actively participating in the musical life of Virginia, specifically at Washington and Lee University in Lexington. JULIA GOUDIMOVA, our Russian-born cellist, was a student of a student of the much-loved Mstislav Rostropovich, conductor of the National Symphony. Despite having learned at the age of seven that he was not destined to be the next Horowitz, he persevered throughout his life as an amateur, ultimately discovering the joys of making music with others through chamber music workshops. Having trained as a singer with Marilyn Cotlow, he enjoys working with singers, both as teacher and voice coach.ĭAVID EHRLICH, founder and director of SWCP, learned the piano at six from his father Richard. He received his doctorate in Vocal Accompanying from Catholic University. STEPHEN BROWN loves accompanying his wife Marje, but has a long history of piano performance. Along the way, she married one of her children into a prominent Philadelphia family, and produced a large number of successful grandchildren, one of whom will be our guest. Concertizing first in Berlin and Paris, then New York, she ended up ultimately in Philadelphia at the Curtis Institute. The wondrous lubo started life in the ghetto of Odessa, Ukraine, emerged from the conservatory in Moscow with a gold medal, and escaped Russia amid the tumult of WWI. The “nightingale” in question is “Lubo’s” violin, “rossignol ” the sonata is Cesar Franck’s and the story is her own. The event will take place at the Thurgood Marshall Library in the same concert venue of Saint Augustin'e Episcopal Church. Tom will be on hand for a lecture and book-signing followed by light refreshments. The Nightingale's SonataĪ related event is the Thursday, December 12, convocation of our Waterfront Village book club’s December meeting, at which we will consider The Nightingale's Sonata, a biography of Russian violinist Lea Luboshutz (1885-1965) as told by the author, who is her grandson Thomas Wolf. Mozart (1756-91) O Holy Night by Adolphe Adam (1803-56)Īdditional Event Thursday, Decemat 2:00 p.m. O Little Town of Bethlehem by Philips Brooks (1835-93) Adagio (from Clarinet Concerto, K. Joseph Martin) Nacht und Traume, D827 by Franz Schubert (1798-1828) In the Deep Midwinter by Christina Rossetti (1830-94) INTERMISSION Lo How a Rose by Michael Praetorius (1571-1621) Auf dem Strom, D945 by Schubert Carol (from Bagatelles) by Gerald Finzi (1901-56) Spiegel im Spiegel by Arvo Part (1935-) Romance by Alexander Scriabin (1871-1915) Ave Maria by Luigi Luzzi(1824-76) 100 (Allegro risoluto Indian Lament Scherzo) by Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904) Christmas Berceuse (arr. Ehrlich (published 1916) Polish Lullaby (Anonymous) Sonatina, op. ![]() Wachet Auf (from Cantata 140) by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) O Come all ye Faithful (Traditional) Largo by Francesco Veracini (1690-1768) Virgin’s Slumber Song by Max Reger (1873-1916) Hark the Herald Angels Sing by Felix Mendelssohn (1809-47) Kol Nidrei by Professor D. M E R R Y C H R I S T M A S ! Featuring: Marje Palmieri, soprano Julia Goudimova, cello Isabella Ulate, violin Harold Yaffe, clarinet Dilyana Kirova, bassoon Cecilia Buttgen, horn Stephen Brown and David Ehrlich, piano The Program: The One Hundred Eighty-Ninth Concert Friday, Decemat 7:00 p.m. ![]()
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