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Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference in Ocean Engineering (ICOE2018). K. Murali, V. Sriram, Abdus Samad, Nilanjan Saha, editors

Online Resource




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Suffrage on the Menu, Part II: The Marble House Conferences of 1909 and 1914

Written by Ina Bort Our last post explored the biography of Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, the doyenne-turned-activist we believe commissioned this plate’s manufacture. Today we explore the first of two likely scenarios where this and similar plates may have been used: The suffrage conferences Alva organized at Marble House, her Newport estate, in 1909 and 1914....

The post Suffrage on the Menu, Part II: The Marble House Conferences of 1909 and 1914 appeared first on Behind The Scenes.




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From Cotton Fields to Laundry Strikes: Black Women’s Labor During Reconstruction and Jim Crow

If you were watching television in the 1990s, you are probably familiar with the jingle “the touch, the feel, of cotton. The fabric of our lives.” In many ways, cotton has also long been the fabric of our country. Many correctly associate the growing of cotton in the United States with the institution of slavery....

The post From Cotton Fields to Laundry Strikes: Black Women’s Labor During Reconstruction and Jim Crow appeared first on Behind The Scenes.




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Exploring the universe: a collection of research reviews on contemporary astrophysics and space science / Banibrata Mukhopadhyay, Supdipta Sasmal, editors

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Chondrules: records of protoplanetary disk processes / edited by Sara S. Russell, Natural History Museum, London, Harold C. Connolly Jr., Rowan University, New Jersey, and Alexander N. Krot, University of Hawaii, Manoa

Hayden Library - QB758.5.C46 C456 2018




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Principles of gravitational lensing: light deflection as a probe of astrophysics and cosmology / Arthur B. Congdon, Charles R. Keeton

Online Resource




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Stellar Populations and the Distance Scale: a conference in honor of Jeremy Mould: proceedings of a conference held at Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics at Peking University, Beijing, China, 11-15 September 2017 / edited by Joseph B. Jensen,

Hayden Library - QB819.S74 2017




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Proceedings of the International Conference of Young Astrophysicists and Astronomers (ICYAA 2018): conference date, 8 June 2018: location, Padova, Italy / editors, Eugenio Bottacini and Elena Orlando

Online Resource




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Exotic nuclei and nuclear/particle astrophysics (VII): physics with small accelerators: proceedings of Carpathian Summer School of Physics 2016 (CSSP18): conference date, 1-14 July 2018: location, Sinaia, Romania / editors, Livius Trache and Alexandra Spi

Online Resource




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Saturn in the 21st century / edited by Kevin H. Baines (University of Wisconsin, Madison), F. Michael Flasar (NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center), Norbert Krupp (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne), Tom Stallard (University of Leicest

Hayden Library - QB671.S2445 2018




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Mathematical models in contact mechanics / M. Sofonea, A. Matei

Barker Library - TA353.S55 2012




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Vibration, structural engineering and measurement II: selected, peer-reviewed papers from the 2012 international conference on vibration, structural engineering and measurement (ICVSEM 2012), October 19-21, 2012, Shanghai, China / edited by Chunliang Zhan

Barker Library - TA355.V58 2012




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Applied mechanics and civil engineering II: selected, peer reviewed papers from the Second SREE Workshop on Applied Mechanics and Civil Engineering (AMCE 2012), September 15-16, 2012, Hong Kong / edited by Liquan Xie

Barker Library - TA349.A66 2012




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Modeling and control in vibrational and structural dynamics: a differential geometric approach / Peng-Fei Yao

Barker Library - TA355.Y36 2011




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Modelling turbulence in engineering and the environment: second-moment routes to closure / Kemal Hanjalić and Brian Launder

Barker Library - TA357.5.T87 H367 2011




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Numerical methods in contact mechanics / Vladislav A. Yastrebov

Barker Library - TA353.Y37 2013




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Laser metrology in fluid mechanics: granulometry, temperature and concentration measurements / edited by Alain Boutier

Barker Library - TA357.5.M43 L37 2013




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Applied mechanics and industrial technologies: selected, peer reviewed papers from the 2012 International Conference on Applied Mechanics and Manufacturing Technology (AMMT 2012), August 14-15, 2012, Jakarta, Indonesia / edited by Ford Lumban Gaol

Barker Library - TA349.I578 2012




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Numerical simulation of multiphase reactors with continuous liquid phase / Chao Yang and Zai-Sha Mao

