September 1st, 2010
Oh, The Humanity (Our Shoes Are Red/The Performance Lab) | Five confessions gone awry.1 comment
August 25th, 2010
Fishing For My Father (Coho Theater) | “Just gotta remember to breathe, eh?”0 comments
August 18th, 2010
Long Day’s Journey Into Night (Artists Rep) | With emphasis on “long” and worth every second.1 comment
August 11th, 2010
Find Me Beside You (Many Hats Collaboration) | Sex, pirouettes and Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks. 0 comments
August 11th, 2010
Long Day’s Journey Into Night (Sydney Theatre Company) | One of Portland’s finest talents goes down under.0 comments
July 28th, 2010
Stumptown Gets A Sense Of Humor | Can Helium Comedy make Portland funny?6 comments
July 14th, 2010
On The Table (Sojourn Theatre) | Bridging the urban/rural divide with art and food.0 comments
July 7th, 2010
The King And I (Broadway Rose) | A flashy blast from Broadway’s past.0 comments
June 23rd, 2010
Chamber Music Northwest’s Protégé Project | The 40-year-old festival gets loose.0 comments
June 23rd, 2010
Songs For A New World (Staged!) | Hot diggity, can these chaps sing!0 comments
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[July 1st, 2009]
Mandolinist Chris Thile’s splendid work with his prog-bluegrass trio, Nickel Creek, hardly prepared us for the ingenuity and ambition of his Punch Brothers project with classically trained, bluegrass-loving cohorts Gabe Witcher (violin), Paul Kowert (bass), Chris Eldridge (guitar) and Noam Pikelny (banjo). Thile managed to infuse larger and more complex musical structures with his newgrass style, far more effectively than most pop-to-classical crossovers, to produce a fascinating concept suite (The Blind Leaving the Blind, inspired by his divorce) and a striking new hybrid of roots-tinged chamber music.
Thile’s band anchors the hippest trio of concerts in this summer’s Chamber Music Northwest. In a series otherwise dominated by dead European male composers, the shows on Fourth of July weekend skew fittingly toward American music. In addition to its concert on Saturday, Punch Brothers plays American fiddle tunes at Thursday’s show, which also includes music by two living composers: film score legend John Williams (Air and Simple Gifts, mimed by an all-star quartet at President Obama’s inauguration) and Aaron Jay Kernis. The show also features Leonard Bernstein’s early, spiffily jazzy Sonata for Clarinet and Piano and George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue arranged for piano duet.
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Monday’s concert includes a Punched-up arrangement of J.S. Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3; contemporary American composer John Adams’ dazzling 1978 Shaker Loops; a Haydn string trio arranged for mandolin, viola and cello; and Mendelssohn’s piano sextet, which isn’t quite six-eighths as powerful as his octet. Besides the Punchers, the concerts include Kernis, Portland composer-guitarist Bryan Johanson and the usual array of CMNW classical music all-stars. The venerable series’ invigorating inclusion of modern American sounds deserves a fireworks display.
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