Tomorrow at 7:00: BACH with Vollrath and Cohan at St. Luke's in Tacoma

SS
Salish Sea Early Music Festival
Sun, Jul 7, 2024 1:00 PM

We hope to see you tomorrow (Monday) at 7:00 for our final Salish Sea
Early Music Festival program this season: really, it's hard to do better
than Bach. The C Minor violin sonata is amazing. And then there's
Reinken! whose music Bach much admired and whose imaginative variations
for solo harpsichord on a popular German folk song, dating from when
Bach was 25, perfectly complement the emotional depth and rhythmic
complexity of Bach's works ... and may even have helped inspire them. We
hope you can join us! ... for this program without intermission of three
Bach sonatas and the Reinken variations.

Monday, July 8, 2024 at 7:00 PM:

 • Johann Sebastian Bach
  — Faythe Vollrath (harpsichord)
  — Jeffrey Cohan (baroque flute)

*St. Luke's Memorial Episcopal Church
*3615 North Gove Street in Tacoma
www.salishseafestival.org/tacoma
   — suggested donation $20 to $30 (a free will offering; pay as you wish)
   — 18 and under free

    ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷

Bach with Vollrath and Cohan

Harpsichordist Faythe Vollrath from Sacramento, CA will join baroque
flutist Jeffrey Cohan for this mostly-Johann Sebastian Bach extravaganza
in the eighth and final 2024 Salish Sea Early Music Festival performance
demonstrating the unparalleled mystery and emotional intensity of Bach’s
compositional abilities, featuring transcriptions of his works
originally for viola da gamba and another for violin, both with
obbligato (or fully written-out) harpsichord in addition to sonatas
originally written for flute by Bach both with continuo (a bass line
with numbers denoting harmonies from which the harpsichordist
improvises) and with obbligato harpsichord. Faythe Vollrath will play
variations for solo harpsichord by Johann Adam Reinken (1643-1722) on
the popular German folk tune “Schweiget mir von Weibernehmen” (‘shush,
no more talk about womanizing”). Reinken was greatly admired by Bach,
who made arrangements of several of his works.

     ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷

       Harpsichordist FAYTHE VOLLRATH is actively heard as a soloist
and chamber musician throughout the United States. Hailed by the Wall
Street Journal for her “subtly varied tempo and rhythm that sounds like
breathing,” her solo performances include venues such as MusicSources in
Berkeley, CA, Gothem Early Music in New York City, and Bruton Parish
Church in Colonial Williamsburg, VA.
       Enamored with the contrast of new music written for historic
instruments, Faythe combines new vs. old elements in many of her
performances  including concerts of new music in both Serbia and France
featuring new American composers, for the Festival of New American Music
in Sacramento, CA, and for the Center for New Music in San Francisco,
CA. She has paired Japanese harpsichord works with Japanese art at the
Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, CA, and has performed in a columbarium
as part of the Garden of Memory in Oakland, CA.
       Faythe received first prize with an excellence nomination in the
Vivaldi International Music Competition, and was a semi-finalist in the
Petrichor International Music Competition, both in 2022. Additional
awards include first place in the Charleston International Music
Competition in 2021, semi-finalist in the 2012 Jurow International
Harpsichord Competition, and the 2009 Betchel award recipient presented
by the Midwestern Historical Keyboard Society. Her duo, Zweikampf, was a
finalist in Early Music America’s inaugural Baroque Performance
Competition. They have been featured on public radio in both Michigan
and Arizona and perform throughout the United States. Faythe received
her doctoral diploma from SUNY-Stony Brook under Arthur Haas, and artist
diploma from the U of I Urbana-Champaign under Charlotte Mattax Moersch.
She earned her Bachelors of Music in Piano Performance from
CSU-Sacramento while studying piano with Richard Cionco.

    JEFFREY COHAN, who according to the New York Times can “play
several superstar flutists one might name under the table”, and is “The
Flute Master” (headline) according to the Boston Globe, has performed
throughout Europe, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, and for
the USIA Arts America Program in the South Pacific, South America,
Turkey and Portugal. First Prize winner of the Olga Koussevitzky Young
Artist Competition in New York and recipient of grants from the Martha
Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music and the French Government, he has
received international acclaim as a modern flutist and as one of the
foremost specialists on transverse flutes from the renaissance through
the early 19th century. He is the only musician to have been awarded
both the highest prize in the Concours Musica Antiqua in Bruges,
Belgium, which he won together with lutenist Stephen Stubbs, and the
Erwin Bodky Award in Boston - two of the most prestigious prizes for
performers on period instruments. He is artistic director of the Salish
Sea Early Music Festival and resides in Colville and Anacortes.