Barker Library - TA357.5.M84 Y36 2014




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Optimal modified continuous Galerkin CFD / A. J. Baker

Barker Library - TA357.B273 2014




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Advanced research on applied mechanics and manufacturing system: selected, peer reviewed papers from the 2012 International Conference on Applied Mechanics and Manufacturing System (AMMS2012), November 24-25, 2012, Guangzhou, China / edited by Helen Zhang

Barker Library - TA349.I579 2012




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Engineering trends: materials science, mechanics and kinematics: selected, peer reviewed papers from the 2nd International Conference on Kinematics, Mechanics of Rigid Bodies, and Materials 2014 (KINEMATICS 2014), November 29-30, 2014, Bandung, Indonesia

Hayden Library - TA349.K56 2015




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38th advanced computational fluid dynamics: adjoint methods and their application in computational fluid dynamics: September 14-17, 2015 / edited by H. Deconinck & T. Horvath

Barker Library - TA357.5.D37 A15 2015




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Two-phase flow, boiling and condensation in conventional and miniature systems / S. Mostafa Ghiaasiaan, Georgia Institute of Technology

Barker Library - TA357.G4625 2017




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Active flow control: techniques and applications / edited by S. Lavagnoli

Barker Library - TA357.A28 2017




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Annihilation conquest / writers, Dan Abnett [and four others] ; pencilers, Sean Chen [and eight others] ; inkers, Scott Hanna [and nine others] ; colorists, Guru-eFX [and four others] ; artists, Mike Perkins, Kyle Hotz ; letterers, Virtual Calligraphy

Hayden Library - PN6728.A66 A36 2015




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Mobile suit Gundam. story and art, Yasuo Ohtagaki ; original concept by Hajime Yatate and Yoshiyuki Tomino ; translation, Joe Yamazaki ; English adaptation, Stani ; touch-up art & lettering, Evan Waldinger ; cover & design, Shawn Carrico ; editor

Hayden Library - PN6790.J34.K5413 2016




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Terms and conditions: the graphic novel / R. Sikoryak

Hayden Library - PN6727.S51572 T47 2017




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Solid state / concept by Jonathan Coulton ; written by Matt Fraction ; art by Albert Monteys ; lettering by Barbaink ; edited by Lauren Sankovitch

Hayden Library - PN6728.S57 F74 2017




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Superman: the persistence of an American icon / Ian Gordon

Hayden Library - PN6728.S9 G67 2017




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Make ours Marvel: media convergence and a comics universe / edited by Matt Yockey

Hayden Library - PN6725.M34 2017




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Comic book film style: cinema at 24 panels per second / Dru Jeffries

Hayden Library - PN6725.J43 2017




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Cyborg / John Semper Jr., writer ; Paul Pelletier, Will Conrad, Timothy Green II [and two others], pencillers ; Tony Kordos, Sandra Hope, Scott Hanna [and four others], inkers ; Guy Major, Hi-Fi, Ivan Nunes, colorists ; Rob Leigh, letterer ; Will Conrad

Hayden Library - PN6728.C96 S46 2017




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Condo heartbreak disco / Eric Kostiuk Williams

Hayden Library - PN6733.W55 C66 2017




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Gotham Academy second semester / written by Brenden Fletcher, Becky Cloonan, Karl Kerschl ; pencils by Adam Archer ; inks by Sandra Hope ; background painting by Msassyk ; breakdowns by Rob Haynes ; color by Msassyk, Serge Lapointe, Chris Sotomayor ; let

Hayden Library - PN6728.G687 F45 2017




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The Concerts Office Responds to Corona Virus

March 17, 2020

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The Concerts Office Responds to Corona Virus

On Thursday, March 13, the Library of Congress closed all Library buildings to the public. Within a few days, all public events in March and April were canceled. These cancellations are a measure of caution to promote social distancing and to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 virus. The events affected include:

  • March 17, Takács Quartet
  • March 18, Tabea Zimmerman and Javier Perianes
  • March 28, “Manuscript Music for Men’s Chorus”
  • March 31, “Japanese American Influence in Appalachian Spring”
  • April 4, Conrad Tao and Caleb Teicher
  • April 9, Miles Davis: The Birth of the Cool
  • April 16, The Ballad of Fred Hersch
  • April 17, Bang On A Can All-Stars: Field Recordings
  • April 23, The Jazz Loft According to W. Eugene Smith
  • April 25, “The Beethoven Complex”
  • May 1, Flux Quartet with Oliver Lake & Donal Fox
  • May 2, Flux Quartet with Donal Fox
  • May 8, International Contemporary Ensemble

The Concert Office will attempt to reschedule performances subject to artist and space availability.

