Filtering by: free events

Concert in the Park With Quinteto Latino
Sep
25
8:00 PM20:00

Concert in the Park With Quinteto Latino

Join us for this special outdoor concert on September 25th to take in the sounds of Quinteto Latino. The concert begins at 6:00pm at Seminary Oaks Park in Menlo Park. For those planning to attend, please be sure to bring your own chair or blanket for seating. 

Performers: Diane Grubbe, flute; Kyle Bruckmann, oboe; Leslie Tagorda, clarinet; Shawn Jones, bassoon; Armando Castellano, horn.

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Emerald Futures: NYPhilharmonic VYC x Chromic Duo
Sep
10
5:00 PM17:00

Emerald Futures: NYPhilharmonic VYC x Chromic Duo

Emerald Futures: NYPhilharmonic Very Young Composers and toy piano and composer duo, Chromic Duo, team up to create an immersive soundwalk!

About this event

Come celebrate with us! 

Immerse yourself in an evolving sound-world that changes according to your geographic location, as you listen to world premieres of pieces by the Very Young Composers at the New York Philharmonic. With GPS hotspots plotted along the route, site-specific pieces will play as you move from one contrasting natural soundscape into a future imagined by the next generation of composers and thinkers on a future that we believe in. 

Emerald Futures is an Augmented Reality Sound Walk that guides you through a year of transformation and growth, from Central Park (W. 72nd St + Central Park West) to Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya’s mural, “We Belong Here”, in response to the rise of anti-AAPI hate. 

As you reach the end of the walk at Lincoln Center, unlock a *special element* with Chromic Duo that is especially rendered for this closing event! 

Please download Gesso (available for iOS + Google Play) and have headphones ready beforehand. https://www.gesso.app/download

Duration: ~30 minutes

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American Composers Forum: Artist Equity Summit
Sep
10
to Sep 11

American Composers Forum: Artist Equity Summit

This past year we saw some positive change happen among many commitments to achieving greater equity (including ACF). Now, we’re seeing some of that enthusiasm wane while also experiencing strong backlash to these movements. 

How do we persist and resist the inertia pulling us back into our flawed systems and exclusionary practices? What does real follow through on the commitments of this past year look like? For our own work, how do we ensure artists are being invited, included, and presented in an equitable way?

We invite you to join us for our next Artist Equity Summit on September 10-11, 2021 to learn how we as artists, arts advocates, and arts supporters can be an effective part of the follow through. Join us virtually or watch the videos on icareifyoulisten.tv later.

This event will be on a monitored zoom platform with accessibility support; we will make every effort to provide an inclusive space for curious colleagues looking to learn together.

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The Dream Unfinished "VITALS: Health and Wellness Music Festival"
Aug
21
10:00 AM10:00

The Dream Unfinished "VITALS: Health and Wellness Music Festival"

  • Jamaica Performing Arts Center (JPAC (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

An outdoor health, wellness, and classical music festival advancing health equity amongst communities of color

Join us at VITALS, an outdoor health and wellness festival highlighting non-profit organizations and entrepreneurs advancing health equity amongst communities of color. Also featuring musicians from The Dream Unfinished, an Activist Orchestra, and the Harlem Chamber Players, in outdoor performances of works by diverse artists and composers. Free admission. 

When: August 21st, between 11 AM to 5 PM

Where: The front lawn of Jamaica Performing Arts Center. 

This event is supported in part by the Queens Council of the Arts, and is produced in partnership with Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. 

Participating Organizations

  • Sinergia

  • MinKwon Center for Community Action

  • Queens Community House

  • South Asian Council for Social Services

  • GetCoveredNYC

  • Bangladeshi American Community and Youth Development Services

  • includeNYC

  • Make The Road New York

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New Music Gathering
Aug
12
9:00 AM09:00

New Music Gathering

New Music Gathering is an annual conference/festival hybrid dedicated to the performance, production, promotion, support, and creation of new and forward-thinking music.

With concerts, lecture/recitals, roundtable discussions, talks, and choreographed socializing like musician meet-ups and live action role playing games, NMG aims to be both a conference in the traditional sense but also quite literally a collective place for things to grow, improve, solidify, and above all get personal!

Aug. 12-14: Landmark Center, Landmark Plaza, Mears Park & Studio Z

Aug. 12-18: Online

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Sugar Hill Salon Live!
Jul
23
5:00 PM17:00

Sugar Hill Salon Live!

Join Sugar Hill Salon as we celebrate the success of our first season with a free community park concert. This family friendly concert will feature prominent Black and Brown classical musicians from our first season! Donate $25 or more through the Eventbrite and receive a prepackaged artisan sandwich with chips and choice of drink for the concert, catered by Common Good Harlem.

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Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert: Soobeen Lee and Elliot Wuu
Jul
21
12:15 PM12:15

Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert: Soobeen Lee and Elliot Wuu

Watch the Dame Myra Hess Memorial free concert series on the International Music Foundation website at imfchicago.org.

