Muse Mentors

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Has there been a time in your life where you’ve looked to someone to guide you? Grammy-nominated flutist Karen Kevra is a musician whose life was changed by her mentor. Join her for engaging interviews of artists as they share personal stories of deep connection that will warm your heart and inspire you....whatever you do and wherever you are on your path.

Karen Kevra

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    • Feb 28, 2024 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 27m AVG DURATION
    • 39 EPISODES

    4.9 from 39 ratings Listeners of Muse Mentors that love the show mention: flute, armando, paula, arts, interviewer, music, wonderful, great, muse mentors, jeffrey chappell, karen kevra.


    Ivy Insights

    The Muse Mentors podcast is an absolute gem in the world of podcasts. Hosted by Karen Kevra, this show delves into the lives and stories of artists and musicians and explores the profound impact that mentors have had on their journeys. Each episode is a captivating blend of intimate conversations, beautiful music, and thoughtful insights that leave listeners feeling inspired and enriched.

    One of the best aspects of The Muse Mentors podcast is the way in which it seamlessly weaves together personal anecdotes, interviews, and music. Karen's interviewing style is warm and engaging, creating a comfortable atmosphere for her guests to open up about their experiences. The conversations are heartfelt and intimate, allowing listeners to truly connect with the artists on a deeper level. The inclusion of snippets of music throughout the episodes adds an extra layer of beauty and depth to the storytelling.

    Another standout aspect of this podcast is the variety of artists featured. From flutists to painters to pianists, The Muse Mentors covers a wide range of artistic disciplines. This diversity allows for a rich exploration of different perspectives and experiences within the creative world. It also provides valuable insights for anyone involved in or interested in the arts.

    However, one potential downside to The Muse Mentors podcast is that each episode might feel too short for some listeners. With such intriguing conversations and captivating stories being shared, it can be disappointing when an episode comes to an end. This leaves listeners wanting more and perhaps craving a longer format that allows for deeper dives into each mentor-mentee relationship.

    In conclusion, The Muse Mentors podcast is a must-listen for anyone who appreciates artistry, creativity, and human connection. Karen Kevra's skillful interviewing combined with the enchanting stories shared by her guests make for an unforgettable listening experience. Whether you are a musician or artist yourself or simply someone who appreciates beauty in all its forms, this podcast will leave you feeling inspired and uplifted.



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    Latest episodes from Muse Mentors

    FLUTE STORIES - Friedrich Kuhlau's Arietta and Variations on a Theme of Mozart

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 10:15


    Fredrich Kuhlau (1786–1832) was a Danish composer of the late Classical and early Romantic periods who wrote prodigiously for the flute.  The final movement of his Fantasie for Solo Flute in D major, "Arietta and Variations" is charming,  virtuosic, and fun! The aria "Bati, Bati"  from Mozart's opera Don Giovanni is the theme. The operatic spirit shines in this 4 minute long gem.Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12, performed by Karen Kevra, flute Georg Friedrich Händel, Suite No. 5 in E Major, HWV 430:  IV. Air con Variazioni "The Harmonious Blacksmith" performed by Murray Perahia, piano Franz Schubert's Theme, from the Introduction, Theme, and Variations on "Trockne Blumen", D. 802 performed by Karen Kevra, flute and Jeffrey Chappell, pianoWolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Overture from Don Giovanni, K. 527, Hans Vonk, Staatskapelle DresdenWolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Aria: "Batti, batti, o bel Masetto", Cecelia Bartoli, soprano, Wiener Kammerorchester  Friedrich Kuhlau, Fantasie for Solo Flute in D major (Op. 38, No. 1),  movement 3, "Arietta and Variations", performed by Karen Kevra, fluteSupport the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Katherine Hoover's WINTER SPIRITS

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2024 11:19


    Composer Katherine Hoover's Winter Spirits is a musical tribute to the American Desert Southwest. This 5 minute piece was inspired by Marie Buchfink's artwork picturing a cross-legged native American flute player: A colorful cloud of tiny beneficent spirits rises from the flute into a cloud. Elements of dance, chant, and drumming combine to create a mystical, magical soundscape. Katherine Hoover, KokopeliKatherine Hoover, Winter Spiritsperformed by Karen Kevra, fluteSupport the show

    Tony Barrand: Sing Me A Story/Dance Me A Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 71:02


    In this encore episode from Christmas eve 2020, we celebrate the life and legacy of Tony Barrand who died on January 29, 2022. Tony Barrand was born in England in 1945 but has lived most of his life in southern Vermont in the vibrant town of Brattleboro—a place that shines all the more brightly because of him. This Cornell PHD and Professor Emeritus of Boston University is not just an academic, but also a singer, dancer, and story-teller. What first grabs you is his way with words—he can give them weight, or make them sparkle depending on the point he is trying to make, but he uses words to greatest effect when he sings. His handsome  tenor voice really shines when joined by his singing comrades (John Roberts, Fred Breunig and Andy Davis) from the band Nowell Sing We Clear. This is top-notch exuberant music-making in a traditional style that will have you singing along, dancing, and entranced by the magic of the story-telling.  Guaranteed to brighten your days during this darkest time of year. Special thanks to:Andy Davis, Keith Murphy and Becky Tracy, Amanda Witman, Peter Amidon, Sue Dupre, Kari Smith, Carole Crompton, and Rachel BellMusic, courtesy Golden Hind MusicClick here to order  Nowell Sing We Clear: Songs & Carols for Midwinter & ChristmastidePhoto: BU PhotographySupport the show

