Romance and Humor in the 19th Century: Joseph Gold, Miles Graber, and Bruce Jenett



Program:

Duetto Amoroso..........Nicolo Paganini 1782-1840
Commencement, Entreaty, Consent, Timidity, Happiness,
Quarrel, Reconciliation, Tokens of love, Announcement of departure, Departure

Five Humorous Pieces..........Hubert Leonard 1819-1890
1. Rooster and hens - 2. In the dark forest - 3. Cat and mice
4. Donkey and driver - 5. Serenade of the bellicose rabbit
Joseph Gold,violin
Miles Graber, piano
Bruce Jenett, actor-narrator
In this  concert we begin with one of the pieces that changed the course of music. It is "Duetto Amoroso" by Paganini. It was no less significant than "Symphonie Fantastique" by Berlioz. Paganini was the sex symbol of his age. The piece is overtly sexual in an autobiographical way.

The second piece is one of the most humorous. It was the inspiration for Saint-Saens to compose his "Carnival of the Animals."

Romance and Humor in the 19th Century: Joseph Gold, Miles Graber, and Bruce Jenett
Sunday, November 30, 2014, 3:00pm
Suggested donation: $20 at the door.
Seating is limited. Get your required online reservation here.

Travis Callison & Morgan Bolender

Join us for a double bill featuring singer-songwriters Travis Callison and Morgan Bolender.




Travis Callison is a Berkeley based producer, singer/songwriter, guitarist and EDM DJ. Drawing on a wide spectrum of musical stylings from blues to hip-hop to drum and bass to folk, he is a unique talent. "Unplugging" for this performance — with only acoustic guitar — his inquiring, heartfelt and infectious songs thrive under the austerity, and move in transcendent directions with a joy and urgency.

Morgan Bolender feels most honest when she's singing. Listening to her songs is like being carried down a gentle river whose depth and clarity leave you refreshed and inspired. Her voice and lyrics come from deep within the heart, evoking a fully embodied love that artfully captures the vulnerability of the human experience. A self-taught artist, she draws influence from her years of worldwide travel as well as the nuances of everyday life and relationships. She currently lives and loves in Oakland, California but music is her home wherever she goes.

Travis Callison and Morgan Bolender at the Maybeck Studio

Sunday, November 23, 2014, 3:00pm
Suggested donation: $15 at the door
Seating is limited. Get your required online reservation here.

Charity Cellos for Mindful Peacebuilding


Join us for a program featuring various show pieces for cello quartet, including a Telemann Concerto and arrangements of popular American folk tunes.

Charity Cellos
The Charity Cellos met while playing together in the Oakland Civic Orchestra, a volunteer community orchestra funded by Oakland Parks and Recs. We cellists really love our instrument, and it is our opinion (and we hope you agree) that out of the four instruments in the violin family, the cello has the most dynamic and emotive range -- with the depth and power of our lower strings up to the singing, voice-like tones of the upper registers.  It is this wonderful range that allows each cello to cover the range of parts that make up a quartet.  We hope to share our love of the cello through public performance while also inspiring support for community and charity organizations.

Charity Cellos is:  

Beth Kim
Deborah Thurtle
Paula Hollowell
Diane Louie

Mindful Peacebuilding


"Peace In Ourselves...Peace In Our Communities...Peace On Our Planet"

Bringing  together mindfulness practice, peacebuilding leadership skills, the art of mindful living in daily life, community service, and public action, Mindful Peacebuilding promotes a mindfulness-based approach to building a culture of peace on our planet and is open to all who wish to engage with societal challenges in a mindful context.  We are a diverse, inclusive networking organization which offers mindfulness-based listening circles, meditation and study groups, holiday gatherings, retreats, community service, and encouragement for public action, as well as coaching in mindfulness-based peacebuilding practice. Current areas of focus include:  working with elders and young people to transform and heal historical harm; cultivating mindfulness in prisons and schools; offering meals at a shelter for young adults who are homeless; supporting awareness and action related to climate change, access to clean water, and plant-sourced food; and communicating wisely and compassionately in the midst of strong emotion. Mindful Peacebuilding is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. All contributions are tax-deductible.

Charity Cellos for Mindful Peacebuilding at the Maybeck
Sunday, November 16, 2014, 3:00pm
Suggested Donation: $10-$20 at the door. All contributions are tax-deductible.
Seating is limited. This event is sold out. Thank you for your interest.

Lois Brandwynne, Piano


The Maybeck Studio presents Lois Brandwynne in an afternoon of Romantic Classical Piano.

The program will include Beethoven's "Tempest" sonata, short pieces of Chopin and feature the great C major Fantasy by Robert Schumann. Of this work, he wrote to his then fiancee Clara Weick: "The first movement may well be the most passionate I have ever composed---a deep lament for you."

Lois Brandwynne at the Maybeck
Sunday, November 9, 2014, 4:00pm < Note the time!
Suggested donation at the door: $20 adults, $15 seniors and students
Seating is limited. This event is sold out.

Lois Brandwynne studied piano at Mills College with revered Russian pedagogue Alexander Libermann and the legendary Dutch pianist Egon Petri.  She also studied composition with composers Darius Milhaud and Leon Kirchner. Awarded two successive traveling music fellowships from UC Berkeley, she then coached with Leonard Shure in New York and Alfred Brendel in Vienna.
She has soloed with numerous orchestras, including the San Francisco and Oakland Symphonies and the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, and has concertized in the United States and Europe to critical acclaim.

