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Timothy Judd, Suzuki Violin Lessons
Timothy Judd, Suzuki Violin Lessons
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Latest Listeners’ Club Posts

  • Remembering Chuck Mangione July 25, 2025
    Chuck Mangione, the American flugelhorn player, trumpeter, and composer, passed away last Tuesday (July 22) at his home in Rochester, New York. He was 84. Born in Rochester to Italian parents who were avid jazz fans, Mangione rose to prominence as a student at the Eastman School of Music. He performed with his brother, Gap Mangione in the e […]
  • Vivaldi’s “Sonno, se pur sei sonno” from “Tito Manlio”: Lucio’s Lament July 23, 2025
    Antonio Vivaldi’s opera, Tito Manlio, composed over the course of five days in December of 1718, centers around a turbulent moral dilemma. Love and loyalty to family come into conflict with duty and rigid adherence to the law. Here is a brief synopsis, provided by Naxos.com: Titus Manlius is engaged in war with the people of Latium. Conflic […]
  • Remembering Roger Norrington July 21, 2025
    Sir Roger Norrington, the English conductor known for historically informed performances, passed away last Friday, July 18. He was 91. Born in Oxford, Norrington rose to prominence in the 1960s when he revived and championed the choral music of the 17th century German composer, Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672). In 1962, Norrington founded the Sc […]
  • Ives’ “The Pond”: A Dreamy Elegy July 18, 2025
    Composed by Charles Ives in 1906, The Pond is a shimmering, atmospheric fragment, or, in the words of the composer, “a song without voice.” Evocative of a rippling pond on a lazy afternoon, the work is so brief that it unfolds as a fleeting dream. The Pond was the composer’s nostalgic elegy for his father, George Ives (1845–1894), a cornet […]
  • Prokofiev’s String Quartet No. 1 in B Minor: Classical Foundations July 16, 2025
    The impetus for Sergei Prokofiev’s First String Quartet came from America. In 1930, Prokofiev received the commission from the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation of the Library of Congress. The Brosa Quartet premiered the work in Washington, D.C. on April 25, 1931. At the time, Prokofiev lived in exile in Paris, having fled his native la […]
  • Beethoven’s Bagatelle, Op. 33 No. 4: Paul Lewis, Live at Wigmore Hall July 14, 2025
    From his teenage years in Bonn until the end of his life, Beethoven composed piano bagatelles. These brief, unpretentious pieces, which the composer called Kleinigkeiten, or “trifles,” were published in three sets (Op. 33, Op. 119, and Op. 126). They set the stage for the Romantic character pieces of later composers, such as Schumann, Chopi […]
  • Prokofiev’s Overture on Hebrew Themes: Klezmer Conversations July 11, 2025
    When the February Revolution of 1917 broke out in Petrograd, Sergei Prokofiev resettled in the United States, stating that his native Russia “had no use for music at the moment.” Soon after arriving in New York, the 28-year-old Prokofiev received a commission from Zimro, a touring Soviet ensemble made up of Russian Jewish immigrants. The ne […]
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  • Lessons
  • Performance Photos
  • Bio
  • The Listeners’ Club
  • Links
  • Media
  • Contact
  • Lesson Payments