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chamber music

Cultural Crossroads: Dvořák in America

The Ciompi Quartet performs at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. in a program that explores how Native American melodies and uplifting African American spirituals influenced the music of beloved Czech composer Antonín Dvořák. With its stellar cast of musicians, this ensemble entertains, educates, and inspires through a program drawn from the curiosity of a Czech composer a century ago.

The Program
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904): Finale from String Quartet No. 12
R. Carlos Nakai (1946-): Butterflies Dancing
Traditional African American Spiritual: Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904): Allegro non tanto from String Quintet No. 3
Traditional African American Spiritual: My Lord, What a Morning
R. Carlos Nakai (1946-): Clan of the Mists
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904): Allegro vivo—Un poco meno mosso from String Quintet No. 3
Traditional African American Spirituals: Go Down Moses; By and By
R. Carlos Nakai (1946-): Honoring Song
John Newton (1725–1807): Amazing Grace
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904): Finale. Allegro giusto from String Quintet No. 3
Going Home

The Artists
R. Carlos Nakai (Navajo-Ute) is the world’s premier performer of the Native American flute. He has appeared as a soloist and educator worldwide, released more than 40 albums, and been nominated for several Grammy awards. He also founded the R. Carlos Nakai Quartet. A Navy veteran, Nakai earned an MA in American Indian Studies from the University of Arizona, authored The Art of Native American Flute with composer James DeMars, and has received a multitude of awards and honors for his lifetime achievements.

Will Clipman began playing drums and piano at age three and has since mastered a pan-global palette of percussion instruments. A seven-time Grammy nominee and winner of several US, Canadian, and Indigenous awards, he has recorded over 70 albums, and collaborated with many internationally acclaimed artists and ensembles, most notably through his 30-year association with Native American flutist R. Carlos Nakai. Clipman is a widely published, prize-winning poet, as well as an accomplished mask-maker and storyteller. In his 40-year career as an arts educator, he has given hundreds of presentations, impacting a range of communities from traditional school settings to hospitals, prisons, and parks.

Kenneth Kellogg is a Washington, DC native and alumnus of the city’s Duke Ellington School of the Performing and Visual Arts. Active in both the US and Europe, he has worked with the San Francisco Opera, LA Opera, Washington National Opera, Opera de Oviedo, and Opera de Lausanne, among others. A sample of his many operatic roles includes the title role in Mozart’s Don Giovanni, as well as Leporello and Il Commendatore; Mephistopheles in Gounod’s Faust; and Don Alfonso in Mozart’s Cosi fan tutte. Of note, Tazewell Thompson’s opera Blue was written for him. Kellogg holds degrees from University of Michigan and Ohio University.

Pamela Freund-Striplen served as artistic director and violist of San Francisco’s Gold Coast Chamber Players for 35 years. She has also performed with members of the St. Lawrence, Alexander, Escher, and Verona String Quartets, New European Strings, and Amati Ensemble; with the San Diego Symphony, San Francisco Opera Orchestra, and San Francisco Symphony; and as principal violist with the San Diego Opera and Western Opera Theater. Motivated by the social impact of her special projects like Cultural Crossroads: Dvořák in America, she now focuses on presenting these programs to national and international audiences. In this performance, Freund-Striplen serves as violist, curator, and narrator.

Valley Classical Concerts, Northampton, MA

The Ciompi Quartet performs with pianist Ieva Jokūbavičiūte at Valley Classical Concerts in Northampton, Massachusetts.

The Program
Mieczysław Weinberg: Piano Quintet (1944)

I. Moderato con moto
II. Allegretto
III. Presto
IV. Largo
V. Allegro agitato

W.A. Mozart

William Grant Still
I. The Sentimental One
II. The Quiet One (based on Inca melody)
III. The Jovial One

John Dowland

Valley Classical Concerts
Valley Classical Concerts was founded as Music in Deerfield in 1979. Now based in Northampton, our mission is simple: to bring first-rate performances of classical chamber music to the Pioneer Valley, music and artists that might otherwise only be heard in major metropolitan areas. Valley Classical Concerts (VCC) presents both mainstream classical music and works of 20th and 21st century composers, performed by a mix of established musicians and exciting early-career ensembles. VCC broadens access to this great music through deeply discounted family and student pricing and other special admission opportunities.

Ieva Jokūbavičiūtė
Lithuanian pianist Ieva Jokūbavičiūtė’s powerfully and intricately crafted performances have earned her critical acclaim throughout North America and Europe. Her ability to communicate the essential substance of a work has led critics to describe her as possessing ‘razor-sharp intelligence and wit’ and ‘subtle, complex, almost impossibly detailed and riveting in every way’ (The Washington Post) and as ‘an artist of commanding technique, refined temperament and persuasive insight’ (The New York Times). In 2006, she was honored as a recipient of a Borletti-Buitoni Trust Fellowship.

Labor Records released Ieva’s debut recording in 2010 to critical international acclaim, which resulted in recitals in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Baltimore, DC, Vilnius, and Toulouse.

Vienna to L.A.

In a concert celebrating composer Arnold Schoenberg’s 150th anniversary, the Ciompi Quartet performs a program of works connected by time and place. Mozart’s Vienna produced quartets like his K. 589: formally perfect, deeply learned, but with an effortless grace. Erich Korngold and Arnold Schoenberg, both raised in Vienna, were polar-opposites by the mid-1930s when they arrived in Los Angeles: Schoenberg was an avant-garde modernist and a revered figure in the Academy (UCLA); Korngold was a composer of lush romantic scores that were sought after by Hollywood. Both wrote brilliant quartets that gave their Viennese origins a 20th century incarnation.

The Program
W.A. Mozart: String Quartet #22 in B-flat major, K. 589
Arnold Schoenberg: String Quartet #4, Op. 37 (1936)
Erich Wolfgang Korngold: String Quartet #2, Op. 26 (1933)

Presented by Duke Arts.

Duke Arts
Duke Arts champions expansive, inclusive, and impactful arts programs that build meaningful connections between campus, community, and global audiences.

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