Kaufman Center And NYFOS Present WHERE WE COME FROM 10/13 At Merkin Concert Hall
Kaufman Center and New York Festival of Song (NYFOS, www.nyfos.org) will present Where We Come From on Tuesday October 13, 8 PM at Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center. This concert, which opens NYFOS's 22nd season, celebrates the festival's newly formed Artist Council with a musical journey that explores the backgrounds, the birthplaces, and the artistic homes of the cast, a team of highly acclaimed singers, ranging from Russia to Canada, and covering a wide swath of the United States. Founded by Steven Blier and Michael Barrett in 1988, New York Festival of Song, which "redefined the song recital with daring and dramatic programming," (The New Yorker) was awarded "Best Classical Programming in New York" by New York Magazine.
Single ticket prices at Merkin Concert Hall are $40 to $55 and a limited number of $15 student tickets are available by calling NYFOS at (646) 230-8380. Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center is at 129 West 67th Street (between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue), New York, NY 10023. Discounted 2009-2010 subscription packages are still available as well. For all ticket information, visit www.kaufman-center.org, or call (212) 501-3330.
Where We Come From features performance styles spanning art song, vocal chamber music, blues, music theater, and popular song. The artists include: Paul Appleby, tenor (winner of last spring's Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, and praised in Opera News for his "knockout performance" last season with NYFOS); Amy Burton, soprano (featured at the Metropolitan Opera and called "luminous" by The New York Times); Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano (acclaimed for her performances of Kitty Oppenheimer in Doctor Atomic at the Metropolitan and English National Operas, and called "genuine magic" by Opera Today); Sari Gruber, soprano ("Sensational." - Opera Magazine); Dina Kuznetsova, soprano ("A brilliant Tatiana." at the Chicago Lyric Opera - Chicago Sun); Kate Lindsey, mezzo-soprano (the Metropolitan Opera artist called "profoundly moving" by The New York Times in NYFOS's Fugitives program last season); James Martin, baritone ("Excellent, engaging." - The New York Times); and baritone William Sharp, baritone (praised by The New York Times as a "sensitive and subtle singer" and featured on NYFOS's Grammy-winning recording of Leonard Bernstein's Arias and Barcarolles). NYFOS's Steven Blier ("A national treasure when it comes to the art of song" - The New York Times) and Michael Barrett (also General Director of the renowned Caramoor Festival) will be pianists/hosts.Hoagy Carmichael: Can't Get Indiana Off My Mind
Franz Schubert: Licht und Liebe
Harry Revel/Noble Sissle: Guiding Me Back Home
John Musto: Don't Hurry Home
Tchaikovsky: Passion is Gone
Was I Not a Blade of Grass?
Harold Arlen: A New World
Gustav Mahler: Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen
George Gershwin: Our Little Kitchenette
Charles Ives: The Things Our Fathers Loved
W. C. Handy: Harlem Blues
Kurt Weill: Alabama-Song
Stay Well
Emmerich Kálmán: Lichtreklamen, Riesenlettern
Pierre Mercure: DissidencePrograms and artists subject to change.NYFOS's upcoming concerts include Great American Songwriting Teams (November 17 and 19) with Broadway and cabaret's Mary Testa, Sylvia McNair and Jason Graae; Killer B's: American Song From Amy Beach To the Beach Boys (January 13), the fifth annual NYFOS@Juilliard at The Juilliard School; The Voluptuous Muse (February 16 and 18) a survey of the last vestiges of lush tonality and decadent Romanticism at the dawn of the 20th century; the first great flowering of French art song performed by America's brightest new vocal stars in The Sweetest Path, part of the Caramoor Vocal Rising Stars program, March 13 at Caramoor and March 16 at Merkin Concert Hall; and The Newest Deal (May 4 and 6) featuring recent American works, including the premiere of the Harold Meltzer song cycle Beautiful Ohio*, created for and performed by Paul Appleby.
Videos