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Spring Concerts

Caramoor Announces a Packed Calendar of Spectacular Fall ’23 and Spring ’24 Performances

July 11, 2023 by Inside Press

Spring ‘24 Season Features Cellist Abel Selaocoe, Singer-Songwriter Allison Russell, The English Concert, Baritone Will Liverman, the Lakecia Benjamin Quartet, Pianist Seong-Jin Cho and Much More

Caramoor’s longstanding commitment to adventurous programming – encompassing an expansive range of genres and outstanding artists – continues indoors all year round in the intimate setting of the Rosen House Music Room. Highlights of the Fall ’23 – Spring ‘24 season include genre-bending South African cellist Abel Selaocoe (Oct 22); a benefit concert with Juno Award-winning and Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Allison Russell (Dec 2); superlative period-instrument ensemble The English Concert led by Harry Bicket (Dec 8); Grammy-winning baritone Will Liverman (March 24); dynamic saxophonist and bandleader Lakecia Benjamin with her quartet (April 19); and Chopin International Competition-winning pianist Seong-Jin Cho (May 15).

The fall and spring season is rounded out with the multi-Grammy winning Pacifica Quartet (April 14); a holiday program featuring TENET Vocal Artists (Dec 10); two programs from this season’s Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence, the Abeo Quartet (Nov 12 & May 5); American Roots music from Alisa Amador (Nov 3) and Jake Blount (May 11); jazz from the Emmet Cohen Trio with special guest Lucy Yeghiazaryan (Sep 29); cabaret singer Carole J. Bufford (Oct 20); performances by young artists from Caramoor’s Evnin Rising Stars and Schwab Vocal Rising Stars programs, and more. 

Designed by Caramoor’s founders, Walter T. and Lucie Bigelow Rosen, as a charmingly intimate space for chamber music concerts, the historic Rosen House Music Room, with its authentic Renaissance furniture, paintings dating from the 16th century, and terra cotta reliefs, provides an ideal venue for Caramoor’s fall and spring programs – many of them unlikely to be heard this season elsewhere in the New York area.

Recitals and Chamber Music

Reviewing a recent performance, The Strad called genre-bending South African cellist Abel Selaocoe “a keen improviser, effulgent vocalist, natural collaborator and a winning communicator.” Moving seamlessly through a range of genres and styles, he has collaborated with world musicians and beatboxers, while also giving concerto performances and solo classical recitals. He combines virtuosic performance with improvisation, singing and body percussion, and he has a special interest in curating recital programs that highlight the links between Western and non-Western musical traditions, with a view to helping classical music reach a more diverse audience. An exclusive Warner Classics recording artist, Selaocoe’s debut album, Where is Home? (Hae Ke Kae), on the subject of home and refuge, was released last fall (Oct 22).

Superlative period-instrument ensemble The English Concert, led from the harpsichord by Harry Bicket, a recipient of an OBE from Queen Elizabeth, returns to Caramoor to perform the music of Vivaldi, Geminiani and others. This follows their 2021 all-Vivaldi performance, and featured on this concert are the remaining concertos from Vivaldi’s string concerto collection L’estro armonico that were not performed two years ago. Founded in 1972 by Trevor Pinnock CBE, the pioneering chamber orchestra was one of the first devoted to playing 18th- and early 19th-century music on period instruments and is recognized as one of the world’s leading exponents of Baroque and early Classical repertoire (Dec 8).

New York City-based TENET Vocal Artists, now in its 15th anniversary season, returns to Caramoor for a Christmas program entitled “Love Enfolds Thee Round.” Under Artistic Director Jolle Greenleaf, the vocal ensemble has won acclaim for its innovative programming, virtuosic one-voice-to-a-part singing “to an uncanny degree of precision” (Boston Globe) and command of repertoire that spans the Middle Ages to the present day (Dec 10).

Baritone Will Liverman, who earned raves and a subsequent Grammy for his “breakout performance” in Terence Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones at the Met, gives his debut recital at Caramoor this season. Called “a voice for this historic moment” (Washington Post), Liverman was also awarded the Met’s 2022 Beverly Sills Artist Award. Following Fire’s success, the Met announced that Liverman will star in Anthony Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X, premiering this fall and making Davis the second Black composer to have an opera produced at the Met in the company’s history (March 24).

