Program Guide November 2022
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Broadcasting as a Community Service from
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WWUH is truly "listener supported" as 90% of the funding comes from our listeners during the two, on-air fund drives we run each year. Our listeners have always been extremely generous, a fact that we never take for granted.
The final fund drive of the year kicks of at 6pm on Sunday, November 13th and runs for just one week. New this year is a sleeveless fleece vest, color med. grey for a donation of $85. You can donate on line at wwuh.org or call in during the drive.
–John Ramsey
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In Central CT and Western MA, WWUH can be heard
at 91.3 on the FM dial.
Our programs are also carried on:
WDJW, 89.7, Somers, CT
smart device.
We also recommend that you download the free app TuneIn to your mobile device.
You can also access on demand any WWUH program which has aired in the last two weeks using our newly improved Program Archive.
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Real Alternative News
For over 54 years WWUH has aired a variety of unique community affairs programs.
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Here is our current schedule:
Tuesday: Noon–12:30 p.m. 51 Percent
Wednesday: Noon–12:30 p.m. Perspective
8:30 p.m.–9:00 p.m. Gay Spirit
Sunday: 4:30 p.m.–5 p.m. Tales From Off and On CT's Beaten Path
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Never Miss Your Favorite WWUH Programs Again!
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The WWUH Archive!
We are very excited to announce that our archive has been completely upgraded so that it is usable on most if not all devices. The archive allows you to listen to any WWUH program aired in the last two weeks on-demand using the "Program Archive" link on our home page.
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Do you have an idea for a radio program?
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If you have an idea for a radio program and are available to volunteer late at night, please let us know.
We may have some midnight and/or 3am slots available later this year. Email station manager John Ramsey to find out more about this unique and exciting opportunity for the right person.
Qualified candidates will have access to the full WWUH programmer orientation program so no experience is necessary. He/she will also need to attend the monthly WWUH staff meetings (held on Tuesday or Sunday evenings) and do behind the scenes volunteer work from time to time. This is a volunteer position.
After completing this process, we will review the candidate's assets and accomplishments and they will be considered for any open slots in our schedule.
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New Program!
Amazing Tales From Off and On CT
Beaten Path
We encourage you to tune in to our newest program, Amazing Tales from Off and On Connecticut’s Beaten Path which airs Sunday afternoons at 4:30 right after the Opera.
Amazing Tales uses a story-telling format to focus on historically significant people, places, and events from Connecticut’s past. Host Mike Allen interviews subject matter experts on a variety of historical topics.
He specializes in bringing local history to life, by using his journalism and story-telling skills with podcasting and public speaking. For 15 years, Mike worked as a radio journalist, both at NPR’s Boston affiliate WBUR and as News Director at i-95 (WRKI-FM) in western Connecticut. He subsequently worked in government and corporate before retiring and starting his podcast. As a resident of Connecticut for more than 50 years, Mike also makes public appearances throughout the state, speaking on topics of local history
Sundays, 4:30pm.
11/6 Identifying Four Unearthed 250-year-old Skeletons, Buried in a Mass Grave
11/13 When Dinosaurs Roamed Connecticut
11/20 The First State Prison Ever in the U.S. was in CT - and it was Like a Dungeon
11/27 Is a Pickle That Doesn’t Bounce Illegal in Connecticut?
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The WWUH Scholarship Fund
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In 2003 WWUH alums Steve Berian, Charles Horwitz and Clark Smidt helped create the WWUH Scholarship Fund to provide an annual grant to a UH student who is either on the station's volunteer Executive Committee or who is in a similar leadership position at the station. The grant amount each year will be one half of the revenue of the preceding year.
To make a tax deductible donation
either send a check to:
WWUH Scholarship Fund
c/o John Ramsey
Univ. of Hartford
200 Bloomfield Ave.
W. Hartford, CT 06117
Or call John at 860.768.4703 to arrange for a one-time
or on-going donation via charge card.
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CT Blues Society
Founded in 1993, the Connecticut Blues Society is a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion and preservation of Blues music in our state. CTBS is an affiliated member of The Blues Foundation, a worldwide network of 185 affiliates with an international membership in 12 countries.
Here is a link to CT Blues Society with events and venues.
