by Jarrett Hoffman
HAPPENING TODAY:
The afternoon opens with a Trinity Brownbag “Organ Spectacular” at 12 pm, with Todd Wilson and Nicole Keller (above) unveiling Trinity Cathedral’s new Muller Pipe organ through music by Sowerby, Hampton, Widor, Lemare, Shearing, and Soler (attend in person or via stream). And at 12:15, there’s a Dana School of Music Voice Area Recital at YSU’s Butler Institute of American Art.
The evening pairs string quartets and visual art when four CIM ensembles play works by Beethoven, Brahms, and Haydn in “Music in the Galleries” at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Details in our Concert Listings.
IN THE NEWS:
Last Thursday, Mike Telin rounded up several reviews of the Metropolitan Opera’s production of Terence Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones, the first opera by a Black composer ever to be staged by the company.
Following up on the review by chief classical critic Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times has since sent two more critics to see the production — one specializing in classical music, the other in jazz (Blanchard is a jazz trumpeter as well as a composer). Read the post-opera discussion between Seth Colter Walls and Giovanni Russonello here.
Elsewhere in NYC, the New York Philharmonic is managing the challenge of being without a home venue this season during the renovation of David Geffen Hall. “This 2021-2022 season is shaping up as a militarylike exercise of logistics, dexterity and scheduling,” writes Adam Nagourney in the Times.
Here are the numbers: “For each move, over the course of 86 concerts in four main locations, six crew members will have to pack up to 30 cases of instruments and equipment and load them into a 24-foot-long truck for hauls that will range from five blocks (from Tully to the Rose) to three miles (Riverside Church) and later in the season to its old home, Carnegie Hall.”
And you thought you were having a hard day.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:
On this date in 1882 in the village of Tymoszówka, now in Ukraine, one of the great Polish composers was born: Karol Szymanowski. Beloved in his home country, he has received a slew of state honors, both during his life and after it.
Among the more fun facts in that arena, a whole year was given to his name thanks to a resolution by the Polish Parliament: 2007 was decreed “The Year of Karol Szymanowski” — it was the 125th anniversary of his birth. And later that year he reached truly rarefied air among composers: he appeared on commemorative currency, pictured above.






The third iteration of No Exit’s fall program took the ensemble to an intimate venue — the gallery of Heights Arts on Lee Road in Cleveland Heights, where space is at such a premium that percussionist Luke Rinderknecht’s big marimba was nearly marooned offstage, and a few dozen audience members added up to a packed crowd.
After highlighting music by three members of the Oberlin composition faculty, Timothy Weiss and the Conservatory’s Contemporary Music Ensemble (CME) have continued their Oberlin Music label offerings with another triptych of works by composers from the present day.
Organist Jonathan Moyer plays a Noon recital on his home turf at the Church of the Covenant in University Circle featuring musical prayers by William Bolcom, César Franck & Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck. Moyer will use organs at both ends of the Covenant nave, and there are cookies to be had.

HAPPENING THIS WEEKEND:
The new month begins with concerts by two university orchestras — interim director David Becker and student conductor Jacob Kaminsky lead the BW Symphony in Brahms, Dvořák, and Saint-Saëns with faculty soloists Khari Joyner, cello, and Nicole Keller, organ. And Victor Liva and student conductor Jimmie Parker preside over the CSU Symphony for works by Haydn, Saint-Saëns and Fauré, featuring cello soloist Ovidiu Marinescu.
Cleveland Orchestra president and CEO André Gremillet announced on Thursday that the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Foundation has bestowed a $50 million gift on the Orchestra — the largest in the ensemble’s 103-year history, as well as the largest in the 68-year history of the Foundation. $31.5 million of that will go to endowment funds that will support an annual Mandel Opera Festival, the Orchestra’s global digital offerings, and local programs and partnerships.