With a career spanning nearly three decades, the multiple Grammy-winning Pacifica Quartet is known for its virtuosity, exuberant performance style, and often-daring repertory choices. Faculty string quartet-in-residence at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music since 2012, the quartet also leads the Center for Advanced Quartet Studies at the Aspen Music Festival and School. Its 2020 album Contemporary Voices, featuring the works of Pulitzer Prize winners Shulamit Ran, Jennifer Higdon, and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, won the Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music Performance. The quartet’s Caramoor program comprises works by Korngold, Gruenberg and Beethoven (April 14).

Pianist Seong-Jin Cho – the youngest-ever winner of Japan’s Hamamatsu International Piano Competition – also won Third Prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition in 2011 at the age of 17 and was the first prize winner at the 2015 Chopin International Competition in Warsaw. An exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist since 2016, his latest recording for the label is the solo album The Handel Project, released this past spring, following up on a 2021 release of Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 and Scherzi with the London Symphony Orchestra and Gianandrea Noseda. At Caramoor, he plays a program of Haydn, Ravel and Liszt (May 15).

Jazz (in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center)

Multifaceted American jazz pianist and composer Emmet Cohen is an internationally acclaimed jazz artist, dedicated educator, winner of the 2019 American Pianists Awards, and a finalist in the 2011 Thelonious Monk International Piano Competition. A regular headliner at Jazz at Lincoln Center, the Village Vanguard and Birdland, he has also appeared at the Newport, Monterey, and North Sea jazz festivals. The Emmet Cohen Trio is joined at Caramoor by American-Armenian vocalist Lucy Yeghiazaryan, a frequent collaborator who has become a leading voice in American straight-ahead jazz. She was a top ten finalist in the 2015 Thelonious Monk Competition and is also a skilled classical violinist. Her third album, Lonely House, was released earlier this year (Sep 29).

In 2020, charismatic alto saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin was voted “Rising Star” in the 2020 Downbeat Critics Poll and “Up and Coming Artist of the Year” by the Jazz Journalists Association. Fusing traditional conceptions of jazz, hip-hop, and soul, she has shared stages with several legendary artists, including Stevie Wonder, Alicia Keys, and The Roots. Her fourth studio album, Phoenix, released this past January on Whirlwind Recordings, was praised by All Music for its “wide sense of adventure,” revealing Benjamin to be “as ambitious as she is focused, energetic, and perceptive.” She appears at Caramoor with the Lakecia Benjamin Quartet (April 19).

American Roots (in collaboration with City Winery)

Winner of the 2022 NPR Tiny Desk Contest, Alisa Amador began performing as a backup singer for her parents’ bilingual Latin folk band, Sol y Canto, at age five, began playing classical guitar at age ten, and eventually found the electric guitar a decade later. Her own songs, written in both English and Spanish, contain elements of Latin and jazz music as well as pop, funk, soul, and something uniquely her own. As she puts it, her specialty is sparking connections across both listeners and musical styles (Nov 3).

Self-taught singer, songwriter, poet, activist and multi-instrumentalist Allison Russell plays a special benefit concert in the Rosen House Music Room in December. Her first solo album, Outside Child, was released two years ago, and garnered three Grammy nominations, the Juno Award for Contemporary Roots Album of the Year, the 2022 Americana Music Association’s Album of the Year Award, two International Folk Music Awards, three Canadian Folk Music Awards, and four UK Americana Music Awards. Her eagerly awaited follow-up, The Returner, a body-shaking, mind-expanding, soulful expression of Black liberation, Black love and Black self-respect that features an all-female musical collective, will be released in September (Dec 2).

Based in Providence, RI, Jake Blount is an award-winning interpreter of Black folk music. Initially recognized for his skill as a string band musician, Blount has charted an unprecedented, Afrofuturist course on his pilgrimage through sound archives and song collections. In his hands, the banjo, fiddle, electric guitar and synthesizer become ceremonial objects used to channel the insurgent creativity of his forebears. His performances – like his recent Smithsonian Folkways release, The New Faith – seamlessly merge centuries-old traditional songs with the trappings and techniques of modern Black genres (May 11).

American Songbook

Carole J. Bufford – recipient of Broadway World’s Vocalist of the Year and the 2020 Gold Medal winner of the American Traditions Vocal Competition – gives a benefit performance in October. Originally hailing from Lincolnton, GA, her program, ROAR! Music of the Jazz Age, will feature classics from the Jazz Age songbook made famous by the likes of Sophie Tucker, Louis Armstrong, Al Jolson, Fats Waller, Bessie Smith, Helen Morgan, Ruth Etting, and more.  (Oct 20).