    Pianist Jeffrey Chappell

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 36:45


    Pianist Jeffrey Chappell reflects on his life and his formative mentorships first with pianist Jane Allen, and later with the legendary Leon Fleisher.  In this encore episode, Jeffrey reveals his early childhood genesis story with the piano; his studies at the Curtis Institute and Peabody Conservatory, and path that led him to an astounding last minute substitution for Claudio Arrau with the Baltimore Symphony. He addresses overcoming challenges and adversity and speaks about his lifelong meditation practice and his book Answers from Silence. Support the show

    Edgard Varèse - DENSITY 21.5

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 14:33


    Edgard Varèse is one of the most influential musicians of the twentieth century and was called  "The stratospheric Colossus of Sound."  He lived life with intensity and composed the same way.  Varèse lived most of his composing life in New York City and  made music out of the  compelling cacophony of NYC street noises: sirens,  firetrucks, river sounds, foghorns, and even skyscraper construction.Density 21.5 was composed in 1936 (and revised in 194) at the request of Georges Barrère to inaugurate his new platinum flute.  (21.5 is the density of platinum.) Density 21.5 breaks the stereotype of typical French music. This 4 minute-long  ground-breaking piece offers free tonality, an immense dynamic range,  surgically precise rhythms, steely and wispy colors, and it showcases Varèse's love for percussion. Varèse was more interested in the nature of sound rather than the aspect of melody.  Listen with curiosity to the sounds and enjoy the emotional ride.Music:Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12 for solo flute by Karen KevraEdgard Varèse -Poème électronique Kees Tazelaar, Edgard Varèse & Institute for Computer MusicJacques Offenbach - Barcarolle from Tale of Hoffman, Sir Neville MarinerFrédéric Chopin - Ballade #4, Opus 52, Alfred CortotErik Satie - Gymnopédie No. 1,  Philippe EntremontEdgard Varèse - Amériques, The Philadelphia OrchestraEdgard Varèse, Ionisation, The New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Pierre BoulezEdgard Varèse - Déserts, Choeurs de Radio France, Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre BoulezClaude Debussy - Syrinx, Karen KevraCécile Chaminade - Concertino, Karen KevraEdgard Varèse - Density 21.5, Karen KevraSupport the show

    new york city french sound tale institute var hoffman colossus opus radio france density choeurs edgard var ensemble intercontemporain new york philharmonic orchestra ionisation
    FLUTE STORIES - Rimsky-Korsakov's FLIGHT OF THE BUMBLEBEE

    Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 4:33


    Flight of the Bumblebee from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's opera  "The Tale of Tsar Saltan"--is at the heart of a fantastical tale which includes a large cast of characters including a king and a queen, a magical swan, and a prince turned bumblebee. It's a dazzling colorful encore piece, instantly recognizable and adopted by all kinds of instrumentalists, from string players, to pianists and of course flutists. The buzzier and the faster, the better!Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12  for solo flute by Karen Kevra Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Flight of the Bumblebee by the Russian National OrchestraNikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Scheherazade, Op. 35 - I. The Sea and Sinbad's Ship,  André Previn · Rainer Küchl · Wiener Philharmoniker Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Flight of the Bumblebee by Karen Kevra photo credit: Karen KevraSupport the show

    Pierre-Octave Ferroud's JADE

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 6:01


    Pierre-Octave Ferroud wrote "Jade"- a tropical work for solo flute in July of 1921. There are two musical features in this Asian-styled French piece that give it its distinctly far eastern flavor. The first is the pentatonic scale-- the five pitches are tied to five elements:  wood, fire, earth, metal and water. The second feature is a rhythmic one --the ever present dotted rhythms give the piece a bubbling dance quality. This is imaginative music so close your eyes and travel to a tropical  beach with waterfalls, ancient canopied banyan trees, fluttering butterflies and the glittering jade colored sea...Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12Pierre-Octave Ferroud,  Bergère CaptivePierre-Octave Ferroud, JadeAll flute pieces performed by  Karen Kevra photo credit: Karen KevraSupport the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Gabriel Fauré's MOURCEAU DE CONCOURS - A winter lullaby

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 9:14


    One of the things that really sets Gabriel Fauré apart is the singing style of his music. He was an exceptional and prolific composer of song so it's no wonder that we hear that singing quality even in his instrumental works. Fauré's "Morceau de Concours" is an incredibly special tiny gem. Don't be fooled by the title. Though he wrote it as a sight-reading examination piece for students at the Paris Conservatory, it is a poetic lullaby. -A musical balm for this most dark time of year. MUSIC: Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12, performed by Karen KevraGabriel Fauré, Sicilienne, Op. 78, performed by Karen KevraFrédéric Chopin, Waltz in E flat major, performed by Jeffrey Chappell George Gershwin, Rhapsody in Blue, performed by George Gershwin, piano with Paul Whiteman and the  Paul Whiteman Orchestra (Recorded June 10, 1924)Gabriel Fauré, Violin Sonata no.1, op. 13, Allegro molto, performed by Arthur Grumiaux, violin, and Paul Crossley, pianoGabriel Fauré, Piano Trio No. 1, Allegro molto moderato, performed by Marguerite Long, piano,  Jean Pasquier, violin, Pierre Pasquier, viola, Etienne Pasquier, celloGabriel Fauré, Piano Trio No. 1, Scherzo: allegro vivo, performed by Marguerite Long, piano,  Jean Pasquier, violin, Pierre Pasquier, viola, Etienne Pasquier, celloAdjutant's Call/French Foreign Legion March, US Marine BandGabriel Fauré, Cantique de Jean Racine, Op. 11, performed bythe Cambridge Singers, Cambridge Singers, City of London SinfoniaGabriel Fauré, Morceau de Concours, performed by Karen KevraSupport the show