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Hartford Jazz Society
The longest continuously operating jazz society in the country
Founded in 1960, this all-volunteer organization produces jazz concerts featuring internationally acclaimed artists as well as up and coming jazz musicians. Our mission is to cultivate a wider audience of jazz enthusiasts by offering concerts, workshops and educational programs to the Greater Hartford region. The area’s most complete and up-to-date calendar of Jazz concerts and events.
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Boomer's Paradise
Monday's 1-4 PM with your host, The Turtle Man
Summer is in the rear view mirror and we're looking ahead to winter. Every Monday from 1-4PM Boomers Paradise with your host, The Turtle Man has just the tonic to chase away the cold weather blues.
We start out November will a look back 50 years to new album releases in November 1972 along with another edition of the Billboard Top 40 One Hit Wonders and another dose of good harmony from different artists.
Appropriately enough we continue with more songs with titles featuring the elements of fire, ice, water, earth and sky. Added to that is some rock tunes with a touch of sitar and songs about love, life and living.
Next we once again share music from artists who have connections to the band, The Byrds, songs with "music" and "rain" and "snow" in the song title.
We end the month with a musical review of the songs gracing the airwaves in the years 1964-1966.
All this for you on WWUH, the best in public alternative radio.
You can hear all of this each November Monday from 1-4PM on Boomers Paradise with your host, The Turtle Man on WWUH 91.3 FM and wwuh.org.
Tune in on the radio (91.3 FM) or streaming online at wwuh.org.
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WWUH Classical Programming
November 2022
Sunday Afternoon at the Opera… Sundays 1:00 – 4:30 pm
Evening Classics… Weekdays 4:00 to 7:00/ 8:00 pm
Drake’s Village Brass Band… Mondays 7:00-8:00 pm
(Opera Highlights Below)
Tuesday 1st
Dall’Abaco: Cello Duo in F; Haydn: Symphony No. 25; Mozart: Piano Sonata No. 9 in A K310; Ruth Gipps: Piano Concerto; Thomas Hyde: Symphony; Grieg: Holberg Suite; Szymanowski: Conerto for Violin & Orchestra
Wedneday 2d
Berg: Lyric Suite; Ravel: String Quartet; Elena Uroste & Tom Poster – The Jukebox Album; Dutilleux: Le Loup
Drake’s Village Brass Band Tribute to Dale Clevenger
Thursday 3d
From Courthouse to Court Musician: J.P.E. Hartmann: Hakon Jarl Overture Op. 40, Character Pieces; Scheidt: Ludi Musici; Brentner: Horae Pomeridianae, Op. 4, "Concertus cammerales": Concerto No. 1 in g; Bellini: Oboe Concerto in E Flat Major, Norma: Casta Diva; Browne: To Gratiana dancing and singing; Barry: Film Music.
Friday 4th
Remembering Gabriel Faure
Sunday 6th
Stanford: Mass Via Victrix 1914-1918; Zelenka: Missa Omnium Sanctorum
Monday 7th
Walker: Piano Sonata #3, Poem for Violin and Orchestra; Mennin: String Quartet #2; From Brighton to Brooklyn- Elena Urioste Violin, Tom Poster Piano;
Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet selections
Drake’s Village Brass Band – Annapolis Brass Quintet selections from Encounter and Invitation to a Side Show
Tuesday 8th
Friedrich Witt: Flute Concerto; Josef Kraus: Symphony in E flat; Cax: Symphony No. 7; Franz Scharwenka: Piano Concerto No. 1; Alexander Mosolov: Harp Concerto; Mozart: Piano Sonata No 5 in G K283
Wednesday 9th
Host’s Choice
Thursday 10th
From Courthouse to Court Musician: Kozeluch: Symphony in D; Schieferdecker: Concert Overture No. 1 in a minor; Rabaud: Solo de concours, Op. 10, Marouf Cobbler of Cairo: Dances; Collins: Piano Music; Morricone: Film Music; F. Couperin: Pièces de clavecin II: Ordre 6ème in B Flat, Les Nations: Premier Ordre 'La Françoise'
Friday 11th
It’s November – Time for #11
Sunday 13th
Eccles: Semele; Purcell: Dido and Aeneas
Monday 14th
Copland: Sextet for Clarinet, Piano and String Quartet, Dance Symphony; Respighi: Ancient Aires and Dances; Bernstein: Mass: Orchestral Suite
Drake’s Village Brass Band Hakan Hardenberger -French Trumpet Concertos
Tuesday 15th
Holzbauer: Concerto in A for flute, 2 violins, viola and basso continuo; Rudolphe Kreutzer: Violin Concerto No. 19; Franz Scharwenka: Piano Concerto No. 2; Weinberg: Symphony No. 3; Faure: Cello Sonata No. 2 in g minor; Francaix: Les malheurs de Sophie
Wednesday 16th
Selected performances from the ornamental underbelly of these three labels: Discover International, Jade, & Raum Klang!
