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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201101T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201101T173000
DTSTAMP:20201026T234835Z
CREATED:20201026T231045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201026T234835Z
UID:11291-1604246400-1604251800@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:Jenni Brandon’s Spider Suite Performed by The Kalliope Reed Trio
DESCRIPTION:Kalliope Reed Quintet / Trio performs an evening of music\, Sunday\, November 1\, 2020 At 4 PM PST – 5:30 PM PST. The Inspiration is from Día de Muertos and Halloween\, spiced up with some fun works and features “Spider Suite” by Jenni Brandon. This is an online event at http://grpm.us/Msd7Bg and  hosted by Regent Theatre Arlington\, 7 Medford Street\, Arlington\, MA\, 02474\, Phone: {781} 646-4849. Special thanks to the Boston Cultural Council for making this concert possible! \nCome hear the  newest sub-section of the Kalliope Reed Quintet\,\, the Kalliope Trio. This versatile combination of instruments plays a wide variety of works by Jenni Brandon; (“Spider Suite”)\, Pierre Max Dubois\, Jose Elizondo’s “Pan de Azucar” and more! \nKalliope is a Boston-based seasonal chamber ensemble dedicated to supplying a wide variety of colorful music to the community. Its members are: \nBennett Parsons\, Saxophone/Clarinet* \nNatalie Zemba\, Bassoon* \nCéline Ferro\, Clarinet* \nAnna Bradford\, Oboe \nWolcott Humphrey\, Bass Clarinet \nBennett Parsons\, Saxophone/Clarinet* \nNatalie Zemba\, Bassoon* \n* Trio members \nKalliope was originally the name of a Greek Goddess\, and translated the word means “beautiful sound”. The Kalliope Ensemble is dedicated to creating beautiful music with a unique touch. We began in 2015 as a colorful combination of piano\, oboe\, and bassoon\, and performed at a variety of events all over Boston. Since then have moved to a seasonal summer Reed Quintet\, and occasionally feature reed trios and duos as well. We hope you will find time to enjoy our dynamic combination of instruments. The full concert program for Friday\, August 28\, 2020 is: \nWe are first introduced to the world of spiders through the fast and many-legged theme in “Along came a spider…\,” full of skittering\, racing\, and lurking. In movement two a young spider takes flight – baby spiders will spin a balloon out of silk and fly away from their mother’s web to embark on their own journey\, letting the wind take them wherever it might. Our spider lands gently and immediately begins to make his web in “Spinning Song.” Once the web is spun\, it is time to wait for dinner to come along. Our spider dances “A Wicked Waltz\,” laughing manically as he waits for the “Happy Bug (unsuspecting)” to get stuck in his web. As the bug flies and sings\, he gets increasingly stuck in the web – listen as the timbral trills in the oboe become more and more frequent. In the final movement the spider reflects on his day (flying\, spinning\, and hunting…)\, tearing down his web\, as spiders often do\, to begin again the next day. \nMovement I: Along came a spider… \nMovement II: The Spider’s Flight (solo bassoon) \nMovement III: Spinning Song \nMovement IV: A Wicked Waltz: The Spider and the Happy Bug (unsuspecting) \nMovement V. The end of the day…begin again \n“Spider Suite” for oboe\, clarinet\, and bassoon was commissioned by the California Association of Professional Music Teachers and was premiered by the Vientos Trio at the CAPMT state conference in February 2010 at the Pacific Palms Resort. \nThe version for flute\, clarinet\, and bassoon is recorded by Ceora Winds on their debut CD Postcards. \n“Spider Suite” is available for purchase on Jenni Brandon.com
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/jenni-brandons-spider-suite-performed-by-the-kalliope-reed-trio/
LOCATION:Regent Theatre\, 7 Medford Street\, Arlington\, MA\, 02474\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Kalliope Reed Quintet":MAILTO:https://kalliopereedquintet.com/contact/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201103T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201103T173000
DTSTAMP:20201106T011607Z
CREATED:20201106T011607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201106T011607Z
UID:11394-1604421000-1604424600@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:Three Desert Fables by Jenni Brandon Performed by Kristin Leitterman
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Kristin Leitterman and Emily Trapp Jenkins\, piano performed Three Desert Fables by Jenni Brandon on KASU Public Radio\, Jonesboro\, Arkansas on November 3\, 2020 at 4:30 PM CST. The performance was featured on the  KASU radio show\, In Performance at A-State\, hosted by Dr. Ed Owen. In addition to the weekly radio broadcast on 91.9 FM\, “In Performance at A-State” may also be heard via live-streaming through KASU’s website\, kasu.org; through the KASU mobile app; and on smart speakers such as Amazon Echo and Google Home. \nThree Desert Fables for solo oboe tells the story of the unique relationship between the Joshua trees found in the Mojave Desert and the Yucca moth. The Joshua tree relies on the moth for pollination\, and the moth lays her eggs in the flowers of the Joshua tree where the larvae live off the yucca seeds. In fact\, one cannot survive without the other\, and this relationship is much like a fable\, making this a wonderful story to tell as a solo for oboe. \nThe Joshua tree is dance-like and angular\, its branches twisting and gnarled. In contrast the moth is fluid and lyrical\, flying to the highest flowers of the Joshua tree to lay her eggs and to pollinate the white flowers of the tree. In the final section of the piece the Joshua tree and the moth dance together\, relying on each other for their survival in the harshness of the desert. This piece was written in collaboration with oboists Ryan Zwahlen of the Definiens Project and Laura Medisky at the University of Wisconsin.
