Shinkoskey noon concerts present 'Death, Grief, and Rebirth!'
Thursday March 14, 12:05 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free
Carrie Hennessey, soprano,
and Jennifer Reason, piano
Program
All selections by Ricky Ian Gordon (b. 1956):
Souvenir
Wild Swans
An Old Fashioned Song
The Red Dress
Run Away
Once I Was
Otherwise
What the Living Do
Will There Really be a Morning?
Joy
Tord Gustavsen Trio on Thursday
Thursday March 14-16, 7:30 p.m., Vanderhoef Studio Theatre, The Mondavi Center
Often with just a few carefully chosen notes, Norwegian jazz pianist Tord Gustavsen draws listeners into a world where melody is cherished as much as the freedom to explore textures and soundscapes.
Taking care to play only that which says something, and leaving space for listeners to savor what has been said, his bands unite beauty and emotional intensity in their playing and improvisation. His two Mondavi Center appearances have been spiritual moments for many audience members, a very intentional effect. 鈥淔or me,鈥 he says, 鈥減laying the piano is very similar to a meditation or prayer.鈥
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Choruses of 嘿嘿视频: Music of the Living
Friday, March 15, 7 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, tickets starting at $12
Works by two members of the 嘿嘿视频 Department of Music faculty, a graduate student and an undergraduate student will be featured in a choral concert on March 15 at the Ann E. Pitzer Center.
The concert, 鈥淢usic of the Living,鈥 spotlights work by contemporary composers that are ideal for more intimate venues like the Pitzer Center. The includes performances by the 嘿嘿视频 Concert Choir and Chamber Singers under the direction of Nicol谩s Dosman, assistant professor of teaching and director of choirs.
The concert鈥檚 repertoire incorporates many different choral traditions including American spirituals, Venezuelan folk songs, Filipino or Visayan folks songs and modern choral harmonies.
The Concert Choir performs Professor Pablo Ortiz鈥檚 Face and Heart and the premiere of Song for a Wandering Spirit (Please Rest) by undergraduate student Isabella Lazaro. The choir鈥檚 program also includes The Storm Is Passing Over arranged by Barbara Baker, Inscription of Hope arranged by Z. Randall Stroope, Every Life Shall Be a Song and Crossing the Bar by Gwyneth Walker, La Paloma by Cristian Grases and Still I Rise by Rosephanye Powell.
The Chamber Singers perform Ava Maria by Professor Christian Baldini, music director and conductor of 嘿嘿视频 Symphony Orchestra and Babara K. Jackson Chair in Orchestral Conducting, and premieres Morning is the Place for Dew by Peter Chatterjee, graduate student in composition. The program also includes Rosas Pandan arranged by George Hernandez, My Heart Be Brave by Marques Barrett and Go Down in the Valley and Pray arranged by Andr茅 Thomas.
In a program of music written entirely by living composers, the choruses at 嘿嘿视频 perform works ideal for intimate concert venues such as the Pitzer Center. The repertoire incorporates many different choral traditions, including American Spirituals, Venezuelan folk songs, Filipino or Visayan folk songs, and modern choral harmonies.鈥
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The Mondavi Center presents Dan煤
Sunday, March 17, 7:30 p.m., Jackson Hall, The Mondavi Center, tickets from $25
Celebrate the day of the year when everyone is a little Irish with Dan煤, one of Ireland鈥檚 most acclaimed traditional music ensembles.
For two decades, this band hailing from County Waterford has been entertaining audiences internationally with its breathtaking vocals in Irish and English and virtuoso performances on flute, tin whistle, button accordion and bouzouki. Irish Music Magazine rightly praises that Dan煤 鈥渟tirs the blood and lifts the heart.鈥
Ciar谩n 脫 Gealbh谩in, the original lead singer of Dan煤, will join the group in place of Nell N铆 Chr贸in铆n. Dr. O鈥橤ealbhain is a lecturer in the Department of Folklore and Ethnology, University College Cork, where his doctoral research focused on aspects of the D茅ise song tradition.
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Read the program of the performance here:
Virtual art history lecture series at the Pence Gallery: Allison Grenda
Saturday, March 23, 1 p.m., on Zoom, free (suggested $10 donation)
The Parthenon Through the Ages: From Ancient Rituals to Modern Controversies
Originally built in the 5th century BCE as a temple to the goddess Athena, the Parthenon in Athens has undergone multiple drastic evolutions over the past two and a half millennia. In this talk, Allison Grenda (PhD Candidate, History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) will trace the history of the monument and explore how its architectural and ideological changes have repeatedly placed it at the center of conflict, controversy, and most recently, debates over cultural patrimony.
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Ongoing Art
New exhibits at the Pence Gallery
Open Tuesday through Sunday, 11:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., 212 D Street, Davis, free
Erica Norelius: Natural Places & Urban Spaces 鈥 Available March 1 through April 28
Erica Norelius鈥 new series of work offers an in-depth dive into the natural spaces of the Golden State, stretching from the coastal cities and desert areas, and north towards Oregon. The quiet presence of man is often seen in small intrusions such as power lines.
Ongoing art exhibits at 嘿嘿视频
Lucky Seven: Stairway Display by Bussie Parker Kehoe: Available March 5 through March 31
Bussie Parker Kehoe is a mixed media artist, committed to nurturing and celebrating found and discarded materials in unexpected ways. She pours old discarded house paint onto glass, lets the paint dry, and then intentionally places each dried paint peel so that it connects to and supports the others surrounding it, which is directly related to her life experience of moving and searching for those connections and support. She often stacks and cuts those paint peels, assembling a 鈥渜uilt鈥 reminiscent of Korean textiles she grew up with.
Spark Your March with Art Spark
Saturdays and Sundays 1-4 p.m., Carol and Gerry Parker Art Studio at the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, Free
This March, the theme is Yo Soy ___. Create a print that expresses who you are, completing the phrase in Malaquias Montoya鈥檚 Yo Soy Chicano with a part of your identity you want to honor.
Media Resources
Karen Nikos-Rose, Media Relations, Arts Blog Editor; kmnikos@ucdavis.edu