Keyboard Music

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CLASSICAL MUSIC

Cape Community Orchestra - Fire and Fantasy

Cape Community Orchestra - Fire and Fantasy

11-22-2025 3:00 pm
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Music to Ignite the Imagination
South Coast Chamber Music Series - Quintessentials (2)

South Coast Chamber Music Series - Quintessentials (2)

11-22-2025 3:00 pm
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Warmth, grace, and joy—experience music at its most perfect.

Jessie Montgomery: Duo for Violin and Cello (2015)
Louise Farrenc: Piano Quintet No. 1 in A minor, Op. 30
Franz Schubert: Piano Quintet in A Major, D. 667 “Trout”

EmmaLee  Holmes-Hicks, violin
Emma Powell, violin
Anna Griffis, viola
Peter Zay, cello
Janice Weber, piano
Peter Walsh, bass

Born in 1804, Louise Farrenc was a true French Romantic whose works are earning – again – a huge following. Her unique Piano Quintet (1839), utilizing string bass, reflects and complements Schubert’s immortal “Trout” Quintet, a work employing the same musical forces. Firebrand American composer Jessie Montgomery proves that less is more with her delightful ode to friendship,  Duo for Violin and Cello.

Beethoven Violin Concerto

Beethoven Violin Concerto

11-22-2025 7:30 pm

BEETHOVEN VIOLIN CONCERTO

Earl Lee, conductor
Elena Urioste, violin

JESSIE MONTGOMERY: Overture
BEETHOVEN: Violin Concerto
SIBELIUS: Symphony No.2

Sounds of Stow - Timeless Tidings

Sounds of Stow - Timeless Tidings

11-23-2025 2:00 pm

The chorus and orchestra will perform John Rutter’s Gloria! in celebration of Rutter’s 80th birthday, as well as additional works by Vaughan Williams, Finzi, Bernstein, Britten, and Faure.

Rutter’s Gloria!with its rousing rhythms, was his first big “hit” for chorus and orchestra. We will have an excellent brass section to do full justice to this irresistible music. Also on the program are works by three other British composers – Gerald Finzi’s In Terra Pax, full of rich and striking harmonies.Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Fantasia on Christmas Carols, selected movements of Benjamin Britten’s Ceremony of Carols and Gabriel Faure’s beloved Cantique de Jean Racine. The final movement of Leonard Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms concludes with this fervent hope: “Behold how good, and how pleasant it is, for brethren to dwell together in unity.” Such a timely and moving message