We have received inquiries about presenting our concerts via webcast. We are unable to implement that option because many of our artists are restricted from traveling to our location. 

To promote social distancing within the Library, Concert Office staff, as well as many other Music Division staff, are teleworking; therefore, if you need to reach the office, please contact us by email at concerts@loc.gov.

Do you need ideas on how to cope with social distancing? We have a few suggestions for your consideration. This is the perfect time to visit our YouTube channel and revive some of your favorite performances of Concerts from the Library of Congress. You can visit our YouTube channel here. In addition, please visit and learn more about our online music collections. You can visit our online collections here Digital Music Collections. Lastly, on March 29, you can watch the PBS premiere of the 2020 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song Concert celebrating Garth Brooks. Here is the link 2020 Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.

We want to send a heartfelt thank you to all our fellow artists and patrons for their support and understanding of the current situation. We want to reassure you that Concerts from the Library of Congress cares for the safety of all its patrons, artists, and staff. We wish all of you health, and we hope that soon we will be able to go back to our normal operations.

If you no longer wish to receive emails from the Music Division of the Library of Congress, feel free to update your subscription HERE





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Library of Congress Gershwin Prize Airs This Sunday

March 27, 2020

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Gershwin Prize Concert: Garth Brooks

Watch Promo Clip Here

The concert will air this Sunday, March 29, 2020 at 9:00 ET, on PBS. Watch the performance of Garth Brooks here.

Early this month, The Library of Congress celebrated the 2020 Gershwin Prize for Popular Song honoring the mega country music star, Garth Brooks. Brooks is one of the significant changemakers in the history of country music. His music weaves the beauty of poetry, the universality of the human experience and the inclusiveness of other musical genres, making him one of the most influential performers in country music today. 


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Pick of the Week from Concerts from The Library of Congress

March 30, 2020

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Hello Music News subscriber!

The music never stops at Concerts from the Library of Congress. You can enjoy many FREE videos of past performances from the Library of Congress. To guide you through your options, the Concert Office has created Pick of the Week. Every week, we will send you a list of performances for you to enjoy from the comfort of your home. But remember, these are our suggestions, there are many more options at Concerts from The Library of Congress

Kristian Bezuidenhout

In 2016 fortepiano phenomenon Kristian Bezuidenhout brought this unique instrument to life in a rare treat for Coolidge audiences. Known for his thoughtful and energetic performances of concerti, Lieder, chamber music and solo repertoire, Bezuidenhout trains his eye on some of the riches of the mid-1790s for his appearance at the Library.

Doric Quartet

In 2018, The Doric Quartet performed Beethoven’s op. 130 with its original finale, the still avant-garde Grosse Fuge at the Concerts from the Library of Congress. Charismatic, commanding performances and eloquent recordings of the complete Schumann and Korngold quartets explain Gramophone’s description of the group: “musicians with fascinating things to say.”

Europa Galante Concert

Revived the 2018 performance of Europa Galante.  Founded by the brilliant violinist and conductor Fabio Biondi, Italy’s Europa Galante is one of the world’s most admired period performance ensembles, particularly known for masterly performances of the music of Antonio Vivaldi. The concert highlighted two of his dazzlingly imaginative Concerti dell’ Addio, the Farewell Concertos written in the final year of his life, and works by Venetian and Viennese contemporaries who may have influenced him.

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Pick of the Weekend from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 3, 2020

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The weekend is here and Concerts from the Library of Congress brings you...Pick of the Weekend, free video performances to keep you company. 


This weekend's pick is dedicated to our colleague Larry Applebaum who is retiring from the Music Division after four decades of creative and innovative work. 
For this Pick of the Weekend we are sharing with you some of his great interviews with jazz masters and the artists' performances at the Library.  For more of Larry's story at the Library of Congress, here is a link to his most recent blog post


Abdullah Ibrahim & Larry Appelbaum in Conversation

Abdullah Ibrahim talks with Larry Appelbaum about jazz as part of the Library of Congress Jazz Scholars program.