    Beethoven Hymn of Thanksgiving-A meditation like no other

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 15:57


     Muse Mentors host Karen Kevra  discusses Beethoven's transcendent Hymn of Thanksgiving from the Op. 132 A minor string quartet with Nicholas Kitchen, the first violinist of the Borromeo Quartet.Credits:Beethoven, Hymn Of Thanksgiving (String Quartet Op. 132, Movement III)  Borromeo Quartet  - Nicholas Kitchen, Violin; Kristopher Tong, Violin; Mai Motobuchi, Viola; Yeesun Kim, Cello)Use this link to hear and see the entire performance by the Borromeo String Quartet Support the show

    FLUTE STORIES - C.P.E. Bach's Sonata in A minor - A meditation on autumn

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 10:18


    CPE Bach was the second son of Johann Sebastian and Maria Barbara Bach and to say he was a prolific composer is putting it mildly. CPE Bach wrote loads of flute music--sonatas, chamber music, and dazzling concerti. The tremendous output of flute music had to do with the fact that he had a flutist for a boss--Frederick the Great of Prussia. His touching Sonata in A minor for solo flute was composed in Berlin in 1747 and the opening movement is a palate of fall colors --golden yellows, reds, mahogany, and conifer green. This piece is a kind of meditation on the fall--it has an intimate quality unlike any other and it expresses the sadness of the passing of summer, the gratitude for the harvest, and the quality of turning inward as we light our fires and face the winter.  MUSIC:Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12, performed by Karen KevraC.P.E. Bach, Cello Concerto in A minor, Allegro assai, performed by Alison McGillivray, and The English Concert C.P.E. Bach Harpsichord Concerto in D Minor, Allegro, performed by Jean Rondeau, with Sophie Gent, Louis Creac'h, Fanny Paccoud, Antoine Touche, Thomas de Pierrefeu, Evolène Kiener C.P.E. Bach Flute Concerto In D Minor,  Allegro Di Molto, performed by Jean-Pierre Rampal-flute, Pierre Boulez-conductor  C.P.E. Bach Sonata in A minor for unaccompanied flute, performed by Karen Kevra Robert Frost recites "Reluctance" -included for educational purposesPhotograph: Cornwall, Vermont backyard by Karen Kevra  Support the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Friedrich Kuhlau's FANTASY

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 8:25


    Fredrich Kuhlau was admired by Beethoven and is known as "the Beethoven of the flute." He wrote his gorgeous Fantasy in D major for solo flute in 1820 during a four-month stay in Vienna. Perhaps the Danube river provided inspiration for this silky, rippling Romantic music...Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12, performed by Karen KevraFredrich Kuhlau, Fantasy, Op. 38 in D major, Adagio, performed by Karen Kevra J.S. Bach, Fantasia in G minor, BWV 542, performed by Hans-André Stamm-organ  Beethoven, Choral Fantasy, Op. 80, performed by Singapore Symphony Chorus and Youth Choir, Eudenice Palaruan, Choral Director, Tengku Irfan, piano https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AXnA7-TD4QBeethoven, Piano Sonata No. 14 in C-Sharp Minor, Op. 27 No. 2 "Moonlight" - I. Adagio sostenuto performed by Maurizio Pollini-piano Beethoven, Symphony #6 "Pastorale" - Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Charles Mackerras, conductorPlease support the show.Artwork: Danube landscape near Regensburg, by Albrecht AltdorferSupport the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Johannès Donjon's SUMMER MUSIC

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2022 9:27


    Frenchman Johannès Donjon 8 Etudes de Salon are whimsical and summery music. His miniature "Song of the Wind", "Elegie", and "Will-O'-the Wisp" require sure-footed technique. Even so, this fun music oozes with color, expression and imagination.Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12Johannès Donjon, Song of the Wind, Elegie, Will-O'-the WispPerformed by  Karen Kevra. Support the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Jindřich Feld's MEDITATION

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2022 6:23


    It's been a period of intense news and worldwide stress. At times like these you've got to turn it off and turn to music. Czech composer Jindřich Feld's 1957 Meditation is a sublime 2.5 minute work that offers a respite from the news.  Try the simple meditative approach for a deep listening experience.Ray Chen-violin, and Julio Elizalde-piano perform Jules Massenet Meditation from Thais  Karen Kevra-flute, performs Jindřich Feld's Meditation.Support the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Pierre-Octave Ferroud's BERGERE CAPTIVE

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 5:28


    Pierre-Octave Ferroud wrote his "Bergère Captive", a gorgeous and plaintive work for solo flute in July of 1921. You've probably never heard of Ferroud because he died a grisly pedestrian death when he stepped out into an oncoming car and was killed at the age of 36. It's a tragedy because if you listen to his colorful and inventive music you will understand why he won the attention  of Prokofiev, Poulenc and Stravinsky! His "Captive Shepherd" is musical storytelling at its best--full of imagination, a summery rainbow of colors, and deep emotion.Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12Pierre-Octave Ferroud,  JadePierre-Octave Ferroud, Bergère CaptiveAll flute pieces performed by  Karen Kevra Support the show