Community

Caramoor presents a celebration of Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, for the third year as a free outdoor community event. The rich cultural holiday will be observed through traditional music, dance, arts & crafts, and storytelling so that loved ones are honored in this lively celebration. Featured artists include the Calpulli Mexican Dance Company (Oct 15).

Family

Blanca Cecilia González and Jesse Elder – a husband and wife violin/piano duo – bring the holiday-themed Musiquita Nutcracker Tap Dance Special to the Music Room, in a playful bilingual exploration in Spanish and English of music, language and culture (Dec 3). 

In the spring, Latin Grammy-nominated songwriter Sonia De Los Santos presents a family program on Friends Field following the release of her third and latest solo album, Esperanza, a bilingual collection of songs that explore hope, looking back at our own journey, cherishing our cities and homes, being grateful to one another, dreaming of a better future, marveling at nature, and finding light within ourselves (May 19).

Mentoring

Young artists from Caramoor’s chamber mentorship program, Evnin Rising Stars, led by Guest Artistic Director Marcy Rosen, perform a pair of concerts in the fall following a week of workshops, reading sessions, and ensemble rehearsals alongside distinguished artist mentors violist Shmuel Ashkenasi and double bassist Edgar Meyer. This year’s Rising Stars are violinists Maria Ioudenitch, Lun Li and Amarins Wierdsma; violists Njord Fossnes and Cara Pogossian; cellists Gabriel Martins and Chase Park; and pianist Janice Carissa. Over the course of two programs, they perform works by Boccherini, Mozart, Schubert, and Dohnányi, as well as Meyer’s Quintet for String Quartet and Double Bass (Oct 28 & 29).

The Abeo Quartet, Caramoor’s 2023-24 Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence, gives two performances this fall and spring. The quartet formed at Juilliard in 2018 and is currently the inaugural Graduate String Quartet in Residence at the University of Delaware under the mentorship of the Calidore String Quartet. Abeo’s recent accomplishments include winning Third Prize at the 2023 Bad Tölz International String Quartet Competition and being among ten quartets invited to participate in the 14th Banff International String Quartet Competition in 2022. The quartet was also a First Prize and Audience Favorite Prize winner in the Yellow Springs Chamber Music Competition for Emerging Professional Ensembles and Silver Medal winner of the Chesapeake International Chamber Music Competition, both in 2022. The quartet’s fall program includes music of Prokofiev and Beethoven, along with the U.S. premiere of Lee Bradshaw’s Resolve. In the spring they perform quartets by Glazunov, Shostakovich, Ravel and Reena Esmail (Nov 12, May 5).

Caramoor’s Schwab Vocal Rising Stars – led by Artistic Director Steven Blier, assisted by Bénédicte Jourdois and developed in conjunction with the New York Festival of Song – present “EROS AND CO.”: the chaos and the delight of Cupid’s arrow, refracted through songs by Saint-Saëns, Granados, Sondheim, Serge Gainsbourg, and others. This follows a week-long residency that includes daily coaching, rehearsals, and workshops (March 17).

Getting to Caramoor

Getting to Caramoor is simple by car or public transportation. All parking is free and close to the performance areas. Handicapped parking is also free and readily available. By car from New York City, take the Henry Hudson Parkway north to the Saw Mill River Parkway north to I-684 north to Exit 6. Go east on Route 35 to the traffic light (0.3 miles). Turn right onto Route 22 south, and travel 1.9 miles to the junction of Girdle Ridge Road where there is a green Caramoor sign. At the junction, veer left and make a quick right onto Girdle Ridge Road. Continue on Girdle Ridge Road 0.5 miles to the Caramoor gates on the right. Approximate drive time is one hour. By train from Grand Central Station, take the Harlem Division Line of the Metro-North Railroad heading to Southeast, and exit at Katonah. Caramoor is a 3.5-mile drive from the Katonah station.

About Caramoor

Caramoor is a cultural arts destination located on a unique 80-plus-acre campus with Italianate architecture and gardens in Northern Westchester County, NY. Its beautiful grounds include the historic Rosen House, a stunning mansion listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Besides enriching the lives of its audiences through innovative and diverse musical performances of the highest quality, Caramoor mentors young professional musicians and provides music-centered educational programs for young children.

