Friday Music Series 2013-2014 Archive

2014 FALL CONCERTS

The Georgetown University Music Program’s Friday Music Series features acclaimed artists in FREE concerts on select Fridays at 1:15 p.m. in McNeir Hall, on Georgetown’s main campus.

Friday, September 20, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Aaron Broadus and the Georgetown University Jazz Ensemble
The Big Band Era
Co-presented with the GU Library Associates and the Special Collections Research Center

Georgetown University professor Aaron Broadus leads the ensemble in a program of big band classics recalling the years when artists such as Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa performed for the student body.
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING


Friday, September 27, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Netanel Draiblaite, violin
Lura Johnson, piano

Israeli violinist Netanel Draiblate, concertmaster of the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra who has been praised for his “vibrant” and “passionate” performances (Baltimore Sun), performs with pianist Lura Johnson, Principal Pianist of the Delaware Symphony, who performs regularly with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and has been hailed as “brilliant” by the Washington Post. Together, they founded the duo Times Two and have recorded a CD on the Azica Records label. Both have collaborated with acclaimed artists including Yo-Yo Ma and Itzhak Perlman. 
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING


Friday, October 4, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Matt Stuver Quartet
Acclaimed Saxophonist Matt Stuver, winner of Downbeat Magazine Student Music Award as a soloist, leads his quartet in an afternoon of classic and contemporary jazz. Stuver has played with such artists as Clark Terry, Wayne Bergeron, Chuck Mangione, Rick Baptist, Christian McBride, and many others. Stuver is currently saxophonist for the United States Naval Academy Band, the Next Wave Ensemble. 
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING


Friday, October 18, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Modern Musick
Risa Browder, violin
John Moran, violoncello
Dongsok Shin, fortepiano

The acclaimed Baroque period instrument ensemble continues its residency in the Music Program with a concert of 17th and 18th-century compositions for violin, cello, and harpsichord. Led by Risa Browder (violin), John Moran (cello), and Dongsok Shin (harpsichord), Modern Musick has performed to great acclaim throughout the United States. 
MCNEIR HALL,* NEW NORTH BUILDING
*Please note that this event has been relocated from its original location of Dahlgren Chapel.


Friday, October 25, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Sylvia Torán, piano
Madrid-born pianist Sylvia Torán won the First Prize at the International Master Players Competition held in Lugano (Switzerland) and that same year made her debut in New York, obtaining a glowing review in the New York Times. She has performed in such prestigious series and places as Ibermúsica, Mozart Festival, Palau de la Música (Barcelona), Wigmore Hall (London), Salle Gaveau (Paris), and Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center (New York). 
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING 
 


Friday, November 8, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Jennifer Ellis Kampani, soprano 
Mark Janello, harpsichord
Handel and the Italians
Kampani and Janello return to the Hilltop for a performance of the music of George Frideric Handel and Italian contemporaries. The duo will offer a performance of the composer’s masterpiece cantata Lucrezia. The program for the event is as follows:

HANDEL AND THE ITALIANS

Il Zelo Animato (1733) Francesco Mancini (1672-1737)

Eight Great Suites (1725) George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
Suite #3 in D minor

La Lucrezia (1707) Handel

MCNEIR HALL*, NEW NORTH BUILDING 
* Please note that this event has been relocated from its originally scheduled venue of Dahlgren Chapel. Apologies for any inconvenience.


Friday, November 15, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Barbara Hollinshead, contralto
Matthew Heil, tenor
Betty Bullock, piano

“Abraham and Isaac,” (1952) from Benjamin Britten’s highly acclaimed Five Canticles, serves as the centerpiece of this program celebrating the centennial of Britten’s birth. 
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
 


Friday, November 22, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Consort
Ben Harbert, electric guitar
Amy Domingues, cello
Amy Farina, drumset

