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VERSION:1.0
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES: SPECIAL OCCASION;TRAVEL;APPOINTMENT
STATUS:NEEDS ACTION
DTSTART:20130131T000000
DTEND:20130131T000000
SUMMARY:Transfigured Night
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:Event Name: Transfigured Night=0D=0AEvent Url: http://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/441655992=0D=0AEvent Date Begin: 2013-01-31=0D=0AEvent Date End: 2013-01-31=0D=0A=0D=0A&nbsp;Two people walk through a bare, cold grove.=0D=0A=Woman:&nbsp;I'm carrying a child, not yours.=0D=0A=I walk in sin beside you.=0D=0A=Man:&nbsp;A special warmth flickers=0D=0A=From you into me, from me into you.=0D=0A=It will transfigure the strange man's child.=0D=0A=Two people walk through the lofty, bright night.=0D=0A=from Stanley Applebaum's translation of Richard Dehmel's poem=0D=0A=In 1899, at the dawn of a new century, composer&nbsp;Arnold Schoenberg&nbsp;created a breakthrough musical work,&nbsp;Verkl&auml;rte Nacht (Transfigured Night). In creating this epic half-hour of unprecedented sounds, Schoenberg drew on his love of two opposing musical models of his time: Brahms's pure, abstract music, Wagner's musical storytelling&mdash;along with a poem that was scandalous for its time in treating an illegitimate child as a catalyst for human transformation. Paradoxically, Schoenberg's uncompromising quest for a new musical aesthetic was triggered by this consummate musical peace offering.=0D=0A=Writing for string sextet, Schoenberg expressed a vision of orchestral scale. In fact, he eventually created an arrangement for string orchestra (in 1917, revised in 1943), and on&nbsp;February 27, Donald Palma and the NEC Chamber Orchestra offer the opportunity to hear this version of the work.=0D=0A=Each year&nbsp;John Heiss&nbsp;recruits students interested in performing 20th- and 21st-century music to join the&nbsp;NEC Contemporary Ensemble. After a fall concert that included an early modernist icon that is often on the Contemporary Ensemble playlist, Schoenberg's&nbsp;Pierrot Lunaire, Heiss continues his Schoenberg survey.=0D=0A=Also on the program: a 1938 trio by&nbsp;B&eacute;la Bart&oacute;k&nbsp;based on Hungarian and Romanian dance melodies; and&nbsp;Gunther Schuller's 1979&nbsp;Octet, written shortly after he stepped down from the presidency of New England Conservatory.=0D=0A=Bart&oacute;k&nbsp;Contrasts=0D=0A=Robyn Bollinger, violin=0D=0A=Nathan Raderman, clarinet=0D=0A=Yannick Rafalimanana, piano=0D=0A=Schuller&nbsp;Octet=0D=0A=Amy Galluzzo, Sarah Ryu, violin=0D=0A=Danielle Weibe, viola=0D=0A=Yina Tong, cello=0D=0A=Edward Kass, double bass=0D=0A=John Diodati, clarinet=0D=0A=Sean Maree, bassoon=0D=0A=Nick Rubenstein, horn=0D=0A=Read Gunther Schuller's notes on this work.=0D=0A=Schoenberg&nbsp;Transfigured Night=0D=0A=Audrey Wright, Alexi Kenney, violin=0D=0A=Wenting Kang, Alice Webber, viola=0D=0A=Emileigh Vandiver, Andrew Larson, cello=0D=0A=Since 1967,&nbsp;John Heiss&nbsp;has taught NEC students the roots of 20th-century modernism both in the classroom and as a conductor and coach. His courses on Ives, Schoenberg, and Stravinsky have shaped generations of musicians. Due to the accuracy of his ear in rehearsals, Stravinsky called him 'the pitch doctor.'=0D=0A=0D=0AStart time:Seating is first come, first served
CLASS:PRIVATE
PRIORITY:3
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