THE SWEETEST PATH Plays Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center
Kaufman Center and New York Festival Of Song (NYFOS, www.nyfos.org) present a special non-subscription program, The Sweetest Path, on Tuesday, March 16 at 8 PM at Kaufman Center's Merkin Concert Hall. The concert, celebrating the first great flowering of French art song, with the lush, poetic music of Fauré, Ravel, Debussy, Bizet, Gounod and many other composers, culminates the second season of Caramoor's Vocal Rising Stars program, a week-long residency for young professionals devoted to guiding and inspiring the next generation of vocal talent. The Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts in Katonah, New York is the program's sponsor, and will present The Sweetest Path on Saturday, March 13 in the Music Room at Caramoor. The initial season of the Caramoor Vocal Rising Stars Program will be underwritten, in part, by the Terrance W. Schwab Fund for Young Vocal Artists. Leading the week's events will be NYFOS Artistic Directors and pianists Steven Blier and Michael Barrett, working with a select group of young singers from around the country.
Tickets for The Sweetest Path at Merkin Concert Hall are $40-$55, with $15 student discount tickets a half-hour before performances, as available. There are also $15 student tickets available in advance by calling (646) 230-8380. Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center is at 129 West 67th Street (between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10023. Telephone (212) 501-3330, or visit www.kaufman-center.org.The artists are Charlotte Dobbs, soprano, featured last summer as the Governess in The Turn Of the Screw under the baton of Lorin Maazel; Rebecca Jo Loeb, mezzo-soprano, featured in NYFOS's Latin Lovers, and hailed by Opera News as "a singer to watch"; Matthew Peña, an award-winning tenor who can be heard on the Albany Records recording of The Turn Of the Screw; John Brancy, baritone, a Liederkranz Foundation winner; and NYFOS Artistic Director Steven Blier ("A national treasure when it comes to the art of song" - The New York Times) and Associate Artistic Director Michael Barrett, General Director of Caramoor, as pianists/hosts.
Gabriel Fauré Le plus doux chemin
Emmanuel Chabrier Les cigales
Edouard Lalo Au fond des halliers
Chabrier LiedThe Purple Years
Charles Gounod O ma belle rebelle
César Franck Le mariage des roses
Alfred Bachelet Chère nuit
Georges Bizet N'oublions pas!Spanish Weekend
Albert Roussel Le bachelier de Salamanque
Pauline Viardot L'absence
Maurice Ravel Vocalise en forme de habanera
Chabrier España
New Voices
Maurice Ravel Deux épigrammes de Clément Marot
1. D'Anne qui me jecta de la neige
2. D'Anne jouant de l'espinette
Erik Satie Daphénéo
Max d'Ollone L'enfant Eros
Francis Poulenc La petite servante
Fauré En sourdine
Georges Auric Attendez le prochain bateau
Albert Roussel Sarabande
Claude Debussy Colloque sentimental
After Hours
Maurice Ravel Fascination
René Sylvano
and Lucien Boyer,
lyrics by
Yvette Guilbert Partie carrée
of standard, new, and unjustly obscure repertoire. His operatic
credits include roles with Anchorage Opera, Virginia Opera, Chautauqua
Opera, Opera Santa Barbara, and the Des Moines Metro Opera. He was a
recent member of the Steans Institute at the Ravinia Festival and has
appeared in concert and recital with the American Classical Orchestra,
the Choral Society of New York, the San Jose Music Club, the Cleveland
Singers Club and The Song Continues Festival of the Marilyn Horne Foundation. This summer, he will be an Apprentice Artist with the Santa Fe Opera. Mr. Peña has won several awards, including a grant from the Léni Fé Bland Foundation, the San Jose Music Study Club Competition, and the Charles A. Lyman Vocal Competition. He is a graduate of Oberlin College and Conservatory and the Manhattan School of Music. His recordings includeLee Hoiby's A Month in the Country and Spohr's Zemire and Azor, both available through Albany Records. Steven Blier
Artistic director Steven Blier co-founded the New York Festival of Song (NYFOS) in 1988 with Michael Barrett. Since the Festival's inception he has programmed, performed, translated and annotated over one hundred vocal recitals with repertoire spanning the entire range of American song, art song from Schubert to Szymanowski, and popular song from early vaudeville to Lennon-McCartney. Mr. Blier also enjoys an eminent career as an accompanist and vocal coach. His recitals with Renée Fleming, Cecilia Bartoli, Samuel Ramey, Susan Graham, Frederica von Stade, and Jessye Norman have taken him to the stages of Carnegie Hall, La Scala, and London's Wigmore Hall. He has premiered works of John Corigliano, Ned Rorem, William Bolcom, John Musto, Paul Moravec, Tobias Picker, Robert Beaser, and Lee Hoiby, many of which were commissioned by NYFOS.In addition to his many recordings with NYFOS, Mr. Blier's discography includes four volumes of songs by Charles Ives with baritone William Sharp (Albany Records), a Grammy-nominated CD of American songs with Mr. Sharp (New World Records), and first recordings of music by Busoni and Borodin with cellist Dorothy Lawson (Koch International). His two most recent releases are The Land Where the Good Songs Go with Sylvia McNair and Hal Cazalet, and Spanish Love Songs with Joseph Kaiser and the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (Bridge Records). Mr. Blier is on the faculty of The Juilliard School, and has been active in encouraging young recitalists at summer programs, including the Wolf Trap Opera Company, Glimmerglass Opera, and the San Francisco Opera Center. Michael Barrett
NYFOS co-founder and Associate Artistic Director Michael Barrett is Chief Executive and General Director of the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts. In 1992, he co-founded the Moab Music Festival with his wife, violist Leslie Tomkins. From 1994 to 1997, he was the Director of the Tisch Center for the Arts at the 92nd Street Y in New York.
A protégé of Leonard Bernstein, Mr. Barrett began his long association with the renowned conductor and composer as a student in 1982. He is currently the Artistic Advisor for the estate of Leonard Bernstein. Mr. Barrett has been a guest conductor with the Orchestra of St. Luke's, the New York Philharmonic, the London Symphony, the Israel Philharmonic and the Orchestre National de France, among others. He also has served variously as conductor, producer, and music director of numerous special projects, including the world premiere of Volpone by John Musto.
Mr. Barrett's discography includes: Spanish Love Songs, recorded live at Caramoor with Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, Steven Blier, and Joseph Kaiser; Live from the Moab Music Festival; the Grammy-nominated Evidence of Things Not Seen (New World Records); Aaron Jay Kernis: 100 Greatest Dance Hits (New Albion); On the Town (Deutsche Grammophon); Kaballah (Koch Classics) by StewArt Wallace and Michael Korie; Schumann Lieder with Lorraine Hunt and Kurt Ollman (Koch); and Arias and Barcarolles (Koch) by Leonard Bernstein (Grammy Award).
New York Festival of Song was founded in 1988 by Steven Blier and Michael Barrett. NYFOS is dedicated to creating intimate song concerts of great beauty, humor and originality, combining music, poetry, and history to entertain, educate and create community among audiences and performers. With a far-ranging repertoire of art songs, concert works and theater pieces, its thematic recitals have included programs from Brahms to the Beatles, from the nineteenth-century salons of Paris to Tin Pan Alley, from Russian art song to Argentine tangos, from sixteenth-century lute songs to new music. NYFOS particularly celebrates American song literature and culture, and specializes in premiering and commissioning new American works.
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