Long Island's Chamber Players International is one of the few professional performing ensembles that also offers original, new classical music that you can commission for your own specific occasion. There's a tax-deductible fee scale to fit your choice of instruments, the length of the piece, even the style. Private, corporate, other. Just Contact Us
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Music composed just for you?
Saturday, May 21, 2011
David Winkler Premier
St. Lubin
Ravel - Tzigane
Winkler - Tanyetz Spirituoso
Schubert - Fantasy
Chopin - Scherzo
Ravel - Tzigane
Winkler - Tanyetz Spirituoso
Schubert - Fantasy
Chopin - Scherzo
Wine and Cheese reception to follow. Tickets are $20 at the door, or you can call Chamber Players International for tickets at 1(877)444-4488
Grammy Nominee Anastasia Khitruk, Violin & Olga Vinokur, Piano
Anastasia Khitruk |
Olga Vinokur |
Hope to see you there.
Labels:
Anastasia Khitruk,
Chamber Players International,
David Winkler,
Kosciuszko Foundation,
Olga Vinokur,
Piano,
Violin
Friday, May 20, 2011
The Long Island Mozart Festival is fast approaching. Got your Shades?
Labels:
Chamber Players International,
classical music,
Culture,
David Winkler,
Long Island,
Mozart,
Mozart Festival
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Musical Magic at your Charity Event!
To read more about Chamber Players International visit us Here
Download our Brochure.
Monday, May 16, 2011
Music that Resonates
It seems to me that fine art, in particular classical music really resonates with older adults. Probably it's their life experience which finds a friend in the depth and the dimensions of musical master works - which had to have been crafted with care and seriousness of purpose to have lasted for decades and centuries.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Music and Mathematics
The ancient Greeks had it right - mathematics helps us to explain the outside world - but we need the fine arts, particularly music, to help explain our inner world. Classical music provides a multi-dimensional counter-weight, a way to balance our lives in a technological age dominated by computers, robotics and their inherent lack of passion. These two can live together - but we must see to it that they do.
Labels:
classical music,
David Winkler,
mathematics,
music
Thursday, May 5, 2011
The Long Island Mozart Festival, May 28th & 29th
About this year's long Island Mozart Festival
This year, the Chamber Players are proud to introduce several new elements to this outdoor family event, including a children's Music Fair, lectures on “Classical Music and Nature,” and interactive concerts for families.
On Saturday May 28 and Sunday, May 29, the LI Mozart Festival grounds will open at 10:00 am, featuring day-long pre-concert events including children’s activities, tours of Old Westbury Gardens, lectures on “classical music and nature,” and more. The Mainstage concerts will be at 2:00 pm featuring renowned violinist Anna Rabinova and Flutist extraordinaire, Lance Suzuki, and the LI Mozart Festival Chamber Orchestra conducted by Daniel Boico, assistant conductor of the New York Philharmonic.
These magnificent programs in the exquisite setting of Old Westbury Gardens are presented at a very reasonable price to the public and parking is free.
Support our cultural events and bring your date, your family and friends. It's a great place for seniors to enjoy the gardens and the music of Mozart.
Review the Schedule of events for Saturday May 28th and Sunday May 29th
Purchase Tickets Online
The Line Up
A Captivating Flutist
Lance Suzuki has been described as "an unusually passionate flutist who captivates an audience" by the New York Concert Review. The Los Angeles Times has called his playing "musically poised" and "cool in sound" and the New York Times has deemed his collaborations "the evening's most compelling offerings." Recent highlights include chamber music performances in Weill and Merkin Halls, at the 92nd StY, The Stone, live on National Public Radio's Performance Today, and at the Marlboro Music Festival.
Mr. Suzuki has collaborated with many leading artists including flutists Paula Robison and Marina Piccinini, pianists Gilbert Kalish and Lang Lang, cellist David Soyer, and principal wind players from many major US orchestras. He has appeared as a soloist with the Manhattan School Philharmonia, the Young Musicians Foundation Debut Orchestra, the New York Metamorphoses Orchestra, the Young Soloists of New York chamber orchestra, and in Vivaldi's double concerto with Paula Robison at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among others. Work with guitarist/composer David Leisner has led to the New York and Boston premieres of works by William Bolcom and Osvaldo Golijov, a live appearance on WGBH Radio in Boston, and performances at guitar festivals in New York and Long Island. He has also premiered new works through Carnegie Hall Professional Training Workshops led by Dawn Upshaw, Osvaldo Golijov, and John Harbison.
Born and raised in the state of Hawaii, Lance Suzuki began studying the flute at age nine. Since then, he has been the recipient of numerous honors and grants in his home state and abroad. Among these are a Hawaii Music Award, fellowships from the Aspen and Marlboro Music Festivals, and prizes from the MSM Eisenberg-Fried, YMF Debut, and Pasadena Instrumental Competitions. He holds degrees from the Manhattan School of Music, and from the University of Southern California where he was named "Outstanding Graduate" in his class by the faculty. His teachers have been Linda Chesis, Michael Parloff, Nadine Asin, Gary Woodward, and Jean Harling.
Support your Russian Heritage!
In 2002, Soukhovetski won Second Prize in the Walter W. Naumberg Piano Competition and Second Prize in the Hilton Head International Competition. This was followed in 2003 with success in Juilliard's Gina Bachauer Competition and the Cleveland International Piano Competition, and in 2004 he won Second Prize in the UNISA International Piano Competition in Pretoria, South Africa.
Conductor
Born in Israel and raised in both Paris and the United States, Mr. Boico was a student and assistant of Russian Professor Ilya Musin at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. A prize winner at the Prokofiev and Pedrotti conducting competitions, Mr. Boico has led numerous major orchestras worldwide, including the New York Philharmonic, Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, Taipei Symphony Orchestra, and the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional in Mexico City. Mr. Boico has collaborated with many international soloists, including Daniel Barenboim, Itzhak Perlman, Gil Shaham, Shlomo Mintz and Shai Wosner. In August 2000, he directed I Virtuosi Italiani in the highly praised world premiere recording of Nino Rota’s two cello concertos with cellist Dmitry Yablonsky on the Chandos label.
Upcoming engagements include concerts with the New York Philharmonic, the Moscow State Academic Orchestra, the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional in Mexico City, and the Limburg Symphony Orchestra in Maastricht, Holland. Daniel Boico resides in New York with his wife, Anastasia, and daughter Naomi.
Introduction to Classical Music for Children
Labels:
Anna Rabinova,
Chamber Players International,
Konstantin Soukhovetski,
Long Island Mozart Festival
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