Thursday 17th
From Courthouse to Court Musician: Janitsch: Sonata da camera in D, Op. 5, No. 1 'Echo'; Bernstein: On The Town – 3 Dance Episodes; Amram: Theme and Variations on 'Red River Valley'
Friday 18th
Celebrating the lives of Gilbert & Sullivan
Sunday 20th
Eyerly: The House of Seven Gables
Monday 21st
Diaghilev150 – Tcherpnin: Le Pavillon d’Armide; Grainger: Thanksgiving Song; Thomson: Pilgrims and Pioneers; Ives: Thanksgiving and Forefathers Day;
Still: Music for Violin and Orchestra
Drake’s Village Brass Band David Pyatt -British Horn Concertos
Tuesday 22d
Franz Benda: Flute Concerto in e minor; Kapustin: Piano Sonata No. 2; Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 1; Rimsky-Korsakov: Symphony No. 1; Gounod: Petite Symphony; Britten: Suite from King Arthur
Wednesday 23d
Host’s Choice
Thursday 24th
From Courthouse to Court Musician: Agricola: Flute Sonata in A; Stavenhagen: Piano Concerto; Joplin: Rags; Diemer: Folk Hymn Sketches; Schnittke in Engels. Schnittke: Suite in the Old Style; Ung: 1B
Friday 25th
Birth Anniversaries of Two Ts - Sergei Taneyev (1856) & Virgil Thomson (1897)
Sunday 27th
Tchaikovsky: Pique Dame
Monday 28th
Prokofiev: Symphony #2; Diaghilev 150 – Stravinsky: The Firebird complete
Drake’s Village Brass Band Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass Live
Tuesday 29th
Dall’Abaco: Sonata in E flat; Dora Bright: Piano Concerto; Mozart: Piano Sonata No. 12 in F K332; Chadwick: Symphony No. 2; Donizetti; String Quartet No. 17; Von Schacht: Symphony in e flat “con eco”
Monday 30th
Kusser: 6 Overture Suites "Festin des muses", Orchestral Suite No. 1 in G minor; Chelleri: 6 Sonate di Galanteria: Sonata No. 6 in G major and Symphony nouvelle No. 6 in B-flat major; Telemann: Cantatas for the 1st Sunday in Advent; Hola Rovensky: Czech Baroque Advent songs; J. S. Bach: Violin Partita No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1004; Schütz: Symphoniarum sacrarum III, Op. 12, SWV 398-419 (selections); Reicha: Wind Quintet No. 16 in D Major, Op. 99, No. 4;
Schnittke: The Master and Margarita Suite; Farrenc: 30 Études, Op. 26 (selections).
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SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT THE OPERA
your "lyric theater" program
with Keith Brown
Programming for the month of November 2022
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SUNDAY NOVEMBER 6TH Stanford, Mass,Via Victrix 1914-1918, Zelenka, Missa Omnium Sanctorum Programming for the month of November commences on a sombre note. It was on November 11th that World War One ended in 1918. Several European composers wrote requiems for the war dead. The notable British composer, Sir Charles Villiers Stanford (1852-1924) wrote a setting of the Latin Mass as a thanksgiving for the cessation of hostilities, and as a celebratory ode for Allied victory. Mass Via Victrix 1914-1918 was published in vocal score in 1920, but only the "Gloria" section was ever sung in the composer's lifetime, and only in a reduced performance. In complete scoring for full orchestra, organ,chorus and and four vocal soloists it was finally recorded in concert, the 27th of October, 2018, to mark the upcoming centenary of the Armistice. BBC Radio 3 broadcast the concert to the nation, the aircheck for which was picked up by the Lyrita record label of the UK for release in 2019 on a single silver disc. Adrian Partington conducts the BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales. Stanford's At the Abbey Gate for baritone solo, chorus and orchestra was first performed at the Royal Albert Hall in 1921 following the unveiling ceremony of the Cenotaph, the monument for the fallen soldiers in downtown London. The world premiere recordings of both of Stanford,s works are now available to the public through Lyrita.
