Joan Trimble News
Irish composer
Commemorations 2025 (Birth: Joan Trimble)
- piano
- opera
- United Kingdom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
- composer, pianist, musicologist, songwriter, newspaper proprietor, newspaper editor
Last update
2024-03-28
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2021-10-05 07:22:27
MAX@245
[…] of MAX's founded members) as artistic director. The series launches on 18 October 2021 with pianist Joanna Macgregor in It's Time: Music for the Soul with music by Bach, Chopin, Ginastera, Mary Lou Williams, and Piazzolla plus her own For Nina Simone. Subsequent events include the first appearance from the newly formed Trio Balthasar (Ian Burnside, piano, Michael Foyle, violin, Tim Hugh, cello) in piano trios by Judith Weir, Johannes Brahms and the Irish composer Joan Trimble (1915-2000) who studied with Arthur Benjamin, Herbert Howells and RVW (20/10/21), a showcase from the current young artists of the National Opera Studio (23/10/21), Black Voices, the European female a cappella quintet (23/10/21) and the Pink Singers, Europe's longest running LGBT+ choir (which, incidentally, I directed from 1983 to 1988) in SING - an outdoor jamboree for all the family (24/10/21). Full details from the MAX website.
2021-03-28 11:00:31
Spring weekend of song in Leeds
[…] section began with Stanford's La belle Dame sans merci, so clearly these are not comfortable places! Kitty Whately and Middleton began simply, almost folkishly but gripped us with the story and its vivid drama. Rebecca Clarke's The Salley Gardens was new to me. Lovely and touching, it was hardly folk-ish at all yet with a nice simplicity. Howells' King David began simply too, but developed into real rapture with a terrific nightingale from Middleton. Joan Trimble's Green Rain was quite traditional, well made and rather romantic but lovely. An Irish composer and pianist, Joan Trimble (1915-2000) was another discovery. Fields and Meadows began with RVW's Silent Noon, where Kitty Whately brought out the narrative elements of the poem, alongside the sheer lyrical beauty of the song. Michael Head's A green cornfield had charm and simplicity which contrasted well with the disturbing elements in Christina Rossetti's poem The lambs […]
2020-09-10 23:40:00
PhoenixNewTimes.com: Violinist and composer Nokuthula Ngwenyama will debut her new work titled "Finding the Dream" as part of an event called "Tuning Up"
www.asukerr.com TUNING UPfeaturing Nokuthula Ngwenyama and ASU Institute Professor and Professor of PracticeDaniel Bernard Roumain (DBR) Debut and discussion of “Finding the Dream,” composed by NgwenyamaTuesday, Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. https://youtube.com/asukerrhttps://facebook.com/asukerr/live Phoenix New Times Lynn Trimble | September 9, 2020 Feeling the pangs of pandemic boredom? Try mixing it up with these (mostly virtual) concerts happening in the coming days and weeks. One features new music inspired by victims of police brutality, and another puts a modern spin on the ancient art of taiko drumming. Collectively, they’ll help you stretch your musical horizons, and show a little extra love for the local music scene. Most are free, but some venues want viewers to get tickets or RSVP online beforehand. *** Tuning Up Tuesday, September 29 Violinist and composer Nokuthula Ngwenyama will debut her new […]
2019-11-11 19:26:00
The November 2019 issue (vol.13, no.3) of The Wagner Journal has been published and contains the following feature articles: • ‘Knappertsbusch in Bayreuth’ by Hans Rudolf Vaget • ‘In Wagner’s Eyes: Casting Light on a Disputed Portrait‘ by Michael Trimble, Dale C. Hesdorffer, Robert Letellier and Gordon Plant •’Ernest Newman in ‘’Naziland‘’: In Search of Otto Strobel‘
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