Pianist Glazer Performs Tribute to Schumann

Starts: Dec 5 2010 - 3:00pm
Ends: Dec 5 2010 - 5:00pm

Dec 5 2010 - 3:00pm
Dec 5 2010 - 5:00pm
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Price: 
Free but tickets are required
Phone: 
207-786-6135

Olin Arts Center
75 Russell Street
Lewiston

In honor of the bicentennial of Romantic composer Robert Schumann, Bates College artist-in-residence Frank Glazer performs some of the composer's best-loved piano pieces.
Glazer, 95, has been an artist in residence at Bates since 1980. Internationally renowned, he has spent decades touring, composing, recording and teaching.

Schumann is one of the greatest composers of the Romantic era. Born in 1810 in Germany, he influenced music considerably through both his compositions and his sway as a music critic.

His compositional style is described as poetic, observing both structural demands and an innovative melodic "stream of consciousness" that challenged a traditional focus on form. Schumann also advanced the concept of "program music," where prose or poetry provides a matrix for a piece of music.

To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the composer's birth, Glazer will perform a selection of the composer's many pieces for piano: the early "Papillons," Op. 2; the 1836 Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17; and the 1834 Symphonic Studies, Op. 13.

Glazer, of Topsham, dedicated much of his 2009-10 concert season to the performance at Bates of the complete cycle of 32 Beethoven piano sonatas. A student of Artur Schnabel and Arnold Schoenberg, he is at home in every style of music from Bach to contemporary. He has concertized in more than 24 countries; appeared on his own television show for NBC stations; made more than 50 recordings and performed 30 world premieres.

Glazer was a founding member of the Eastman Quartet, the Cantilena Chamber Players and the New England Piano Quartette. With his wife, the late Ruth Glazer, he founded the long-running Saco River Festival in Cornish.