Concerts 2022
ALL CONCERTS ARE IN THE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, 62 CENTRE STREET, NANTUCKET, MA
TUESDAYS AT 7 P.M. DOORS OPEN AT 6:30 P.M. VERY LIMITED ON-SITE PARKING FOR HANDICAPPED.
July 12
Anne Marie Stanley
mezzo-soprano
Anne Marie was recently named a Grand Finals Winner of The Metropolitan Opera Laffont Competition where she received the Faith P. Geier Award. She performed 'Air des lettres' from Massenet's Werther and 'Se Romeo, t'uccise un figlio...La tremenda ultrice spada' from Bellini's i Capuleti e i Montecchi with the Met Orchestra under the baton of Maestro Marco Armiliato. Previously, she was honored to receive First Prize in the 2021 Giulio Giargiari Bel Canto Competition at the Academy of Vocal Arts and was selected as 1 of the 12 Grand Finalists in the Vincerò World Singing Competition in Naples, Italy. She recently finished performing the role of Olga in Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin at The Academy of Vocal Arts. She is currently covering the role of Thurza in Dame Ethyl Smyth's The Wreckers at The Glyndebourne Festival Opera in East Sussex, England.
July 19
Jordan Dodson
guitar
Jordan Dodson, described by Performance Today as “one of the top young guitarists of his generation,” is a musician and educator. A passionate advocate of contemporary music, Dodson has given the premiere of hundreds of new works. In 2013 he was the first guitarist to graduate from the Curtis Institute of Music’s new guitar program. In the same year he won Astral Artists’ National Auditions and was selected to be Young Artist in Residence on American Public Media.
July 26
Adrian Daurov, Cello
Spencer Myer, Piano
Two sensationally gifted virtuosi - cellist Adrian Daurov and pianist Spencer Myer - established the DAUROV/MYER DUO to explore and perform three centuries of masterworks from the beloved repertoire for their respective instruments, both solo and in combination.
August 2
Shelest Duo
Anna and Dmitri Shelest, pianists
Praised for their “stirring performances of rare repertory” (Fanfare Magazine), SHELEST PIANO DUO is a husband and wife team of Anna and Dmitri Shelest that takes their roots to the music school in Ukraine. At their official Carnegie Hall debut in February 2018, their CD Release of Ukrainian Rhapsody brought the renewed attention to the music of their homeland. Since then, the CD has been featured as the Album of the Week on a number of radio stations nationwide (KUSC Los Angeles, WCRB Boston, etc.) Having been classmates since middle school, the Duo began performing together after their marriage in the US. Their inventive programs brought them to a broad array of venues from concert stages to state functions, and, in words of Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon “realized diplomacy through music".
August 9
Balourdet String Quartet
The Balourdet Quartet, based in Boston, Massachusetts, is currently in residence at the New England Conservatory’s Professional String Quartet Program. The quartet received the Grand Prize at the 2021 Concert Artists Guild Victor Elmaleh Competition as well as the top prize awarded in the 2021 Premio Paolo Borciani in Reggio Emilia, Italy. The group also received the Gold Medal in the 2020 Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition, the Gold Medal and Audience Award at the 2021 Chamber Music Yellow Springs Competition, and the Second Prize in the 2019 Carl Nielsen International Chamber Music Competition.
August 16
Itamar Zorman, violin
with
Adam Golka, piano
Itamar Zorman is one of the most soulful, evocative artists of his generation, distinguished by his emotionally gripping performances and gift for musical storytelling. Since his emergence with the top prize at the 2011 International Tchaikovsky Competition, he has wowed audiences all over the world with breathtaking style, causing one critic to declare him a “young badass who’s not afraid of anything.” His “youthful intensity” and “achingly beautiful” sound shine through in every performance, earning him the title of the “virtuoso of emotions.
Pianist Adam Golka first performed all of Beethoven's Piano Sonatas when he was 18 years-old, and in 2020-2021 Adam Golka performed the cycle of Beethoven's 32 Sonatas at the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park (Florida) and at Saint Thomas Church Fifth Avenue (NYC), in socially-distanced and live-stream formats. Adam's performances of each Sonata were complemented by 32 short films he created, known as 32@32 (available on YouTube), documenting his preparation for climbing the Everest of piano literature and featuring an amalgam of distinguished guests, from an astrophysicist to Alfred Brendel.