The next Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra Chamber Music Series concert will feature local award-winning soloists, recitalists, chamber musicians and PTSO members in a varied program …
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The next Port Townsend Symphony Orchestra Chamber Music Series concert will feature local award-winning soloists, recitalists, chamber musicians and PTSO members in a varied program spanning three centuries.
“We are proud of the ongoing development of this chamber music series,” said Pamela Roberts, its co-artistic director. “Talented local musicians generously volunteer their time so people can attend admission-free and enjoy exciting, high-quality programs. Those who are able to donate at the door provide valuable support to organizations such as Olive Crest. This model of giving creates a fun and fulfilling activity for both our community and our musicians.”
Featured artists include Vincent Oneppo on clarinet, Tamara Rotz on flute, Anne Krabill on oboe, Pamela Roberts herself on cello, Laurel Sprigg singing soprano, and Michael Carroll, Sung-Ling Hsu and Lisa Lanza on piano.
The concert’s program includes:
• Slavonic Dances for Four Hands, Op. 72 No. 2 and Op. 46 No. 8, by Antonin Dvorak.
• Cello Suite No.5 in C minor, BWV 1011, Prelude, by Johann Sebastian Bach.
• Neapolitan Tarantella for Clarinet and Piano, by Alfred Pasquala Zambarano.
• Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano Trio, Sentimentale, by Claude Bolling.
• “The Lake Isle of Innisfree,” by Ben Moore.
• “Jardin Antiquo,” by Carlos Guastavino.
• “Io son l’umile ancella,” from Adriana Lecouvreur, by Francesco Cilea.
• Oboe Sonata, DM, Op. 166, by Camille Saint-Saens.
• Clarinet Trio in A minor, Op. 114, mov. 3 and 4, by Johannes Brahms.
Roberts was a faculty cellist at the University of Puget Sound, while Carroll, her co-artistic director of this series, studied with Robert Van Meter at Clarion State College.
Sprigg studied at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and dance at Bennington College, and is an active recitalist who recently moved to Washington.
Hsu studied composition in Taiwan, and is a pianist at the Port Ludlow Community Church, while Lanza earned a master of music in piano performance from the University of Redlands, and is a pianist for both the Grace Lutheran Church and the Rainshadow Chorale.
Krabill studied with Gustav Steinert in Germany, and Leon Goossens in London, and was the principal oboist with the Atlantic Symphony Orchestra in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Oneppo graduated from the Yale School of Music, and soloed with Yale ensembles in New Haven and Carnegie Hall.
Rotz specializes in historical performance on flute, violin and viola, and holds a master of music performance degree from Indiana University’s Early Music Institute.