Posts Tagged ‘2018’

March Meeting

February 22nd, 2018

These pieces were played at the March 18 meeting in Hopewell Borough:

David Starbuck

  • Carolan’s Farewell — Turlough O’Carolan, arr. Allan Alexander
  • Down by the Sally Gardens — “”
  • The Two William Davis’s — “”

Robert Ey

  • The Boys of Blue Hill/Reedsdale Hornpipe — Trad., arr. Gordon Bok
  • Port Lennox — Rory Dhall O’Cathain, arr. Glenn Weiser
  • Give Me Your Hand — “”

 Gad Berger

  • Un Dia de Noviembre — Leo Brouwer
  • Air on a G String — J.S. Bach, arr. Per-Olov Kindgren
  • Hallelujah — Leonard Cohen, arr. Gad Berger
  • Prelude to Cello Suite — J.S. Bach
  • The Parting Glass — Trad., arr. John Mock

Gary Lee

  • Banks O’ Doon — Robert Burns, arr. Guy Bergeron
  • Muir Woods — Andrew York

Jeff Griesemer

  • Here, There, and Everywhere — Beatles, arr. Jeff Griesemer
  • Slieve Russell/Port Sgian — Trad, arr. Jeff Griesemer

 James Day

  • Night Music — Donald Crockett
  • Guiding the Minotaur — Donald Crockett
  • Roll Out — Paul Lansky

Memorial Service for George Schindler

February 15th, 2018

A memorial service for George E. Schindler, Jr. will be held on Saturday, February 24, at 5:00 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, New Jersey.

George was a leader in our Society, organizing and hosting meetings in his homes in New Providence and, later, Montgomery. He was active over several decades. In addition to the usual repertoire, George was fond of playing arrangements of music from composers not traditionally associated with classical guitar, such as Jerome Kern, Victor Herbert, Henry Mancini, and George Gershwin.

Gad Berger will be representing the New Jersey Classical Guitar Society at the service, playing some of the music that George enjoyed and performed. Members are invited to attend.

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George E. Schindler Jr., a passionate hiker, backpacker, and environmentalist, died on February 9 in Princeton, N.J., at Acorn Glen Assisted Living. He was 94. The probable cause of death was pneumonia.

Mr. Schindler was born in 1923 in Carnegie, Pa., son of George E. Schindler Sr. and Stella Victoria Cox. He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps at the tail end of World War II; his military specialty was meteorology. Before enlisting, he had patched together the resources to study chemical engineering at Carnegie Tech for two years; afterwards, thanks to his army training and the GI Bill, he pursued his undergraduate studies at the University of North Carolina and then at the University of Chicago, from which institution he was awarded a B.S. in Meteorology. His interests having shifted to English literature, he earned his M.A. from the University of Pittsburgh. During those early years, he taught himself to play the classical guitar. A lifelong lover of literature, Mr. Schindler was extremely well read, favoring the works of George Bernard Shaw and Charles Dickens. He himself wrote two unpublished novels.

He married Faith Sayre in 1946, and the couple had three daughters. The family lived for many years in New Providence, N.J. In his thirty-one years with AT&T Bell Laboratories, Mr. Schindler edited a technical journal at the Bell Labs facility in Murray Hill, N.J., during the glory years of that company. In the four years preceding his retirement, he was department head in charge of a multivolume history project as well as of the Bell Laboratory archives.

George Schindler was never happier than when outdoors, whether camping, backpacking, or canoeing. He mapped trails and led hikes all over the country. His love of hiking grew into a deep commitment to preserving the natural landscape. He was instrumental in blocking a proposed dam at Tocks Island on the Delaware River, a dam that would have destroyed the nearby lake known as Sunfish Pond as well as spoiling the beauty of the Delaware’s free flow. As forestry coordinator for the New Jersey chapter of the Sierra Club and member of the board of directors of the NJ Audubon Society, his efforts contributed to the passage of the New Jersey Natural Areas Systems Act in 1975. Among the many other environmental causes for which he fought tirelessly were the preservation of the Pine Barrens and the protection of the Great Swamp from the incursion of a proposed jetport.

