Word: pianist
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...harmonious works of composer Josquin along with more contemporary pieces. Sanders Theatre. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, $18/14 general; $9/7 students/senior citizens. (LAM)The Ying Quartet. The award-winning professional Ying Quartet mixes its violin and cello skills with the music of pianist Bob Levin. Paine Hall. 8 p.m. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222, free with a limit of two tickets per person. (LAM)Saturday, Nov. 5Dins & LowKeys Concert. Check out the fall concert festivities at Keylime, where the two Harvard a capella groups will...
...University Professor and arguably the most well-respected Bach scholar, Christoph Wolff. The conference took place Sep. 23-25, the same weekend that the exhibit opened. It featured papers by musicologists as well as live performances by the Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra, the Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra, and pianist and Harvard Professor Robert Levin and his wife, pianist Ya-Fei Chuang (both of whom played harpsichord...
...Chicago band that whose style fuses traditional Celtic music and punk rock. 18+. The Middle East Upstairs. 9 p.m. $10 in advance through Ticketmaster, $12 at the door. (CEJ)Sunday, Oct. 30Violin and Piano Concert. Head over to church this Sunday and let Irina Muresanu, violinist, and Michael Lewis, pianist, make your spine tingle with gorgeous rhythm and melody. Harvard-Epworth Church, 1555 Massachusetts Ave. 5 p.m. Free. (TMN)Wynton Marsalis. Don’t miss nine-time Grammy-award-winning jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis who promises an unforgettable performance. Sanders Theatre. 5 p.m. Tickets available at Harvard Box Office...
...seems incongruous at first. The author of a two-volume biography of Roosevelt and a notoriously sub-par work on Ronald Reagan, Morris has no obvious ties to the music world. However, he goes out of his way to mention on the back flap that he is both a pianist and a “private music scholar” who has been studying Beethoven with 50 years of devotion. These credentials sound about as compelling as those of the ousted director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Michael D. Brown. (But when Morris discusses at First Parish tonight...
...Wolohojian explains, can also be seen as a pair of leafy green wings. This makes the scene iconic: the annunciation, the first visit of the angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary.But Wolohojian insists that the painting might also be the depiction of a very personal family drama. The pianist is probably Degas’ brother Renee, the figure of Mary Renee’s wife, and the angel the wife of one of Renee’s neighbors. The pianist, with his strangely blurred face, is looking past the figure of Mary to the angel. His gaze is disturbingly prophetic...