21c Media Group Inc.

03/17/2021 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/18/2021 10:23

Classical Streaming from 21C in March, April & Beyond

March 17, 2021

21C's artists and organizations are keeping music alive in 2021 with new livestreams and favorite archived performances. Stay up to date with this rolling list, which we'll update and redistribute whenever new additions are announced. Upcoming and recent streams are up top; updates & additions to previously announced series are in red. (Updated March 17)

For press passes to any of the ticketed streams, please contact Louise at 21C

STREAMS & BROADCASTS COMING UP IN NEXT 10 DAYS
(listed chronologically; livestreams in gold)

Today: Wed, March 17 at 6:30pm ET: Bernard Labadie & OSL present 'The Madness of La Follia' (see Orchestra of St. Luke's below)
Today: Wed, March 17 at 1pm ET: Trinity Youth Chorus sings 'Love is Love is Love' (see Trinity Church Wall Street below for performances throughout the week)
Tomorrow, Thurs, March 18, 7pm PDT (10pm EDT): Mitsuko Uchida plays Schubert (see Cal Performances below)
Friday, March 19 at 7pm CET (2pm ET): Daniel Hope celebrates Denmark's music in [email protected] (see Daniel Hope below)
Sat, March 20 at 7pm CET (2pm ET): Daniel Hope celebrates Finland's music in [email protected] (see Daniel Hope below)
Sun, March 21 at 7pm CET (2pm ET): Daniel Hope celebrates Ireland's music in [email protected] (see Daniel Hope below)
Tues, March 23: James Ehnes joins DSO (see Dallas Symphony Orchestra below)
Weds, March 24: Anna Clyne curates OSL livestream (see Orchestra of St. Luke's below)
Thurs, March 25 at 7:30pm EST: Alisa Weilerstein & Inon Barnatan in recital (see Alisa Weilerstein below)

UPCOMING STREAMS
(LISTED ALPHABETICALLY BY ARTIST;newly announced streams in red)

CAL PERFORMANCES presents Mitsuko Uchida, Christine Goerke,Jeremy Denk & Renée Fleming
(TOMORROW: March 18, & dates in April; pre-recorded streams on website; ticketed)

Cal Performances announces its Spring 2021 'At Home ' season of twelve newly produced, full-length Main Stage music and dance video streams, recorded in leading venues and recording studios around the world, and premiering on select Thursday evenings from February 25 through June 10. Tickets for streamed programs are $15 for a single viewer, $30 for two viewers, and $60 for three or more; the Spring Stream Pass is $144. $5 tickets are available for UC Berkeley students to all events. See links below for upcoming streams, and click here for more general info.

Thurs, March 18, 7pm PDT (10pm EDT):Mitsuko Uchida, piano
SCHUBERT: Impromptu in A-flat, D. 935, No. 2
SCHUBERT: Impromptu in C minor, D. 899, No. 1
SCHUBERT: Sonata in G, D. 894
Following premiere, this will be available on demand from March 19 through June 16

Thurs, April 1 at 7pm PDT (10pm EDT):Christine Goerke, soprano
In one of the only recitals of her career to date, Goerke takes a break from opera's dramatic heroines to sing songs by composers from Handel and Brahms to Cole Porter and Carrie Jacobs-Bond. Joining Goerke at New Jersey's Art Factory is longtime recital partner Craig Terry, with whom she shares chemistry, banter and charm.
Following the premiere, this will be available on demand through June 30.

Thurs, April 15 at 7pm PDT (10pm EDT): Jeremy Denk, piano
Pianist, MacArthur Fellow, writer and noted musical commentator Denk returns to Cal Performances with a performance of Book 1 of Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier.
Following the premiere, this will be available on demand through July 14.

Thurs, April 29 at 7pm PDT (10pm EDT): Renée Fleming, soprano
As part of Cal Performances' Illuminations: Music and the Mind series, Fleming hosts a special discussion-performance with guest musicians TBA and UC Berkeley Professor of Neuroscience Ehud Isacoff.
Following the premiere, this will be available on demand through July 28.

Details of May programs - which include Bang on a Can, Beatrice Rana and yMusic - will follow soon.

