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June 30, 2009

Summer Chamber Music in Roland Park to open with Mozart, Ravel

Music is inevitably a little less plentiful around here once the hot months arrive, but you can always find something to hear.

A fresh batch of off-season fare for 2009 arrives via the free Summer Chamber Music in Roland Park, which starts at 7 p.m. tonight (Tuesday, June 30) at Roland Park Presbyterian, 4801 Roland Ave. The program lists the exquisite Clarinet Quintet by Mozart and Ravel's Introduction and Allegro for flute, clarinet, harp and strings. A piece for flute and harp by contemporary composer Bernard Andres is also scheduled.

Performers include fine local talent: harpist Julia Martin, flutist David Lavorgna, clarinetist David Drosinos, violinists Melina Gajger and Tamara Seymour, violist Jackie Capecci, and cellist Kirsten Walsh.

The series will ...

continue on subsequent Tuesday evenings. The Lyric Brass Quintet play Bach and more on July 7. Music by Schubert, including his Octet and some lieder, will be the focus on July 14; soprano Fatima Petersen will be featured. The series wraps up July 21 with the enticing pairing of the Piano Quintet by Vaughan Williams and the original chamber version of Copland's Appalachian Spring.  
Posted by Tim Smith at 3:15 PM | | Comments (0)
        

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About Tim Smith
I was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up there. Initial thoughts of becoming a cocktail pianist faded when I realized I hated taking requests. I decided to study music history instead, and got a B. A. in that field from Eisenhower College in Seneca Falls, New York, and an M.A. from Occidental College in Los Angeles. After free-lance gigs for the Washington Star and the Washington Post, I worked as classical music critic for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel during the 1980s and '90s, a period when I also ventured into radio, contributing to NPR and hosting a weekly show on a West Palm Beach station. Since April 2000, I've been classical music critic at the Baltimore Sun. Over the years, I've written occasional articles for the New York Times, BBC Music Magazine and other publications, and I'm a longtime, regular contributor to Opera News and the U.K. magazine Opera. You may still be able to find on the remainder racks my one and only book, The NPR Curious Listener's Guide to Classical Music (Perigee, 2002).
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