27 June 2018

fun stuff I may or may not get to: July 2018

Traditionally a slower performance month, July still has a lot going on:

Theatrical
Shotgun Players presents the west coast premiere of White by James Ijames, directed by M Graham Smith, from 6 July to 5 August. And you can catch more James Ijames at Shotgun's Champagne Reading Series when they present Kill Move Paradise, directed by Darryl V Jones, on 30 and 31 July.

San Francisco Playhouse presents its annual summer musical starting 5 July through 8 September and this year it's Sondheim's Sunday in the Park with George.

The African-American Shakespeare Company presents Richard III, directed by Kirsten Brandt with L Peter Callender in the title role, from 14 to 29 July in the Taube Atrium Theater.

Operatic
The last notes of San Francisco Opera's 2017 - 2018 season will sound on 1 July as Götterdämmerung burns it all down, but the Opera's Merola Program for young artists will rise from the ashes, presenting staged scenes from Vanessa, Il tabarro, Don Giovanni, and Les pêcheurs de perles on 5 July at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and on 7 July at Bing Concert Hall at Stanford. On 19 and 21 (matinee) July at the Conservatory the Merola program will present the first of this season's two operas: Mozart's Il Re Pastore (the second opera, The Rake's Progress, will arrive in early August).

Orchestral
Edwin Outwater leads the San Francisco Symphony in an all-Gershwin concert on 3 July, featuring Rhapsody in Blue (with soloist Andrew von Oeyen), An American in Paris, and favorite songs performed by Capathia Jenkins.

Chamber Music
The Bridge Piano Quartet performs works by Mozart and Frank Bridge as well as the world premiere of Chad Cannon's Gateway: Stories from Angel Island on 1 July at Old First Concerts.

Le Due Muse (cellist Sarah Hong and pianist Makiko Ooka, joined this time by special guest violinist Fumino Ando) present a program of Czech music (Josef Suk, Bohuslav Martinů , and Antonin Dvořák) at Old First Concerts on 21 July.

Keyboards & Strings
On 6 July Old First Concerts presents the third of its four concerts marking the centennial of Debussy's death; pianists Christopher Basso, Daniel Glover, Jeffrey LaDeur, Keisuke Nakagoshi, and Robert Schwartz perform a program that will include 24 Preludes, Books I & II.

On 13 July Old First Concerts presents Arjun Verma on sitar with Sudhakar Vaidyanathan on tabla

Modern / Contemporary Music
Huun-Huur-Tu play the Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse on 18 July. I'm not entirely sure what this is but the description makes it sound as if it's based in something so old and remote (music from isolated Siberian herdsmen) that it ends up being seriously avant-garde.

Pianist Sarah Cahill performs an all-star assortment (by Phil Kline, John Adams, Annea Lockwood, Samuel Adams, Meredith Monk, Pauline Oliveros, and Terry Riley) of music commissioned by or dedicated to her; that's 22 July at Old First Concerts.

The SF Jazz Center presents a Philip Glass Fest from 19 to 22 July, with the composer himself performing (with harpist Lavinia Meijer and cellist Matt Haimovitz and then with pianists Anton Batagov, Jenny Lin, and Aaron Diehl).

Here's your monthly reminder to check out the Center for New Music's schedule often, as it changes more than once a month; some things that strike my eye in the current July listings are Larry Ochs, Aram Shelton, Scott Walton, and Kjell Nordesen improvising together on 11 July; The Sky Was Beyond Description for koto / bass koto by Hyo-shin Na performed by Shoko Hikage on 15 July; Hans Otte's The Book of Sounds performed by pianist D Riley Nicholson on 21 July; Robert Simonds performing works for unaccompanied violin (including several written for him) by American women composers (Missy Mazzoli, Cindy Cox, Patricia Van Ness, TJ Cole, Molly Joyce, Elizabeth Kennedy Bayer, and Alexis Bacon) on 27 July; and Steve Adams (woodwinds), Michael Vlatkovich (trombone), and Tom McNalley (guitar) improvising on 30 July.

Vocalists
On 1 July Lieder Alive! presents mezzo-soprano Kindra Scharich and pianist John Parr performing Beethoven's An die ferne Geliebte, a selection of Schubert lieder, and Neue Lieder by Anno Schreier (the latter a joint commission with the Deutsche Oper Berlin).

On 13 July at Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse you can hear Korean Men featuring Korean folk singer Lee Heemoon and Korean jazz group Prelude; originally created for the National Theatre of Korea, the evening is a comic look at male and female roles.

Margaret Belton performs a tribute to Patsy Cline at the Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse in Berkeley on 15 July.

Anna & Elizabeth perform two shows of folk songs from the Appalachias on 15 July at the SF Jazz Center's Joe Henderson Lab.

Marcia Ball takes the stage at the Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse in Berkeley on 27 July.

Choral
The Golden Gate International Choral Festival takes place on 11 July at Old First Concerts and features the Chamber Singers of the Fairfield County Children's Choir from Orange, Connecticut, and the St Stephen's College Choir from Hong Kong. This is a free concert and no tickets are required.

Jazz
The SF Jazz Center presents Dustbowl Revival and the Hot Club of Cowtown on 12 July.

Mike Greensill and Joe Cohen perform music by Greensill and Duke Ellington on 15 July at Old First Concerts.

Resonance Jazz Ensemble, which combines classical and jazz instrumentalists, performs original music by pianist and band leader Stephen McQuarry as well as old standards on 20 July at Old First Concerts.

Paris Combo comes to the SF Jazz Center from 26 to 29 July.

Dance
ODC/Dance presents two "summer sampler" programs: the first on 20 - 21 July and the second on 27 - 28 July; both are at the ODC Theater on 17th Street in San Francisco.

Cinematic
The Jewish Film Festival runs from 19 July to 5 August; the film that jumps out at me is the recently rediscovered and restored 1924 Austrian silent film The City Without Jews, a satirical look at an imaginary country that decides the way to revive its economy is by banishing the Jews, with disastrous results – a storyline that would of course become a real-life tragedy for millions just a few years later. The film is presented in partnership with the San Francisco Silent Film Festival and you can see it on 22 July at the Castro Theater with an original score performed live by Sascha Jacobsen and the Musical Art Quintet.

7 comments:

Civic Center said...

I'd add the Ethnic Dance Festival at the SF Opera House for two weekends. It's interesting.

http://worldartswest.org/main/edf_index.asp

Patrick J. Vaz said...

Thanks for the tip; I'll check it out.

Eric Pease said...

we're in for Paris Combo. really enjoying their KEXP performances on Youtube.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrn3wi7lTCc

Patrick J. Vaz said...

Thanks for the recommendation -- I don't know much about them but they sounded interesting and like something I would like (Django Rheinhardt). I also haven't heard Marcia Ball except for an interview on NPR and I liked her enough so that I bought her CD (haven't listened to it yet) and might go hear her live.

Eric Pease said...

you likely already know this... free Sondra Radvanovsky master class tix now available:

https://sfcm.edu/events/sondra-radvanovsky-soprano

Patrick J. Vaz said...

Thanks -- I didn't, actually, as that event is in September. I just go by the month's calendar on the SFCM website.

Patrick J. Vaz said...

Thanks -- I didn't, actually, as that event is in September. I just go by the month's calendar on the SFCM website.