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/three-desert-fables-by-jenni-brandon-performed-by-kristin-leitterman/
LOCATION:Arkansas State University\, Riceland Hall of Fowler Center\, 201 Olympic Dr.\, Jonesboro\, AR\, 72467\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201107
DTSTAMP:20201105T230203Z
CREATED:20201105T001155Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201105T230203Z
UID:11367-1604620800-1604707199@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:A Jenni Brandon Composition Performed by Sierra Watson
DESCRIPTION:Sierra Watson performs\, for her senior recital\, Going to the Sun by Jenni Brandon on Friday\, November 6\, 2020\, 7:30 PM. This recital will also be offered as a livestream – visit the Concert Livestream Page to watch live. Streaming begins approximately 15 minutes prior to scheduled concert start time. The live performance is at the Hahn Recital Hall in the Music Instruction Building\, Ball State University 2000 W. University Ave\, Muncie\, IN 47306. Her program is: \n* Jenni Brandon \n* W. A. Mozart \n* Gaetano Donizetti \n* Alexandre Tansman \nGoing to the Sun: Snapshots from Glacier National Park for oboe and bassoon explores the beauty of Glacier National Park in Montana. When Jennifer Gookin Cavanaugh approached me about writing a work\, she told me how much she has always loved visiting the park and that it had been a family tradition for many years. Both Jennifer and Elizabeth Ball Crawford\, who premiered this work\, taught at the University of Montana at the time of writing this work. I thought it fitting to write a work that highlighted the performers’ close connection to the area in which they lived. \nAs I began to spend time with hiking books\, topographical maps\, and pictures taken by many visitors to the park over the years\, I knew that a work about a journey through this park would be a great way to share not only Jennifer’s memories\, but also the many travelers on the Going to the Sun Road. Those fifty miles across the park bring the visitor in contact with lakes\, weeping walls\, animals\, meadows\, the Continental Divide\, and the power of the glacier that now moves closer and closer to extinction due to climate change. \nThe work is in one movement; however\, it is broken into several sections. I liked the idea of telling these stories like looking back at snapshots you might take on your vacation to remind you of these natural and manmade wonders: \n\nEarly morning on the Road\nFifty miles begin…\n\nIII. Sunrise on Lake McDonald \n\nDriving the Loop\nThe Weeping Wall\nStepping onto Jackson Glacier Overlook\n\nVII. Jackson Glacier \nVIII. Sunset at the end of The Road \nThe oboe and bassoon are great story-telling instruments\, lending their voices and character to each of these sections\, painting the landscape with texture\, range\, and song. And while the vastness and beauty of this park is too big to capture in any work of music\, it is my hope that the listener can travel this road with us through this natural wonder and remember the importance of supporting our National Parks.
