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Showing posts from November, 2022

San Diego Civic Youth Ballet Performs Excerpts from "The Nutcracker" at the Organ Pavilion November 13

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2022 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved On Sunday, Novembe 13, my husband Charles and I got back from an organ concert in Balboa Park that was supposed to feature the dancers from the San Diego Civic Youth Ballet performing extracts from Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker (or should I write his name “Chaikovskii” the way the folks at the San Francisco State library did in the late 1970’s?). I was quite disappointed that San Diego civic organist Raúl Prieto Ramírez did not get to accompany the dancers from the console at the Organ Pavilion.; Instead they danced to a pre-recorded version of the orchestral score. I’m presuming this was so the young dancers would hear the music in the same tempi they’ve rehearsed to and wouldn’t get thrown by slight differences from a live accompaniment. Also coordinating the dancers with live organ would probably have taken extra rehearsal time, and no doubt neither the young dancers nor the Sprecles Organ peop

Raúl Prieto Ramírez's Special Veterans' Day Organ Concert in Balboa Park – Five Days Early

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2022 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved Yesterday my husband Charles and I completed my trifecta of free classical music concerts int he area – or should I say a “”quadrifecta,” since we actually went to two events yesterday afternoon. The first was the usual Sunday afternoon organ concert at 2 p.m. with civic organist Raúl Prieto Ramírez playing a program honoring the sacrifices of American and other servicemembers in the various wars in the world.He explained this because even though Veterans’ Day is next Friday, November 11, and it’s being celebrated the following Monday, November 14. This is in line with the decision of the U.S. government during the Nixon years to shift all holiday celebrations except Thanksgiving and Christmas to Mondays regardless of what date the holiday actually falls on so they’ll all create three-day weekends. Ordinarily Raúl explained that he would have given the Veterans’ Day concert next Sunday, November 1

St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral Present's a Surprisingly Gentle Fauré's "Requiem"

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2022 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved Charles and I then walked across Balboa Park to Fifth and Laurel, then ate dinner at the Mexican restaurant on Fifth and Nutmeg just across the street from St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, where we were going to attend the Sunday afternoon Evensong service and the following performance of Gabriel Fauré’s Requiem. The Evensong service came with a full program that also included the text of the Requiem, and there were spaces in it for audience participation through standing during parts of the service (which I was O.K. with) and joining in singing of the hymns (which I was not, mainly because I hadn’t brought my reading glasses and my rapidly deteriorating eyes would have been useless in trying to parse out the words from the printed texts, which included the music as well). I had thought Evensong was the kind of service where you didn’t have to do anything except sit (or stand) there and bask in the

Trio Arpavioluta: Engaging Concert from an Unusual Instrumental Combination

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2022 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved The November 5 concert at St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral featured an ensemble I’d heard before – in fact’ as I’ve been writing this I’ve been listening to a CD I burned from their appearance 3 ½ years ago (June 2, 2018, to be exact) – the Trio Arpavioluda. The Trio Arpavioluta consists of three women: Cathay Blickenstaff on flute, Pälvikki Nykten on violin and viola, and Laura Vaughan on harp. Since the classical music repertory isn’t exactly bursting with music composed especially for that combination of instruments – according to Blickenstaff, who in addition to her flute duties serves as the group’s spokeswoman, the only pieces actually written for flute, violin and harp are a 1905 “Terzettino” by French composer Théodore Dubois (1837-1924) and a 1915 trio sonata by a far better-known French composer, Claude Debussy (1862-1918) – they’ve had to fill out their repertoire with a lot of transcripti