 

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Caramoor Fall ’23 – Spring ‘24 season

All concerts take place in the Rosen House Music Room unless otherwise indicated

Fri, Sep 29 at 8pm

Emmet Cohen Trio with special guest Lucy Yeghiazaryan

Presented in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center

 

Sun, Oct 15 at 3pm

Friends Field

Día de los Muertos Celebration

With Calpulli Mexican Dance Company

 

Fri, Oct 20 at 8pm

Carole J. Bufford

Benefit Concert

 

Sun, Oct 22 at 3pm

Abel Selaocoe, cello

 

Sat, Oct 28 at 8pm

Evnin Rising Stars: Program I

Guest Artistic Director:

Marcy Rosen, cello

 

Distinguished Artists:

Shmuel Ashkenasi, viola

Edgar Meyer, double bass

 

Rising Stars:

Maria Ioudenitch, violin

Lun Li, violin

Amarins Wierdsma, violin

Njord Fossnes, viola

Cara Pogossian, viola

Gabriel Martins, cello

Chase Park, cello

Janice Carissa, piano

 

Luigi BOCCHERINI: String Quintet TBA

Edgar MEYER: Quintet

Ernő DOHNÁNYI: Piano Quintet in C

 

Sun, Oct 29 at 3pm

Evnin Rising Stars: Program II

Luigi BOCCHERINI: String Quintet TBA

W.A. MOZART: String Quintet in G minor, K. 516

Franz SCHUBERT: Piano Quintet in A, “Trout”

 

Fri, Nov 3 at 8pm

Alisa Amador

Presented in collaboration with City Winery

 

Sun, Nov 12 at 3pm

Abeo Quartet

Lee BRADSHAW: Resolve for String Quartet (U.S. premiere)

Sergei PROKOFIEV: String Quartet No. 2 in F, Op. 92

Ludwig van BEETHOVEN: String Quartet No. 12 in E-flat, Op. 127

 

Sat, Dec 2 at 8pm

Allison Russell

Benefit Concert

 

Sun, Dec 3 at 3pm

Family Concert: Musiquita Nutcracker Tap Dance Special

 

Fri, Dec 8 at 8pm

The English Concert

Harry Bicket, conductor and harpsichord

Antonio VIVALDI: L’estro Armonico, Concerto No. 5

Antonio VIVALDI: L’estro Armonico, Concerto No. 6

Antonio VIVALDI: L’estro Armonico, Concerto No. 7

Evaristo Felice DALL’ABACO: Concerto a più istrumenti, Op 5, No. 6

Unico Wilhelm VAN WASSENAER: Concerto Armonici for 4 violins in E-flat, No. 6

Giovanni MOSSI: Concerto for 4 violins

Antonio VIVALDI: L’estro Armonico, Concerto No. 4

Francesco GEMINIANI: Concerto grosso in D minor, “La Follia” after Corelli

 

Sun, Dec 10 at 3pm
TENET Vocal Artists

“Love Enfolds Thee Round”

 

Sun, March 17 at 3pm

Schwab Vocal Rising Stars

Steven Blier, Artistic Director

“EROS AND CO.”

 

Sun, March 24 at 3pm

Will Liverman, baritone

Pianist TBA

 

Sun, April 14 at 3pm

Pacifica Quartet

Erich Wolfgang KORNGOLD: String Quartet No. 3 in D, Op. 34

Louis GRUENBERG: Four Diversions for String Quartet, Op. 32

Ludwig van BEETHOVEN: String Quartet No. 15 in A minor, Op. 132

 

Fri, April 19 at 8pm

Lakecia Benjamin Quartet

Presented in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center

 

Sun, May 5 at 3pm

Abeo Quartet

Alexander GLAZUNOV: Five Novelettes, Op. 15: 2. Orientale

Reena ESMAIL: String Quartet “Ragamala”

Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH: String Quartet No. 11 in F minor, Op. 122

Maurice RAVEL: String Quartet in F

 

Sat, May 11 at 8pm

Jake Blount

Presented in collaboration with City Winery

 

Wed, May 15 at 7:30pm

Seong-Jin Cho, piano

Joseph HAYDN: Piano Sonata in E minor

Maurice RAVEL: Menuet sur le nom d’Haydn

Maurice RAVEL: Le Tombeau de Couperin

Franz LISZT: Années de pèlerinage, deuxième année – Italie, S161

 

Sun, May 19 at 3pm

Friends Field

Family Concert: Sonia De Los Santos

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts Tagged With: American Jazz, American Roots, Caramoor, Fall Concerts, Rosen House, Spring Concerts