Abdullah Ibrahim Concert

Jazz pianist and composer Abdullah Ibrahim celebrated his Library of Congress residency with a captivating concert that left the audience in awe of his authenticity as a performer. A onetime protégé of Duke Ellington, Ibrahim has become a cultural icon in his native South Africa, through his commitment to expanding music education opportunities and developing the nation’s unique jazz scene.

 


Maria Schneider & Larry Applebaum in Conversation

Jazz artist Maria Schneider discusses her approach to the creative process and her collaboration with David Bowie in an interview with Larry Appelbaum. Recorded in conjunction with the world premiere of Schneider's Library of Congress commission "Data Lords," presented in association with the Reva and David Logan Foundation.

Maria Schneider Concert

Maria Schneider’s music has been hailed by critics as “evocative, majestic, magical, heart-stoppingly gorgeous, and beyond categorization.” The multiple GRAMMY® award-winning composer and bandleader spent a packed week at the Library on the spring of 2016 for a special residency project. On the agenda were explorations of the Library’s treasure trove of scores and memorabilia, plus workshops for students and conversations with curators. Schneider conducted her terrific orchestra—a crack 17-member collective made up of many of the finest jazz musicians performing —and unveiled her new Library of Congress commission, created through the support of the Reva and David Logan Foundation, in memory of David Logan.


A Conversation With Dafnis Prieto and Larry Appelbaum

Host of WPFW's "Sound of Surprise" Larry Appelbaum of the Library of Congress' Music Division, interviews Dafnis Prieto.

Dafnis Prieto SÍ O SÍ Quartet Concert

with guest artist, Christian Howes, violin
“Prieto’s music explodes with energy… original compositions with a singular passion and intensity.”

Cuban-born composer and drummer Dafnis Prieto is unquestionably one of the most important leaders of the New Latin Jazz movement.  He has wonderfully blurred the line between traditional Latin-jazz and 21-century postbop, fusing Afro-Cuban rhythms and modern jazz harmonies.

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Pick of the Week from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 6, 2020

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Hello Music News subscriber!

The music never stops at Concerts from the Library of Congress. You can enjoy many FREE videos of past performances from the Library of Congress. To guide you through your options, the Concert Office has created Pick of the Week. Every week, we will send you a list of performances for you to enjoy from the comfort of your home. But remember, these are our suggestions, there are many more options at Concerts from The Library of Congress. 

Minguet Quartett

Regulars at major music festivals and concert halls across the globe, this award-winning quartet takes its name from 18th-century Spanish philosopher Pablo Minguet, who wished to make the arts accessible to everyone. Champions of contemporary composers like Rihm and Stockhausen, the Minguet is equally at home with Romantic masters. Treasures both new and well-known are on offer in this beautiful program, including favorites by Czech composers and a transcription of one of Gustav Mahler’s most affecting lieder.

Ensemble Signal 

In 2017, our season opened with an extraordinary evening of chamber works by a pioneering composer whose music has profoundly influenced composers and musicians worldwide. The Library and Washington Performing Arts joined forces to present this special concert featuring the East Coast premiere of Runner, for winds, percussion, strings, and two pianos. Brad Lubman conducts the fearless supergroup Ensemble Signal, which has enjoyed a long and cordial relationship with the composer.

Roger Steffens: Oral History of Bob Marley

Reggae historian and collector Roger Steffens’ new book So Much Things to Say: The Oral History of Bob Marley (W.W. Norton Press) isa rich new oral biography” (New York Times) offering the author’s intimate, revelatory interviews with Marley’s family and musical partners. Steffens speaks from the expert viewpoint of a journalist, musician and producer known for four decades of reggae scholarship as well as tours with the artist, and the impressive resources of his own Marley collection of recordings and memorabilia, the world’s largest.

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Pick of the Weekend from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 10, 2020

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The weekend is here and Concerts from the Library of Congress brings you...Pick of the Weekend, free video performances to keep you company. 

For this Pick of the Weekend, we are sharing with you the 2016 Martha Graham Festival at the Library of Congress. Concerts from the Library of Congress celebrated the long partnership between the Library of Congress and Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance. A fun fact, did you know that Martha Graham danced at the Coolidge Auditorium? We hope you enjoy!


Isamu Nogushi's Dance Set

Dakin Hart discussed Martha Graham and Isamu Noguchi's explorations of the archetypal spaces of myth, including the American west, the Minotaur's labyrinth and the "cave of the heart."