We hope to see you tomorrow (Monday) at 7:00 for our final Salish Sea Early Music Festival program this season: really, it's hard to do better than Bach. The C Minor violin sonata is amazing. And then there's Reinken! whose music Bach much admired and whose imaginative variations for solo harpsichord on a popular German folk song, dating from when Bach was 25, perfectly complement the emotional depth and rhythmic complexity of Bach's works ... and may even have helped inspire them. We hope you can join us! ... for this program without intermission of three Bach sonatas and the Reinken variations. Monday, July 8, 2024 at 7:00 PM:  • *Johann Sebastian Bach* •   — Faythe Vollrath (harpsichord)   — Jeffrey Cohan (baroque flute) *St. Luke's Memorial Episcopal Church *3615 North Gove Street in Tacoma www.salishseafestival.org/tacoma    — suggested donation $20 to $30 (a free will offering; pay as you wish)    — 18 and under free     ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷ Bach with Vollrath and Cohan Harpsichordist Faythe Vollrath from Sacramento, CA will join baroque flutist Jeffrey Cohan for this mostly-Johann Sebastian Bach extravaganza in the eighth and final 2024 Salish Sea Early Music Festival performance demonstrating the unparalleled mystery and emotional intensity of Bach’s compositional abilities, featuring transcriptions of his works originally for viola da gamba and another for violin, both with obbligato (or fully written-out) harpsichord in addition to sonatas originally written for flute by Bach both with continuo (a bass line with numbers denoting harmonies from which the harpsichordist improvises) and with obbligato harpsichord. Faythe Vollrath will play variations for solo harpsichord by Johann Adam Reinken (1643-1722) on the popular German folk tune “Schweiget mir von Weibernehmen” (‘shush, no more talk about womanizing”). Reinken was greatly admired by Bach, who made arrangements of several of his works.      ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷  ✣  ✷        Harpsichordist FAYTHE VOLLRATH is actively heard as a soloist and chamber musician throughout the United States. Hailed by the Wall Street Journal for her “subtly varied tempo and rhythm that sounds like breathing,” her solo performances include venues such as MusicSources in Berkeley, CA, Gothem Early Music in New York City, and Bruton Parish Church in Colonial Williamsburg, VA.        Enamored with the contrast of new music written for historic instruments, Faythe combines new vs. old elements in many of her performances  including concerts of new music in both Serbia and France featuring new American composers, for the Festival of New American Music in Sacramento, CA, and for the Center for New Music in San Francisco, CA. She has paired Japanese harpsichord works with Japanese art at the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, CA, and has performed in a columbarium as part of the Garden of Memory in Oakland, CA.        Faythe received first prize with an excellence nomination in the Vivaldi International Music Competition, and was a semi-finalist in the Petrichor International Music Competition, both in 2022. Additional awards include first place in the Charleston International Music Competition in 2021, semi-finalist in the 2012 Jurow International Harpsichord Competition, and the 2009 Betchel award recipient presented by the Midwestern Historical Keyboard Society. Her duo, Zweikampf, was a finalist in Early Music America’s inaugural Baroque Performance Competition. They have been featured on public radio in both Michigan and Arizona and perform throughout the United States. Faythe received her doctoral diploma from SUNY-Stony Brook under Arthur Haas, and artist diploma from the U of I Urbana-Champaign under Charlotte Mattax Moersch. She earned her Bachelors of Music in Piano Performance from CSU-Sacramento while studying piano with Richard Cionco.     JEFFREY COHAN, who according to the New York Times can “play several superstar flutists one might name under the table”, and is “The Flute Master” (headline) according to the Boston Globe, has performed throughout Europe, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, and for the USIA Arts America Program in the South Pacific, South America, Turkey and Portugal. First Prize winner of the Olga Koussevitzky Young Artist Competition in New York and recipient of grants from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music and the French Government, he has received international acclaim as a modern flutist and as one of the foremost specialists on transverse flutes from the renaissance through the early 19th century. He is the only musician to have been awarded both the highest prize in the Concours Musica Antiqua in Bruges, Belgium, which he won together with lutenist Stephen Stubbs, and the Erwin Bodky Award in Boston - two of the most prestigious prizes for performers on period instruments. He is artistic director of the Salish Sea Early Music Festival and resides in Colville and Anacortes.