Stormy Seas Concert Trailer | Dec 13-27

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  • čas přidán 10. 12. 2020
  • WATCH THE CONCERT / SUBSCRIBE TO OUR SEASON ► musicofremembrance.uscreen.io
    “People want to jump overboard. If they can swim for two hours, they can make it to shore. They would rather drown than go back. Being sent back is a death sentence. I am interested in staying alive.” - Ruth, age 18 old, Breslau Germany 1939
    Iranian-American composer Sahba Aminikia is also a performer and educator with a deep personal commitment to human rights causes. He is the founder and artistic director of the Flying Carpet Festival, a performing arts festival for children in war zones. In Stormy Seas, Aminikia draws on his passion to tell five true stories about young people who braved the peril of setting sail in search of safe shores: from Nazi Germany; from communist Cuba; from war-torn Vietnam; from Taliban-dominated Afghanistan; from an orphanage in Ivory Coast. The work is a testament to hope and courage, and an appeal to our shared humanity.
    You’ll also experience the chamber works of two Dutch composers who met very different fates. Dick Kattenburg (like Anne Frank, ten years his junior) experienced the war years in hiding until he was betrayed. He was murdered at Auschwitz just shy of his 25th birthday, and only one of his works was performed in his lifetime. Géza Frid, a student of Bartók and Kodály, arrived in the Netherlands from his native Hungary in the late 1920s. In Nazi-occupied Amsterdam he was part of an artists’ resistance and organized clandestine house concerts. He was active in the underground as a forger of coupons and identity cards. Miraculously he escaped detention and deportation, and for years after the war was one of the most-performed composers in the Netherlands. Max Vredenburg helped found Radio Free Netherlands, which broadcast from Paris until the approach of the German army. He fled and eventually set sail to Batavia in what were then the Dutch East Indies - only to find himself in the hands of new enemies when the Japanese soon seized power there. Vredenburg endured three years in harsh prison camps, where he gave occasional clandestine music lectures, and relaunched a distinguished career in Amsterdam after the war.
    Featuring MOR’s stellar instrumental ensemble drawn from the Seattle Symphony: Violinists Mikhail Shmidt, violist Susan Gulkis Assadi, cellist Walter Gray, clarinetist Laura DeLuca and pianist Jessica Choe. Guest Artists: Guitarist Michael Partington, and vocalists Tess Altiveros, soprano, Karen Early Evans, mezzo soprano, and José Rubio, baritone.
    Max Vredenburg
    Lamento (1952)
    Susan Gulkis Assadi, viola, Jessica Choe, piano
    Dick Kattenburg
    String Trio (1939)
    Mikhail Shmidt, violin; Susan Gulkis Assadi, viola; Walter Gray, cello
    Géza Frid
    String Trio, Op. 1 (1926)
    Mikhail Shmidt, violin; Susan Gulkis Assadi, viola; Walter Gray, cello
    Sahba Aminikia
    Stormy Seas (2020)
    World Premiere Commissioned by Music of Remembrance
    Made possible through the generous support of Marcus Meier
    Child performers: Lila Noelle Bahng; Vritika Gupta; Mikayla Sanchez; Mia Habermann; Makayla Burley; Victoria Evans
    Laura DeLuca, clarinet; Mikhail Shmidt, violin; Walter Gray, cello; Jessica Choe, piano
    Erich Parce, director
    Special Thanks to our 2020-2021 Season Sponsor
    The Powell Family Foundation
    Thanks to our Community Parnters
    Congregation Ezra Bessaroth
    Seattle Sephardic Network
    Sephardic Bikur Holim
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