Piano music by Mozart & Debussy, Songs by Donaudy & Ravel

Emiko Hori

First movement, “Allegro moderato” from Sonata K. 330, C Major by W.A. Mozart

from Images, Book 1 by Claude Debussy

-Reflets dans l’eau (“Reflections in the Water”)

-Hommage à Rameau (“Homage to Rameau”)

-Mouvement (“Movement”)

Emiko Hori, piano

Vocalise Etude en forme de habanera by Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)

from Arie de Stile Antico (Arias in the old style) by Stefano Donaudy (1879-1925)
Vaghissima sembianza (Very charming image)
No, non mi guardate (No, don’t look at me)
O del mio amato ben perduto incanto! (O lost enchantment of my dearly beloved!)
Amorosi miei giorni (My amorous days)
Ah, mai non cessate (Ah, never cease)
Dormendo stai (You are sleeping)

Villanelle by Eva Dell-acqua(1856-1930)

Ya-Li Lee, soprano
Joan Lundquist, piano

Songs by Rachmaninoff, Mozart & Debussy Piano Music **CANCELED**

Songs by Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943)

Soprano, Dora Barnes

I Wait for Thee op. 14 no. 1
Do Not Grieve op. 14 no. 8
Spring Waters op. 14 no. 11

Twilight op. 21 no. 3
Lilacs op. 21 no. 5
Fragment from A. Musset op. 21 no. 6

Dora Barnes, soprano
Abigail Habegger, piano

“Allegro moderato” from Sonata K. 330, C Major by W.A. Mozart (1756-1791)

from Images, Book 1 by Claude Debussy (1862-1918)

-Reflets dans l’eau (“Reflections in the Water”)

-Hommage à Rameau (“Homage to Rameau”)

-Mouvement (“Movement”)

Emiko Hori, piano

Music for Mezzo-Soprano & String Ensemble

Candice Chin and Katie Stevenson

French opera favorites, arr. Bryan Fiehler arranged for voice and string quartet (b. 1981)

“Habanera” from Carmen Georges Bizet (1838–1875)
“Vois sous l’archet frémissant” Jacques Offenbach from Les Contes d’Hoffmann (1819–1880)
“Seguedille” from Carmen Georges Bizet
“Mon cœur s’ouvre á ta voix” Camille Saint-Saëns from Samson et Dalila (1835–1921)
“Je suis Lazuli” from l’Étoile Emmanuel Chabrier (1841-1894) 

Katie Stevenson, mezzo-soprano
Candice Chin, violin
Robert Redman (guest artist), violin
Ryan May (guest artist), viola
Terry Cook, cello 

Selections from String Quartet Ludwig van Beethoven Op. 59, No. 2 (1770–1827) 

Allegro
Molto Adagio
Finale Presto

Candice Chin, violin
Robert Redman (guest artist), violin
Ryan May (guest artist), viola
Terry Cook, cello 

3 Old English Folk Songs arr. Rebecca Clarke arranged for voice & violin (1886–1979) 

  1. It was a lover and his lass
  2. Phillis on the new made hay
  3. The tailor and his mouse 

Katie Stevenson, mezzo-soprano
Candice Chin, violin

 

The Inspiring Words of Emily Dickinson

Born in December of 1830, Emily Dickinson was an incredibly prolific and influential American poet.  She wrote close to 1800 poems and yet, fewer than a dozen were published in her lifetime and those were heavily edited in order to fit the current sensibilities of society.  The topics of many of her poems concerned death and immortality.

For more information about Emily Dickinson:
Wikipedia, Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson Poetry Foundation

Tonight’s Program

Settings by John Duke (1899-1984)

Good morning, Midnight
Heart! We will forget him!
Let down the bars, Oh Death
An awful tempest mashed the air
Nobody knows this little Rose
Bee! I’m expecting you!

Amber Rose Johnson, soprano and Lucy Wenger, piano

Settings by Craig Urquhart

It’s All I Have to Bring Today
On This Wondrous Sea

Settings by Lori Laitman

“The Butterfly upon” from One Bee and Revery
“Hope is a Strange Invention” from One Bee and Revery
“To Make A Prairie” from One Bee and Revery

Good Morning Midnight
Wider than the Sky

Clarice Alfonso, soprano and Lucy Wenger, piano

from Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson by Aaron Copland (1900-1990)

Why do they shut me out of heaven?
Heart, we will forget him
Dear March, come in!
When they come back
I felt a funeral in my brain
Going to heaven!
I’ve heard an organ talk sometimes

Lin Chen, soprano and Lucy Wenger, piano

Settings by Ricky Ian Gordan (b. 1956)

Too Few the Mornings Be
If All the Griefs I Am to Have
Bee! I’m Expecting You
I’m Nobody! Who are You?
Will There Really be a Morning?

Beth Ann Bonnecroy, soprano and Lucy Wenger, piano

Songs and Piano solos by Contemporary Korean composers

ki-jung jun, soprano
Ki-Jung Jun, Korean Soprano sings music by contemporary Korean composers

Psalm 62 by Yeojeong Yoon B (b. 1978)

Greeting by Hakjoon Yoon (b. 1974)

Singing Cosmos by Heungyul Lee (1909-1980)

As if Spring Comes Across the River by Keungsoo Lim ( b. 1950)

Longing for Mount Keumkang by Youngsup Choi (b. 1929)

In the Flowing Cloud by Heungyul Lee (1909-1980)

Ki-Jung Jun, soprano

Fantasy from Arirang by Youngmin Choi (1984- )

3B Variations on the theme of “For the beauty of the Earth” by C. Kocher  by Young Jo Lee (1943- )

From “Five Korean Dance Suite “ by Young Jo Lee (1943- )
Dance of Love

Hannah Cho, piano