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Raleigh Chamber Music Guild • March 30, 2003

Zéphyros Winds

The Raleigh Chamber Music Guild
Meymandi Concert Hall
BTI Center for the Performing Arts
Raleigh, North Carolina

With Charles Wadsworth, piano 

March 30, 2003
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Camille Saint-Saëns Caprice on Danish and Russian Airs, op. 79

Francis Poulenc Trio for Piano, Oboe, and Bassoon

Samuel Barber Summer Music, op. 31

Poulenc Elegy for Horn and Piano

Lalo Schifrin La Nouvelle Orléans

Poulenc Sextet for Winds and Piano
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Wilton Candlelight Concerts • March 23, 2003

Zéphyros Winds

Wilton Candlelight Concerts
Wilton, Connecticut

March 23, 2003

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Karl Pilß Serenade for Wind Quintet

Lalo Schifrin La Nouvelle Orléans

Paul Hindemith Kleine Kammermusik, op. 24, no. 2

Paul Pierné Suite Pittoresque, op. 14, no. 2

Endre Szervànszky Wind Quintet No. 1

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Yale • New Haven, CT • December 3, 2002

Zéphyros Winds
The Chamber Music Society at Yale
Battell Chapel, Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut
 
December 3, 2002
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Karl Pilß Serenade for Wind Quintet

Lalo Schifrin La Nouvelle Orléans

Paul Hindemith Kleine Kammermusik für fünf Bläser, op. 24, no. 2

Paul Pierné Suite pittoresque pour Quintette à Vent

Endre Szervánszky Fúvósötös

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Harvard Musical Association • November 15, 2001

Zéphyros Winds

The Harvard Musical Association
Julia M. Marsh Memorial Concert

November 15, 2001

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Jacques Ibert Trio pièces brèves

August Klughardt Wind Quintet, op. 79

György Ligeti Six Bagatellles

Paquito D’Rivera Aires Tropicales

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“Janus 21” Chamber Music Festival 2001 • Longy School, Cambridge, MA • August 14, 2001

Zéphyros Winds

“Janus 21” August Chamber Music Festival 2001
Longy School, Cambridge, MA

Guest artists
Jane Strauss, mezzo soprano
Michael Calmès, tenor
Judith Gordon, piano

August 14, 2001

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August Klughardt Wind Quintet, op. 79

Franz Schubert “The Shepherd on the Rock” D. 965

Samuel Barber Summer Music, op. 31

Ralph Vaughan Williams Ten Blake Songs for Tenor and Oboe

Francis Poulenc Sextet for Winds and Piano
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Lincoln Center Out of Doors • August 9, 2001

Zéphyros Winds

Lincoln Center Out of Doors
North Plaza

“Chamber Music of the World”

August 9, 2001

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August Klughardt Wind Quintet, op. 79

Paquito D’Rivera Aires Tropicales

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Library of Congress • Washington, DC • May 11, 2001

Concerts from the Library of Congress

MUSIC OF IRVING FINE

Zéphyros Winds
Ida Kavafian, violin
Ursula Oppens, piano
Colorado String Quartet
Chamber Choir, Norman Scribner, director

Coolidge Auditorium

Thomas Jefferson Building

May 11, 2001

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ALL-IRVING FINE

Violin Sonata (1946)

String Quartet (1952)

Partita for Wind Quintet (1948)

“Father William” from Alice in Wonderland
An Old Song from the Yiddish
The Choral New Yorker: Four Choral Patters with Piano Obbligato

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Live Recording on Bridge Records

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The Oak Ridge Civic Music Association, March 31, 2001

Zéphyros Winds

The Oak Ridge Civic Music Association
Pollard Auditorium, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
Oak Ridge, Tennessee

March 31, 2001

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August Klughardt Woodwind Quintet, op. 79

Jean Françaix Wind Quintet No. 1

Samuel Barber Summer Music, op. 31

Paquito D’Rivera Aires Tropicales

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Review published in The Oak Ridger of Tuesday April 3, 2001 

“A standing ovation for the Zephyros Quintet” by Diedre Hoffman

The Oak Ridge Civic Music Association
Saturday night at Oak Ridge Associated Universities’ Pollard Auditorium

How many woodwinds does it take to make a woodwind quintet? If you guessed four, you’re correct. If you put only four names on the program for a woodwind quintet performance, however, then you’ve got some explaining to do.

This was the awkward position that Charles Yust was in as the announcer for Saturday evening’s Zephyros Quintet performance. The name of the French hornist, Patrick Pridemore, had been inadvertently omitted from the evening’s program. With a little self-effacing humor, Mr. Yust pointed out the error and introduced the group.

As we would see later in their performance, the Zephyros Quintet has a good sense of humor. Four players filed onto stage instead of the usual five. The empty chair for the French horn player was a hilarious sight gag and the audience howled with laughter.

Pridemore rushed onto the stage, horn tucked under his arm, and we were soon on our way toward a very enjoyable show.

The first thing you notice about this group is their beautiful overall tone. They opened the program with a piece by August Klughardt (Woodwind Quintet, Op. 79). This was a light, gentle piece, interspersed with periods of strength, and was perfect for introducing us to this group.

Beautiful sweeping passages with the flute and a clarinet solo that was fluid in style and pure in tone marked some of the highlights of this work.

