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N A T I O N A L L Y  A C C R E D I T E D  C O M M U N I T Y  M U S I C  S C H O O L 
Violin and Clarinet
Vocal Arts DC
Art Song Discovery Concert  
 
Vocal Arts - Bingham and Gates
Sunday, April 21, 2013  
4 pm  

  

Washington Conservatory
at Glen Echo Park   
7300 MacArthur Boulevard  
Glen Echo, MD 20812  
Free (Donations welcome)  
 
Heather Bingham, soprano
Jeffrey Gates, baritone
R. Timothy McReynolds, piano
with
Maxence Mouries, violin 
Elizabeth Daniels, commentary

  

  
Program
    Gesang Weylas & Abschied from Mörike Lieder...Wolf
Oh! Si les fleurs avaient des yeux...Massenet
Ouvre tes yeux bleus...Massenet
Don Quichotte a Dulcinée...Ravel
Poljubila ja na pechal' svoju & Ja zhdu tebja...Rachmaninoff
Last Song & Recuerdo...Musto
Two English Folk-Songs...Vaughan Williams
Lonesome Man, Cabin, Sugar in the Cane from Blue Mountain Ballads...Bowles
Song & They might not need me...Laitman
Love is where you find it...Brown  

  

This informal concert features the winners of the Vocal Arts DC Young Artist Competition. The concert is designed to introduce families and other members of the community to the art of the voice recital. With spoken commentary throughout the recital, the program makes art song interesting and accessible to an audience that may otherwise not have the chance to attend a performance. 


Soprano Heather Bingham, described as possessing "a voice of fragrant delicacy" (Washington Post), has appeared on stages throughout the US and Europe, performing gospel, jazz, opera, and oratorio. Her most recent opera roles range from Alcina in Handel's Alcina to Maria Callas in the East Coast premiere of Salerni's award-winning opera Tony Caruso's Last Broadcast. Her concert performances include Mozart's Requiem Mass with the Reston Chorale and Bach's Cantata No. 51 with New York's Metro Chamber Orchestra. She was a featured performer in Renée Fleming's Master Class Series at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, performing the role of Sophie from Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier trio.


Baritone Jeffrey Grayson Gates has won numerous awards, including being a winner in the Washington DC District Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and Grand Prize Overall Winner at the 2010 Naftzger Young Artist Auditions. He has performed in opera, musical theater, and on the concert stage. His many roles with the Oklahoma Opera and Music Theater Company include Don Giovanni in Mozart's Don Giovanni and Eisenstein in Strauss's Die Fledermaus. Most recently he performed Reverend Hale in Ward's The Crucible with Peabody Opera Theatre. He is pursuing his Graduate Performance Diploma in Voice at Peabody Conservatory, having earned his BM at Oklahoma City University.


Pianist R. Timothy McReynolds has toured across the US and internationally in concerts, cabarets, and master classes. He is a member of the Voice/Opera faculty of the University of Maryland, School of Music, and has participated as vocal coach/pianist for the Washington National Opera's Opera Institute and the Aspen Music Festival.   

 

More information: 301-320-2770 or online 

 concertsUpcoming Concerts
at Westmoreland Circle
   

Saturdays at 8 pm  FREE (donations welcome)
Westmoreland Congregational UCC Church
1 Westmoreland Circle, Bethesda, MD 20816
 Nikolay Khozyainov 
Nikolay Khozyainov, piano    
April 27
2012 Dublin International Piano Competition Winner 




Small concert 2012
Haskell Small, piano    
May 4 
Holst, Hovhaness, Mozart, Small


  
Yukiko Sekino
Yukiko Sekino, piano 
June 8

2011 Mu Phi Epsilon International Competition Winner





gepconcertsUpcoming Events
at Glen Echo Park
FREE (donations welcome) 
Washington Conservatory at Glen Echo Park
7300 MacArthur Boulevard, Glen Echo, MD 20812
Directions 

Almquist & Lee
Nancy Almquist, soprano
Jaewon Lee, piano
Saturday, May 4 at 3 pm
BritHits: A Cabaret


Yukiko Sekino
Piano Master Class
with Yukiko Sekino
  
Friday, June 7 at 7 pm
In cooperation with Mu Phi Epsilon 
 
piano black and white

2012/13 ISSUE 30       

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Upcoming Concerts: 

 at Westmoreland Circle

 

at Glen Echo Park 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

    

 

The Washington Conservatory is a nationally accredited community music school serving the greater Bethesda, MD and Washington, DC area since 1984.

 

NOW ENROLLING 

 

Serving students of all ages - kids, teens, and adults - beginners to advanced. No audition.

 

301-320-2770 

 

Two locations:

 

Westmoreland Circle,

 

Bethesda &

 

Glen Echo Park

 

 

 

pianoforumAnnouncing!
WCM piano forum
The Inaugural Event of the

WASHINGTON CONSERVATORY
PIANO FORUM


Saturday, April 20, 2013 at 4 - 5:30 pm

What is the Washington Conservatory Piano Forum?

 

The WCM Piano Forum is a gathering for pianophiles - piano students, piano teachers, amateur pianists, and inquisitive piano music-lovers of all ages -  

to provide enjoyable experiences that expand knowledge,  

stimulate curiosity, inspire ideas, and further musical creativity!  

Washington Conservatory at Glen Echo Park  

presents 

 

THE PIANO: BEAUTIFUL MUSIC THROUGH EFFICIENT MOVEMENT

 

Lydia Frumkin, Professor Emeritus Oberlin Conservatory


 

This enjoyable and informative 1 ½ hour workshop is designed for pianophiles, piano students, piano teachers, amateur pianists, and curious music-lovers.  

 

Drawing upon her successful 37 year career as a piano teacher, Oberlin Conservatory Professor Emeritus, Lydia Frumkin will demonstrate an approach to the keyboard developed by Anna A. Schmidt-Schklovskaya - a student of renowned pianist, composer and teacher Felix Blumenfeld.

 

Blumenfeld (1863 - 1931) studied composition at the St. Petersburg Conservatory with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and piano with Fedor Stein. He taught on that faculty, while also serving as conductor of the famed Mariinsky Theatre.  In Kiev, Vladimir Horowitz was his master class pupil, and he taught at the Moscow Conservatory from 1922 until his death.

 

This method deals with correcting physical problems that arise from inefficient movements pianists often use at the keyboard.  Such movements lead to lack of control, discomfort and even physical pain during playing, and can cause more long-term problems such as tendonitis. This workshop will demonstrate ways to develop a more "natural" approach to the keyboard, that will prevent physical (occupational) ailments. This approach helps to develop pianistic skills that free the body, so the pianist is free  to explore & express the music.  

 

$15 general admission

$10 Washington Conservatory students & family     

 

Reserve tickets:

 

Directions & Parking for Washington Conservatory at Glen Echo Park 

Washington Conservatory of Music
One Westmoreland Circle
Bethesda, Maryland 20816