Rifkin Mixing Centuries At Club Helsinki And Crescendo Brings Us Bernstein and Britten

   Joshua Rifkin was one of the first pianists to bring the music of Scott Joplin back to public awareness 40 years ago. Rifkin is also a noted Baroque scholar, the first to propose singing Bach with one person per vocal part. He has had a long and successful career as conductor, teacher and arranger, particularly in Europe, where he is in the forefront of early music performances in several countries.

   I spent happy hours in my teens listening to his witty, infectious Baroque Beatles Book, the first instance I know of that transformed the Liverpuddlians’ tunes into Handelian arias and choruses. His latest CD is “Vivat Leo! Music for a Medici Pope†with the Dutch-based vocal ensemble Cappella Pratensis (Challenge Classics).

   A rare opportunity to hear Rifkin play comes Jan. 23 at 4 p.m. at Club Helsinki in Hudson, NY. The program begins with the familiar Prelude and Fugue in C major from Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier (Book I), and through a careful succession of related major and minor keys, shifts to rags by Joplin and the tangos of Nazareth.

   For information, call 518-828-4800.    

   On Jan. 22 at 5 p.m., the Norfolk Library sponsors a unique soprano Jordan Rose Lee and pianist Oksana Protenic performing the Hermit Songs by Samuel Barber, a song-cycle with settings of 10 anonymous texts written by Irish monks and scholars between the 8th and 13th centuries.Please call for reservations at 860 542-5075. Library events are free and open to the public.

   And Crescendo’s vocal soloists and section leaders will present a recital Jan. 29 at 4 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church in Lime Rock, CT. The program includes British and American folk and art songs by Bernstein, Britten, Coward, Gershwin and others. Repeat performance Feb. 6 at 4 p.m. at the First Congregational Church of Stockbridge, MA. Free, donation requested. 860-435-4866 info@crescendoberkshires.org. The program features Jordan Rose Lee, soprano, Doug Schmolze, tenor, and Monte Stone, baritone.  Opera singer and New York resident Brooke Schooley, coloratura soprano, will also perform.

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