Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Mozart a Deux in Manhattan Beach March 2

"Bach's Lunch" Recital
Mozart à Deux:
Sonatas for Violin and Piano
Distinguished UCLA Faculty Artists
Guillaume Sutre violin and Neal Stulberg piano

When
Friday, March 2, 2012 - 12:15-1:00 p.m.

Where
Trinity Lutheran Church
1340 Eleventh Street, Manhattan Beach, CA
(3 blks east of Sepulveda & 1 blk south of Manhattan Beach Blvd.)

Admission
Free, donations appreciated
Box lunches, with sandwiches made from special-order bakery bread and farmers-market-fresh produce are available afterwards to enjoy with the artist or take back to the office.

For more
Information
www.palosverdes.com/tlcmusic/tlcmbbl.htm


Mozart à Deux: Sonatas for Violin and Piano

UCLA Professors Guillaume Sutre and Neal Stulberg have embarked on a grand project of performing all of Mozart's masterpieces for violin and piano on a three-concert series in UCLA's Schoenberg Hall and then on a European concert tour. They'll share highlights in an extended "Super" Bach's Lunch Recital in Manhattan Beach.



Internationally renowned French-born violinist Guillaume Sutre, known worldwide as member of the Ysaÿe Quartet and for his recordings for Sony Classical, Decca, harmonia mundi, Naïve, Aeon, and Ysaÿe Records, is Professor of Violin at UCLA. He was awarded the prestigious George Enesco Prize, and in 1999, he was named Chevalier of the Order of Arts and the Letters by the French government. Guillaume plays a 1738 Italian violin made by Gregorio Antoniazzi, and uses an 1815 bow made by François Lupot.



UCLA Professor and Director of Orchestral Studies Neal Stulberg, heralded by the Los Angeles Times as ". . .a shining example of podium authority and musical enlightenment," conducts leading orchestras worldwide, including the Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Seoul Philharmonic, Haifa Symphony Orchestra, Israel Sinfonietta, St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra, and Moscow Chamber Orchestra, among others too numerous for mention here. In his career trajectory, he served as assistant conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Carlo Maria Giulini and as music director of the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra.


The Program

Mozart: Selected Sonatas for Violin and Piano

No comments: