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VERSION:1.0
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES: SPECIAL OCCASION;TRAVEL;APPOINTMENT
STATUS:NEEDS ACTION
DTSTART:20130213T000000
DTEND:20130213T000000
SUMMARY:NEC Philharmonia + Loebel
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:Event Name: NEC Philharmonia + Loebel=0D=0AEvent Url: http://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/441656423=0D=0AEvent Date Begin: 2013-02-13=0D=0AEvent Date End: 2013-02-13=0D=0A=0D=0A&nbsp;David Loebel, Associate Director of Orchestras, conducts the NEC Philharmonia in an all-Hungarian program. He opens with the much neglected&nbsp;Ernest von Dohn&aacute;nyi'sSuite in F-sharp minor&nbsp;from 1909. Richard Freed, the critic and annotator has written of the work: 'Anyone who has ever heard Dohn&aacute;nyi's orchestral&nbsp;Suite in F-sharp minor, Op.19, must wonder about the incredible neglect of so substantial, brilliant and altogether ingratiating a work. There is not a single empty gesture in its half-hour span. Its four movements -- a dazzlingAndante con variazioni, a sly and bristlingScherzo, a lyric and songful&nbsp;Romanza, a rumbustious, exultant concluding&nbsp;Rondo(with a big, sweeping waltz and castanets) -- call to mind the pianist Artur Schnabel's reference to the Schubert sonatas as 'a safe supply of happiness.'=0D=0A=The piece is pure enchantment, with its abundance of good tunes, imaginative orchestral coloring (including some delicious solo passages for clarinet and cello), its prevailing sense of fantasy, remarkable range of mood, and unforced charm.' Loebel himself describes the Suite as 'full of Hungarian paprikash.'=0D=0A=A&nbsp;Bart&oacute;k&nbsp;Piano Concerto (tba) follows with the solo performed by the winner of an NEC concerto competition.=0D=0A=The program closes with&nbsp;Zoltan Kod&aacute;ly's&nbsp;Galanta Dances,&nbsp;a setting of folk dances from area (now a part of Slovakia) where the composer spent much of his childhood. Kodaly wrote in the preface to the printed score: 'The author spent the most beautiful seven years of his childhood in Gal&aacute;nta. The town band, led by the fiddler Mih&oacute;k, was famous.&nbsp; But it must have been even more famous a hundred years earlier. Several volumes of Hungarian dances were published in Vienna around the year 1800. One of them lists its source this way: 'from several Gypsies in Gal&aacute;nta'... May this modest composition serve to continue the old tradition.'
CLASS:PRIVATE
PRIORITY:3
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