- November First is a special day in the traditional Christian calendar: the Feast of All Saints. In observance of the holy day the composers of old were often commissioned to write festive Mass settings. The Bohemian composer, J. S. Bach's Catholic colleague, Johann Dismas Zelenka (1679-1745) penned his Missa Omnium Sanctorum in 1741 for the Saxon Royal Court Chapel in Dresden. Zelenka played the bass viol in the renowned court orchestra there. Musicologists think that Bach wrote his Latin Mass in B Minor for possible performance in Dresden. Zelanka's 'Mass for All Saints" is in the same contrapuntal North German baroque style. It gets a perfect idiomatically baroque performance from the Milanese La Barocca period instrument players and chorus, joined by four vocal soloists. Ruben Jais directs them all. The Spanish Glossa label put Zelenka's Missa Omnium Sanctorum out in 2019 on a single compact disc.
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SUNDAY NOVEMBER 13TH Eccles, Semele,Purcell,Dido and Aeneas You could call this Sunday's presentation"Purcell's Last Gasp." John Eccles (1668-1735) was of the generation of musicians circulating in London at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Eccles began his career as a composer around the time of the untimely death of Henry Purcell, the much-praised "English Orpheus," in 1695. He was one of the up-and-coming rivals of Purcell in writing music for the theater, and his music is in the same insular style of the English baroque of the Restoration period. Eccles composed at least a dozen masques in this style before his Semele (1705-06?). He collaborated, as did Purcell, with William Congreve, the greatest poet of the age. Handel would set the same Semele text to music in 1744. (I have presented Handel's Semele three times on this program.) Eccles' Semele was intended to be the grand opening production at the newly-built Queen's theatre in the Haymarket. We don't know exactly why Semele was naver staged there, however, and Eccles' score was shelved. By 1705 Italian opera in the advanced continental baroque style was already sweeping the old style out of London. Handel would shortly begin producing his own Italian opere serie at the Haymarket. The autograph score of Eccles' Semele:An Opera has survived almost complete. An overture from one of Eccles' other stageworks has been supplied for the world premiere recording of the work by the period instrument Academy of Ancient Music, with thirteen voices, directed by Julian Perkins. AAM, the proprietary label of the orchestra, issued Semele on two CD's in a deluxe package in 2020. Reviewer Bertil Van Boer enthuses, "This is an excellent recording... If one wishes to find a composer to bridge the gap between Purcell and Handel in terms of importance, one need not look further than this work." (Fanfare,November/December,2021.) Since Semele is an extension of the Purcellian style, it begs comparison with Dido and Aeneas,a historically-informed recording of which you will hear immediately following.
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SUNDAY NOVEMBER 20TH Eyerly, The House of the Seven Gables Thanksgiving is by origin a New England holiday, and my lyric theater offering this Sunday springs directly from the literary culture of our region. Scott Eyerly's three act opera The House of the Seven Gables (2000) is based on Nathaniel Hawthorne's great American novel, first published in 1850. Eyerly wrote his own libretto and the story of the opera follows the book closely. In 1992 Eyerly received a National Endowment for the Arts grant to compose this his first operatic work, which was intended for its premiere production by the Manhattan School of Music Opera Theater. As part of his personal preparation for composing he spent six weeks in Salem, Massachusetts. He was permitted to sleep overnight in one of the bedrooms of the creaky, spooky seventeenth century wooden structure. The house itself is practically a character in both novel and opera. Albany Records released The House of the Seven Gables on two compact discs in 2001. I last presented it on Sunday, November 28,2004.