Martha Graham Dance Company 

In April of 2016, the Martha Graham Dance Company presented three performances in our festival week, offering a trio of the five Graham ballets commissioned by the Library: Appalachian Spring (music by Aaron Copland); Cave of the Heart (music by Samuel Barber) and Dark Meadow (music by Carlos Chávez).


Martha Graham Dance Company: Discussion with Pontus Lidberg and Janet Eilber

Anne McLean leads a discussion with Swedish choreographer Pontus Lidberg and the Martha Graham Dance Company's artistic director Janet Eilber. Lidberg received a dance commission from the Library of Congress and Martha Graham Dance Company, which resulted in the work "Woodland," set to the Notturno for strings and harp by Irving Fine. Eilber discusses the long and storied history of the Martha Graham Dance Company, and its ongoing relationship with the Library of Congress, which commissioned "Appalachian Spring."


Conversation with Pontus Lidberg

Swedish choreographer Pontus Lidberg discusses his career and his Library of Congress/Martha Graham Dance Company co-commission, "Woodland," with Nicholas Brown. Set "Notturno for strings and harp" by Irving Fine, "Woodland" was commissioned for the 90th anniversary season of "Concerts from the library of Congress." Part of the "Martha Graham at the Library" Festival and presented in association with the Embassy of Sweden and Swedish Arts Council.

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Pick of the Week from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 13, 2020

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The week has started and Concerts from the Library of Congress brings you...Pick of the Week, free video performances, lectures and conversations to keep you company. 

This Pick of the Week takes us back to 2016 when the Library of Congress celebrated Bibliodiscotheque,  a series of programs that explored the legacy of disco and its impact on popular culture. We hope you enjoy. 

Tim Gunn on Disco Fashion

In April of 2016, Deputy Librarian of Congress Robert Newlen interviewed fashion icon and native-Washingtonian Tim Gunn about the history of fashion in the disco era and its impact on modern fashion. Gunn is a past chair of fashion design at Parsons School of Design, where he was on faculty from 1982-2007. He is a design mentor and host of the hit television show Project Runway, which has garnered him a primetime Emmy Award. Gunn is the author of five books.

Bibliodiscotheque Symposium, featuring Gloria Gaynor

As part of the series, the Library explored the history of disco music, dance and culture in an afternoon symposium that featured appearances by Gloria Gaynor, Good Morning America host Robin Roberts, distinguished music scholars Martin Scherzinger and Alice Echols, photographer Bill Bernstein, and Yolanda Baker, the only disco ball maker in the United States.

Lecture: "Disco's Influence on European Dance Music"

Music Specialist James Wintle of the Library's Music Division lectured on the influence of disco on European dance music.

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Pick of the Weekend from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 17, 2020

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Pick of the Weekend, free video performances, lectures and conversations to keep you company. 


This Pick of the Weekend takes us back to our 2016-2017 season. We have a robust selection of performances, including tenor, Mark Padmore, Musicians from Marlboro, and a performance by musicians from the Santa Fe Music Festival, including Brett Dean, Tony Arnold, Juho Pohjonen, and the Orion Quartet. In addition, we paired these performances with their pre-concert lectures. We hope you enjoy it. 


Mark Padmore, tenor | Andrew West, piano

English tenor Mark Padmore is one of the most revered artists on the international touring scene, and was recognized with the 2016 Musical America Vocalist of the Year Award. Padmore’s exquisite artistry was on display in an intimate evening for voice and piano. He was joined by frequent recital partner pianist Andrew West who has collaborated with the likes of Florian Boesch, Alice Coote, and Roderick Williams, and is on faculty at the Royal Academy of Music.

“Gentlemen Prefer the Taubenpost: Love and Longing in the Songs of Beethoven and Schubert” 

In conjunction with a recital by tenor Mark Padmore and pianist Andrew West, David Plylar of the Music Division lectured on love and longing in the songs of Beethoven and Schubert.


Musicians from Marlboro

Alexi Kenney, violin  |  Robin Scott, violin  |
Shuangshuang Liu, viola
Peter Stumpf, cello  |  Zoltán Fejérvári, piano

The Viennese schools were well-represented in this season’s final appearance of the Musicians from Marlboro. In addition to several classics by old friends, we heard a comparably expansive early quartet by Anton Webern, a composer renowned for his economy of means. The manuscript of Webern’s 1905 quartet is housed in the Hans Moldenhauer Archive in the Library of Congress.

