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Classically Speaking

Classical music in West Virginia and Beyond

(Classical) Guitar Heroes!

(News, Just for Fun) Permanent link
By Mona Seghatoleslami
 · May 8, 2009
Guitar Heroes from Naxos/Amazon

Calling all guitar fans … all music fans … here’s a chance to get a whole bunch of guitar music for less than a dollar

Starting today for a limited time, you can download 50 tracks of classical guitar music for just 99 cents.  It’s part of a special project with Naxos Records and Amazon, called Guitar Heroes

Also starting this week, you might notice some extra links on our classical music playlists.

People frequently write to ask how they can purchase a recording they’ve heard on Classical Music with Jim Lange.  Now, there will be direct links from the playlists to purchase recordings on Amazon.  When you buy a CD or mp3 through these links, a small percentage of the cost will be donated to WV Public Broadcasting.

I hope to add links to online classical music site ArkivMusic soon – they are still some technical issues we need to work out. 

Looking for more guitar?  We’ve interviewed a few classical guitar heroes around here previously: XueFei YangChris Anderson, and Glen Kurtz.   Also, Aran Jenkins has written about the guitar-saxophone connection  and posted a Segovia video, and coming soon, Jim Lange (a guitar hero in his own right) will post his interview with Sharon Isbin!


If you spend that dollar to get the 50 tracks of classical guitar music, let me know what you think.  If you like it, share this post with your friends, so they can get this deal and enjoy the music too.


WVU Prof at Carnegie Hall (New York)

(Interviews, News) Permanent link
By Mona Seghatoleslami
 · May 7, 2009
Allemagnetti
Allemagnetti

Violist Maggie Snyder will be playing at Carnegie Hall this Sunday. No, not  that Carnegie Hall, the other one … up in New York City. She and her sister, harpsichordist Alexandra Snyder Dunbar, will be playing a recital featuring three world premieres at Carnegie’s Weill Recital Hall. 

Snyder is from Memphis, received degrees at Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, and now teaches viola at West Virginia University. She and her sister have performed together all their lives, but they just recently established themselves as a group with a name – Allemagnetti (you can read the story of that name on their site). 

I called Maggie Snyder Tuesday at her sister’s apartment in New York City, and we chatted about how they got to Carnegie Hall, the music she’s playing, her experience growing up in a musical family, comissioning new music, and bringing the harpsichord into the 21st century. 

This audio player requires Adobe Flash
Interview with violist Maggie Snyder


In the interview, Snyder mentions that they’ll be performing this music sometime in West Virginia (after she catches up on her taxes!). I’ll be sure to let you know when that happens. 

The duo Allemagnetti will perform at Carnegie Hall Sunday May 10 at 5:30 p.m. Their program includes music by J.S. and C.P.E. Bach, Alan Hovhannes, Manuel de Falla, Kenji BunchThomas PasatieriKamra Ince and Garrett Byrnes

** As a fellow violist, I was remiss in not asking Snyder her opinion of viola jokes and whether she started on viola or violin.  I’ll get back to you on those questions – and if you ever have extra questions you want asked of the people we interview, let us know, and we’ll see what we can do. 

** UPDATE: Maggie Snyder wrote back to me a bit ago with answers to my questions, and now I'm finally getting to post them. Here's what she said:

"I didn't start on viola. My father was a violinist, and I actually did the 'learn to stand, learn to hold a violin' Suzuki training. I was even first more of a prodigy pianist than a string player anyway, starting that intensively when I was 3. 

"At about 12 years old, my father handed me a viola, and I was in, hook line and sinker after that. I kept up piano and violin all through high-school (and violin continues to be a "back-up" instrument for me), but viola was definitely my focus in college. My very first piece on viola was [Mozart's] Sinfonia Concertantescordatura (my father believed in trial by fire).  What fun to play first thing with my dad, though!

As to viola jokes, I am a big believer in taking oneself very lightly, so think they are very fun. I probably have heard most of  them. I especially like the ones that end up with a twist at the end which turns them into jokes about conductors or violinists. And I like jokes of any kind, so ones about my instrument are like "famous" ones."


Congrats, Larry Combs!

(News) Permanent link

Larry Combs clarinetThis just in:  clarinetist Larry Combs will be inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame this year. 

Larry Combs is from Charleston, WV, where he studied clarinet and by age 16 was principal of the Charleston Symphony (now the West Virginia Symphony).  Combs is a founding member of the Chicago Chamber Musicians.  He recently retired as principal clarinetist with the Chicago Symphony, and he was previously principal clarinet of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra.  He also teaches at DePaul University and performs with jazz groups in Chicago. 

I hope to have an interview with Larry Combs for you sometime soon. For now check out Erica Peterson’s story about Combs and the rest this year’s WV Music Hall of Fame class.

Previous classical inductees have been composer George Crumb (interview) and opera singer Phyllis Curtin (interview). 

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