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/a-jenni-brandon-composition-performed-by-sierra-watson/
LOCATION:Ball State University\, 2000 W. University Ave.\, Muncie\, IN\, 47306\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20201106T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20201106T213000
DTSTAMP:20201030T010737Z
CREATED:20201030T010737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201030T010737Z
UID:11325-1604691000-1604698200@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:Five Frogs by Jenni Brandon Performed by The Denver Arapahoe Philharmonic
DESCRIPTION:The Denver area Arapahoe Philharmonic performs Five Frogs by Jenni Brandon on Friday\, November 6\, 7:30 PM at the Denver First Church of the Nazarene\, 3800 E. Hampden Avenue\, Cherry Hills Village\, CO 80113. The live performance is sold out. However\, this is also a Livestreamed Performance. Livestreams tickets are available for purchase. \nThe program is: \n\nFive Frogs – Jenni Brandon\nWind Serenade – Antonin Dvořák\nOn Seven-Star-Shoes – Julia Wolfe\n\nFounded in 1953\, the Arapahoe Philharmonic is among the longest established\, continuously operating musical resources in Colorado. After thriving under two long-tenured conductors\, T. Gordon Parks and Vincent C. LaGuardia\, Jr.\, we celebrated our 60th anniversary season (2013-2014) with an exciting new conductor\, Devin Patrick Hughes. The orchestra’s musicians are volunteers\, playing for the love of music\, with a core of compensated section principals who provide technical leadership and help ensure the excellence of performance. The orchestra’s performance repertoire includes the greatest names in classical music\, ranging through centuries of master composers\, but also featuring those of more recent times. \nFive Frogs for woodwind quintet (woodwind quintet sheet music) is inspired by One Hundred Frogs by Hiroaki Sato\, a little book that takes a look at one hundred different haikus\, sonnets\, prose poems\, and even limericks based on Bashô’s haiku\, “Old Pond/Frog jumps in/The sound of water”. Each of the instruments in the ensemble is so different and so exceptional in their sound and abilities that each one could be one of the frogs from the book. The clarinet is perfect for “Leaping” because of its agility and grace\, the way a frog can be still one minute and gone the next. “Catching Bugs” gave me the opportunity to use the piccolo and allow the ensemble to run ‘amuck’ after their bug dinner. Finally\, in “Epilogue” all the frogs sing together\, each one bringing their own musical motive into this final movement. \n“This is a piece that describes frog-like things one appropriate instrument at a time\, with the last movement summing it up. Frogs leap – and so do some clarinetists! So the first movement is called – you guessed it – LEAPING. Frogs sit on lily pads – not easy to do for an oboist. The second movement is therefore called ON THE LILY PAD (as opposed to under it!). The third movement\, SWIMMING\, is probably something most horn players can do – just not while playing! Would you say that a bassoon can sound like a BULLFROG (but obviously doesn’t look like one)? The fourth movement will convince you! Frogs eat bugs – but do piccoloists? The fifth movement – CATCHING BUGS – sounds just right – all that flittering around! Put it all together and what do you get? The final movement called EPILOGUE – a ribbiting conclusion” states the program notes contributed by Hal Rutenberg\, Devin Patrick Hughes. \nPublished by Boosey & Hawkes. (48018979) woodwind quintet sheet music.
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/five-frogs-by-jenni-brandon-performed-by-the-denver-arapahoe-philharmonic/
LOCATION:Denver First Church of the Nazarene\, 3800 E. Hampden Avenue\, Cherry Hills Village\, CO\, 80113\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Arapahoe Philharmonic":MAILTO:https://www.arapahoe-phil.org/about-us/contact-us/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201120T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201120T180000
DTSTAMP:20201101T235921Z
CREATED:20201101T235921Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201101T235921Z
UID:11356-1605888000-1605895200@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:“Starry Night” by Jenni Brandon Performed by Joanna McCoskey
DESCRIPTION:“Starry Night” by Jenni Brandon performed\, by Joanna McCoskey on Friday\, November 20\, 2020 at 4:00 PM PST. This is an online Zoom performance (https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81950869567?pwd=VER6VDgrSk1uMkhBaGdPMnM3YkM4QT09 Zoom passcode: 754911). She is a conductor at Greensboro and Winston Salem New Horizons Bands. Joanna is also a Clarinet Instructor at Community Music School of UNC School of the Arts. She is a Doctor of Musical Arts student at UNC Greensboro studying clarinet performance at UNC Greensboro College of Visual and Performing Arts.  She currently resides in Winston-Salem\, NC and is the clarinet teacher at the UNCSA Community Music School and at Upbeat Music Company in Lewisville\, along with maintaining her own private studio. She has taught privately for 10 years\, and has taught in New York\, Delaware\, and North Carolina\, with her students regularly placing in top honors ensembles. She is a freelancer in the Winston-Salem area\, and has performed with the Piedmont Wind Symphony\, Piedmont Wind Symphony Clarinet Ensemble\, Salem Band as a section first-clarinetist and Eb-clarinetist\, and the Salem Saxophone Quartet as a tenor saxophonist. At UNCG\, she has been part of the Wind Ensemble and the Avid Reeders Clarinet Quartet. She has given masterclasses to middle school students in schools throughout the Winston-Salem/Greensboro regions. In addition\, she serves as the conductor of the Gate City and Winston-Salem New Horizons Bands\, an international organization that creates music-making opportunities for retired adults. \nHer program for November 20\, 2020 at 4:00 PM PST\, is an online Zoom performance and includes: \nStarry Night for solo B-flat clarinet by Jenni Brandon \nKaribu by Regina Harris Baiocchi \nDistant Light by Amy Dunker \nD(i)agon(als) by Augusta Read Thomas \nNocturne by Freya Waley-Cohen \nStarry Night is a three-movement work for solo B-flat clarinet that tells of the night skies and our fascination with what lies in them. Using poetry and texts from Gerard Manley Hopkins\, John Keats\, and Van Gogh (whose painting is also the inspiration for the title of this work)\, these movements tell of the stars as “fire-folk” and how the sight of stars can make us dream. \nThis work was written for Virginia Costa Figueiredo\, premiered in February 2013\, and receives its premiere recording on her CD \nThe movements are: \n\nThe Starlight Night\n\nLook at the stars! look\, look up at the skies! \nO look at all the fire-folk sitting in the air! \nGerard Manley Hopkins (1844-1889) \n\nBright Star!