A trio of electric guitar, cello and drums adapt works that straddle mid-century avant garde and folk traditions. The program puts in a new light the original string duos of Luciano Berio, Béla Bartók, Witold Lutosławski, and Halsey Stevens. Georgetown professor Ben Harbert is joined by cellist Amy Domingues and drummer Amy Farina. All three performers have distinguished themselves in both classical and rock projects.
MCNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
 


Friday, December 6, 2013 at 1:15 p.m.
Annual Holiday Concert
Prof. Aaron Broadus leads the Georgetown University Jazz Ensemble in a collection of holiday favorites and standards.
DAVIS PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, GONDA THEATRE

The Georgetown University Music Program’s Friday Music Series features acclaimed artists in FREE concerts on select Fridays at 1:15 p.m. in McNeir Hall, on Georgetown’s main campus.


2014 SPRING CONCERTS

Please note:  The February 14 event has been postponed, due to inclement weather.  Check this site for the rescheduled date, to be announced.

Friday, January 24 at 1:15 p.m.
Washington National Opera Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program
Singers from the distinguished Washington National Opera’s Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program perform a program of arias and duets from popular operas. The program, founded in 2002 by Plácido Domingo, is designed for young singers, coaches/accompanists, conductors, and stage directors on the verge of international careers, and its participants have been seen onstage at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Washington National Opera, the National Symphony Orchestra, Weill Recital Hall, and the Los Angeles Opera. 
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


Friday, January 31 at 1:15 p.m.
Modern Musick
Georgetown University Chamber Singers
The acclaimed Baroque period instrument ensemble Modern Musick, along with the Georgetown University Chamber Singers, will present a program of viols and voices, featuring English music of the 17th-century which owes its existence to the presence of the Jesuit Order in England during a time when English Catholics were forced to go underground or face dire consequences.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


NOTE:  
This event has been postponed due to inclement weather, rescheduled date TBA.

Friday, February 14 at 1:15 p.m.
Allison Mondel, soprano
Richard Giarusso, baritone

Husband and wife duo Richard Giarusso, baritone, and Allison Mondel, soprano, return to the Friday Music Series for a program featuring art song of the Romantic era, including works by Schubert, Mahler, and Wolf. Both highly versatile performing artists and teachers, Giarusso and Mondel are delighted to collaborate on a new recital presenting stirring masterworks of the German lied tradition, in addition to a few “romantic” surprises. Mondel has been praised by the Washington Post for her “ethereal soprano” and “spare, otherworldly radiance.” A specialist in early music but treading nimbly across repertoire spanning the 11th century to the present, Mondel is music director of award-winning women’s vocal ensemble Eya: Ensemble for Medieval Music. She is also a voice teacher at Georgetown University and in the Washington National Cathedral’s prestigious chorister program. Giarusso, receiving acclaim in the Washington Post for his “expressive and perfectly controlled voice,” serves on the musicology faculty at the Peabody Conservatory, offering interdisciplinary classes in music and literature at The Johns Hopkins University. In addition to his work as both singer and musicologist, Giarusso has also appeared as guest conductor with the Washington Bach Consort, and is artistic director of the Maryland Choral Society and music director of the Georgetown Chorale.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


Friday, February 21 at 1:15 p.m.
Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek, mezzo-soprano
Praised for her “pure, lilting voice” (New York Times) that is “a wonder of unadorned beauty” (Boston Globe), Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek is a member of the world renowned vocal quartet Anonymous 4, as well as being a versatile and accomplished soloist, specializing in early and new music. 
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


February 28 at 1:15 p.m.
Eunbi Kim, pianist

Laura Yumi Snell, actress
Pat Carroll, saxophonist
Murakami Music: Stories of Loss and Nostalgia
created by Eunbi Kim and directed by Kira Simring

