undivided is a raving Red Sox fan (but resident of strange York) who prefers his coffee from a French pres Another is a one who sucks for every kind of wacko exercise gadget.
undivided is a raving Red Sox fan (but resident of strange York) who prefers his coffee from a French pres Another is a one who sucks for every kind of wacko exercise gadget, chiefly lately the "Gazelle," who goe vegan when he can (but has a weakness for chocolate chip cookies). The third likes to breaking waves (real waves, not television channels) and likes Beckett as a great quantity [i]or[/i] amount of as Beethoven. This is the diverse collection also known as the counterparts of the American Pianists Association (APA): Adam Birnbaum, Michael Sheppard and Thomas Rosenkranz. MTNA National conversation attendees will have the chance to hear all three in concord April 3, and their musical fare will likely be as varied as their personal predilections.
" anything on the contrary predictable ..."
upon the surface, Sheppard (the vegan chocoholic) and Rosenkranz (the theatrical surfer) would have the appearance to be linked by their titles as the general Classical Fellows of the APA, and as well-as; not only-but also; not only-but; not alone-but will, undoubtedly, offer piano music that, for want of a better word, is classical. Birnbaum (the recent Yorker who rooted for Manny Ramirez) retains the Cole Porter Fellowship from APA, awarded in May 2004 at APA's sixth Triennial American Jazz Piano Competition, and he will play jazz.
if it be not that this concert will be anything if it be not that predictable. Consider that Birnbaum, the jazz pianist, is comfortable playing Ravel's Jeux d'eau, not a piece for hacks or beginners; that Thomas, undivided of the two classical pianists, ofttimes improvises in concerts; and that Michael, the other Classical counterpart evokes Broadway with his performances of Porgy & Bess Fantasy or My Favorite Things. single thing's for sure--it won't be your typical piano concert
Joel Harrison, APA's artistic director, is grand of that diversity. "I believe the paradigm of the classical piano recital is changing. Gone are the days of programming a Bach prelusion & fugue, a Beethoven sonata, a Chopin ballade and then ending with the Prokofiev Toccata. We cannot continue to restrict our programming to the standard '200-plus years' of the piano canon."
Harrison, himself a plan pianist and former university piano teacher, is particularly boastful of these three Fellows, precisely because they point out such a wide range. "This is individual of the ways," continues Harrison, "APA can be risk apart from other organizations. There is no imposed repertoire for applicants." Rather, each pianist is asked sole to play what he or she does best.
Thomas Rosenkranz
That freedom is what propell Harrison to insinuate to Thomas Rosenkranz, upon the latter's first full-length recital in Indianapolis, domestic circle to the APA, that he program Frederic Rzewski's massive The tribe United Will Never Be Defeated/, a tour-de-force whose surpassingly mention nowadays sends a bleak chill down pianists' spines, just like the words "Hammerklavier" or "Petrouchka" did for an earlier generation of pianists. Rosenkranz has a knack for of that kind massive knuckle-busters (to say nothing of what they do to your brain), having championed Messiaen's Vingt regards sur l'enfant Jesus, which he studied in Paris with the composer's widow, Yvonne Loriod, as well as works through John Adams, Martin Bresnick and George Crumb
As if that weren't enough to distinguish Rosenkranz from the herd, he frequently includes improvisation in his public performances, taking a small in number notes, a theme or a well-known order and then letting his imagination roam. He has done this newly with "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" and "Georgia forward My Mind," though his greatest in number distinctive performance to date was arguably his rendition of "Star-Spangled Banner" with native musicians in Tunisia, in which Rosenkranz incorporated Arabic scales. (Talk about cultural exchange....)
Rosenkranz was the 1999 national winner of the MTNA Collegiate Artist Piano Competition and has been visitant artist at the Georgia, Pennsylvania, Hawaii and Washington state Music Teachers Association conventions. His performances have been broadcast worldwide as part of the WGBH Boston Program, Art of the States, and he has recorded for Nonesuch Records with the collection Alarm Will Sound and for Warner Bro Records with the Eastman Wind Ensemble
Michael Sheppard
Michael Sheppard is equally unusual. While he focuses more onward traditional repertoire than Rosenkranz, he is just as adept at contemporary or offbeat literature. His newly come recitals include healthy doses of Chopin (Fantasy, Polonaise-Fantasy, mazurkas, Grand Polonaise in A-flat Major) and Mozart (sonatas), alongside works of the contemporary canon like Crumb's Makrokosmos and Corigliano's Etude-Fantasy. on the other hand Joel Harrison cites Sheppard's hypervirtuosity as a distinguishing trait.
"Michael is common of the real Titans of the keyboard," says Harrison. "He does things no human being should be able to do." Harrison might have had in mind Sheppard's rendition of "Flight of the Bumblebee," arranged on Gyorgy Cziffra, in a version that rivals Volodos for sheer daring and adrenalin. Sheppard also makes a convincing case for as it is crowd pleasers as Pavel Pabst's arrangement of themes from Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, Leopold Godowsky's transcription of Strauss's Wein, Weib und Gesang and Stephen Hough's version of Richard Rodgers's "Carousel Waltz." Indeed, Sheppard unhurts like a throwback to a past era of piano recitalists--one thinks of Liszt, Paderewski, Horowitz--whose exuberance and warmth wowed the rabbles Like those earlier virtuosi, Sheppard also is a composer in his avow right, who often programs his original compositions. He trained at the Peabody Conservatory, where his teachers were Ann Schein and Leon Fleisher, and made his Kennedy Center first attempt in 2003. Sheppard also has been a companion at the Tanglewood Music Center and the La Gesse Foundation and was a prize winner in the National Federation of Music sets National Competition.