//// Frederick the Great
//• ////A concerto at Sans Souci with 2 violins, viola and cello behind
CPE Bach •
//
Join us tomorrow eve for a flute concerto composed by the king himself,
who was an enthusiastic flutist and composer and performed almost
nightly for concerts at his court, alongside concerti for both flute (A
Major) and for harpsichord (D Major) by Frederick the Great’s court
keyboardist Carl Philip Emmanuel Bach, as well as the Suite in B Minor
by his father Johann Sebastian Bach, whose visit in 1747 to Frederick
the Great’s court is legendary.
Tuesday (not Monday), May 13 (rescheduled from May 26) at 7:00 PM at
Mason United Methodist Church:
* — CONCERTI from the COURT of FREDERICK THE GREAT*
· David Schrader, harpsichord (Chicago)
· Jeffrey Cohan, baroque flute (Anacortes)
· Elizabeth Phelps, baroque violin (Seattle)
· Courtney Kuroda, baroque violin (Los Angeles)
· Christine Moran, baroque viola (San Francisco)
· Susie Napper, baroque cello (Montreal)
✷ ✣ ✷ ✣ ✷ ✣ ✷
**Mason United Methodist Church
2710 North Madison Street in Tacoma
www.salishseafestival.org/tacoma http://www.salishseafestival.org/tacoma
— Suggested donation $20 to $30
(a free will offering; pay as you wish) — 18 and under free
✷ ✣ ✷ ✣ ✷ ✣ ✷
Our Guests:
A performer of wide ranging interests and accomplishments, DAVID
SCHRADER is equally at home in front of a harpsichord, organ, piano, or
fortepiano and has performed as featured soloist with the San Francisco
Symphony Orchestra under Neeme Järvi, and with the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra under the direction of Sir Georg Solti, Claudio Abbado, Daniel
Barenboim, Pierre Boulez and Erich Leinsdorf. He has appeared with the
Grant Park Symphony under Carlos Kalmar, with the Colorado Symphony
Orchestra, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Symphony
Orchestra, El Paso Symphony Orchestra, and with many other orchestras
throughout the USA and Canada.
David Schrader has appeared at numerous music festivals throughout the
USA and Europe and has performed five separate programs as featured
performer at the prestigious Irving Gilmore Keyboard Festival, as the
Artist of the Year at the Oulunsalo Soi Music Festival in Oulu, Finland,
as harpsichord soloist with the Nagaokakyo Chamber Ensemble in a tour of
Japan under Yuko Mori, as soloist with the Canadian Baroque orchestra
Tafelmusik in a European tour, for the Michigan Mozartfest with Roger
Norrington, and at the Ravina Festival under the direction of Nicholas
McGegan performing all six of J.S. Bach’s Brandenberg Concertos.
David Schrader's numerous recordings include concerti of J.S. Bach with
the Stuttgarter Kammerorchester, and with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
for both recordings of Sir Georg Solti's Creation, and the St. Matthew
Passion (BWV 244) and Messiah. He has many releases of solo repertoire
including the music of J.S. Bach, Soler, Franck, Antonio Vivaldi, Dupré
and Domenico Scarlatti. For over thirty five years he was the organist
of Chicago’s Church of the Ascension.
Named Personality of the year, Prix Opus 2002; Femme de Merité in
Montreal in 2011; and Compagnon de l’Ordre des arts et des lettres du
Québec in 2024, SUSIE NAPPER is cellist, gambist, and continuo player
par excellence, alternatively praised or admonished for her colourful
and controversial performances of solo and chamber repertoire of the
baroque! Having studied at Juilliard in New York and at the Paris
Conservatoire at the end of the student riots of ‘68, she founded the
Montreal Baroque Festival and has spent decades with a foot on either
side of the Atlantic recording, performing, teaching in Montreal and
Copenhagen and touring around Europe, the Far East and Oceania, often
with Les Voix Humaines. With an undying preference for harmony over
melody, and the use of rubato and general freedom of expression, she's
constantly searching for rhetorical meaning and eloquence in bringing
the printed page to life!
Your donations alone enable this project entirely, are applied to all
2025 concerts equally and are gratefully accepted at
https://www.salishseafestival.org/donate.html. Thank you!