Fiveupcoming streams from DALLAS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, filmed before live audiences
(From March 23; recorded livestreams on website; ticketed)

The Dallas Symphony Orchestra streams five more performances in March and April, each filmed before a live audience and featuring guest artists including Emanuel Ax, Rudolf Buchbinder, James Ehnes, Augustin Hadelich and David Robertson.Highlights include a performance conducted by Fabio Luisi, who, while still in his first season as Music Director, has already extended his contract with the orchestra. His leadership of Schumann's Fourth Symphony and Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto (streaming from April 13) marks his final DSO appearance of 2020-21.Presented in accordance with strict health and safety guidelines, all concerts are available for streaming in the DSO's Next Stage Digital Concert Series. Tickets: $10 for individual concerts; full series of 20+ concerts $125 with the NEXT STAGE Digital Pass. For tickets and more details about DSO's Next Stage series, visit Mydso.com/nextstage. (See also below for select DSO streams still available on demand.)

Streaming from March 23 (live performances: March 11-14)
Katharina Wincor conducts Anna Clyne: Stride for String Orchestra; Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto in E minor (with James Ehnes, violin); Schubert: Symphony No. 5

Streaming from March 30 (live performances: March 19 & 20)
Andrew Grams conducts Gershwin: Overture to Tip-Toes; Rhapsody in Blue, arr. Iain Farrington (with William Wolfram, piano); Lullaby for Strings; An American In Paris, arr. Iain Farrington

Streaming from April 13 (live performances: April 1-3)
Fabio Luisi conducts Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 4 (with Rudolf Buchbinder, piano); Schumann: Symphony No. 4

Streaming from April 20 (live performances: April 9 & 10)
Katharina Wincor conducts Copland: Appalachian Spring (chamber version); David Amram Partners: Double Concerto for Violin, Cello & Orchestra (with Maria Schleuning, violin; Jolyon Pegis, cello)

Streaming from April 27 (live performances: April 15-17)
David Robertson conducts R. Crawford Seeger: Rissolty Rossolty; Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 17 (with Emanuel Ax, piano); Berio/Schubert: Rendering

Details of May streams - conducted by Gemma New, Krzysztof Urbanski and others - will follow shortly.

DANIEL HOPE is back at home, live: [email protected]
(Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays at 7pm CET (1pm ET); live video streams on website and socials)

Following the success of his hit TV series [email protected], British violinist Daniel Hoperecently launched [email protected]. Streaming live each Friday, Saturday and Sunday for nine weeks, this newest incarnation of the show celebrates Europe and its rich musical and cultural diversity. With each episode devoted to a different one of the European Union's 27 member states, Hope is inviting young musicians into his Berlin home to collaborate on music by composers from their respective countries. All the episodes stream live at Arte Concert, Hope's Facebook page and Arte Concert's Facebook page, before being archived at Arte.tv. See details of the upcoming episodes below. See details of the upcoming episodes below.

Conceived as 'DIY TV' for our socially distanced times, the [email protected] series combine high-quality audio with the intimacy and immediacy of live, world-class home music-making. Together with its sequels, [email protected] on Tour! and [email protected] - Next Generation, the original show ran to almost 120 episodes, was streamed more than ten million times, and raised tens of thousands of Euros for artists in need.

THIS FRI, March 19: Dreamers' Circus, i.e. Rune Tonsgaard Sørensen, Ale Carr and Nikolaj Busk (Denmark)
THIS SAT, March 20: Pekka Kuusisto, violin; Jarkko Riihimäki, piano (Finland)
THIS SUN, March 21: Patrizia Sieweck, violin (Ireland)

Fri, March 26: Kristjan Järvi, piano (Estonia)
Sat, March 27: Sarah Aristidou, soprano; Annika Treutler, piano (Cyprus)
Sun, March 28: Jacques Ammon, piano; Ferenc Snetberger, guitar; Budapest Festival Orchestra / Ivan Fischer, founder and MD (Hungary)

Fri, April 2: Christian Gerhaher, baritone; Gerold Huber, piano (Germany)
Sat, April 3: Jana Kurucová, mezzo-soprano; Tahmina Feinstein, piano (Slovakia)
Sun, April 4: Michael Barenboim, violin; Natalia Pegarkova, piano (France)

LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA presents two further 'LOVE' livestreams in March
(March 27 & April 10; livestreams & subsequently available on website; ticketed)

Music director Teddy Abrams leads the Louisville Orchestra in the next edition of its Festival of American Music: two further 'LOVE' (Louisville Orchestra Virtual Edition)livestreams in March and April. Both performances will stream live at the orchestra's website, where they will subsequently be available for streaming on demand.

