by Jarrett Hoffman
ON THIS WEEKEND:
Saturday brings the 7:30 pm Showcase Concert from the Cleveland Classical Guitar Society, featuring performances by the Gruca White Ensemble, Jeremy Collins, and Andy Poxon with Jeanelle Brierley. Watch in person at the Maltz Performing Arts Center, or via stream — either way it’s free, but registration is required. Read our preview article here.
Sunday’s schedule is more packed, with possibilities in Berea, Cleveland, Akron, and Youngstown. At 3:00, tenor JR Fralick gives a BW faculty recital at the University’s Kulas Music Hall (free). And at 4:00, there are three options: the Cavani Quartet continue their “Beyond Beethoven” project at CSU’s Drinko Auditorium (free), organist Anthony Newman plays a recital on the Arts at Holy Trinity Series (freewill offering), and Miriam Burns leads the Youngstown Symphony at DeYor PAC in a performance that features cellist Miriam K. Smith (tickets). The Cavani, Newman, and Smith pictured above.
More details in our Concert Listings.
LOCAL NEWS:
On November 15, The Cleveland Orchestra will release a new recording of Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto for Piano and Strings (with Yefim Bronfman) and Prokofiev’s Second Symphony. The Schnittke was recorded in October 2020 at Severance Hall and was part of the Orchestra’s In Focus series, while the Prokofiev was recorded in January 2020 at the Knight Concert Hall while on tour in Miami. The album will be available via streaming, download, and CD, and pre-ordering begins October 15.
Many of us take for granted the opportunity to enjoy recordings such as that one above, in addition to all the filmed concerts that have been shot during the pandemic. Taking us behind the scenes, Les Délices has published an interview with audio producer Elaine Martone and video producer Erica Brenner to reveal what a recording project with the ensemble is like from their perspectives.
FURTHER AFIELD:
Management is proposing steep cuts to the San Antonio Symphony, which would bring it from 71 full-time musicians to 42 (San Antonio Report). In more positive news, ClevelandClassical.com correspondent Jeremy Reynolds covers Pittsburgh’s resurgence as a national hotspot for jazz in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. And turning to the wonderfully absurd, enjoy the talents of the South Korean a capella group MayTree as they mimic digital sounds such as cell phone ringtones and computer error messages, as heard in an audio story from The World.
WEEKEND ALMANAC:
One for Saturday, one for Sunday. We’ll start with Francesca Caccini (born on September 18, 1587 in Florence), the Italian composer, singer, lutenist, and poet whose opera La liberazione di Ruggiero is believed to be the first entry in that genre by a woman, and possibly the first Italian opera to be performed outside of Italy.
Last March, during the “Women in Music” episode of Les Délices’ SalonEra series, soprano Michelle Kennedy sang the role of the Siren in “Chi nel fior di giovinezza,” a scene from that Caccini opera. I spoke to Kennedy before the episode aired, and among our topics of discussion was the composer’s distinctive ornamentation.
“It’s kind of a signature of hers — she was a master of ornamentation as a performer, and also compositionally,” Kennedy said. Though the episode is no longer freely accessible, it’s worth noting that SalonEra subscribers now get on-demand access to the entire first season.
Caccini’s signature ornamentation is most evident in her famous collection of solo songs and duets Il primo libro delle musiche. Soprano Henriette Feith and theorbist David Van Ooijen choose a selection of songs from that work in their album La Cecchina (the composer’s nickname) — listen in this playlist on YouTube.
And Sunday brings what would have been the 91st birthday of pianist and composer Muhal Richard Abrams, who was born in Chicago, and died in 2017.
A Jazz Master as named by the National Endowment for the Arts in 2010, his compositions and improvisations are often classified as, well, unclassifiable. At the keyboard he was known to suddenly reference historical jazz styles, woven into his own brand of modernism. And as a composer, his ouevre reveals both his background in the blues and his interest in chamber music and orchestra. He’s also famous for helping to found the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (A.A.C.M.), and was its first president.







Jaap van Zweden, the New York Philharmonic’s music director, has
On this day in 1931, record company RCA Victor introduced a new product to the consumer market: the long-playing 33 1/3 rpm vinyl. These discs were called Project Transcription, and they represent one of the earliest efforts to bring the long-playing (or LP) record to market.
Public radio in Northeast Ohio is about to undergo a dramatic change. Ideastream Public Radio and WKSU have announced they will enter an operating agreement, which will go into effect on October 1. This collaboration will create one of Northeast Ohio’s largest news organizations, and in 2022, WKSU will become the area’s sole NPR and local news station.
Born on this date in 1887 in her home country of France, Boulanger (pictured left with her sister Lili) is well-known for influencing an entire generation of composers, with her list of students including Aaron Copland, Philip Glass, and Astor Piazzolla. Her conducting career was equally impressive, as she was the first woman to conduct the Boston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, and other major ensembles.


As a companion to yesterday’s diary, which included a New York Times piece exploring the careers of women conductors in the country’s top orchestras,
On this day in 1741, Handel (pictured) put the finishing touches on his Messiah, a composition he had been working on non-stop for the last 23 days. This great oratorio, now a fixture of the Christmas season, was first proposed to him by librettist Charles Jennens in July of that year.

There are plenty of concerts to enjoy over the weekend — let’s break it down day by day.
The Tri-C Jazz Fest continues today with a full slate of programming across all stages. Highlights include Harp vs Harp (Edmar Castaneda and Grégoire Maret), Upside of Medium, and Catherine Russell. Read more details in our
Today, as we honor the twentieth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks that changed our world, take a moment to read about and listen to the classical music works which were shaped by that tragedy. An article published by WQXR ten years ago today details the way that composers were affected and how it shaped the musical responses they would create.

In anticipation of his appearance at Blossom this weekend, drummer and rock star Stewart Copeland has put together a playlist titled “For Cleveland.” The founder of legendary rock band The Police showcases his varied tastes, including everything from “Murder by Numbers” by The Police and “Strange Days” by The Doors to selections from Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana and Caroline Shaw’s Partita for 8 Voices. Listen on
For pianist Jonathan Biss, who 