SooBeen Lee, violin and Elliot Wuu, piano

Claude Debussy – Violin Sonata in g minor, L. 140

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor – Suite for Violin and Piano, Op. 3

Igor Frolov – Concert Fantasy On Themes from Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, Op. 19

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Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert: Ronaldo Rolim
Jul
14
12:15 PM12:15

Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert: Ronaldo Rolim

Watch the Dame Myra Hess Memorial free concert series on the International Music Foundation website at imfchicago.org and listen to the broadcast on 98.7 WFMT

Ronaldo Rolim, piano

Francis Poulenc – Nocturne No. 1 in C Major
Claude Debussy – Ballade, L. 70
Gabriel Fauré – Impromptu No. 2 in F minor, Op.31
Maurice Ravel – Le Tombeau de Couperin

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Distant Pairs: Raven Chacon and Rob Thorne
Jul
8
7:00 PM19:00

Distant Pairs: Raven Chacon and Rob Thorne

Thursday, July 8th, ISSUE is pleased to stream the debut collaboration between Diné composer, performer, and installation artist Raven Chacon and New Zealand Māori composer, performer, improvisor, and anthropologist Rob Thorne. The duo’s debut work will stream on ISSUE’s site.

Both Chacon and Thorne have extensive histories using various high-pitched Indingenous wind instruments from their respective territories. Recently, Chacon has composed chamber works including Sweet Land, co-composed with Du Yun (commissioned and produced by The Industry) as well as Owl Song, for sinfonietta and voice (commissioned by Borealis Festival for Bit20 Ensemble). In 2020, Chacon released An Anthology of Chants Operations on the Ouidah label, a body of recordings drawn from across the last decade of his output capturing live performance, installation, and composition. Rob Thorne has maintained a broad solo and collaborative practice that includes cross-disciplinary works with Berlin based electronic composer Fis, Athenian pianist Tania Giannouli, The NZ String Quartet, and Orchestra Wellington, and in 2017, reimagined a pre-colonial dawn chorus in the field-based acousmatic work Te Koki. Recent work includes contributions to short-film Super Special, chamber opera He Pūtōrino Mākutu with Celeste Oram, and the Unsettling Scores series with Liquid Architecture. Currently a Research Fellow at the NZ School of Music, he has an upcoming album release with improvisor David Rothenberg (US) and vocalist Anna Fält (Sweden/Finland), as well as a creative commission with NZ Crown Research Institute Manaaki Whenua that seeks to express people’s nationally surveyed perceptions of how they relate to trees.

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Unmuting the Voices: A Conversation with Dr. Quinton Morris
Jun
3
2:30 PM14:30

Unmuting the Voices: A Conversation with Dr. Quinton Morris

The Department of Performing Arts and Arts Leaderships invites you to a conversation with Dr. Quinton Morris about his exciting new venture with KING FM, Unmute the Voices.

Dr. Morris will be interviewed by Maggie Molloy, Seattle University alum and the host of Second Inversion at KING FM.

Register for this free event to receive the Zoom link a few days prior to the event. (Remember to check your spam/junk folder if you don't see it in your inbox.)

Unmute The Voices is a national radio show, podcast and video series that celebrates the music and performances of BIPOC composers and performers with dedicated space for BIPOC artistry. The project highlights classical music written by composers from BIPOC communities and includes performances and interviews with artists of color.

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 Harambee Chamber Orchestra: Spring Celebration 2021
Jun
2
6:00 PM18:00

Harambee Chamber Orchestra: Spring Celebration 2021

A joyous concert to come together after a challenging year to celebrate the season and our talented musicians. Featuring soloist Rafael Galvan-Herrera, and a brilliant composition by student-composer Kailyn Williams.

Please join us for our first in-person concert of the 2020-21 Season! With Special Guests: The Quintessentials & Furioso String Quartet. Compositions by Astor Piazzola, Antonio Vivaldi, Carlos Simon, Kailyn Williams, Luigi Boccherini, and more.

Date and Time:
Wed, Jun 2, 2021, 7:00 PM ET
Location:
The Woodland
60 Woodland Road 
Maplewood, NJ 07040

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Afro-Diasporic Opera Forum
May
26
to May 28

Afro-Diasporic Opera Forum

  • Google Calendar ICS

A free, virtual public forum hosted by International Contemporary Ensemble with Dr. Naomi André.

The Afro-Diasporic Opera Forum is a three-day series of events produced by colleagues and collaborators of the International Contemporary Ensemble in order to celebrate, share, and reflect on three operas that have had a major impact on the organization and collaborators. They include: George Lewis’ Afterword (2015), Tyshawn Sorey’s Perle Noire: Meditations for Joséphine Baker (2016), and Pauline Oliveros and IONE’s The Nubian Word for Flowers: A Phantom Opera (2017).

In order to cultivate awareness among presenters, producers, ensembles, and audiences, we will bring these works into conversation with one another and with leading scholars in the field. Renowned musicologist Dr. Naomi André is the lead scholar and conversation partner for this three-day series.