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SUNDAY NOVEMBER 27TH Tchaikovsky, Pique Dame Russia's most famous composer wrote ten complete operas, two of which achieved international status: Eugene Onegin (1878) and Pique Dame or The Queen of Spades (1890). Peter Tchaikovsky's brother Modest prepared the libretto for Pique Dame,which is based on a story by Alexander Pushkin, Russia's first great author of international stature. Pushkin's original tale is too cynical for most theater-goers to take in unadulterated form. In the opera the young military man Hermann is not a cold-hearted monomanaical cardshark. Then again, in Pushkin there is no double suicide. A number of recordings of the opera have been made that reside in our station's holdings. Two different ones I have featured previously, on Sundays in October of 1988 (Melodiya LP's/Bolshoi Theatre) and April of 1991 (Sony Classical CD's/ Bulgarian National Opera). Then came Vladimir Jurowski's recorded interpretation with the Israel Philharmonic and Ukrainian tenor Oleg Kulko as Hermann (Helicon Classics), which went over the air on Sunday, September 22, 2019. Our WWUH classical record library has acquired yet another recording of Pique Dame with Mariss Jansons conducting the Orchestra and Chorus of Bavarian Radio and tenor Mischa Dyduk as Pushkin's anti-hero. (A BR Klassik compact disc release in 2015.) It was recorded in a live concert performance in Munich, with very minimal audience noise. This may be the best of all the "Dames" I've presented over the decades. Fanfare reviewer Huntley Dent says of it,"...this powerful new release is hard to surpass." (Fanfare,March/April, 2016.)
Keith Brown
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Connecticut Valley Symphony Orchestra
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The Connecticut Valley Symphony Orchestra is a non-profit Community Orchestra. They present four concerts each season in the Greater Hartford area, performing works from all periods in a wide range of musical styles. The members of Hartford’s only community orchestra are serious amateurs who come from a broad spectrum of occupations.
Coming Up
Sunday, November 6, 2022 at 3:00 p.m.
Weaver High School, Kinsella Magnet School Auditorium
415 Granby Street Hartford, CT
Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor………….Johann Sebastian Bach, arr. Stokowski
Concerto for Flute in D major……………………Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Noriiyo Fukui, flute)
Symphony No. 5 in E minor……………………….Peter Tchaikovsky
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The West Hartford Symphony Orchestra
In collaboration with the WWUH Classical Programming we are pleased to partner with the West Hartford Symphony Orchestra to present their announcements and schedule to enhance our commitment to being part of the Greater Hartford Community.
Richard Chiarappa, Music Director 860.521.4362
Coming Up
Sun, Nov 6, 2022 at 3:00 PM
170 Kingswood Rd, West Hartford, CT, 06119
The West Hartford Symphony Orchestra announces the showing of the documentary “For the Left Hand” featuring the one-handed pianist Norman Malone in addition to the West Hartford Symphony Orchestra’s “Completing the Circle” fall concert on Sunday, November 6 at 3:00 p.m. There will be a question and answer session with the pianist, a Chicago Tribune music critic, and the West Hartford Symphony Orchestra conductor. The WHSO will perform Borodin’s Allegro from Symphony No. 2 and In the Steppes of Central Asia. The one-handed pianist Norman Malone astounded audiences when he performed with the West Hartford Symphony several times, and his uplifting story has been told on the CBS Evening News and by several national newspapers. After a tragic attack as a boy, Malone sustained a severe brain injury, rendering his right hand permanently useless. But, despite intense pain, physical disabilities, and psychological trauma, Malone never lost his love for music. He resumed his piano lessons, playing and mastering compositions specifically written for the left hand only. After graduating from DePaul University’s School of Music, he taught choral music in Chicago public schools for 30 years, retiring in 2001.
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The Musical Club of Hartford
The Musical Club of Hartford is a non-profit organization founded in 1891. Membership is open to performers or to those who simply enjoy classical music, providing a network for musicians from the Greater Hartford area. Club events take place normally on selected Thursday mornings at 10:00 a.m, Fall through Spring. The usual location is the sanctuary at Westminster Presbyterian Church, 2080 Boulevard, West Hartford, CT (between Ridgewood and Mountain Avenues). Information on time and location is given at the bottom of each event description.
Coming Up
Classical and Classy: Brahms, Beethoven, Ella and Louis
Live Music on Thursday, November 17, 2022 at 10 a.m.
