Trace Johnson
July 23, 2021
Trace Johnson
Cellist Trace Johnson, a Madison native, has performed as a chamber musician, soloist and orchestral musician across the world, and will visit the Arts + Literature Laboratory for a pair of solo performances. Johnson currently plays with Sarasota Orchestra in Sarasota, Florida, and the Southwest Florida Symphony in Fort Myers, Florida. Besides performing, Johnson is a composer, arranger, recording artist and educator.
media release:
Admission: $10 advance online/$15 at the door - $5 discount to students/youth
Arts and Literature Laboratory will host solo performances by cellist Trace Johnson this summer. Solo cello works by Osvaldo Golijov, Laura Elise Schwendinger, J.S. Bach, Steven Stucky, and a premiere by New York-based composer Jesse Limbacher, will be presented in two intimate recitals on Wednesday, August 4th and Friday, August 6th at 7:00 PM. Tickets $10 ($5 Student/Youth) in advance online or $15 ($10 Student/Youth) at the doo
Scholarship competition named for board member Felicia Taylor s mother
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Palm Beach Daily News
Flutist Karen Fuller, a co-founder of the Palm Beach Chamber Music Festival, describes being able to perform in front of an audience for the first time in over a year with one word: huge.
“It s amazing. Performing is something that we ve all missed so incredibly much,” Fuller said. The COVID-19 pandemic closed cultural venues and nixed in-person performances for much of the past year.
Last year, the festival featured three 30-minute virtual concerts in partnership with Old School Square in Delray Beach.
The festival, founded by Fuller, clarinetist Michael Forte and bassoonist Michael Ellert, is celebrating its 30th anniversary this season.
Can you spot a criminal? Art Heist lets the audience be the detective
Palm Beach Daily News
If you’ve ever dreamed of being a detective or forensic scientist, the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts has the perfect show for you. Art Heist, an interactive performance produced by Right Angle Entertainment and based on the real-life art theft at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, is a “true crime walking show” where socially distanced groups move through five walkable locations to gather clues.
The show premieres Thursday and runs through May 16, with tickets starting at $41.50.
The audience will be able to interview a variety of characters adapted from the actual suspect list from the night. This includes the two thieves who on March 18, 1990 entered the museum in the middle of the night disguised as police officers, telling guards they were investigating a disturbance.
Daily News staff report
The Palm Beach Opera will celebrate its 60th anniversary this coming season with a three-opera lineup of well-known works, including two comedies and one of the world’s most-admired tragedies.
The operas will be presented at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts in West Palm Beach, the troupe’s usual home. In February, the company hosted a three-opera outdoor festival at the South Florida Fairgrounds, in what was a rare national return to staged opera amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The season will open Jan. 28-30 with one of the most popular operas in the repertoire, French composer Georges Bizet’s 1875 melodrama Carmen, the story of the tragic love of Don José, a Spanish soldier, for Carmen, a tempestuous Roma woman who refuses to be bound to conventional ways. The opera, the last major work of its short-lived composer, contains some of the best-known melodies in opera, such as Carmen s “Habanera” and the “Toreador So
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