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 Chicago Composers Orchestra: "Immigrant Mass: A Multimedia Music Film"
May
22
7:00 PM19:00

Chicago Composers Orchestra: "Immigrant Mass: A Multimedia Music Film"

World premiere of new work by Chicago-based composer Carlos Jaquez Gonzalez

A plea for understanding. A multi-media Immigrant Mass performance/film reflecting the lives and struggles of those who have sought better lives in America. The goal of the mass is to humanize immigrants and their experiences through real interviews, striking visuals, and music. Through this multi-media lense, this message can be better communicated and understood.

The six movement Immigrant Mass is a fusion of the mass ordinary and immigrant experiences (collected by photo-journalist Greg Constantine). The purpose of this exploration is to examine how religion and government affect the lives of those seeking a better life (from war, poverty, and more). The Roosevelt University Conservatory Choir led by Dr. Cheryl Frazes Hill, will be singing the standard Greek/Latin text of the mass ordinary and fulfilling the role of religion and government. Soloists; Corinne Costell, Tori Darnell, David Chavez, and Austin Sanders will be singing and embodying first-hand accounts of immigrants who have been held at border detention camps.

The ultimate goal of this mass is to highlight the realities and resilience of humanity, particularly struggling families, and what our role and duty is to help them. Through this melting pot of sounds and visuals by the Chicago Composers Orchestra, Conservatory Choir, soloists, and Greg Constantine, it is my hope that this work - which has brought so many hard working people from different walks of life together - will inspire to aid the immigrant community through various organizations, donations, and change in perspective.

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From the Composer’s Studio: A Conversation With Missy Mazzoli and Jessie Montgomery
May
20
6:00 PM18:00

From the Composer’s Studio: A Conversation With Missy Mazzoli and Jessie Montgomery

Join us for an intimate conversation with CSO Mead Composer-in-Residence Missy Mazzoli and Jessie Montgomery as they discuss what it means to be a composer working with symphony orchestras in 2021. 

Free and open to the public, this webinar will be followed by Q&A.

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 Our City, Your Orchestra: Citizenship and Immigration Services
May
17
6:00 PM18:00

Our City, Your Orchestra: Citizenship and Immigration Services

Performance Details

Julia Li Violin
Che-Hung Chen Viola
Yumi Kendall Cello

Traditional “Great Day,” from Three Spirituals
MacDowell “To a Wild Rose,” from Ten Woodland Sketches
Dohnányi Fifth movement, from Serenade
Dvořák First movement, from Miniatures

Julia Li (violin), Che-Hung Chen (viola), and Yumi Kendall (assistant principal cello) perform during three naturalization ceremonies in West Philadelphia, presided by Joel H. Slomsky, senior U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. 

The trio performs music that celebrates the U.S. as a nation of immigrants and diverse cultures, from MacDowell’s“To a Wild Rose,” from Ten Woodland Sketches to the first movement of Dvořák’s Miniatures. The program also features interviews with newly naturalized citizens.

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We Shall Overcome: Music & Equitable Healing
Apr
26
5:30 PM17:30

We Shall Overcome: Music & Equitable Healing

With racial inequity at the forefront of our national conversation, this event is co-presented by Project STEP and Longwood Symphony to highlight the disproportionate effect of COVID-19 on communities of color and to celebrate these organizations working on the frontline for social justice and healing. This virtual gathering will include performances featuring Project STEP and Longwood Symphony musicians, a presentation from healthcare leaders working for equity, and a Q&A with some of the artists.

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Feb
11
5:00 PM17:00

Jangdan: Conversation of the Breath – Kim So Ra, Kim Young Mi, Hong Kyeong Hwa, Hyun Seung Hun & Hong Ji Hye

We are all breathing the same air, and we are all connected. From a theater in Seoul, percussionist Kim So Ra experiments with rhythm and movement alongside contemporary dancers Kim Young Mi and Hong Kyeong Hwa, percussionist Hyun Seung Hun, and piri (bamboo reed flute) player Hong Ji Hye for the short film Jangdan: Conversation of the Breath, premiering at National Sawdust’s Digital Discovery Festival on the eve of Seollal, the Korean Lunar New Year.

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Gabriel Cabezas and Gabriella Smith: Lost Coast
Feb
2
7:30 PM19:30

Gabriel Cabezas and Gabriella Smith: Lost Coast

Composer Gabriella Smith, whose music has been described as “high-voltage and wildly imaginative” (Philadelphia Inquirer) and “the coolest, most exciting, most inventive new voice I’ve heard in ages” (Musical America) comes together with Sphinx Medal of Excellence recipient cellist Gabriel Cabezas on Lost Coast, a forthcoming album that addresses both the natural beauty of the planet and humanity’s hand at destroying it.

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National Philharmonic at Strathmore presents: All American Composers
Nov
22
2:00 PM14:00

National Philharmonic at Strathmore presents: All American Composers

Our focus is on American composers, with a program featuring works by leading composer and performer Jessie Montgomery, "Dean of Afro-American Composers" William Grant Still, and winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize in music, Melinda Wagner. David Whiteside, principal flutist, whose playing is described as “dazzling,” “eloquent,” and “evocative” by The Washington Post, is the featured soloist.

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