On March 27, 'Abrams Plays Ravel' features the conductor as piano soloist in Ravel's Concerto in G, along with rapper and curator Jecorey Arthur, who last appeared with the orchestra when he headlined the world premiere of Abrams's grand-scale work The Greatest: Muhammad Ali (available on demand from April 9 until May 23). Abrams and Arthur will discuss their collaboration and this stream with Ari Shapiro onNPR's All Things Consideredon March 26.

Next, in 'Wailing Trumpets' on April 10, Louisville's Principal Pops Conductor Bob Bernhardt leads a program of jazz and ragtime (available on demand from April 23 until June 6).

Info and tickets are available at Louisvilleorchestra.org/spring-love. See below for 'LOVE' streams still available on demand.

ORCHESTRA OF ST. LUKE'S presents new, curated livestream series
(Starts Feb 17; live video streams on website; ticketed)

Orchestra of St. Luke's presents nine curated concerts this winter and spring, all streaming live from New York's DiMenna Center for Classical Music in the OSLive Wednesday Night Series. Conceived for the online experience and directed by Tristan Cook, this comprises three shorter series, all featuring St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble, OSL's artistic core. David Hyde Pierce hosts the first series, 'Sounds and Stories': three interdisciplinary concerts exploring music through the written word, created with guest collaborators Teju Cole, Anna Clyne, Jyll Bradley and Rita Dove. Next, OSL Principal Conductor Bernard Labadie curates and hosts 'Baroque 2021': three concerts devoted to music of the period, complete with the conductor's expert commentary. Finally, WQXR's Terrance McKnight hosts 'Sounds Like a Symphony,' three programs of Romantic repertoire that showcase the ensemble's symphonic spirit, with guest appearances by Jeremy Denk, Augustin Hadelich, Tito Muñoz and Tai Murray. Streams are available for one week following premiere stream.

OSLive Wednesday Night Series
Orchestra of St. Luke's; Tristan Cook, director
Ticketed; suggested ticket price: $40 (pay what you can from $1-$100)
For tickets and information, clickhere.

Wed, March 17 at 6:30pm
BAROQUE 2021: Madness for La Follia
Bernard Labadie, OSL Principal Conductor and host
CORELLI: La Follia
VIVALDI: Trio Sonata in D minor, RV 63, 'La Follia'
C.P.E. BACH: Twelve Variations on La folia d'Espagne, Wq. 118/9
GEMINIANI: Concerto Grosso Op. 5, No. 12 in D minor, 'La Follia'

Wed, March 24 at 6:30pm
SOUNDS AND STORIES: Anna Clyne
David Hyde Pierce, host
Anna Clyne, composer and curator
Jyll Bradley, visual artist
BACH: Selected Three Part Inventions
STEVE REICH: New York Counterpoint
BACH: Contrapunctus I-IV from Art of the Fugue
ANNA CLYNE: Strange Loops (world premiere)
JYLL BRADLEY: Woman Holding a Balance (short film; world premiere)

Wed, April 7 at 6:30pm ET
SOUNDS LIKE A SYMPHONY: The Lark and the Titan
Terrance McKnight, host
Tito Muñoz, conductor
Tai Murray, violin
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (arr. Gerigk): The Lark Ascending (with Tai Murray, violin); MAHLER (arr. Simon): Symphony No. 1

Wed, April 21 at 6:30pm ET
BAROQUE 2021: Bach in Threes
Bernard Labadie, OSL Principal Conductor and host
Jeremy Filsell, organ
BACH: Sonata in E-flat, BWV 525 (Jeremy Filsell, organ); Violin and Keyboard Sonata in A, BWV 1015 (with OSL violinist Jesse Mills); Trio Sonata from The Musical Offering, BWV 1079; BACH (arr. Labadie): Sonata in E-flat, BWV 525

Details of April, May & June programs to follow in Feb; more details at OSLmusic.org.

TRINITY CHURCH WALL STREET continues its Comfort at One streams
(All streams at 1pm on weekdays; free; Facebook, Twitter and on Trinity's website)

In 2021, Trinity Church Wall Street continues its three-century role of bringing solace to New York's downtown community and the world at large, with a full program of online 'Comfort at One' concerts. Taking advantage of Trinity's extensive archives and high-quality recording and film technology, this free streaming series was launched after the suspension of in-person activities at the start of the pandemic last year. Read more about Comfort at One here. The weekday Comfort at One concerts stream on Facebook< /a>andTwitter,with full videos posted on Trinity's website. All concerts start at 1pm.

