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Jaime Laredo In a 2017 interview on the Violin Channel, renowned violinist and conductor Jaime Laredo was asked which side of him the public never sees. I m very cranky, and I m very often in a terrible mood, he answered with a laugh. Nobody ever sees that of me. Indeed. As Laredo s 20-year tenure as music director of the Vermont Symphony Orchestra comes to an end this week, people around the state are remembering him as the nicest guy ever as well as a beloved musician and mentor. He s so generous and so kind, and I think that vibe has become a part of who the orchestra is, said David Ludwig, who became the VSO s composer-in-residence in 2004 and is now the new-music adviser. Orchestras often reflect their conductors, and this orchestra is a family.
In late August 2020, vioinist Jaime Laredo and cellist Sharon Robinson performed to a reduced density audience at the Great Lakes Center for the Arts.
Prior to that evening, the last time the two had performed for an audience in person was in early March of 2020.
The program is featured this week on Classical IPR in Concert. Listen Friday at 8 p.m., Sunday at noon or click on the link below to listen at any time.
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Sharon Robinson and Jaime Laredo Before people can fall in love, they have to find each other. This can happen in myriad ways, as interviews with half a dozen Vermont couples reveal. The spark can occur with one look across a crowded barroom or during an almost-blind date arranged through the personals. Sometimes, an off-putting first impression or larger impediment has to be overcome for a relationship to proceed. But this happens regularly, as Carole Ziter, half of one of our featured partnerships (and in her 52nd year of marriage), observed in an email to
Seven Days. As so often happens, all obstacles and objections disappeared as we got to know each other, Carole wrote about meeting Tom, the man she married in the summer of 1964.