James Roe, the oboist, introduced to us the second piece on the program, Wind Quintet No. 1 by Jean Francaix. “The jokes in this piece are obvious — feel free to laugh.” The statement in itself produced a chuckle from the crowd. “You don’t seem like a shy audience,” Roe added.

What a fun piece of music! The Allegro brought forth the first laugh from the audience. The muted blat of the French horn was almost circus-like in its comedy. “It sounded like cartoon music,” mentioned Fran Silver.

Now, however fun this piece may be, make no mistake, it is a tremendous challenge for the players. Pages of arpeggiation coupled with challenging, syncopated rhythms kept the Zephyros Quintet on its toes, and it triumphed.

Throughout the abrupt changes in tempi, throughout the many different moods, the group painted a picture of city life, with bustle, activity and even a dark underlying charm.

There were a few intonation problems with the bassoon, and the clarinet’s sound tended to be buried at times in the exuberance of the flute and oboe, but their enthusiasm and showmanship made these small flaws even less noticeable.

Summer Music, Opus. 31, by Samuel Barber is marked “slow and indolent.” The only time that indolence is considered acceptable behavior is probably in the summer. Or when performing a piece of music about summer.

The oppressive weight of the very air in summer was painted around the Pollard Auditorium. With an exquisite oboe solo, and sensitive ensemble work, the atmosphere was deftly transformed and one could even feel a light breeze; nice, but not enough to lift the film and haze that permeates even the coolest days in a Southern summer.

I cannot imagine a more perfect rendering of this piece. It was summer on the front porch, with the sticky-sleepy feel of late afternoon. The members of the Zephyros Quintet are fabulous artists at setting a mood, whether humorous and tongue in cheek, or a landscape setting.

“This is our greatest masterpiece,” mentioned Roe.

Paquito D’Rivera is more familiar to us as a jazz musician than as a composer. The final piece on the program was his Aires Tropicales.

Different popular dances are blended in a classical setting, resulting in a mingling of different styles and flavors. Many nice solos abounded here, particularly the oboe solo in the Habanera. I had expected to hear plenty of French horn in the movement titled “Dizzyness,” for the simple reason that the horn is a brass instrument, and “Dizzyness” is a tribute to Dizzy Gillespie. However, except for the nicely done final phrase, the winds carried the majority of the themes.

The show-stealer of this piece, however, is the folksy, playful “Contredanza.” A thump on the floor startles the crowd into laughing, and then occurs again. This time, however, we see the players stomping in rhythm to the dance. The delighted audience laughed with each thump of the heel. The final movement, Afro, made use of alto flute and English horn. The warm, dark sound of the alto flute was echoed by the whole group and swirled into a rhythmic pulse, full of energy.

They ended their performance to curtain calls and a standing ovation. As an encore, the group revisited the Contredanza from Aires Tropicales. “You have to stomp along this time,” said Roe.

The audience thoroughly enjoyed these excellent entertainers. They were an energetic end to a marvelous Chamber Series season, and a wonderful introduction to anyone who has not heard a woodwind quintet.

Copyright The Oak Ridger

Wolf Trap • Vienna, Virginia • January 26, 2001

Zéphyros Winds

Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts
Vienna, Virginia

With Charles Wadsworth, piano

January 26, 2001

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Camille Saint-Saëns Caprice on Danish and Russian Airs, op. 79

Francis Poulenc Trio for Piano, Oboe, and Bassoon

Samuel Barber Summer Music, op. 31

Poulenc Elegy for Horn and Piano (1953)

Alexandre Zemlinsky Humoreske-Rondo for Wind Quintet

Poulenc Sextet for Piano and Winds

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Concert Review

“Winds as Fresh as a Breeze; The Zephyros Quintet Makes a Big Impact in a Small Field”

The Washington Post, Washington, DC
January 29, 2001

by John Pitcher

You can probably count the number of truly popular wind quintets on the fingers of one hand. The reason, quite simply, is that this kind of ensemble lacks an established canon — a significant body of original works that can support and sustain high-profile careers.

That said, the Zephyros Quintet, which appeared with pianist Charles Wadsworth at the Barns of Wolf Trap on Friday, has in recent years attracted the kind of national — and even international — attention that seems almost unprecedented. How many wind quintets, or string quartets or piano trios for that matter, can boast of an Internet site filled with messages from adoring fans living as far afield as Maine, California and Southeast Asia?

Zephyros is a relatively youthful ensemble, and no doubt its vigorous and enthusiastic approach to music — and the lively banter with which it entertains an audience between numbers — has something to do with its popularity. More important, though, Zephyros is a virtuoso group. In Francis Poulenc’s Sextet for Piano and Winds, for instance, the players created a vast wall of brilliant sound that seemed almost orchestral in its power and intensity. And yet they never lost sight of the music’s inherent intimacy.

The high point of the concert came just before intermission, in a performance of Samuel Barber’s “Summer Music” for wind quintet. Barber marked the opening of his music “slow and indolent,” and that’s exactly how Zephyros played it. It was a remarkably expressive and languid account that clearly called to mind a cool breeze on a hot summer day.

The Athenaeum • La Jolla, California • October 14, 2000

Zéphyros Winds

The Athenaeum Chamber Concerts
La Jolla, California

October 14, 2000
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Ludwig van Beethoven Quintet in E-Flat Major, op. 4 (arr. Rechtman)

John Harbison Quintet for Winds

Josef Bohuslav Foerster Quintet for Winds, op. 95

Heitor Villa Lobos Quintette en forme de Chôros

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