Trinity's ongoing Comfort at One Lenten series was inspired by the Ghandi quotation, 'In the midst of darkness, light persists.' Tuesdays throughout Lent will feature the 'Lamentatio' series from 2014, with Director of Music Julian Wachner conducting the Choir of Trinity Wall Street, NOVUS NY, and guest artists in music by Philip Glass, Shostakovich, Ginastera, Tallis, Dufay, Ockeghem, and Nathan Shields. Thursdays in Lent will feature Wachner performing a variety of improvisations, some drawn again from the Lamentatio series and others from service preludes and postludes.

TODAY, Wed, March 17: Trinity Youth Chorus sings 'Love is Love is Love' from their virtual concert, 'No One is Alone: Songs of Love and Compassion.' The performance is juxtaposed with inspired artwork by the performers.
TOMORROW, Thurs, March 18: Wachner performed the fifth of his Lamentatio improvisations.
THIS Fri, March 19: NOVUS NY's concertmaster and Trinity Baroque Orchestra violinist Katie Hyun performs Telemann's Fantasie No. 8.
Mon, March 22: Choir of Trinity Wall Street and Trinity Baroque Orchestra performed Preise dein Glücke, gesegnetes Sachsen, BWV 215 and the Sanctus - Osanna - Dona nobis pacem from the B-minor Mass. Featured soloists include Andrew Fuchs, Christopher Dylan Herbert, and Sarah Brailey. (from 2016 12th Night Festival).
Tues, March 23: Guest conductor Michael Zaugg directs the Choir of Trinity Wall Street in this exploration of darkness and light through the music of Brahms, Lukaszewski, David Lang and others. (from 2014's Lenten 'Lamentatio' series)
Weds, March 24: The Choir of Trinity Wall Street's soprano Molly Netter curates and performs in a program pairing her own arrangement of Bach with a work she commissioned from Calvin Hitchcock. Netter accompanies herself on the clavicytherium, an instrument resembling an upright harpsichord.
Thurs, March 25: Julian Wachner performed an improvisation on In Christ There Is No East or West (from June 2020's prelude for Pride Sunday).
Fri, March 26: Soprano Molly Netter performs her own arrangement of Thelonius Monk's Round Midnight and the first movement of Beethoven's 'Moonlight' Sonata in a unique a capella mashup.

ALISA WEILERSTEIN joins Inon Barnatan for duo recital, presented by NYC's 92nd Street Y
(March 25 at 7:30pm EST: prerecorded stream on website; ticketed)

Alisa Weilerstein reunited with her regular piano partner, Inon Barnatan, for a pairing of Rachmaninoff's Cello Sonata with De Falla's Suite populaire espagnole. Filmed at La Jolla's Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center, their duo recital will be presented by New York's 92nd Street Y: the performance will stream on March 25, and will be available for one week; click here for tickets and information.

SELECT PERFORMANCE STREAMS NOW/STILL AVAILABLE
(LISTED ALPHABETICALLY BY ARTIST; newly announced streams in red)

PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD celebrates Kurtág at 95
(Available until this FRIDAY March 19; pre-recorded webcast; free on website & socials)

To celebrate the modernist composer's 95th birthday, French pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard performs an all-Gyorgy Kurtág program featuring the online world premieres of the dog (2020) and A Ligatura for Márta (2020). Filmed at the Teldex Studios in Berlin and streamed by Amsterdam's Muziekgebouw, Aimard's performance forms the second half of a birthday concert that opens with a Kurtág program from the Asko | Schönbergensemble and mezzo-soprano Gerrie de Vries. Having premiered on February 20, the concert stream will continue to be available for free on-demand streaming for one month, at theMuziekgebouw website, FacebookandYouTubepages.

MARIN ALSOP leads Polish National Radio Symphony on medici.tv; plus a spotlight on Articulate with Jim Cotter
(PNRS: pre-recorded webcast on medici.tv
Articulate: prerecorded webcast on PBS website; free)

In celebration of International Women's Day, conductor Marin Alsop joined the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and English hornist Piotr Pyc for Polish composer Stanisław Skrowaczewski's Concerto for English Horn and Orchestra, British/Polish composer Roxanna Panufnik's Two Composers, Four Hands, for Double String Orchestra, and Sergei Prokofiev's 'Classical' Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 25. A medici.tv subscription is needed to view this performance. More information and a link to the webcast are available here. Alsop also graced a recent episode of PBS TV's Articulate with Jim Cotter, which aired on PBS TV stations and is now available for streaming on the network's website.

LEIF OVE ANDSNES gives recital of Grieg, Dvořák & Beethoven; PBS's Articulate with Jim Cotter shines spotlight on LEIF OVE ANDSNES
(Feb 21 at 3pm EST; prerecorded webcast; ticketed) (Prerecorded video on website; free)

Spivey Hall presents Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes in a recital filmed earlier this month at the Grieg Museum in Bergen. Streaming from theAtlanta venue's website, Andsnes's program features four of the Norwegian composer's Lyric Pieces, flanked by selections from Dvořák's Poetic Tone Pictures and Beethoven's 'Pathétique' Sonata.

In its latest episode, PBS TV's Articulate with Jim Cottershines the spotlight on Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes. Besides airing on PBS TV stations, the episode is now available for streaming on the series' website.

THE ATLANTA OPERA presents Orfano Mondo, Pagliacci, The Kaiser of Atlantis and more on its Spotlight Media service
(Webcasts; ticketed & available in new digital subscription service)

The Atlanta Opera has just released the first four episodes of Orfano Mondo, a world premiere film series by American bass-baritone Ryan McKinny and Emmy-winning filmmaker Felipe Barral. Addresses the fears surrounding live performance during the pandemic though exclusive behind-the-scenes footage, material filmed expressly for the series, and scenes from Atlanta's live fall productions, each Orfano Mondo episode is 10-15 minutes long. Four more episodes are scheduled for release over the next two months.

This new series expands the offerings available from The Atlanta Opera's new digital subscription service, Spotlight Media. Previous releases include full-length films of the two live opera productions. Baritone Reginald Smith, Jr., tenor Richard Trey Smagurand soprano Talise Trevigne star in Leoncavallo's Pagliacci, while baritone Michael Mayes headlines General & Artistic Director Tomer Zvulun's acclaimed company premiere of The Kaiser of Atlantis, a chilling satire on Hitler by eventual Auschwitz victims Viktor Ullmann and Peter Kien. 'Mezzo Extravaganza ' celebrates the superlative voices of mezzo-sopranos Gabrielle Beteag, Daniela Mack, Megan Marino and Jamie Barton. In a series of 'Love Letters to Atlanta,' each of which includes an extended, exclusive interview, bass Morris Robinson sings 'The Impossible Drea m' from Man of La Mancha, Jamie Barton sings 'Georgia on My Mi nd' and Kevin Burdette sings 'If Ever I Would Leave You' from Camelot.

Single-performance Spotlight Media passes start at $10 and annual passes are priced at $99 per viewing household. Visit The Atlanta O pera's website for more information and contact Louise at 21C for press passes.

JOSHUA BELL gave a recital in Violin Channel's new 'Vanguard Concerts' series
(Pre-recorded stream on Facebook & YouTube; free)

Violinist Joshua Bell plays a full-length recital with pianist Alessio Bax of works by Bach, Schubert, Wieniawski and Chopin in the Violin Channel's new Vanguard Concerts series. This free series of original digital concerts, co-produced with the Alphadyne Foundation, features a lineup of today's top string players and airs weekly on the Violin Channel's Facebook page and YouTube channel. Each concert will be available after the premiere for on-demand viewing.

JULIA BULLOCK sang NPR Tiny Desk (Home) Concert; curated and performed 'Lineage' with San Francisco Symphony; and gave recital for Cal Performances At Home
(Tiny Desk: Recorded video livestream, free on NPR website; 'Lineage': pre-recorded video stream on website; ticketed)

Honored as a 2021 Artist of the Year and 'agent of change' by Musical America, classical vocalist Julia Bullock sang Schubert, Weill, Billy Taylor and more for a Tiny Desk (Home) Concert in NPR Music's special quarantine edition of the series, streaming free on demand at NPR Music. As Collaborative Partner of the San Francisco Symphony, she also curated a program in the orchestra's Digital SoundBox series. Titled 'Lineage,' this offers an audio and visual snapshot of the ways that lineage can inform, influence, impact and express itself in a musical context. Highlights include Bullock's giving her signature rendition of Nina Simone's 'Revolution' and joining members of the San Francisco Symphony and Chorus for accounts of Simone's 'Images,' Esperanza Spalding's 'Little Fly,' Aruán Ortiz's 'Mompouana,' selections from Francis Poulenc's Rapsodie nègre and Ricky Ian Gordon's Litany. 'Lineage' streamed on the SFSymphony+ platform, and is available on demand to ticket holders and SFSymphony+ members through summer 2021. Tickets at $15 are available here.

