Chopin News, Reviews, and Previews:
Piano Man on a Mission
Miami New Times - Miami,FL,USA
Fascinating story of the "self-taught classical pianist" Kristopher Hull, who's now taking his Chopin-heavy act to the streets of Miami as a "Pianist Errant"
This past February 27 would come to be known as Kristopher Hull's Worst Day Ever. Armed with a full-size upright piano, a repertoire of Chopin's etudes and nocturnes, and his nerves, the 33-year-old pianist planned to storm Lincoln Road, guerrilla-style. He was going to bring classical music out of the concert hall and into the streets.
Inspired by his fictional role model, Don Quixote, Hull was in the early days of his quest, which he called "pianist errantry." He was accompanied by a pal, Swedish-born photographer Victor Staaffe, who was documenting the whole thing. Together that sunny afternoon, they unloaded Hull's piano from the back of his aquamarine pickup truck.... Concert will feature 'jazz on a classical guitar'
Post-Bulletin - Rochester,MN,USA
Jazz guitarist Gene Bertoncini is poised to showcase his classical chops with the Rochestra Symphony Orchestra...
The works fit the Latin theme of the concert. "You can't get more Latin than the title of 'Spain,'" Bertoncini said. Jobim borrowed from Chopin's Prelude and added a bossanova beat for "How Insensitive." "I heard a pianist do it the same way when I was on the 'Tonight Show,'" Bertoncini said. "I always remembered that." He simply transferred it to guitar. He'll play three arrangements with the orchestra, two of them melding classical pieces with jazz tunes. The first combines Chopin's Prelude in E flat with Antonio Carlos Jobim's "How Insensitive." The second starts with Joaquin Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez and becomes Chick Corea's "Spain."
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World-acclaimed Vietnamese pianist to release new CD
Viet Nam News - Hanoi,Vietnam
More about the Chopin-heavy CD-and-book releases in Vietnam by native son (and 1980 Chopin Competition winner) Dang Thai Son...
Distributed by the Phuong Nam Film Company, the collection includes 13 CDs, previously released by Japan’s Victor Entertainment Inc. (JVC). The CDs include Tchaikovsky, Men-delssohn, Liszt, Ravel and Debussy scores, and nine devoted entirely to Chopin. According to director of Phuong Nam Film Phan Mong Thuy, the company has spent four months securing distribution rights from JVC. "In presenting the CDs of famous pianist Dang Thai Son, our company is doing its utmost to bring Vietnamese audiences valued musical products," Thuy said.A CD compilation of Vietnamese high profile pianist Dang Thai Son’s favourite classical pieces hits the streets next Friday.
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SFIFF: Ashes to ashes
San Francisco Bay Guardian - San Francisco,CA,USA
Another mention of the acclaimed indie documentary film Forever:
SFIFF One of the greatest pleasures of the 50th SF International Film Festival was Forever, Heddy Honigmann's 2006 study of the living among the dead at Paris' Père-Lachese cemetery. Between footage of the sun-dappled necropolis in all its hushed, springtime glory, Honigmann (who received last year's Persistence of Vision award) profiles several regular visitors, who in the course of discussing an attachment to a particular resident — whether that dweller be Frédéric Chopin or a deceased husband — reveal a great deal about how we commune with memory in our daily lives.
Chopin in the Blogosphere:
Dancing about music
By Thomasina
A "distinterested plug" by a Down Under blogger for a quadruple-bill Jerome Robbins Celebration, by the Australian Ballet...
1. The Concert
This is one of the sweetest, funniest, most entertaining ballets I’ve ever seen. The pianist on stage performs a recital of Chopin. The dancers are the audience – behaving in all the ways that audiences do, including sitting in the wrong seats – and they dance out their fantasies in the most delightful ways. Did I mention I adore this ballet?
Thomasina’s last waltz - http://frindley.typepad.com
Chopin and Callas worshippers
By Gillibrand(Gillibrand)
Can be found at the Church of St Julien le Pauvre in Paris. Since 1889, the home of the Melkites in Paris.
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