Tag Archives: daniels hall

Classical Music on the Cheap: Lunchtime Concerts

In this episode of “Classical Music on the Cheap”, we explore concerts that fit right into your weekday lunch hour. For those who work in downtown Seattle, there’s a wealth of midday events happening just steps away from your office. These hour-long concerts are a great way to sample classical music in bite-sized portions. The best part? All of these performances are completely free.  So grab a sandwich and coffee from the corner cafe, and let’s check out our options.

A performance by Janet Anderson on piano and Nancy Kirkner on solo English handbells (Photo: Sherman Clay Seattle)

Sherman Clay Pianos presents a free piano concert every Thursday at 12:15pm in their showroom just around the corner from Westlake Center. The next recital in the series is on September 27 and features a program of British music performed by Janet Anderson on piano and Nancy Kirkner on English handbells.

Head to the historic Daniels Recital Hall at Fifth and Columbia for themed programs of popular audience favorites. These free noontime concerts are held on the last Thursday of each month. “Music of the Americas”, the next performance in the series, is on September 27. Pianist Jensina Oliver presents works by Joplin, Gershwin, Bolcom, Ginastera, and Piazzolla.

Members of the Ladies Musical Club of Seattle present a free noontime concert at the Seattle Art Museum on the first Thursday of each month. On October 4, pianist Janet Anderson and English handbell artist Nancy Kirkner perform the same program of British music that they’ll play this week at Sherman Clay Pianos. In November, oboist Gail Perstein, soprano Frances Garcia, and pianists Asta Vaicekonis and Taotao Liu will take the stage.

The Central Library is another popular venue for Ladies Musical Club performances. These free monthly concerts are held at noon on Wednesdays. The next concert in the series is on October 10 and features traditional Welsh folk songs as well as piano works by Scriabin and Respighi.

What’s Love Got to Do with Spectrum Dance’s LOVE?

Spectrum Dance Theater’s LOVE (Photo: Nate Watters)

How would you describe love? Some ideas might include perhaps a yearning for close companionship, an irresistible attraction, tenderness, touching, feeling, warmth, affection, closeness, sharing, embraces and kisses.

Looking for these in Donald Byrd’s new work, Love, in performance this and next weekend at Daniels Hall, I saw some, usually in fleeting moments and a few longer, such as the sequence with five couples attached mouth to mouth but without apparent warmth. Indeed the only facial expressions of warmth I saw came from the eloquent dancer Jereboam Bozeman, the tenderness in a head dropping on a partner’s shoulder, a brief embrace, an occasional caress.

Mostly, it’s a work of non-stop movement for first one dancer, then two, then in varied groupings of up to the entire complement of eleven dancers on two connected square stages. One is slightly higher than the other, with most of the church pews pushed aside in what used to be the Methodist Church at Fifth and Marion. Pews for the audience ranged around three sides of one square, but it was possible to see every dancer from anywhere.

The men were in white stretch briefs and sometimes an open longsleeved white shirt which obscured lines and seemed to get in the way; the women in one- or two-piece swimsuits or long shifts and at the end, incongruous long, thin tutu skirts which bunched up, also all white.

The work was mostly about superb athletes in abstract movement, dancers in their fluidity and the way one movement flowed into the next, at times almost reaching pure acrobatics with many leg lifts and somersaults. At others, the movement verged on contortionism, saved by the extraordinary smoothness, apparent ease and beautiful control displayed by all the dancers and epitomized by Vincent Michael Lopez and Ty Alexander Cheng.

In the third section, six men lifted Jade Solomon Curtis high overhead, twisting, turning, swooping, and arching her in a myriad shapes, the most absorbing sequence of the performance. Had she not been so strong and so flexible, and had the supporters’ hands not all been in the right place at the right time, some moves could have been seen as downright dangerous in terms of breaking her back.

But what had this to do with love?

Similarly, Benjamin Britten’s solo Cello Suites Nos. 1-3 were music for Love, played live by Denise Djokic. She draws a warm resonant sound from her instrument and gave a fine performance. However, the dance seemed to have no connection to the music and vice versa.