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From: Yivo Events
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Subject: CONCERT OF WORKS BY EAST EUROPEAN JEWISH COMPOSERS
Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2011 19:08:51 +0000
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VIOLINIST YUVAL WALDMAN TO PERFORM REDISCOVERED WORKS BY
EAST EUROPEAN JEWISH COMPOSERS
A Limited Number of Tickets to Benefit YIVO Now Available Quick Links
More About YIVO
TUESDAY 29 MARCH 2011 I 8PM Visit Max Weinreich
Location: Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center, 129 W 67th St Centers Facebook Page
Tickets: $25; $15 for seniors
To order, call Naomi at Upcoming Lectures
Israeli-American violinist Yuval Waldman will be giving
a solo recital of "Music Forgotten and Remembered" at Yiddish Summer
New York's Merkin Concert Hall on Tuesday March 29, Program
2011, at 8 PM. The program presents rarely performed
gems composed by Eastern European Jews, many of
whom perished during World War II or were silenced
by Soviet repression.
TRAVEL DIRECTIONS
Born in the Ukraine to Holocaust survivors and the
Artistic Director of Music Bridges International,
Waldman was able to rediscover these pieces by
searching music libraries and obscure music
collections in Russia, Ukraine, the Czech Republic,
and Israel. They represent a wide spectrum of stylistic
influences on Jewish composers: impressionistic,
neoclassical, folk, and klezmer. These pieces fill an
unexplored gap in early twentieth-century Jewish music repertory that fully deserves
to be heard today.
"Music Forgotten and Remembered" presents the first New York performance of five
of these rediscovered works:
"Rhapsody on Moldavian Themes" (1952) was composed by Mieczyslaw
Weinberg, an outstanding Russian-Jewish composer and close friend of
Shostakovich, whose intervention with authorities probably kept Weinberg alive. The
piece is a brilliant fantasy on Moldavian and Jewish themes.
"Lullaby," an arrangement of a traditional Hebrew song, was composed in the
Terezin concentration camp in 1943 by Gideon Klein, a young Czech-Jewish
EFTA00436870
composer. Shortly after he wrote the piece, Klein was transferred to Auschwitz,
where he was murdered.
"Colloque Sentimentale," an impressionistic prelude on the poem of the same
name by Paul Verlaine, was written in 1920 by Czech Jaromir Weinberger, who
escaped the Nazis by emigrating to the United States, where he ended up on the
music faculty at Ithaca College.
"Variations on 'Hatikvah"' is a virtuoso violin solo written in the early 1900s by then
famous, now forgotten Ukrainian klezmer violinist and composer Yehiel Goizman.
"Entrata" from Concerto da Camera (1945) is a seldom-heard master work by the
Russian emigre and avant-garde composer Arthur Lourie.
Rounding out the program are two French violin masterpieces: "Sonata in A Major
for violin and piano by Cesar Franck, written for the great Belgian violinist Eugene
Ysaye, and Maurice Ravel's "Tzigane". Mr. Waldman dedicates the performance of
these pieces to his mentors Josef Gingold, who was a student of Eugene Ysaye, and
Zino Francescatti, the foremost representative of violin French romantic school, who
performed the "Tzigane" with Maurice Ravel.
Waldman will be assisted by Ukrainian-Israeli pianist Inesa Sinkevych, a prize winner
in the Arthur Rubinstein International Competition.
A limited number of tickets has been made available to YIVO. All proceeds from their
sale will benefit the YIVO Institute.
Tickets: $25; $15 for seniors
To order, call Naomi at
Location: Merkin Concert Hall at Kaufman Center,
129 West 67th Street
For more information about Yuval Waldman, visit his website,
www.yuvalwaldman.com
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