Well into his retirement, he made three trips to Alaska. He volunteered at the Lyons VA Hospital where his father spent the last few years of his life. Mr. Schindler’s wife died in 1999. He had been her loving caregiver during her long illness. He leaves his sister, Judy Reams of Walnut Creek, Calif.; his sister-in-law, Jeri Schindler of Klamath Falls, Ore.; his three daughters, Karen Baart of Brookline, Mass., Heather Lovett of Hopewell, N.J., and Sarah Schindler of New York, N.Y.; his two grandsons, Frank Lovett and Nathaniel Lovett; and two great-grandchildren. His younger brother, John Robert Schindler, died in 2009.

In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to the New Jersey chapter of the Sierra Club (www.sierraclub.org/new-jersey) or the Environmental Defense Fund (www.edf.org).

Concert Artists Guild Presents Jiji

January 29th, 2018

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2018
7:30 pm
Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall
Tickets: $25 General; $15 Students
More Information: http://www.concertartists.org/cag-presents/jiji-guitar

Guitarist Jiji is an adventurous artist on both acoustic and electric guitar, playing an extensive range of music from traditional and contemporary classical music to free improvisation. Her impeccable musicianship combined with compelling stage presence and fascinating repertoire earned her First Prize at the 2016 CAG Competition. She will perform works by Steve Reich, J. S. Bach, Ginastera, and Leo Brouwer, as well as a new work for electric guitar and electronics by Gulli Björnsson.

Guitarist Jorge Caballero Debuts at 92Y

January 29th, 2018

 

February 10, 2018
8:00 p.m.
Kaufmann Concert Hall
Tickets from $45
More Information: https://www.92y.org/event/jorge-caballero

Art of the Guitar
Jorge Caballero, guitar (92Y recital debut)

BACH: Partita, BWV 1013
ALBÉNIZ: Five Pieces from Iberia
JORGE CABALLERO: Midsummer Love Serenade (world premiere)
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV: 
 Capriccio espagnol, Op. 34

*All arrangements for solo guitar by the artist

Called “A masterly classical guitarist” by the New York Times, Jorge Caballero is the youngest musician and the only guitarist to win the Naumburg International Competition Award.  Born in Peru, Caballero has toured extensively throughout the world, and has been featured with such ensembles as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Orchestra of Saint Luke’s, the Iserlohn Guitar Symposium in Germany and the Great Performers Series in Washington, D.C. among others.  In his 92Y debut recital, Caballero presents a program of music spanning the eras from Bach to Rimsky-Korsakov to Albéniz and a world premiere of a work he composed himself, written as a love song for his wife, and which encrypts the letters of her name in musical pitches.

February Meeting

January 22nd, 2018

Turnout was relatively small, but we found much to discuss.

We talked about the history of our Society, going back to when a group of guitarists working for Bell Laboratories got together to play. Around 1979, Connie LeCraw opened the group to the general public, holding meetings in his home in Westfield. George Schindler then carried the torch for about 20 years, hosting meetings in New Providence and Montgomery. We would like to compile some history of our Society, so we would love to hear from you if you can share any memories or stories.

It’s been a while, but George Schindler and others used to organize member concerts. We wondered if anyone might want to take that on again. The Hopewell Borough railroad station was suggested as a feasible venue, although a location further north might have advantages.

Gary Lee will represent the New Jersey Classical Guitar Society at the Guitar Society Summit (a conference of guitar societies and guitar presenting organizations) in Baltimore in September. Let us know if you have any questions or input.

The next meeting will be on March 18 in Hopewell Borough. It might be a good opportunity to hear some Irish music. The April meeting will be in Wayne on April 15.