See also Cal Performances below for Bullock's fall recital stream.

CAL PERFORMANCES: fall streams still available
( Recorded livestreams on website; ticketed)

Fall classical streams still available:

-Takács Quartet play HAYDN, BRITTEN and BRAHMS (available through April 28)

-Mahan Esfahani, harpsichord plays J.S. BACH: Goldberg Variations, BWV 988 (available through June 2)

-Jordi Savall, La Capella Reial de Catalunya and Le Concert des Nations play MONTEVERDI (available until Sep 1)

-Julia Bullock sings WOLF, SCHUMANN, WEILL, STILL, BONDS, ADAMS, RODGERS (available until April 14)

See above for ticket information. Available at Calperformances.org/at-home or by phone at (510) 642-9988.

Fabio Luisi leads DALLAS SYMPHONY in Next Stage Digital Concert Series
(Recorded performances; videostreams; website; ticketed)

Last September, Grammy-winning conductor Fabio Luisi launched his tenure as Music Director of the Dallas Symphony, which was among the first major US orchestras to return to performing since the outbreak of COVID-19. Powerhouse pianist Yefim Bronfman joined Luisi and the DSO for an all-Beethoven program for the season-opening concerts; a free video stream of the opening program is available here, and many streams are still available in the orchestra's Next Stage Digital Concert Series, including a program of Verdi favorites featuring mezzo Jamie Barton; the world premiere of En otra noche, en otro mundo by DSO Composer-in-Residence Angélica Negrón; and Mahler's Song of the Earth with Tamara Mumford and Stuart Skelton as soloists. To see all the available Next Stage offerings, click here.

ALAN GILBERT led NDR Elbphilharmonie in works by Dvořák & Mahler; plus conductor chats on Facebook
(Archived video stream; website, plus live audio broadcast; free)

In December, Hamburg's NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra and Chief Conductor Alan Gilbert was joined by cellist Gautier Capuçon and soprano Anna Prohaska for a live performance of Dvořák's Cello Concerto and Mahler's Fourth Symphony. The free concert stream is archived at NDR's website. More info here.

From his home in Stockholm, Gilbert has hosted hourlong discussions on Facebook Live with fellow conductors Karina Canellakis, Daniel Harding and Sir Simon Rattle, Marin Alsop, Sir Antonio Pappano and Esa-Pekka Salonen, Herbert Blomstedt, and most recently, Thomas Morris and Christoph von Dohnányi.

First concert in MICHAEL HERSCH's series '… thus far and no further …'
(Recorded live performance; video stream; Facebook; free)

American composer Michael Hersch recently reunited with sculptor Christopher Cairns to launch the intimate live concert series '… thus far and no further …'. Curated by Hersch and performed by some of his most trusted musical collaborators for a socially distanced audience of just 15, each live concert is bookended by sound installations and takes place among the sculptures in Cairns's Pennsylvania studio, as previously featured in the set design for Hersch's monodrama On the Threshold of Winter. VisitHersch's Facebook pageto see the first concert in the series, which presented Miranda Cuckson, Emi Ferguson and the FLUX Quartet in a program juxtaposing Hersch and Morton Feldman with early French composers Guillaume de Machaut and Josquin des Prez.

Also available for free online listening is Hersch's 10-hour world premiere of sew me into a shroud of leaves. The marathon performance comprises Hersch himself playing Part I:The Vanishing Pavilions, hornist Jamie Hersch and cellist Mariel Roberts playing Part II: Last Autumn, and pianist Jacob Rhodebeck playing Part III: one day may become menace. Hersch mastered the recording on November 9, 2019 from 5am to 8pm (with breaks) in the State Hall of the Austrian National Library, and has just made it available free of charge on YouTube.

LOUISVILLE ORCHESTRA's March 'LOVE' livestreams still available on demand
(available on website; ticketed)

Music director Teddy Abrams has led the Louisville Orchestra in two 'LOVE' (Louisville Orchestra Virtual Edition) livestreams in March: both performances are available to stream at the orchestra's website. 'Homecomings: Musical Journeys of Uncommon Folk' features singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Sarah Jarosz with world premiere orchestral arrangements of her own songs, along with Bartók's Romanian Folk Dances and Gabriela Lena Frank's Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout (available on demand from this Friday, March 19 until May 2). A 'Classical Pairing' of Mozart's Symphony No. 39 with John Adams's Chamber Symphony, is also available on demand until April 11. Info and tickets are available at Louisvilleorchestra.org/spring-love.