Caramoor’s Fall ’22/Spring ’23 Season Offerings: Save the Dates and this Handy Guide

July 18, 2022 by The Inside Press

 L-R: Yasmin Williams (photo: Kim Atkins Photography), Melissa Aldana (photo: Stephen Pariser), Iestyn Davies (photo: Chris Sorensen), Thomas Dunford (photo: Julien Benhamou), Rachel Podger (photo: Theresa Pewal), Takács Quartet (photo: Amanda Tipton), Jeremy Denk (photo: Michael Wilson)

Upcoming Lineups feature Pianist Jeremy Denk, Countertenor Lestyn Davies and Lutenist Thomas Dunford, Takács Quartet, Violinist Rachel Podger, Melissa Aldana Quartet, Guitarist Yasmin Williams and Much More

(July 2022)–Caramoor’s longstanding tradition of adventurous programming continues indoors all year round amid the authentic Renaissance furniture, paintings dating from the 16th century, and terra cotta reliefs of the historic Rosen House Music Room. Designed by the Rosens for chamber music concerts, the Music Room remains an ideal venue for the expansive range of genres and outstanding artists for which Caramoor is celebrated. Programs in the Fall 22/Spring 23 season include pianist Jeremy Denk performing Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I; countertenor Iestyn Davies along with  lutenist Thomas Dunford; chamber music from the Takács Quartet; Baroque violinist Rachel Podger; back-to-back holiday performances from the German a cappella vocal ensemble Calmus; guitarist Yasmin Williams; singer-songwriter Kat Wright; the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain; Broadway star Sierra Boggess in a special cabaret benefit; jazz from the Melissa Aldana Quartet and Sean Mason Quintet; and performances by young artists from Caramoor’s Evnin Rising Stars and Schwab Vocal Rising Stars programs, as well as the Ivalas Quartet, this season’s Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence. 

Recitals and Chamber Music

The New York Times declared Jeremy Denk to be “a pianist you want to hear no matter what he performs.” Winner of a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship and the Avery Fisher Prize, Denk has also been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is an insightful writer on musical subjects as well as a performer; his memoir Every Good Boy Does Fine was recently published by Penguin Random House. At Caramoor he performs Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, resuming his series of performances from 2019-20, prior to the pandemic shutdown. After a performance of the work this past spring at London’s Barbican, The Guardian declared Denk to have “the fiendish technique and expressive iconoclasm you’d expect from one of today’s classical superstars” (Nov 6).

British countertenor Iestyn Davies has won two Gramophone Awards, a Grammy Award, an RPS Award for Young Singer of the Year, the Critics’ Circle Award, and an Olivier Award nomination, as well as being awarded the MBE in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours List 2017 for services to music. In concert with lutenist Thomas Dunford, the founder and artistic director of the Jupiter Ensemble (and whom BBC Music Magazine called “the Eric Clapton of the lute”), Davies presents a program of Late Renaissance Italian, French and English song interspersed with solo lute music (Nov 20).

Rachel Podger, called “the unsurpassed British glory of the baroque violin” (The Times), was the first woman to be awarded the prestigious Royal Academy of Music/Kohn Foundation Bach Prize in October 2015, Gramophone Artist of the Year 2018, and Ambassador for REMA’s Early Music Day 2020. She is also the founder and Artistic Director of Brecon Baroque Festival and her ensemble Brecon Baroque. In the spring, she performs an all-Bach solo program at Caramoor (April 30).

Caramoor’s chamber music offerings this spring are anchored by the Takács Quartet, who mentored the Ivalas Quartet during the latter’s residency from 2019-2022 at the University of Colorado-Boulder. Now entering its forty-eighth season, the Takács Quartet comprises violinists Edward Dusinberre and Harumi Rhodes, violist Richard O’Neill and cellist András Fejér. Like Jeremy Denk, Dusinberre has literary leanings as well as musical, and his book Distant Melodies: Music in Search of Home will be published by Faber and the University of Chicago Press in the fall. At Caramoor the quartet plays music of Haydn, Fanny Mendelssohn and Schubert (April 23).

Winner of the 2009 Concert Artists Guild International Competition, the German a cappella vocal ensemble Calmus is known for its charming stage presence and flawless technique. Founded in 1999 in Germany, the quintet – with the unusual configuration of a female soprano and four male voices ranging from bass to countertenor – embodies the rich choral tradition of its hometown of Leipzig, the city so closely associated with Bach and Mendelssohn. As the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel characterizes the group: “The singers bring tremendous character and musical depth to their interpretations … that transcends the language of the lyrics.” Calmus’s holiday program at Caramoor ranges from early music to contemporary Christmas favorites (Dec 10).