Her work as a chamber musician is equally extensive. In California she has performed at Music at the Vineyards, the Claremont and Cabrillo Music Festivals, and collaborated with eminent concert artists such as violist Walter Trampler, flutist Doriot Anthony Dwyer, cellists Bonnie Hampton and Emil Miland, and violinist Alexander Barantschik in the popular San Francisco Symphony Chamber Music Sundaes.

She has long been an enthusiast of contemporary music, and will participate in composer Elinor Armer's Jubilee Year in new works written for her and other Bay Area musicians this spring.
She on the music faculty at UC Davis  and also teaches in Berkeley at her private piano studio.

DIALOGUE: Myra Melford and Ben Goldberg


THE PROJECT:
We have been performing duets since 2008. Each concert is a chapter in an evolving musical conversation -- two musicians speaking the same language with slightly different points of view, and, like any good conversation, finding something new. So we titled the project DIALOGUE.

THE MUSICIANS:
Over the course of two decades and more than 30 recordings, Myra Melford, recipient of the Doris Duke Performing Artist Award (2013), a Guggenheim Fellowship (2013), and the Alpert Award in the Arts (2012), has carved out a distinctive niche among the creative music’s most respected pianist-composers. Her signature sound skillfully combines early influences such as classical music and the traditional blues piano styles of her native Chicago with her later immersion in the music of Eastern Europe and India and extensive musical studies with such legendary figures as Jaki Byard, Don Pullen and Henry Threadgill. Critics called her latest release, The Whole Tree Gone (Firehouse 12 Records), “a triumph” (John Sharpe, AllAboutJazz.com), “compelling from start to finish” (Jez Nelson, BBC 3′s Jazz on 3), “a knockout by any standard” (Nate Chinen, New York Times) and “a high water mark in Melford’s extraordinary oeuvre” (Troy Collins, Point of Departure). She currently leads a variety of ensembles, including a new quintet called Snowy Egret, and composes and plays in the collective Trio M with Mark Dresser and Matt Wilson.

Ben Goldberg, whom John Zorn has called "one of the greatest clarinetists I have ever heard," was named #1 Rising Star Clarinetist in both the 2011 and 2013 Downbeat Critics’ Poll. His group New Klezmer Trio "kicked open the door for radical experiments with Ashkenazi roots music" (San Francisco Chronicle). A recording of Ben’s song-cycle Orphic Machine, based on the poetical writings of Allen Grossman with Carla Kihlstedt on vocals (“knotted and occasionally spooky composition marked by dazzling interplay” – LA Times), will be released in 2014. Ben also leads Unfold Ordinary Mind, featuring Nels Cline, Ellery Eskelin, and Ches Smith (“Joyous research into the basics of polyphony and collective improvising” -- The New York Times); the sextet Ben Goldberg School; Go Home with Charlie Hunter (“a searching ensemble that welcomes lyrical improvisation while embracing the groove” -- The New Yorker); and the Ben Goldberg Trio with Greg Cohen and Kenny Wollesen; He is a member of Tin Hat; plays monk; Myra Melford’s Be Bread; and Nels Cline’s New Monastery.

DIALOGUE: Myra Melford and Ben Goldberg at the Maybeck
Saturday, November 8, 2014, 3:00pm
Suggested donation: $20 at the door
Seating is limited. This event is sold out. Thank you for your interest.


Bobbe Norris and Larry Dunlap


Vocalist Bobbe Norris has been a central figure in the ranks of Bay Area jazz luminaries since the 1960s. She has performed in virtually every jazz club in the area, starting with Jimbo’s Bop City and the North Beach jazz scene, spent several years in New York pursuing a much publicized career, and has appeared throughout Europe, Japan and the Caribbean, as well as throughout the US.

Larry Dunlap, Bobbe’s longtime partner in music and life, is a much in demand pianist and arranger who brings an innovative and ear-grabbing approach to all his endeavors. Larry is heard regularly with vocalists Mark Murphy and Dame Cleo Laine, to name a few.

Together Bobbe and Larry bring a warm and exciting newness to both familiar standards and original material from unusual sources. Their performances often include lesser know songs from well known composers as well as Brazilian delights and originals from seldom heard composers such as Michael Ruff, Flip Nunez and Marilyn Harris.

Bobbe Norris and Larry Dunlap at the Maybeck
Sunday, November 2, 2014, 3:00pm
Suggested Donation: $20 at the door
Seating is limited. Get your required online reservation here.

Bobbe’s lush, sultry voice and uncluttered style has been hailed by critics throughout the world. She is “a very hip singer who can turn a lyric like few others, a marvel at mellowness” (SF Examiner) and a songstress with a wealth of experience that is evident in every note. Combine this with Larry’s innovative but always appropriate playing and arranging and you have a very special evening of world class music that is exciting and relaxed, elegant and informal. This is old school vocal jazz in the vein of Ella Fitzgerald, Shirley Horn or Johnny Hartman.

A recent review in The Times (London) by Clive Davis states, “Norris has no time for artifice. Her lush contralto is direct and unfussy. She is a natural storyteller; as in the music of Chris Connor or Johnny Hartman, every syllable of every lyric is made to count; Dunlap's settings for piano and bass
could hardly have been more sympathetic.”