2009-2010 Season
Spring Delights
8 pm, April 23, 2010
John Street United Methodist Church
44 John Street
Free admission
Program
Schumann (arr. Fagin): Five Movements from Kinderscenen, Op. 15
Telemann: Concerto for Four Violins in C major
Fagin: Suite for Strings (world premiere)
Chopin (arr. Fagin): Grande Valse Brilliante, Op. 18
Mozart: Ein Musikalischer Spass (A Musical Joke), K. 522
Musical Tales and Adventures
Peter And The Wolf & The Voyage Of Henry Hudson
January 16, 2010, 7pm, World Financial Center Winter Garden
The KCO’s performance of “Musical Tales and Adventures” on January 16, 2010, in the World Financial Center Winter Garden drew a huge audience -- 1,500, according to WFC staff. Every seat was filled and almost every patch of marble staircase was occupied.
Photo by Adam Hume, www.Adamimage.com
Fans came with great anticipation to hear Sergei Prokofiev’s charming “Peter And The Wolf” narrated by renowned author Neil Gaiman. As the flute chirped the first bird notes, children began to tiptoe to the front of the Winter Garden. One by one they were ushered under the ropes by security guards to sit entranced before the stage, listening to the story of the brave boy and his adventure.
Photo by Robert Simko, www.ebroadsheet.com
Bravos and a roar of approval met the world premiere performance of KCO Music Director Gary S. Fagin’s composition “And Bold To Fall Withal (Henry Hudson In The New World),” featuring Broadway star Jason Danieley singing the story of Henry Hudson’s arrival in New York Harbor 400 years ago. Click here for the libretto of "And Bold To Fall Withal." Click here for a two-minute audio excerpt of the piece, recording at the Winter Garden on January 16, 2010.
Photo by Adam Hume, www.Adamimage.com
The rapt audience listened in absolute silence to Charles Ives’ “The Unanswered Question,” tapped their toes to Duke Ellington’s jazzy “Up And Down, Up And Down,” and danced in the aisles to Tchaikovsky’s waltz from the opera “Eugene Onegin.”
After the concert, many KCO fans repaired to Southwest restaurant to celebrate at a reception. At right are KCO founder and music director Gary S. Fagin flanked by Neil Gaiman at left and Jason Danieley at right.
Photo by Robert Simko.
If you missed this wonderful concert but are inspired by its tremendous success, we invite you to help support the Knickerbocker Chamber Orchestra. And if you were in the Winter Garden on January 16, you’ll remember the buoyant feeling at the end of the evening. Musical excellence has that effect. Click here to help us fund more wonderful concerts and to bring more interactive presentations to downtown schools.
Gems From Three Centuries
October 1, 2009, 1pm, Trinity Church
First concert program
Romanze from Sechs Klavierstücke, Opus 118 (Brahms), Symphony No. 47 in G (Haydn) and Come Sunday (Ellington). This concert kicked off the fall season of Trinity Church’s Concerts at One series.
KCO violin soloist Joyce Hammond performs “Come Sunday” by Duke Ellington.