University of South Carolina School of Music Calendar of Events OCTOBER 2015

Beijing Guitar Duo

Yes, the students are back and so is the traffic and the endless coffee shop lines, the scarcity of parking spaces with their hateful meters, the gridiron obsession, and the schnockered Greek groupies skittering across our main thruways like potted squirrels in a rigged game of chance.

The upside? We live in a university town and, as a city and an arts community, we are almost always invited to take advantage of the plethora of new arts experiences our universities offer us. Case in point--the calendar for USC's School of Music for the month of October alone lists no less than 15 events, most of which are free.

Yes, Columbia is a university town, but these universities are part of what makes us an arts town--nay, an arts destination-- as well.

 

Thurs., Oct. 1, 7:30 p.m. USC Concert Choir and University Chorus Concert Main Street United Methodist Church

Free

The USC University Chorus presents "Peace and Reconciliation" and includes freedom songs from the U.S. and South African traditions, spirituals, and texts that offer words of peace and hope. Featured composers are William Dawson, Jeffery Ames, Maurice Durufle, Robert Hugh, Paul Caldwell and Sean Ivory.

 

Fri., Oct. 2, 1:10 – 2:00 p.m.

Music & Culture Colloquium: OutKasted Conversations: Searching for Contemporary Southern Blackness in Digital Spaces

School of Music, room 232

Presented by Dr. Regina N. Bradley, writer, scholar and freelance researcher of African American Life and Culture. She is a recipient of the Nasir Jones HipHop Fellowship at Harvard University (Spring 2016) and assistant professor of African American literature at Armstrong State University. Dr. Bradley's expertise and research interests include hip hop culture, race and the contemporary U.S. South, and sound studies. Co-Sponsored by African-American Studies. Refreshments served.

 

Fri., Oct. 2, 7:30 p.m. Southern Exposure New Music Concert: Apparition with Soprano Tony Arnold and Pianist Jacob Greenburg USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

Contemporary music’s leading soprano, Tony Arnold consistently receives accolades around the world for the warmth and beauty of her voice, her extraordinary technical facility, superb musicianship, and riveting stage presence. Arnold’s long-time collaborator pianist Jacob Greenburg has been praised for his “brilliance,” “heroic dexterity,” and the depth and nuance he brings to interpretations of both old and new repertoire (New York Times).

Arnold and Greenburg’s Southern Exposure program will include American icon George Crumb’s haunting “Apparition,” which sets texts from Walt Whitman’s elegy for Abraham Lincoln, “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d.”  (2015 is the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s death; Whitman wrote his elegy shortly after Lincoln’s assassination, in the summer of 1865).

 

Oct. 4, 3:00 p.m. Cornelia Freeman Concert Series USC School of Music Recital Hall

Single concerts: $12 adults; $10 seniors citizens, USC faculty and staff; $5 students. Series tickets: $50 adults; $40 seniors citizens, USC faculty and staff. Reserved seating for this popular concert series is an additional $100 per series. Purchase tickets online, call 803-576-5763 or at the door. Featuring the university’s esteemed music faculty performing a diverse repertoire, this popular chamber music series has been raising scholarship money for more than 20 years and takes place on Sunday afternoons in the fall.

The program:

Walter Rabl - Quartet for Piano, Clarinet, Violin & Cello, Op. 101

Joseph Eller, clarinet; William Terwilliger, violin; Robert Jesselson, cello; Charles Fugo, piano

Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonato in E Major Op. 109

Joseph Rackers, piano

Alexander Borodin - Prince Igor’s Aria  (Prince Igor)

Giuseppe Verdi - There Stood a Gypsy (Il Trovatore)

Richard Conant, baritone; Charles Fugo, piano 

 

Thurs., Oct. 8, 7:30 p.m. Jazz Faculty Recital USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

 

Fri., Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m. Scott Price Faculty Recital: Sensory Friendly Concert USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

We especially give a warm welcome to our patrons with autism and other special needs, as well as therapists and family members to attend and enjoy this free and sensory-friendly concert. The concert environment will be kept friendly for everyone including lighting and seating. Audience members are welcome to attend all or as much of the concert as they like, and can come and go as needed. Autism-related behaviors are understood and welcomed.

 

Sunday, October 11, 3:00 p.m.

Music Inspired By Art: Opus Two Concert

USC School of Music Recital Hall – FREE

William Terwilliger, violin, and Andrew Cooperstock, piano, play a premiere performance of new work by Meira Warshauer inspired by Christian Thee’s trompe l’oeil Secret Garden Orientation Gallery at the Columbia Museum of Art and works of art by Alex Powers and Philip Mullen.

