SATURDAY • JULY 20 • 7:30 PM

HOLY TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH, EDMONTON | box-office | directions | tickets | calendar

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“Lubin is a complete master of his instrument, commands the imagination to enliven Mozart’s ideas, and possesses the musical intellect to perceive and render the inner architecture of each movement.” 

-The Whig-Standard

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Steven Lubin’s career as pianist and fortepianist has brought him to many of the great halls of North America, Europe, Asia and Australia, where he has appeared as concerto soloist and recitalist.  His modern-piano performances have been widely praised for their poetry, authority, interpretive freshness and technical excellence, and he is acknowledged worldwide as a founder of the 20th-century fortepiano revival.  His recordings for Decca, Harmonia Mundi USA, Arabesque and Classical Soundings—including his pioneering period-instrument recordings of Mozart concertos and his epoch-making complete cycle of Beethoven concertos on period instruments—have earned international acclaim, as have his recordings of the complete piano trios of Schubert and Mozart.

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Scott Timberg has been writing about music, the arts and pop culture for a quarter century. A former staff writer at the Los Angeles Times and Salon, his work has appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles magazine, GQ, and the LA Review of Books, where he is a contributing editor.

“A quietly radical rethinking of the very nature of art in modern life.”

-Richard Brody, NewYorker.com

His 2015 book, Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class, drew extensive press and radio attention all over the US and overseas: Timberg has spoken on the book — which looks at economic, technological, and sociological jolts to artists, writers, and musicians — at conferences and festivals across the United States, Canada, and Ireland. The book won the National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Award and was hailed by The New Yorker as “a quietly radical rethinking of the very nature of art in modern life.” Some of the book’s concerns show up on the ArtsJournal blog CultureCrash.

Raised in Maryland and educated at Wesleyan University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Timberg lives in Los Angeles with his wife and son. He is currently working on a book called Beeswing: Britain, Folk Rock, and the End of the ‘60s with the guitarist Richard Thompson.

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PROGRAMME

Beethoven and Mozart: Why Music From the Past Still Matters
Talk by Scott Timberg, author
Intermission
Mozart, Beethoven… and Mozart
Steven Lubin, piano
W. A. Mozart
(1756-1791)
Variations in C on “Ah, vous dirai-je Maman,” K.300e
L v. Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Sonata in F minor, Op.57 (Appassionata)
Allegro assai
Andante con moto
Allegro ma non troppo—Presto
W. A. Mozart Sonata in F, K.332
Allegro
Adagio
Allegro assai

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Beethoven and Mozart: Why Music From the Past Still Matters

Talk by Scott Timberg, author

With the huge amount of culture – popular and otherwise – available to people in 2019, why do some of us return to art and music from hundreds of years ago? Does it offer something – something better, something different? — we can’t get otherwise? This address will use three pieces of Mozart’s and Beethoven to look at the origins and importance of art music from the past. Scott Timberg will extend some arguments from his book Culture Crash to consider why these composers and others continue to find advocates and audiences for their work, decades after classical music in the English-speaking world was supposed to have died a natural death. What does it tell us about the future of culture-making?

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