These pieces were played:

David Starbuck

  • Romance — Yuki Kuramoto
  • Levantina No. 5 — Oscar Espla
  • Levantina No. 2 — “”

Gary Lee

  • Prelude No. 4 — Francisco Tarrega
  • Etude No. 6 — “”
  • Etude sobre un Scherzo de Tomas Damas — “”
  • Opus 6, No. 4 — Fernando Sor
  • Etude No. 8 in G — Giulio Regondi

Jeff Griesemer

  • Vincent — Don McClean, arr., John Knowles (In Memory of George Schindler, who was fond of playing it)
  • Because —  Dave Clark Five, arr. Jeff Griesemer
  • Slieve Russel/Port Sgian — Trad., arr. Jeff Griesemer

Robert Ey

  • The Round Battle Galliard — John Dowland
  • Mrs Winter’s Jump — “”
  • Scarborough Fair— Trad., arr. Debbie Cracknell/Paul Simon

Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society presents Celil Refik Kaya

January 16th, 2018

Sunday, February 11, 2018

3:00 PM

Settlement Music School, 416 Queen St, Philadelphia, PA

Admission: General $25.00; PCGS Member $10.00 Student/Senior $15.00

More information: https://pcgs.wildapricot.org/event-2588211

Since his concert debut at the age of 6, Celil Refik Kaya has received high promised repetitions and accolades for his myriad accomplishments at an early age, winning First Prize in the 2012 JoAnn Falletta International Guitar Concerto Competition with the Buffalo Philharmonic; prizewinner of international guitar competitions including Sofia Bulgaria, Naxos Greece, Vienna, Istanbul, and throughout the United States, highlighted awards winner at top competitions such as 2012 Guitar Foundation of America (GFA), Indiana International Guitar Competititon, Boston Guitar Competition, Texas International Guitar Competition, Schadt String Competition, Philadelphia Guitar Competition, Texas International Guitar Competition, Indiana International Guitar Compeition and Boston Guitar Competition. In 2017 He has been awarded “Rising Young Musician of the Year” by the Donizettti Music Classical Awards in Istanbul.

“The Genesis of Fantasy” — Stanley Alexandrowicz at 1867 Sanctuary

January 16th, 2018
Saturday February 3rd @ 8:00 pm
1867 Sanctuary 
101 Scotch Road, Ewing, NJ 08628
Tel: 609-392-6409 or E-mail: 1867sanctuary@preservationnj.org
“The Genesis of Fantasy” — Internationally Acclaimed classical guitarist Stanley Alexandrowicz performs an evening of virtuoso guitar works spanning four centuries. Beginning with the masterful “Ouverture de la Grotte de Versailles (de Lully)” by Robert de Visee (court guitarist to Louis XIV), his program will feature masterworks by the 19th Century’s greatest composer-guitarists: Napoleon Coste (France), J. K. Mertz (Hungary), and Johann Dubez (Vienna). Contemporary compositions by some of America’s greatest living composers dominate the second half of the program, and include Ernst Bacon’s tuneful “Americana—Hymn-tune Suite,” Edward Green’s powerful “Genesis—Variations for Guitar,” Brian Fennelly’s urbane “Maverick Prelude and Tango,” and conclude with Eric Sessler’s fantasy-work “Bombadiliana” — based on Tolkien! 

Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society Presents Behdad Moghaddasi

January 3rd, 2018

Sunday, January 7, 3:00 p.m.

Settlement Music School, 416 Queen Street, Philadelphia PA 19147

Admission: General,$25.00; PCGS Member, $10; Student/Senior, $15.00

Iranian guitarist and composer, Behdad Moghaddasi, is the former chair of the guitar program at Theran Azad University, before immigrating the United States in 2000. Mr. Moghaddasi is the first Iranian solo guitarist to ever step on stage with Iranian Symphony Orchestras to perform Concerto de Aranjuez. He has also performed several solo concerts throughout the United States Canada,Germany, and England. Mr. Moghaddasi has been hailed as an innovator when it comes to composing music for classical guitar.

More information: https://pcgs.wildapricot.org/event-2588210

Annual January Lasagna Meeting

December 15th, 2017

We came. We Played. We ate Lasagna.

Performances by: David Starbuck; The Crossing Consort; Andrew Alford & Ray Butler; Gad Berger; Gary Lee; Ray Butler; Robert Ey; Robert Hansen; and Andrew Alford.