Presented in association with the Bill and Mary Meyer Concert Series of the Smithsonian Freer and Sackler Galleries

Musicians from Marlboro Interview

Members of Musicians from Marlboro discuss their work as chamber musicians, the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont and the creative environment at summer music festivals. This interview was presented in conjunction with a performance by Musicians from Marlboro at the Library.


Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival:
Orion String Quartet, Brett Dean, Tony Arnold, and Juho Pohjonen

Orion String Quartet
Brett Dean, viola   |  Tony Arnold, soprano  |  Juho Pohjonen, piano

This concert highlighted the music of Australian composer and violist Brett Dean, who premiered a new work for viola and piano—a Library co-commission—with Juho Pohjonen.  His arresting monodrama “And once I played Ophelia” featured the remarkable soprano Tony Arnold as protagonist. Striking, imaginative effects in both vocal and string writing sketched a passionate figure the composer calls a “feistier” Ophelia. The manuscript for Schoenberg’s second quartet was given to the Library of Congress by Gertrude Clarke Whittall.

Presented in association with the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival

Santa Fe Music Chamber Festival Interview 

Anne McLean of the Music Division discussed the Library's collaboration with the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, which culminated in a concert at the Library. Joining her were violist/composer Brett Dean, pianist Juho Pohjonen, and Steven Ovitsky, executive director of the festival. The discussion covered the performance program and special projects.

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Pick of the Week from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 20, 2020

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Pick of the Week, free video performances, lectures and conversations to keep you company. 

This Pick of the Week brings you two great jazz concerts, Pérez, Cohen, Potter Quintet and the Saiyuki Trio with Rudresh Mahanthappa.  In the Jazz Conversation section, we have Puerto Rican saxophonist and composer, Miguel Zenón discussing his career, education and latest projects. To close, Larry Applebaum from the Music Division engages in an interview with legendary jazz double bassist Ron Carter. As always, Pick of the Week is full of energy and fantastic music. We hope you enjoy!


Pérez, Cohen, Potter Quintet with Larry Grenadier and Nate Smith


The Pérez, Cohen, Potter Quintet is a new collaborative project by a remarkable trio of bandleaders: pianist and composer Danilo Pérez, trumpeter Avishai Cohen and über saxophonist Chris Potter. It’s an all-star lineup at the forefront of jazz today. You’ll sense  the chemistry that grew out of the trio's Jazz 100 tour in 2017 celebrating the centennials of Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald and Thelonious Monk and hear some great new compositions written especially for this tour.



The Saiyuki Trio with Rudresh Mahanthappaalto saxophone

“ …daring and rewarding fusion…a genuinely international music.”
The New York Times

This concert brings “sound magic” from a trio whose name means “Journey to the West.” French jazz guitarist Nguyên Lê studied visual arts and philosophy before working with artists like Ornette Coleman, Ray Charles, and Mauricio Kagel. Influences from Jimi Hendrix to the traditional music of Vietnam meld harmonies from East and West to paint “an Asia without borders.”

Jazz Conversation: Miguel Zenón 

Multiple Grammy nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenón talks about his music, his work as an educator, and his latest recording "Tipico."  


Jazz Conversation: Ron Carter


Ron Carter is among the most original, prolific, and influential bassists in jazz history, with more than 2,200 albums to his credit, an accomplishment honored in the 2015 Guinness Book of World Records. 


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Pick of the Weekend from Concerts from The Library of Congress

April 24, 2020

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The Library of Congress is celebrating 220 years, providing access to literacy, education, and culture. Please join us to wish the Library a happy birthday. 

This Pick of the Weekend celebrates the Library's many gifts to the public by featuring American musical theater. From our 2014-2015 season, we bring you a unique performance with Steven Lutvak, Jeanine Tesori, and David Yazbek. We are paring it with Warren Hoffman's thought-provoking lecture "Race and the Broadway Musical" and with the 2005 program that celebrated the publication of the book "Theaters" from author Craig Morrison. We hope you enjoy it. And again, Happy 220th birthday Library of Congress!


From our 2014-2015 season: 

Steven Lutvak / Jeanine Tesori / David Yazbek

A thrilling evening with three of Broadway’s hottest musical creators performing their own music—Steven Lutvak, Jeanine Tesori and David Yazbek make a rare appearance in Washington for an intimate evening of music, lyrics and magic.