New York City-based pianist Eunbi Kim produces modern interdisciplinary concert experiences, and thrives in collaborating with other art forms to present classical and contemporary music in unique settings. Her most recent project “Murakami Music,” a series of multi-disciplinary presentations based on the writings of novelist Haruki Murakami, was incubated at the cell theatre in Chelsea and recently presented at NYC’s Symphony Space. It has been featured on Japanese television network, FujiTV and profiled in the documentary, “The World Reads Murakami,” on NHK, Japan’s national public broadcasting organization. Inspired by the associations and references to music woven throughout Haruki Murakami’s works, the concert focuses on four of Murakami’s novels — “Norwegian Wood,” “Kafka on the Shore,” “Sputnik Sweetheart,” and “Wind Up Bird Chronicle” — and the music that is integral to these narratives, including referenced works by Prokofiev, Chopin, Schumann, Debussy, Ravel, and original arrangements of songs by the Beatles. Eunbi Kim made her European orchestral debut with I Solisti di Perugia in Italy and has also performed solo and chamber programs in venues such as the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. and the 92nd Street Y in New York City. For more information on the program for the event click here.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


March 21 at 1:15 p.m. 
Richard Stone, lute
Mark Janello, harpsichord

Music of Bach on his 329th birthday, including Sonatas, a Suite, and Preludes and Fugues by J.S. Bach. Lutenist Richard Stone has performed as soloist and accompanist worldwide. The New York Times called his playing “beautiful” and “lustrously melancholy,” while the Washington Post described it as having “the energy of a rock solo and the craft of a classical cadenza.” He founded and co-directs Philadelphia baroque orchestra Tempesta di Mare, and has played with Taverner Players, Smithsonian Chamber Players, Consort of Musicke, Apollo’s Fire, Handel and Haydn Society, New York Collegium, Orpheus Chamber Ensemble, Orchestra of Saint Luke’s, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Glimmerglass Opera, and Mark Morris Dance Group. Janello whose skills in baroque improvisation the Ann Arbor News called “astonishing,” has performed with the Bach Sinfonia of Washington D.C., and with the Baltimore Symphony. Both are members of the Peabody Conservatory faculty, where Stone is instructor of baroque lute and theorbo and a vocal coach, and Janello teaches music theory.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


March 28 at 1:15 p.m.
Edvinas Minkstimas, piano
A native of Kaunas, Lithuania, pianist Edvinas Minkstimas has performed at Lincoln Center, Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, the Phillips Collection, 6th& I Synagogue, and the Mansion at Strathmore. In July 2011, Minkstimas became Artist-in-Residence of the Embassy Series Festival in Washington D.C. His professional debut was at the age of 14 with The Lithuanian National Philharmonic Orchestra (Vilnius), playing the Grieg Piano Concerto in A minor. Minkstimas has released two recordings, featuring solo and orchestral performances of works by Brahms, Beethoven and Liszt.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


April 4 at 1:15 p.m.
Anderson/Fader Guitar Duo
For the past 20 years the New York City-based Anderson/Fader Guitar Duo, champion of the work of living American composers, has been heard throughout the U.S., Latin America, and Europe, both as the duo and as members of the award-winning Cygnus Ensemble. The list of composers who have written for the Duo and Cygnus include Babbitt, Bond, Davidovsky, Naito, Rakowski, and others. The Duo has performed with James Levine and the Metropolitan Opera Chamber Players at Zankel Hall, and with Cygnus in residence at the Library of Congress in the winter of 2012. Guitar Review magazine noted that “Anderson and Fader are expert chamber musicians with a perfect sense of timing, virtuosity and a sensitivity to nuance.”
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE


April 11 at 1:15 p.m.
Trío Jarocho Guachintón 
Alexandro D. Hernández, guitarra de son and vocals
Keli Rosa Kabunoc, jarana, zapateado, and vocals
Daniel Herrera, leona, violion, and vocals

The son jarocho comes from Southern Veracruz, Mexico into the sotavento, a cultural region that also extends into Oaxaca and Tabasco. Since the mid-1940s, the son jarocho began to set roots in the United States. Trío Jarocho Guachintón will perform in the fandanguero style that has become staple amongstjarocho ensembles and community participants at fandangos (communal musical gatherings), social justice protests and marches, and performance spaces.
McNEIR HALL, NEW NORTH BUILDING
FREE