Check It Out

The Roanoke Times iPad app has a new look and a few new features. Learn more here.

Masters flautist to teach and perform Saturday, Nov. 3 and Sunday, Nov. 4 at Virginia Tech

From my Inbox to you:

Brooks de Wetter-Smith

BLACKSBURG, Va. — Flutist Brooks de Wetter-Smith will present a guest artist recital on Sunday, Nov. 4 at 3 p.m. in the Squires Recital Salon on the campus of Virginia Tech. He will be joined by Department of Music faculty members Tracy Cowden, piano and Elizabeth Crone, flute. The program will feature works by Gaubert, Schoenfield, Schocker, and Franck.

De Wetter-Smith, the James Gordon Hanes Distinguished Professor at the University of North Carolina, is in great demand as a recitalist, concerto soloist, and master class teacher. His recordings span baroque, romantic, 20th century, and jazz-inspired repertoire, many of which include world premieres and works commissioned by or dedicated to him. His performances have been broadcast live on radio and television, including Radio Bremen, Bavarian Radio, Salzburg Radio, Radio/Television Hong Kong, and Public Broadcasting Service affiliates. Recently, he has been actively engaged in exploring traditional Arabic improvisation techniques, an outgrowth of his long-standing interest in jazz. He has combined his work in the Middle East with the study of Brazilian jazz/folk elements, suggesting a close connection between both Arabic music and western jazz traditions via West Africa. He was awarded a Fulbright Senior Professorship to teach at the Hochschule für Musik in Munich and Cologne as well as the Escola Superior in Lisbon, Portugal, and he is former president of the National Flute Association.

His principal teachers include James Galway, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Karlheinz Zöller, Walfrid Kujala, and James Pappoutsakis. He holds a D.M.A. degree from the Eastman School of Music and is the James Gordon Hanes Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

De Wetter-Smith will also present a flute masterclass for the Virginia Tech flute studio on Saturday, Nov. 3 at 10 a.m. in the Squires Recital Salon. The class is free and open to the public.

Tickets for the recital are $5 general and $3 for seniors and students. Tickets are available at the venue door beginning one hour prior to the performance.

Free parking is available in the Squires Lot, located at the corner of College Avenue and Otey Streets, in the Architecture Annex Lot on Otey Street, and the Perry Street/Prices Fork lots. Find more parking information online or call 540-231-3200. Alternative parking is available in the Kent Square parking garage and the Farmers Market metered parking lot, both located on Draper Road. Additional Downtown Blacksburg parking information can be found online.

Virginia Tech’s School of Performing Arts and Cinema, a unit within the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, is comprised of the Department of Music and the Department of Theatre and Cinema. The school’s mission is to elevate awareness and expand the impact of the shared creative experience through discovery, learning, and engagement. In addition to presenting more than 200 theater productions, music recitals, and concerts each year, the school produces the annual Summer Arts Festival and maintains the university’s artist registry.

Start the conversation

Error submitting comment

Name is required

A valid email is required (test@test.com)

Comment is required

Add a comment

Your email address will not be published.
All fields are required to comment.

processing

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Weather Journal

Some severe storm risk thru Thurs.

Wed, 22 May 2013 13:19:25 +0000

About this blog

Mike Allen blogs about the regional arts community, as well as those curious and quirky things that can only be classified as "culture."

RSS feed








Recent Comments

  • Mike Allen: Hi, Antinette. I have a link at the top of this entry to the Roanoke Art Mural Project’s Facebook...
  • Antinette Beane: Hi, I am a mother of a child who has a gift of putting wonderful colors and objects together. His...
  • Jimmy: They haven’t figured out a way to do it yet because the museums don’t want Center in their pockets...
  • Chris VanCantfort: Additional facts. The Center In The Square and the Science Museum are separate corporations in a...
  • lel6: Even when the former science museum was open, the price did not justify the poor quality of exhibits. I much...


Related Links

Categories

Archives