Search the Record 





View past issues
Record


e-Record
Subscribe to
receive Record
headlines
via e-mail

Washington University in St. Louis

March 26, 2004
Vol. 28, No. 26

Front Page
Medical News
Calendar
Notables
Campus Watch
Sports
Record Staff
Employment

Neil White
leads pediatric diabetes research



Picturing
Our Past



To Current Issue
Nov. 6, 2008




Comments,
story ideas

E-mail the Record



March 26, 2004 > Carlin to perform concert March 28

Carlin to perform concert March 28

By Liam Otten

Renowned pianist Seth Carlin, professor of music and director of the piano program in Arts & Sciences, will perform music of Johann Sebastian Bach, Maurice Ravel and Robert Schumann at 7:30 p.m. March 28 in Edison Theatre.

For Carlin, the concert will represent a new approach to the repertoire he performs on the modern piano.

carlin, seth
Seth Carlin will play music of Bach, Ravel and Schumann in Edison Theatre.

"In the past, I've dedicated my career to performing music on the type of instrument for which it was actually written." Carlin said. "But recently, I have come to the thinking that today's piano accommodates very well a broad range of music, including works composed before its emergence.

"On this recital, I'm playing a work by Bach because of my own need to perform this great music, despite the fact that in recent decades performances of his keyboard works frequently have been reserved for the harpsichord."

(The harpsichord was the primary keyboard instrument of Bach's time, the Baroque period, followed by the fortepiano in the Classical period of Haydn and Mozart. The modern piano did not reach its current form until about 1860.)

Carlin will begin his program with Bach's Partita in B-flat Major, BWV 825. He will then move to the 20th century for Ravel's Miroirs, a set of five distinct pieces that includes the popular Alborada del gracioso.

The program will conclude with Schumann's Carnaval, a monument of piano literature consisting of 21 short compositions titled to represent the composer's friends, colleagues, figures of commedia dell'arte and even philosophical opponents. Though some pieces are less than a minute in length, several make extreme technical demands on the performer.

Notably, Schumann depicts himself as both introvert and extrovert — poignant, considering his struggles with manic-depressive disorder.

Concert admission is free and open to the public. For more information, call 935-4841.



News & Information  |   WUSTL Home  |   To Current Record Issue

Front Page | Medical News | Calendar | Notables | Campus Watch | Sports
Washington People | Record Staff | Employment | WUSTL Magazine | Outlook Magazine

The Record is the University's weekly newspaper for faculty, staff and students.

Questions or comments? E-mail the editor or call (314) 935-6603.
Problems with this site? E-mail our Web team.
Copyright ©2003-06 Washington University in St. Louis.  All Rights Reserved.