    FLUTE STORIES - J.S. Bach's SARABANDE from Partita in A minor

    Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 15:07


    Johann Sebastian Bach was incredibly generous with the flute.  He wrote several full scale sonatas, gave the flute has starring roles in two of the Brandenburg concerti, and beautiful obbligato parts in countless arias, but there is just one solo partita. The slow movement from his A minor flute Partita-a Sarabande -is a dance form with both Arab and Spanish origins and has a silky, sensual quality. Imagine a kind of "dance of the seven veils. " Way back in 1583, King Philip II of Spain had  the Sarabande banned because it was said to ‘excite bad emotions'.Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12J.S. Bach Brandenburg Concerto #5 in D major, BWV 1050 mmt. 1 AllegroKaren Kevra-flute,  Lucy Chapman-violin Elizabeth Metcalfe-harpsichord  J.S. Bach "Schafe können sicher weiden" (Sheep may safely graze) from his Cantata BWV 208. Hyunah Yu-soprano, Karen Kevra & Kenichi Ueda-flutes  J.S. Bach, Prelude from Suite No. 1 in G Major, BWV1007, Edward Arron-celloAll flute pieces performed by  Karen Kevra Manuscript of J.S.Bach's Partita in A minor.www.capitalcityconcerts.orgSupport the show

    FLUTE STORIES - Carl Nielsen's THE CHILDREN ARE PLAYING

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 3:28


    "THE CHILDREN ARE PLAYING" is a tiny fairy-tale of a piece for solo flute written by Denmark's best-known composer Carl Nielsen in 1920 as incidental music for a play called "The Mother." The whimsical music is a tip of the cap to Hans Christian Andersen and sounds like kids on playground on a spring day--leaping and laughter and teasing and taunting with a mix of sun and clouds. Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12Claude Debussy, SyrinxCarl Nielsen, The Children are PlayingAll flute piece performed by  Karen Kevra Frank Loesser, I'm Hans Christian Andersen performed by Danny KayeArtwork: Sibylle von Olfers, Mother Earth and Her ChildrenSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Remembering Legendary National Georaphic Photographer Jim Blair on his Birthday

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 39:08


    In this encore episode James Pease Blair, one of National Geographic's legendary photographers  talked about love, life, and legacy. Jim began his 32 year career at the National Geographic Society with a splash as staff photographer on board Jacques Cousteau's Calypso in 1962. As a photography student in the fifties at the Institute of Design in Chicago, he studied with Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind, but it was his years as a summer intern with Roy E. Stryker, at the Pittsburgh Photographic Library that made the biggest impression on Jim. Jim Blair's artistry and empathy brought a new kind of humanity to National Geographic which went from being a travel and culture magazine to a  journal which included social and environmental images that revealed the soul of planet and its inhabitants.Don't miss this powerfully moving episode on the 91st anniversary of his birth.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    FLUTE STORIES - Louis Moyse's PASTORALE

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 11:22


    Composer/flutist/pianist Louis Moyse's Pastorale was written in 1925 when he was just 14 years old.  Louis was the son of the great French flutist Marcel Moyse, and he grew up steeped in Parisian culture and with the sound of the flute in his ears and his heart. That influence shows in this evocative, oh-so-French piece that sounds like a marriage between Impressionism and springtime in the French countryside.   Georg Philip Telemann, Fantaisie No. 12, performed by Karen Kevra  Louis Moyse, Pastorale, performed by Karen Kevra  John Lunn, Downton Abbey Theme, The City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra  J.S. Bach, Gavotte, performed by Karen Kevra  Cecile Chaminade, Concertino, performed by Karen Kevra  Sakura, traditional Japanese folktune, performed by Karen KevraWolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Flute Concerto No. 2 in D major, Allegro aperto, performed by Marcel Moyse  Igor Stravinsky, Petrouchka, Wiener Philharmonic  Cab Calloway, Jumpin' Jive  Duke Ellington Orchestra, Jubilee Stomp  Maurice Ravel, Daphnis et Chloé Suite No. 2, Berlin PhilharmonicSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    FLUTE STORIES - Katherine Hoover's WINTER SPIRITS

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 11:19


    Composer Katherine Hoover's Winter Spirits is a musical tribute to the American Desert Southwest. This 5 minute piece was inspired by Marie Buchfink's artwork picturing a cross-legged native American flute player: A colorful cloud of tiny beneficent spirits rises from the flute into a cloud. Elements of dance, chant, and drumming combine to create a mystical, magical soundscape. Katherine Hoover, KokopeliKatherine Hoover, Winter Spiritsperformed by Karen Kevra, fluteSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    FLUTE STORIES - Debussy's SYRINX

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 8:00


    In this first full episode of the FLUTE STORIES MINI-SERIES host and flutist Karen Kevra explores Claude Debussy's  magical mythical Syrinx, the finest gem of the solo flute repertoire.Claude Debussy, Prélude à l'après-midi d'un fauneClaude Debussy, SyrinxCPE Bach, Poco Adagio from Sonata in A minor for solo fluteKaren Kevra, fluteAlbert von Tilzer, Take Me Out to the Ballgame,Mark Herman, organSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    FLUTE STORIES - a new mini-series from Muse Mentors

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 3:28


    Muse Mentors host Karen Kevra is your guide in Flute Stories--These  short episodes weave performances of flute music with the stories behind them.  All performances by Karen KevraGeorg Philipp Telemann, Fantasie #12 in G minorNikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, Flight of the BumblebeeJoachim Anderson, Etude in G major, #3, Op. 15 Louis Moyse, PastoraleClaude Debussy, SyrinxJules Mouquet, Pan and the BirdsEdgard Varèse, Density 21.5Carl Nielsen,  The children are playingSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Violinist Nicholas Kitchen and his mentor Szymon Goldberg ~a beautiful musical paradox of old technology and new...