Jazz in Collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center

Grammy-nominated saxophonist and composer Melissa Aldana – declared to be “cultured, emotionally weighted [and] purposeful” by the Boston Globe – recently released the album 12 Stars, her debut as a leader on the Blue Note label. Hailing from Santiago, Chile, the 33-year-old Brooklyn-based tenor player was featured on the cover of the March 2021 issue of the New York City Jazz Record and has already established an international reputation for her visionary work as a bandleader. Aldana plays Caramoor with her quartet (Sep 30).

Born and raised in Charlotte, NC, Sean Mason taught himself the piano by ear at the age of 13. Despite musical roots in gospel, hip-hop, and R&B, it was jazz that inspired his career. He has performed and toured with jazz legends including Branford Marsalis, Wynton Marsalis, and Herlin Riley, among many others, and is noted for his ability to switch fluently between many different styles of music. He was the pianist for Netflix’s production of Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and the History Channel’s Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre, worked on both Hadestown and The Phantom of the Opera on Broadway, and off-Broadway has been a composer, orchestrator, and music director. His quintet performance at Caramoor will feature Mason’s original music (March 24).

American Roots Music in Collaboration with City Winery

Singer-songwriter Kat Wright launched her career with a weekly residency at the Radio Bean in Burlington, Vermont, gradually transitioning to an extensive and national touring schedule. The constraints of the pandemic encouraged her to tour with a smaller group, as she puts it “showcasing our folky/rootsy selves, all stripped down, a triangulation of our strengths, our bareness, our imperfect humanness, our voices, our ferocious tenderness, our love of songs and singing and story.” In 2017, Wright was a featured performer in the Eugene Jarecki music documentary, The King (Oct 14).

Based in Alexandria, Virginia, acoustic fingerstyle guitarist Yasmin Williams has an unorthodox, modern style of playing. Using various techniques including alternate tunings, percussive hits, and lap tapping, her “radiant sound and adventitious origins have made her a key figure in a diverse dawn for the solo guitar” (New York Times). She plays a solo show in the Music Room in the spring (May 12).

Popular

Olivier-nominated actress Sierra Boggess reinvented the role of Christine in Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera for Broadway, West End and televised 25th-anniversary concert productions, earning accolades from the composer himself, who declared “she’s the best, the best Christine certainly.” She made her Broadway debut as Ariel in Disney’s The Little Mermaid, receiving Drama Desk and Drama League nominations and the Broadway.com Audience Award for Favorite Female Breakthrough Performance. She also reprised the role of Christine in Love Never Dies, the critically acclaimed sequel to The Phantom of the Opera, for which she was nominated for an Olivier Award. The Los Angeles Times has praised her for “crystalline singing and gameness for comedy.” Boggess performs in a special cabaret benefit at Caramoor in the fall (Oct 22).

The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain “believes that all genres of music are available for reinterpretation, as long as they are played on the ukulele.” Performing on small and large instruments in high and low registers, as well as singing, the eight-person ensemble sits in a chamber group format dressed in formal evening wear and presents programs of “the pompous and the trivial, the moving and the amusing.” The Guardian declared that “the ukulele has found its avant garde,” while the Financial Times raved: “The sophisticated sound they make – both percussive and melodic – is at once hilarious and heartfelt” (May 6).

Family

Caramoor presents a celebration of Día de Muertos, or Day of the Dead, for the second year as a free outdoor family event. The rich cultural holiday will be observed through traditional music, dance, arts & crafts, and storytelling so that loved ones are honored in this lively celebration (Oct 16).

Mentoring

The Ivalas Quartet formed at the University of Michigan in 2017 and serves as the 2022-23 Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence. Comprising violinists Reuben Kebede and Tiani Butts, violist Aimée McAnulty and cellist Pedro Sánchez, the quartet is dedicated to the celebration of BIPOC voices. Ivalas seeks to disrupt the classical music world by continuously spotlighting BIPOC composers such as Jessie Montgomery, Daniel Bernard Roumain, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, and Eleanor Alberga, whose First String Quartet is featured on the quartet’s fall performance in the Music Room. Following a performance of George Walker’s Lyric for Strings at Carnegie Hall in January of 2020, they worked in collaboration with Walker’s son to program his String Quartet No. 1, which is included in their second Caramoor performance. Both programs are completed by pairings of traditional and contemporary repertoire: quartets from Osvaldo Golijov and Beethoven in the fall program, and Brahms and Webern in the spring (Nov 13; April 16).