\n\nBright Star! Would I were steadfast as thou art- \nNot in lone splendor hang aloft the night! \nJohn Keats (1795-1821) \nIII. The Sight of Stars \nFor my part I know nothing with any certainty\, \nbut the sight of stars makes me dream. \nVincent van Gogh (1853-1890) \nStarry Night for solo B-flat clarinet (solo B-flat clarinet sheet music) is available at Jennibrandon.com
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/starry-night-by-jenni-brandon-performed-by-joanna-mccoskey/
LOCATION:University of North Carlolina Greensboro College of Visual and Performing Arts\, 100 McIver St\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27412\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Joanna McCoskey":MAILTO:joannamccoskeyclarinet@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201120T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201120T210000
DTSTAMP:20201215T014259Z
CREATED:20201215T014225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201215T014259Z
UID:11598-1605900600-1605906000@jennibrandon.com
SUMMARY:Jenni Brandon’s  “Going to the Sun: Snapshots from Glacier National Park for oboe and bassoon” Performed by Rachel Gripp
DESCRIPTION:Rachel Gripp\, oboe performed “Going to the Sun: Snapshots from Glacier National Park for oboe and bassoon” by Jenni Brandon at Ball State University\, School of Music. She was accompanied by Michael Seregow\, piano. The virtual performance was on November 20\, 2020 at 7:30 p. m.\, in the Hahn Recital Hall. \nRachel’s entire recital was:     \n\n\n\nClaude Debussy (1862-1918)   Album of Five Pieces \n                                                            I. Reverie \n                                                           II. Arabesque \n W.A. Mozart (1756-1791)    Oboe Concerto in C Major\, K. 314 \n                                                             I. Allegro aperto \n                                                             II. Adagio non troppo \n                                                             III. Rondo: Allegretto \nFrancis Poulenc (1899-1963)  Sonata for Oboe and Piano \n                                                               I. Elegie \nJenni Brandon (b. 1977)        Going to the Sun: Snapshots from Glacier  \n                                                  National Park for Oboe and Bassoon \n                                                              I.            Early morning on the Road \n                                                              II.            Fifty miles begin… \n                                                              III.            Sunrise on Lake McDonald \n                                                              IV.            Driving the Loop \n                                                             V.            The Weeping Wall \n                                                             VI.          Stepping onto Jackson Glacier  Overlook \n                                                             VII.        Jackson Glacier \n                                                              VIII.            Sunset at the end of The Road \n                                            with Sierra Watson\, bassoon\n\n\n\nThe following are the composer notes on “Going to the Sun: Snapshots from Glacier National Park for oboe and bassoon” and how it explores the beauty of Glacier National Park in Montana. \nWhen Jennifer Gookin Cavanaugh approached me about writing a work\, she told me how much she has always loved visiting the park and that it had been a family tradition for many years. Both Jennifer and Elizabeth Ball Crawford\, who premiered this work\, taught at the University of Montana at the time of writing this work. I thought it fitting to write a work that highlighted the performers’ close connection to the area in which they lived. \nAs I began to spend time with hiking books\, topographical maps\, and pictures taken by many visitors to the park over the years\, I knew that a work about a journey through this park would be a wonderful way to share not only Jennifer’s memories\, but also the many travelers on the Going to the Sun Road. Those fifty miles across the park bring the visitor in contact with lakes\, weeping walls\, animals\, meadows\, the Continental Divide\, and the power of the glacier that now moves closer and closer to extinction due to climate change. \nThe work is in one movement; however\, it is broken into eight sections. I liked the idea of telling these stories like looking back at snapshots you might take on your vacation to remind you of these natural and manmade wonders \nThe oboe and bassoon are great story-telling instruments\, lending their voices and character to each of these sections\, painting the landscape with texture\, range\, and song. And while the vastness and beauty of this park is too big to capture in any work of music\, it is my hope that the listener can travel this road with us through this natural wonder and remember the importance of supporting our National Parks.
URL:https://jennibrandon.com/event/11598/
LOCATION:Ball State University\, 2000 W. University Ave.\, Muncie\, IN\, 47306\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Ball State University School of Music":MAILTO:music@bsu.edu
END:VEVENT
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