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2022 37:44


    Nicholas Kitchen, one of the country's leading violinists is a founding member of the Boston-based Borromeo String Quartet. Nick is perhaps the most important protégé of the great Polish violinist Szymon Goldberg. Nick has been loaned his teacher's violin-- the Giuseppe Guarneri, Cremona, ca. 1730, "Goldberg-Baron Vitta" to play throughout his career. In his musical life, Nick was first nurtured by his musically hands-on parents and later through his mentorship with Goldberg.  Nick's rich and profound musical life is a beautiful paradox of old and new technology.Music credits:Schubert, Death and The Maiden String Quartet, Borromeo QuartetJP Sousa, Semper Fidelis, The President's Own Marine BandBeethoven, Violin Sonata, Op. 24 "Spring", Szymon Goldberg-violin, Lili Krauss-piano  JS Bach, Toccata and Fugue in D minor BWV 565, Hans-André Stamm-organBeethoven, Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, mmt. 3 Rondo,  Henryk Szeryng-violin, Hans Zender-conductorSchubert, Mass No. 5 in A Flat Major, D.678 - 4. Sanctus Choir of St. John's College, CambridgeJS Bach,  Fantasia and fugue in G minor BWV 542 - Van DoeselaarBeethoven, String Quartet, Op. 18, No. 1, Borromeo QuartetJS Bach, Adagio, BWV 1110, Nicholas KitchenKreisler, Liebeslied, Fritz KreislerHandel, Op. 1, No. 13 mmt. 1 D Major Sonata, Szymon Goldberg-violin, Gerald Moore-pianoPolish folksong for mandolinesJS Bach, Violin Concerto in E Major, BWV 1042: I. Allegro, Syzmon Goldberg-violinBeethoven, Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, mmt. 1, Syzmon Goldberg-violinMozart, Sonata for Piano and Violin in E Minor, K.304 - Tempo di minuetto, Syzmon Goldberg-violin and Radu Lupu-pianoMozart, Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Major, K219, mmt. 1Beethoven, String Quartet, No. 13, Op. 130,  Borromeo QuartetLouis Moyse, Second Sonata, Scherzo, Karen Kevra-flute, Paul Orgel-pianoStrauss, Don Juan, Op. 20, Berling Philharmonic, Von KarajanBeethoven, Symphony No. 9, mmt. 3 , Adagio molto e cantabile, FurtwänglerSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Tony Barrand: Sing Me A Story/Dance Me A Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 72:04


    Tony Barrand was born in England in 1945 but has lived most of his life in southern Vermont in the vibrant town of Brattleboro—a place that shines all the more brightly because of him. This Cornell PHD and Professor Emeritus of Boston University is not just an academic, but also a singer, dancer, and story-teller. What first grabs you is his way with words—he can give them weight, or make them sparkle depending on the point he is trying to make, but he uses words to greatest effect when he sings. His handsome  tenor voice really shines when joined by his singing comrades (John Roberts, Fred Breunig and Andy Davis) from the band Nowell Sing We Clear. This is top-notch exuberant music-making in a traditional style that will have you singing along, dancing, and entranced by the magic of the story-telling. Tony Barrand offers tales of his mentors and mentees, and plenty of music in this episode. Guaranteed to brighten your days during this darkest time of year. This is an encore episode from Christmas eve 2020.Special thanks to:Andy Davis, Keith Murphy and Becky Tracy, Amanda Witman, Peter Amidon, Sue Dupre, Kari Smith, Carol Compton, Carole Crompton, and Rachel BellMusic, courtesy Golden Hind MusicClick here to order  Nowell Sing We Clear: Songs & Carols for Midwinter & ChristmastideSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Muse Mentors celebrates first anniversary with a reflection on Beethoven's transcendent Op. 132 string quartet

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2021 9:05


    In this short anniversary episode, Muse Mentors host Karen Kevra looks back on a year with a podcast, and a year without concerts.  She previews an upcoming concert by Boston's Borromeo Quartet and discusses Beethoven's transcendent Op. 132 A minor string quartet with Nicholas Kitchen, the first violinist of the Borromeo quartet.Credits:Kuhlau, Fantaisie in D major, Adagio - Karen Kevra-fluteBig Yellow Taxi - Joni MitchellBeethoven, Hymn Of Thanksgiving (String Quartet Op. 132, Movement III) - Borromeo Quartet  - Nicholas Kitchen, Violin; Kristopher Tong, Violin; Mai Motobuchi, Viola; Yeesun Kim, Cello)Beethoven party hat image:  Sharon Su Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    The Circus of Life: Rob Mermin and his mentor Marcel Marceau

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2021 49:20


    Encore episode:  Rob Mermin ran off to join the circus in 1969 at the age of 19. He clowned with renowned European circuses, including England's Circus Hoffman, Sweden's Cirkus Scott, Denmark's Circus Benneweis in the famous Circus Building by the Tivoli, and many more. It was his long mentorship with the iconic French mime Marcel Marceau that shaped him as a performer and inspired him to dream and make plans.  In 1987 he founded Circus Smirkus, the embodiment of Rob -- the touch of wonder, the charm, the story line, the mime and the humor. An enthralling story-teller, Rob Mermin  make you laugh and he'll make you cry with his stories of discovery and loss, and of course mentoring--first as a protégé and later through his own rich legacy of mentorship of some of the greatest circus performers on earth.   *****The accordion music was provided by Rachel Bell and includes Susan Kevra-clarinet, and Karen Axelrod-keyboards.Mozart PianoConcerto #21 licensed by Creative Commons.Rob Mermin's Parkinson's Pantomime Project.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Happy Birthday Leon Fleisher!

