Julie Jordan (MM ’83, piano), an Evening Division piano faculty member, performed in Weill Recital Hall in June in a concert celebrating “Norway in New York” with violinists Berit Cardas and Lisa Lee, violist Patrick Cardas, and cellist Emery Cardas. In July and August she performed concerts in Italy at the Cloisters of San Nicola in Tolentino and the Teatro di Verdi in Pollenza. Also in August, Jordan played a recital and gave a master class at the Bennington Center for the Arts in Vermont. In September, she performed an “Evening of Piano Concerti” at the Yamaha Piano Salon in New York City.
In July, Evening Division faculty member Vincent La Selva (BS ’54, orchestral conducting) was featured on Madeline Frank’s online program Madeline’s One Minute Musical Radio Show, discussing his experience of 55 years of conducting. He was also interviewed for Madeline’s Monthly Article & Musical Tips.
Piano faculty member Seymour Lipkin has just completed his 22nd year as artistic director of the Kneisel Hall chamber music festival in Blue Hill, Me. From June 2009 to May 2010, he will have performed eight different concertos, four different recital programs, and 12 chamber works in cities across the country, including Boston and San Francisco. He also will have offered a number of master classes.
Literature and Materials of Music faculty member Behzad Ranjbaran’s (MM ’88, DMA ’92, composition) piece Saratoga was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra in August. The concert was part of a celebration of Charles Dutoit’s 20th season as conductor and artistic director of the Saratoga Music Festival in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. In July, the Colorado Music Festival orchestra, conducted by Michael Christie, performed Ranjbaran’s Seven Passages in Boulder.
Vocal arts faculty member Kent Tritle (BM ’85, organ, MM ’88, organ and choral conducting) presented an organ recital in September to launch the 2009-10 Sacred Music in a Sacred Space concert season in the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New York City, where he serves as music director.