Young artists from Caramoor’s chamber mentorship program, Evnin Rising Stars, perform in a pair of concerts in the fall, for which the program’s guest Artistic Director, cellist Marcy Rosen, is joined by distinguished artists Joseph Lin, violin, an alumnus of the program, and Steven Tenenbom, viola. Participating young artists are Claire Bourg, Geneva Lewis and Stephanie Zyzak, violins; Njord Kårason Fossnes and Tanner Menees, violas; Nathan Chan and Sterling Elliott, cellos; and Zhu Wang on piano. Over the course of the two programs, the young instrumentalists take on quartets by Haydn and Janáček and string quintets by Brahms and Mozart, as well as piano quintets by Dvořák and Dohnányi (Oct 29 & 30). Finally, led by

Artistic Director Steven Blier, the singers of Caramoor’s Schwab Vocal Rising Stars program take part in a creatively curated concert in the spring (March 12).

Getting to Caramoor

Getting to Caramoor is simple by car or public transportation. All parking is free and close to the performance areas. Handicapped parking is also free and readily available. By car from New York City, take the Henry Hudson Parkway north to the Saw Mill River Parkway north to I-684 north to Exit 6. Go east on Route 35 to the traffic light (0.3 miles). Turn right onto Route 22 south, and travel 1.9 miles to the junction of Girdle Ridge Road where there is a green Caramoor sign. At the junction, veer left and make a quick right onto Girdle Ridge Road. Continue on Girdle Ridge Road 0.5 miles to the Caramoor gates on the right. Approximate drive time is one hour. By train from Grand Central Station, take the Harlem Division Line of the Metro-North Railroad heading to Southeast, and exit at Katonah. Caramoor is a 3.5-mile drive from the Katonah station.

 

About Caramoor

Caramoor is a cultural arts destination located on a unique 80-plus-acre campus with Italianate architecture and gardens in Northern Westchester County, NY. Its beautiful grounds include the historic Rosen House, a stunning mansion listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Besides enriching the lives of its audiences through innovative and diverse musical performances of the highest quality, Caramoor mentors young professional musicians and provides music-centered educational programs for young children.

facebook.com/caramoor

instagram.com/caramoor

twitter.com/Caramoor

pinterest.com/caramoor

youtube.com/caramoor

issuu.com/caramoor

caramoor.org

 

Caramoor Fall 22/Spring 23 season

All concerts in Rosen House Music Room unless otherwise specified

 

Fri, Sep 30 at 8pm

Melissa Aldana Quartet

Presented in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center

 

Fri, Oct 14 at 8pm

Kat Wright

Presented in collaboration with City Winery

 

Sun, Oct 16 at 2pm

Free Community Event

Celebrate Día de Muertos

 

Sat, Oct 22 at 8pm

Cabaret Benefit

Sierra Boggess

 

Sat, Oct 29 at 8pm and Sun, Oct 30 at 3pm

Evnin Rising Stars

Marcy Rosen, guest Artistic Director and cello

Joseph Lin, violin

Steven Tenenbom, viola

Claire Bourg, violin

Geneva Lewis, violin

Stephanie Zyzak, violin

Njord Kårason Fossnes, viola

Tanner Menees, viola

Nathan Chan, cello

Sterling Elliott, cello

Zhu Wang, piano

Oct 29: JOSEPH HAYDN: String Quartet in B-flat, H.III:44

               JOHANNES BRAHMS: String Quintet No. 1 in F, Op. 88

               ANTONÍN DVOŘÁK: Piano Quartet in E-flat, Op. 87

 

Oct 30: WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART: String Quintet in D, K. 593

               LEOŠ JANÁČEK: String Quartet No. 2, “Intimate Letters”

               ERNST VON DOHNÁNYI: Piano Quintet No. 2 in E-flat minor, Op. 26

 

Sun, Nov 6 at 3pm

Jeremy Denk, piano

JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH: The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, BWV 846-869

 

Sun, Nov 13 at 3pm

Ivalas Quartet (2022-23 Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence)

OSVALDO GOLIJOV: Tenebrae

ELEANOR ALBERGA: String Quartet No. 1

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN: String Quartet No. 13 in B-flat, Op. 130