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2021 37:37


    In this encore episode of Muse Mentors, pianist Jeffrey Chappell reflects on his life and his formative relationship with his mentor the legendary Leon Fleisher. He addresses overcoming challenges and adversity through the lens of his teacher's career-altering medical condition. The episode closes with the voice of Leon Fleisher who offers powerful words to live by. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    happy birthday leon fleisher
    Kerrin McCadden is a Poem

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 63:31


    Kerrin McCadden's new collection of poems called American Wake is made of the stuff of life --subjects like family, divorce, raising children, love and even her brother's tragic death by drug overdose are poignantly bound together by her strong Irish Heritage and her family's immigrant story. American Wake, is an actual term that refers to a kind of "Irish wake-style" farewell party that was thrown for Irish families the night before before they set sail for America. A lot of us dabble in ancestry and build family trees, but Kerrin McCadden has made it a way of life.  Kerrin is a National Endowment for the Arts fellow and has received the Sustainable Arts Foundation Writing Award, the Vermont Book Award, the New Issues Poetry Prize, and the Button Poetry  Prize.  Her poems have appeared in Best  American Poetry, American Poetry Review, New  England Review, and more. Her books are American Wake (2021), Keep This To Yourself (2020), Landscape with Plywood Silhouettes (2014).  Her mentors are poets David Budbill and Ellen Bryant Voigt.MUSIC CREDITS:Liz Carroll, The Drunken SailorLiz Carroll, A Day and An AgeSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Lou Kosma: Mensch of the MET

    Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2021 38:21


    Lou Kosma was a bass player in the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra for 36 years. He grew up in Philadelphia in the fifties in a blue collar Italian American - a loving home where the sound of Italian tarantellas  played on guitar and accordion spilled from the windows, and the smell of frying meatballs and Roma tomato sauce filled the air. Little did his working class family know that their son would one day ascend to one of the greatest orchestras in the world! But that full-time job wasn't quite enough for Lou Kosma who has been, for his whole life, a generous teacher, conducting an array of youth and community orchestras with warmth and passion. Lou was shaped by his mentor Edward Arian, a Renaissance man who had  three remarkable careers including a 20 year tenure as a bass player with the Philadelphia Orchestra. Arian lead an eight-week strike that got the musicians their first guaranteed 52- week salary. Lou  Kosma learned a thing or two from his mentor--determination, integrity, generosity, and love of music.   Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    National Geographic photographer James Pease Blair: Making Pictures- life, love, and legacy

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2021 38:38


    James Pease Blair began his 32 year career at the National Geographic Society as staff photographer on board Jacques Cousteau's Calypso in 1962. As a photography student in the fifties at the Institute of Design in Chicago, he studied with Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind, but it was his years as a summer intern at the Institute of Design with Roy E. Stryker, at the Pittsburgh Photographic Library that made the biggest impression on Jim. These experiences set him on a path to become one of America's legendary photographers. Jim Blair's artistry and empathy brought a new kind of humanity to National Geographic which went from being a travel and culture magazine to a  journal which included social and environmental images that revealed the soul of planet and its inhabitants. Now in this late chapter of his life, Jim is contending with a lung condition that his reduced him to 35 percent breathing capacity, and yet he continues to live life with eyes and heart wide open. In this powerfully moving episode he talks about love, life, and legacy.MUSIC:Taps- Bugle Call: USMC Drum & Bugle CorpsHappy Birthday-Jazz Piano Arrangement by Jonny MayChicago- Frank Sinatra Juke- Little WalterGovernment Camp Song-Mary and Betty Campbell, Shafter FSA Camp, August 9, 1941There's a Pawn Shop on The Corner -Guy MitchellPittsburghTown-Pete Seeger The Aquarium, Carnival of the Animals-Camille Saint-SaensCalypso-John DenverNational Geographic 1964 - 1987 Full ThemeSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Dr. Eli Newberger: Music Man/Medicine Man

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 33:42


    It can sound hyperbolic to make the claim that a person has changed the world and made it a better place. In the case of Eli Newberger, it is utterly true. Eli Newberger is equal parts music man and medicine man. He was the key prosecution witness in the trial of Louise Woodward, the British nanny convicted of second-degree murder in the death of an 8-month-old in Boston in1997. Later during the Archdiocese of Boston sex abuse scandal, he offered his expertise on the effects of abuse on children and their families. Eli Newberger's ground-breaking work resulted in the formation of the child-protection program at Boston Children’s Hospital, and he's the author of many publications including an important and accessible book on the development of character in boys called The Men They Will Become. Before Eli became a doctor, he was a musician. And perhaps it's because of music, that he became a doctor...Hear his inspiring origin story about his mentorship with the late New York Philharmonic principal tuba William Bell; his professional career in music, including his long tenure as a founding member of the New Black Eagle Jazz Band, and work with pianists Butch Thompson and Bob Winter; and his inspiring and generous work developing an El Sistema music program in the Berkshires.  MUSIC:Carolina Shout: James P. Johnson, piano  Cyrus the Great: US Air Force Band  Overture to Candide: New York Philharmonic  Yankee Doodle: Vivian Williams, Phil Williams, Howard Marshall, John Williams  Franck: Symphony in D minor: Berlin Philharmonic  Vaughan-Williams, Bass Tuba Concerto in F Minor: II. Romanza: Walter Hilgers  I'm Just Wild About Harry: Butch Thompson, Eli Newberger, and Jimmy Mazzy Carnival of Venice Variations: Carol Jantsch  Issa Keita, balafon (marimba) virtuoso, Bamako, Mali  Bugle Boy March: New Black Eagle Jazz Band  Arturo Márquez: Danzón Nº 2: Gustavo Dudamel at the Proms   Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    The Joy of Fluting: Flutist Paula Robison and her mentor Marcel Moyse