On Thursday, November 17, 2022, starting at 10 a.m., the Musical Club of Hartford presents a concert of classical and jazz inspired musical gems in the sanctuary of Westminster Presbyterian Church, 2080 Boulevard, West Hartford. The concert is open to the public and will include the following performances by Musical Club members and guests:
- Sonata No. 2 in A Major, Opus 100 by Johannes Brahms (performers: Lisa Kugelman, violin; Annette Shapiro, piano)
- Duets and solos inspired by Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong (performers: Patrice Fitzgerald and Richard Leslie: voice; Walter Gwardyak, Walter Mayo, and Theodore Hine: instrumental accompaniment)
- Sonata in G Major, Op. 14, no. 2 by Ludwig van Beethoven (performer: Sandra Ann Craig, piano)
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Connecticut Lyric Opera
Connecticut Lyric Opera is the state’s leading opera company, performing to thousands in Hartford, Middletown, New Britain, and New London. We have earned the reputation as an innovative company that is renowned for our world-class singers, phenomenal concert-quality orchestra and programming choices that go beyond the well-loved standards of the repertoire to include lesser-performed yet equally compelling works.
https://ctlyricopera.org/
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Connecticut Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra
The Connecticut Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra is the state’s premier professional chamber orchestra dedicated to presenting both traditional and contemporary classical chamber works to the public. The Orchestra, led by Founder and Artistic Director Adrian Sylveen, continues to grow in size and repertoire, presenting approximately 35 times a year in many major performing arts centers throughout Connecticut and New York.
Coming Up
Puccini – Tosca
Trinity-On-Main, New Britain: Thursday, November 3 – 7:30 pm
Bushnell, Hartford, Belding Theater: Friday, November 11
Garde Theater, Sunday, November 13 – 6 pm
Opera with the CT Lyric Opera
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The Hartford Choral
The Hartford Choralehttp://www.hartfordchorale.org/The Hartford Chorale is a volunteer not-for-profit organization that presents, on a symphonic scale, masterpieces of great choral art throughout southern New England and beyond, serving as the primary symphonic chorus for the Greater Hartford community. Through its concerts and collaborations with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra and other organizations, the Hartford Chorale engages the widest possible audiences with exceptional performances of a broad range of choral literature, providing talented singers with the opportunity to study and perform at a professional level.
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Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale
Bringing Music to our Community for 60 Years! The Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale is a nonprofit volunteer organization that brings quality orchestral and choral music to the community, provides performance opportunities for its members, and provides education and performance opportunities for young musicians in partnership with Manchester schools and other Connecticut schools and colleges.
Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale
Friday, November 18, 2022 at 7:30 pm
SBM Auditorium, Manchester Community College
Concert 1 – Orchestra
Brandon Halberg, guest conductor
Dana Kaufman: Greyed Rainbow
Telemann: Viola Concerto with student soloist, Will Sotiriou
Dvorak: Symphony No. 7.
Tickets can be purchased at the door. For further information, phone 860-646-0047, visit the MSOC Web site at www.msoc.org or the Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale Facebook page.
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Beth El Temple Music & Art
WHERE ELSE COULD MUSIC BE THIS HEAVENLY? Music at Beth El Temple in West Hartford is under the direction of The Beth El Music & Arts Committee (BEMA). With the leadership of Cantor Joseph Ness, it educates and entertains the community through music. The BEMA committee helps conceive and produce musical performances of all genres, while supporting the commemoration of Jewish celebrations and prayer services.
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Voce
Founded in 2006 by Mark Singleton, Artistic Director, and Tom Cooke, President, Voce has grown to become New England’s premier chamber choral ensemble. With a mission to Serve Harmony, Voce is best known for its unique sound; for bringing new works to a wide range of audiences; and for collaborating with middle school, high school and collegiate ensembles to instill the values of living and singing in harmony, further developing the next generation of choral artists.
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Farmington Valley Symphony Orchestra
For further information, call 800-975-FVSO or visit: www.fvso.org
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South Windsor Cultural Arts
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The New Britain Symphony Orchestra
The 73 year old New Britain Symphony Orchestra is a professional orchestra which presents several concerts each season in the Greater New Britain area, performing works from all periods in a wide range of musical styles. In addition to its full orchestra concerts under the direction of Music Director and Conductor, Toshiyuki Shimada, including a free concert for children, members of the orchestra perform in various free chamber music concerts during the concert season.
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Celebrating 54 Years of Public Alternative Radio
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Our programming can also be heard on:
WDJW - Somers, 89.7 Mhz
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