 

Sun, Nov 20 at 3pm

Iestyn Davies, countertenor/Thomas Dunford, lute

CHARLES TESSIER: “In a Grove Most Rich of Shade”

JOHN DOWLAND: Mrs. Winter’s Jump; Praeludium; “Lady if you so spite me”; Round Battle Galliard; A Dream; A Fancy; “In darkness let me dwell”; “Far From Triumphing Court”; Melancholy Galliard

RICHARD MARTIN: “Change thy mind since she doth change”

DOMENICO MARIA MELLI: “Se di farmi morire”

PIERRE GUÉDRON: “Ce penser qui”; “Vous que le Bonheur”

ANTHONY HOLBORNE: Pavan 2; “My heavy sprite opprest with sorrowes might”

PIERRE GUÉDRON: “Se le parler et le silence”

ROBERT HALES: “O Eyes, Leave Off Your Weeping”

JOHANNES HIERONYMUS KAPSBERGER: Toccata VI

JOAN AMBROSIO DALZA: Calata ala spagnola

JOHANNES HIERONYMUS KAPSBERGER: Toccata No. 1

DANIEL BATCHELOR: “To Plead My Faith”

GIULIO CACCINI: “Amarilli, mia bella”; “Dovrò dunque morire”

ANONYMOUS: “O bella più”; “Passava Amor”; “Vuestros ojos tienen d’amor”; “O Dear Life”; “Sta Notte Mi Sognava”; “Go My Flock”

 

Sat, Dec 10 at 3pm & 5pm

Calmus

CHRISTMAS A CAPPELLA

11TH CENTURY: “Sis willekommen, Herre Kerst” (arr. by Günther Raphael)

14TH CENTURY: “Resonet in laudibus” (arr. by Jacobus Gallus (1550-1591))

16TH CENTURY: “Remember, O Thou Man” (melody by Thomas Ravencroft (1611), arr. by Ludwig Böhme))

THOMAS MORLEY: Madrigal for Christmas

PHILIP RADCLIFFE: “Mary walked through a wood of thorn”

19TH CENTURY (FRANCE): “Il est né, le divin Enfant” (arr: Ludwig Böhme)

ANONYMOUS: “God rest ye merry, Gentlemen”

ANONYMOUS: “Les anges dans nos campagnes”

ANONYMOUS: “Betlehems Stjärna” (Hugh Martin/Ralph Blane) arr. by Jens Troester (1970))

HUGH MARTIN: Meet Me in St. Louis: “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (Ralph Blane (co-composer) arr: by Jens Troester (1970))

TRADITIONAL: “De tierra lejana venimos” (arr. by Juan Garcia (1976))

ANONYMOUS: “Ding Dong Merrily on High”

ANONYMOUS: “The Twelve Days of Christmas” (Frederic Austin/William Henry Husk), arr. by Ludwig Böhme))

 

Sun, March 12 at 3pm

Schwab Vocal Rising Stars

Steven Blier, Artistic Director

Bénédicte Jourdois, Associate Director

Artists to be announced

 

Fri, March 24 at 8pm

Sean Mason Quintet

Presented in collaboration with Jazz at Lincoln Center

 

Sun, April 16 at 3pm

Ivalas Quartet (22-23 Ernst Stiefel String Quartet-in-Residence)

GEORGE WALKER: String Quartet No. 1 (In Memory of My Grandmother M.K.)

ANTON WEBERN: String Quartet

JOHANNES BRAHMS: String Quartet in C minor, Op. 51, No. 1

 

Sun, April 23 at 3pm

Takács Quartet

JOSEPH HAYDN: String Quartet in F, H.III:82

FANNY MENDELSSOHN: String Quartet in E-flat

FRANZ SCHUBERT: String Quartet in G, D. 887

 

Sun, April 30 at 3pm

Rachel Podger, violin

All-BACH program

Sonata No. 1 in G minor, BWV 1001

Cello Suite No. 3 in G (orig in C), BWV 1009

Partita No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1002

 

Sat, May 6 at 8pm

Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain

 

Fri, May 12 at 8pm

Yasmin Williams, guitar

Presented in collaboration with City Winery

 

#          #          #

 

 

© 21C Media Group, July 2022

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts Tagged With: Caramoor, Fall Concerts, Family Entertainment, music, Season Offerings, Spring Concerts, Winter Concerts

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