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 47:55


    Paula Robison is a flutist who is a great artist. Born on a Sunday in Nashville to an extraordinary family of actors, writers, dancers, and musicians, she grew up in Los Angeles not only playing the flute, but studying dance with Bella Lewitzky and theater with Jeff Corey. When she was twelve years old, music claimed her heart and she knew she wanted to be a flutist. At seventeen she was off to the Juilliard School to study flute with Julius Baker, the principal flutist of the New York Philharmonic, but it was during her time in New York that she learned that the great French flutist Marcel Moyse would travel to the city to teach periodically. His singing approach, honesty, and metaphorical and animated way of teaching set Paula on fire and began an important period of mentoring. Her time with Marcel propelled her to great achievement such as winning the First Prize at the Geneva International Competition in 1966, the first American to receive this honor. Her long, lively, and continuing career includes countless recordings, commissions, awards, and devoted students and mentees of her own –all of them flavored with that trademark joie de vivre-something she shared with her mentor Marcel Moyse. MUSIC:George Frederic Handel, Flute Sonata in F Major, Op. 1, No. 11, HWV 369: Allegro (Paula Robison-flute, Timothy Eddy-cello, Kenneth Cooper-harpsichord)Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Flute Concerto No.1 in G major, K.313, Allegro maestoso, (Paula Robison-flute) Apanhei-Te, Cavaquinho! (Paula Robison-flute, and Romero Lubambo, Tiberio Nascimento, Sergio Brandão, Stanley Silverman, Cyro Baptista)Robert Beaser, Cindy, from Mountain Songs for flute and guitar (Paula Robison-flute, Elliot Fisk-guitar)Robert Beaser, Quicksilver, from Mountain Songs for flute and guitar Ol' Man River, Paul RobesonWade in the Water, Fisk Jubilee SingersRobert Beaser, Barbara Allen, from Mountain Songs for flute and guitarBenjamin Godard, "Valse" from Suite De Trois Morceaux, Op. 116 (Paula Robison-flute)Astor Piazolla, "L'Histoire du Tango": Nightclub 1960 (Paula Robison-flute, Elliot Fisk-guitar)Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, "Voi che sapete", from The Marriage of Figaro, K. 492 arranged for flute and string quartet by Nicholas Kitchen (Paula Robison-flute, and the Borromeo String Quartet)Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Flute Concerto No.2 in D major, K.314, Allegro aperto (Marcel Moyse-flute)P.O. Ferroud - Bergere Captive from Trois pièces pour flûte seule (Marcel Moyse-flute)Albert Hammond - It never rains in Southern CaliforniaCamille Saint-Saëns, The Swan, Carnival of the Animals, (Marcel Moyse-flute, Louis Moyse-piano)Camille Saint-Saëns "Voliere" from Carnival of the Animals (Paula Robison-flute with The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Giuseppe Verdi, Il Trovatore, (Marcel Moyse-flute, Louis Moyse-piano)J.S. Bach Trio Sonata in G major Moyse Trio, BWV 1038, Largo (Marcel Moyse-flute, Blance Moyse-violin, Louis Moyse-piano)Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen, "Sisters" from White ChristmasTheobald Boehm, Variations sur un Air Tyrolien (Marcel Moyse-flute, Louis Moyse, piano)Claude Debussy, Syrinx (Paula Robison-flute)Georges Hüe, Fantasie (Marcel Moyse-flute, Georges Truc)Jean-Louis Tulou, Air Ecossais (Marcel Moyse-flute, Blance Moyse-violin, Louis Moyse-piano)Claude Debussy, "Prélude à l'aprés-midi d'un faune" (Paula Robison-flute)J.S. Bach BWV 244-58 Aus Liebe will mein Heiland sterben, BWV 244, from the Saint Matthew Passion, Herbert Karajan conductingSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Bill McKibben: Where There's a Bill There's a Way

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2021 41:32


    In what could be the most important Muse Mentors episode ever, author and climate activist Bill McKibben (who wrote The End of Nature one of the first books on global warming for the general public) talks about his childhood, teen-aged years as a journalist; and, before he even graduated from Harvard, an invitation from the late great editor William Shawn to write for The New Yorker Magazine. McKibben also discusses the impact the arts has in furthering the climate change movement, reflecting on his appearances on The Colbert Report, David Attenborough's recent magnum opus film "A Life on Our Planet", and a celebration of Richard Power's cri de coeur novel The Overstory. ere's a chance to hear Bill's origin story, and to discover how he has become and muse and mentor the world over!Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    David Dworkin: The Maestro of Fitness

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 29:26


    The New York Times called David Dworkin, the maestro who "sparkles with high-spirited virtuosity." This Jersey boy got his start in high school in the late 1940s with clarinet lessons at The Williamsburg (Brooklyn) Community House where he met his mentor the late Metropolitan Opera Orchestra clarinetist Ben Armato. That relationship nurtured David who went on to play in both the American Symphony and Met Orchestras, as well as to conduct orchestras across America and abroad. In 2002 he created the acclaimed exercise program CONDUCTORCISE®, where "you feel the beat as well as the burn” (Times-Picayune) which has received rave reviews across the globe, and has been featured in the New York Times, Town & Country Magazine, and NBC’s Today Show. CONDUCTORCISE® was named one of North America's six most innovative active aging programs by the International Council on Active Aging. Music: Mozart Clarinet Quintet: Musicians from Marlboro (ensemble), Anthony McGill (clarinet)Brahms Clarinet Quintet: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Support the show through our Patreon page.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Tony Barrand: Sing Me A Story/Dance Me A Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 70:27


