Crosscut Tout: Seattle Chamber Music's Winter Festival

The program for the festival, which runs Jan. 27-30, is an interesting mix, and there's special interest in the short concerts that precede three of the main events.

Advertisement

by

Tom Luce

The program for the festival, which runs Jan. 27-30, is an interesting mix, and there's special interest in the short concerts that precede three of the main events.

From Thursday to Sunday (Jan. 27-30),  Seattle Chamber Music holds its short Winter Festival in the small hall  at Benaroya.

The programs are the usual interesting  mix of chamber music for strings and piano in various combinations —  trios, quartets and quintets by Brahms ( all three trios in Friday’s  main concert), Beethoven, Fauré and Rachmaninov with two particularly  unusual  pieces by Turina and Arensky.

There is special interest in the short  concerts which precede the main events at 6.30 p.m. on Thursday and Saturday  and at 2.00 p.m. on Sunday. At these, New York-based pianist Adam  Neiman will play all 12 of Liszt’s "Transcendental Studies." The  French title — “études d’éxécution transcendante” — says  it all: they are transcendentally difficult to play. Performances are  very rare: don’t miss this opportunity.

The short concerts are all free, with no ticket required. As of Wednesday afternoon, tickets for Thursday's concert remained available online. Limited numbers of tickets remained for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. To order, call 206-283-8808.

If you go: Seattle Chamber Music  Winter Festival, Jan. 27–30. The main concerts on Thursday, Friday, Saturday begin at 7:30 p.m. Sunday's concert is at 3 p.m. All at Benaroya Hall, 200 University Street, Seattle. The main concerts will be broadcast live on KING-FM 98.1.

Donation CTA