蜜桃传媒破解版下载

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Artist Series season brings top artists and eye-opening experiences

yo-yo ma and the cello studio

Members of the CU cello studio pose for a photo with the greatest living cellist of our time, Yo-Yo Ma. Photo courtesy Glenn Asakawa

Every year, the brings newcomers and household names in the world of music and dance to 蜜桃传媒破解版下载. Each artist鈥檚 unique presence fills the picturesque auditorium at Macky and transforms campus for a couple of days, bringing the energy of Lincoln Center or Broadway to the foot of the Flatirons.

As the Boulder community benefits from the opportunity to witness remarkable singers, instrumentalists and dance troupes live, students at the College of Music and the Department of Theatre and Dance enjoy the once-in-a-lifetime experience of seeing, learning from鈥攅ven talking shop with鈥攖heir idols.

On the heels of an 80th season that saw appearances by the likes of Yo-Yo Ma, James Galway, Deborah Voigt and Richard Goode, CU Presents Executive Director and Artist Series curator Joan McLean Braun says the lineup for 2017-18 has something for every music lover.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e artists who touch people鈥檚 lives, who will make people thrilled that they came and get them thinking about the performance after they leave. To me, they鈥檙e all interesting and inspiring.鈥

The season begins with the yet-to-be-named of the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, rings in the holidays with jazz and R&B vocalist , breaks up the midwinter doldrums with a rollicking concert by and a return performance by American violinist , welcomes the spring thaw with 鈥渃antina classical鈥 singer , and closes with a virtuosic celebration of 17th-century Italian music by . 听

Braun says while each artist brings something different for audiences to sink their teeth into, they also bring new opportunities for students to learn from the best.

鈥淎s I look for artists, one of the things I do is reach out to faculty to see if they would like to work with that person, if that would be valuable. Knowing an artist is a great teacher or enjoys interacting with our students is definitely a factor.鈥

The attention to student experience isn鈥檛 lost on the students themselves. Junior cellist Haley Slaugh was one of the lucky members of her studio to attend an intimate reception with Yo-Yo Ma after his captivating solo recital in February. Among other things, she and her colleagues talked to Ma about the importance of keeping your cool during a performance.

鈥淗e told us that when he performed the fifth Bach suite that night, he had a memory lapse during the first movement and got lost for about 10 seconds,鈥 Slaugh explains. 鈥淏ut he kept going. He said that it鈥檚 OK if you mess up, because it鈥檚 the music that counts. You can鈥檛 freak out. It鈥檚 what you do with the music.

鈥淗e is this legendary musician, and I鈥檝e always looked up to him 鈥 and there I was that night, standing next to him. It鈥檚 important as a musician to meet your hero and realize that he鈥檚 human too. He was where you are years ago, and it is possible to get to his level.鈥

Braun was a bit star-struck herself that night.

鈥淚t was kind of a dream to be able to present him,鈥 she says. 鈥淵o-Yo Ma has artistry and soul, and he鈥檚 interested in other people. He鈥檚 truly a musical genius and incredibly intelligent, but he鈥檚 also focused on other people and learning new things.鈥

james galway master class

James Galway presents a master class during the Once a Flutist festival. Photo courtesy Emma Salvati

Flutists also enjoyed a visit from the rock star of their order this year as Sir James Galway and Lady Jeanne Galway took the stage in March. Associate Professor of Flute Christina Jennings, who performed along with the flute studio on stage with Sir James, says collaborating with such a legend brought out the doting fan in her just as much as it did her students.

鈥淚 used to play along with his Mozart concerto recordings when I was a kid. He really expanded the realm of possibility of what it meant to be a flutist and upped the ante of what a solo flute career could look like. Those recordings were part of what inspired me and so many people to play the flute.鈥

The Galways鈥 performance even inspired Jennings to plan a two-day celebration of the flute community called the Once a Flutist festival, which brought together students, alumni and even young flute players from around the area.

Braun says that opportunity to introduce children to these artists is another service the Artist Series provides.

鈥淟ook at the , for example. They put on an outreach performance at University Hill Elementary [across Broadway] that exposed this younger generation to the issue of water use and conservation. That we can have that kind of an impact is wonderful.鈥

Braun says the reason the Artist Series is able to provide these outstanding opportunities is the continued power of live music to bring people together.

鈥淎fter Yo-Yo Ma, I heard from a surprising number of people who were moved to tears during that performance. The soul-bearing nature of it is something that you can鈥檛 experience watching on TV in your living room. We all had that experience together, and that鈥檚 special.鈥

For more information on the 2017-18 Artist Series and to book season tickets,