    Tony Barrand was born in England in 1945 but has lived most of his life in southern Vermont in the vibrant town of Brattleboro—a place that shines all the more brightly because of him. This Cornell PHD and Professor Emeritus of Boston University is not just an academic, but also a singer, dancer, and story-teller. What first grabs you is his way with words—he can give them weight, make them sparkle, or swirl depending on the point he is trying to make, but he uses words to greatest effect when he sings. His handsome I-cannot-get-enough-of-it tenor voice really shines when joined by his singing comrades (John Roberts, Fred Breunig and Andy Davis) from the band Nowell Sing We Clear. This is top-notch music-making in a traditional style that will have you singing along, dancing, and entranced by the magic of the story-telling. Tony Barrand offers tales of his mentors and mentees, and plenty of music in this episode. Guaranteed to brighten your days during this darkest time of year.Special thanks to: Andy Davis, Keith Murphy and Becky Tracy, Amanda Witman, Peter Amidon, Sue Dupre, Kari Smith, Carole Crompton, and Rachel BellMusic, courtesy Golden Hind Music Click here to order Nowell Sing We Clear: Songs & Carols for Midwinter & ChristmastideSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    "Mom's the word": Visual Artist Katie Runde and her many surprising mentors

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 45:41


    Vermont visual artist Katie Runde was raised by Medievalist parents. This millennial with a Midas touch has been drawing as long as she was able to hold a crayon, playing saxophone since age eight, and theologizing since that day somewhere around age eleven when Mass stopped making neat story sense. An alum of the Eastman School of Music, she also holds a masters in religious studies from the University of Chicago Divinity School, a BA in folklore/ethnology and music from University College Cork in Ireland, and undertook two years’ apprenticeship with realist painter Evan Wilson...and yet it seems it is her mother who is her most enduring and important mentor. Visit Katie Runde's instagram page, her website and the Muse Mentors website to see her artwork.Click on these links to see the artwork discussed in the podcast: and learn more about Katie RundeStill Life With My FeelingsThe Frog PrinceJosieStill Life with Rainbow Chard3D Chalk Art TurtleSeven Days Vermont cover story: Artist Katie Runde Embraces the Holy and the Cow By CHELSEA EDGARVermont Public Radio: Katie Runde Wings ProjectSupport the show through our Patreon page.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    The Circus of Life: Rob Mermin and his mentor Marcel Marceau

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 48:17


    Rob Mermin ran off to join the circus in 1969 at the age of 19. He clowned with renowned European circuses, including England’s Circus Hoffman, Sweden’s Cirkus Scott, Denmark’s Circus Benneweis in the famous Circus Building by the Tivoli, and many more. It was his long mentorship with the iconic French mime Marcel Marceau that shaped him as a performer and inspired him to dream and make plans. In 1987 he founded Circus Smirkus, the embodiment of Rob -- the touch of wonder, the charm, the story line, the mime and the humor. An enthralling story-teller, Rob Mermin make you laugh and he'll make you cry with his stories of discovery and loss, and of course mentoring--first as a protégé and later through his own rich legacy of mentorship of some of the greatest circus performers on earth. *****The accordion music was provided by Rachel Bell and includes Susan Kevra-clarinet, and Karen Axelrod-keyboards.Mozart PianoConcerto #21 licensed by Creative Commons.Rob Mermin's Parkinson's Pantomime Project.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Armando in Wonderland: Illustrator Armando Veve

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2020 39:55


    Philadelphia-based illustrator Armando Veve is a Forbes 30 Under 30 list designee. He has been awarded three gold medals from the Society of Illustrators and gained international recognition when he was named an ADC Young Gun. His breath-taking and whimsical art has been commissioned by The New York Times, The New Yorker, National Geographic, the New Republic, Penguin Random House, the Poetry Foundation, Scientific American Mind, Smithsonian Magazine, Village Voice, and Mother Jones. That's just the short list. And, boy can he play the piccolo! He talks about the intersection between life, art, and music in delightful and inspiring ways. Visit Armando Veve's instagram page and the Muse Mentors website to see his artwork. Click on these links to see the artwork discussed in the podcast: New York Times Baby Heart Monitor image Truly Mango Lemonade images Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) recruitment poster Mechanical Botanical Special thanks to composer Mike Mower and Franceso Viola, whose brilliant piccolo playing graces this podcast episode.Widor, Romance for flute and piano, Karen Kevra-flute, Jeffrey Chappell-pianoSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Music, Magic, and Meditation: Pianist Jeffrey Chappell and his mentor Leon Fleisher

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2020 35:34


    In the first full episode of Muse Mentors, pianist Jeffrey Chappell reflects on his life and his formative mentorships first with pianist Jane Allen, and later with the legendary Leon Fleisher. Jeffrey reveals his early childhood genesis story with the piano; his studies at the Curtis Institute and Peabody Conservatory, and path that led him to an astounding last minute substitution for Claudio Arrau with the Baltimore Symphony. He addresses overcoming challenges and adversity and speaks about his lifelong meditation practice and his book Answers from Silence.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

    Welcome to the Muse Mentors Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 5:15


    In this brief introductory episode, Muse Mentors host Karen Kevra weaves a personal story of mentorship and invites listeners to join her for engaging and inspiring interviews.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=42335511)

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