 

Sunday, October 11, 4 p.m.

Reimagined: USC Symphonic Winds Concert

Koger Center for the Arts – FREE

Cormac Cannon directs Symphonic Winds for a diverse program including the music of Mathew Browne, Debussy, Gordon Jacob, Saint Saëns, Joseph Schwantner, Frank Ticheli and Paul Hindemith.

 

Tues., Oct. 13, 7:30 p.m. Ronald Davis Faculty Tuba Recital USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

Ronald Davis with Charles Fugo, piano, present the music of JS Bach- Sonata in E-flat major, Edward Gregson- Alarum, Blagoj Canev – Passacaglia and Paidushka, Jan Sandström- Song for Lotta, and Philip Sparke- Tuba Concerto.

 

Wed., Oct. 14, 4:30 p.m. Sarah Frisof Guest Artist Flute Recital USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

Sarah Frisof was a semi-finalist in the 2009 Kobe International Flute Competition, and 2nd Prize winner of both the National Flute Associations’ Young Artist Competition in 2008 and the Heida Hermann’s International Woodwind Competition in 2007. She is the principal flute of the Dallas Wind Symphony and a frequent performer with the Dallas Symphony. Her interests in outreach and education have led her to Zimbabwe and Brazil, where she directed music programs and participated in humanitarian efforts. She earned her Doctorate from the University of Michigan, her Master of Music from the Juilliard School, and her Bachelor of Music from Eastman School of Music. She will be accompanied by Winifred Goodwin for this recital and will play works of Gieseking, CPE Bach, Dohnanyi, and Burton. Jennifer Parker-Harley, USC associate professor of flute, will join her for a duet by Christopher Theofanidis.

 

Thurs., Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m. Jeffrey Smith Guest Artist Trumpet Recital USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

Jeffrey Bernard Smith is professor of trumpet at the University of Veracruz, the Instituto Superior de Musica del

Estado de Veracruz, and the Centro Mexicano Posgrado Puebla. He joined the Xalapa Symphony Orchestra as principal trumpet in 2008 and has participated in many summer festival orchestras including the East-West International

Music Festival in Altenburg Germany from 1995-2000 where he has been a featured soloist on various occasions. Smith has appeared as soloist with the Guanajuato Symphony Orchestra, Xalapa Symphony, Bellas Artes Chamber Orchestra, the East-West International Music Festival, la Banda de Leon Guanajuato, and others. He is in high demand in Mexico giving courses, master classes, and lessons throughout the Republic including Xalapa Veracruz, Tlaxcala, Queretaro, Tlahuitoltepec Oaxaca, Merida, Leon Guajuato, Mexico City.

 

Sunday, October 18, 4 p.m.

USC Wind Ensemble Concert

Koger Center for the Arts – FREE

The program opens with Edvard Grieg’s Funeral March for Rikard Nordrak and continues with Antonin Dvorak’s charming Serenade in D Minor, Op. 44. After the intermission, guest conductor Paul DeCinque conducts David Maslanka’s epic work, A Child’s Garden of Dreams. This very powerful work is based on writings by Carl Jung and is one of the cornerstones of the wind band repertoire.

 

Tues., October 20, 2015, 7:30 p.m. 

USC Symphony Orchestra: John Williams Extravaganza!

Guest Artist Michael Ludwig, violin

Koger Center for the Arts

Michael Ludwig and the USC Symphony Orchestra perform Signature Editions of composer John Williams’ most beloved film score classics, including music from Hook, E.T., Harry Potter, Schindler’s List, Superman, Jurassic Park, Indiana Jones, andStar Wars. Save with a season subscription (6 concerts) and enjoy the best seats in the house: $150 general public; $110 senior citizens, USC faculty and staff; $45 students. Single concert tickets are $30 general public; $25 senior citizens, USC faculty and staff; $8 students. Call 803-777-7500 or Koger Box Office, corner of Greene and Park Streets (M-F 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) or online at kogercenterforthearts.com.

 

Tues., Oct. 27, 7:30 p.m. USC Chamber Orchestra Concert Johnson Hall, Darla Moore School of Business, level 1 Free

On the program: JS Bach- Brandenburg Concerto, Mozart- Symphony 29, Cynthia Folio’s new work, Winds for Change for flutes, strings and percussion.

 

Wed., Oct. 28, 7:30 p.m. Guest Artist/Alumni Concert

USC School of Music Recital Hall – Free

USC alums and members of Pershing’s Own Army Band, Washington D.C. - James Miller (flute), Robert Aughtry (flute), Cheryl Ani (clarinet)