STEVEN LUTVAK’s rise to Broadway fame was met with the Tony Award for Best Musical in 2014 for A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder. Lutvak is a past recipient of the Kleban Award for Lyric Writing for the Theater and the Fred Ebb Award for Songwriting for the Theater.

JEANINE TESORI
From Thoroughly Modern Millie to Violet and Caroline, or Change, Tesori’s musicals have become modern classics, garnering her four Tony nominations and the Olivier Award for Best New Musical.
Photo credit: Matthew Karas

DAVID YAZBEK
David Yazbek, a three-time Tony nominee, is known for his comedic musicals The Full MontyDirty Rotten Scoundrels, and Woman on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. He is also a GRAMMY-nominated producer, Emmy-winning TV writer, and co-composer of the theme song to PBS’s Where in The World is Carmen Sandiego?


Race and the Broadway Musical


A lecture with Warren Hoffman, Ph.D

Warren Hoffman, a program director, producer, theater critic, and playwright, discusses the role of race in American musical theater. Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Kanter called Hoffman’s book “an eye-opener for anyone studying the racial implications of commercial musical theater.”

Presented in conjunction with the Library of Congress exhibition
“The Civil Rights Act of 1964: A Long Struggle for Freedom”

Presented in association with Songs of America and the Library of Congress Daniel A.P. Murray African American Culture Association


Theaters

The Library of Congress and W.W. Norton & Company celebrated the publication of "Theaters" with a special program of music and entertainment. Featured were an illustrated overview of the book by the author, Craig Morrison; a performance by Ted van Griethuysen of the Shakespeare Theatre Company; a musical performance by Genevieve Williams featuring songs composed by Cole Porter, George and Ira Gershwin, Howard Dietz and Irving Berlin; and a performance by the noted Russian pianist Svetlana Potanina of compositions by Sergei Rachmaninoff and Robert Schumann.


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Pick of the Week from Concerts from the Library of Congress

April 27, 2020

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The Library of Congress is celebrating 220 years of advocacy and support for scholarship, literacy, education, and culture. Please join us in wishing the Library a happy birthday. 

This Pick of the Week features the 2009 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song honoree Stevie Wonder.  As part of the celebration, Stevie Wonder gave a concert in the Coolidge Auditorium and premiered his composition Sketches of a Life for chamber orchestra commissioned by the McKim Fund in the Library of Congress. In addition, we bring you Stevie Wonder's conversation with former Senior Music Specialist, Norman Middleton. In his interview, he discusses his new composition, his journey as an artist and his creative process. We hope you enjoy it! 


 

Stevie Wonder performs Library Commission Sketches of a Life

Music legend Stevie Wonder, honoree of the 2009 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, premieres Sketches of a Life, a hybrid pop-classical work for chamber orchestra.


Stevie Wonder discusses Library Commission Sketches of a Life

Stevie Wonder talks to Norman Middleton of the Library's Music Division about his new Library of Congress commission Sketches of a Life and his thoughts about composition and music.

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Pick of the Weekend from Concerts from the Library of Congress

May 1, 2020

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Chucho Valdés in Conversation

On Saturday, October 16, 2019, Concerts from the Library of Congress hosted Afro-Cuban jazz master, Chucho Valdés. Founder and director of the legendary Cuban jazz band Irakere, winner of six GRAMMYs and four Latin GRAMMYs, Chucho Valdés is not just an authority in the jazz world, he is a living legend.  This Pick of the Week features Chucho Valdés in conversation with Music Specialist, Claudia Morales. 

In this fun and intimate conversation, Chucho Valdés reacts to some treasures from our music collections that include music composed by his father, one of the most representative musicians in the history of Cuban music, pianist and composer, Bebo Valdés. He also reacts to a photo of him and the American drummer Max Roach from the Max Roach Papers housed in the Music Division. Chucho’s reaction to the materials was simply heartwarming.

No one talks to Chucho Valdés without talking about Irakere. I had so many questions to ask, but I was primarily interested in learning about his experience with religious syncretism, the merging of two or more religions in a new belief, as an element of his music. Chucho told me about his exposure to Santeria through his grandfather and to the Catholic church through his grandmother, and how he mixed these elements with jazz and funk to create the Timba Cubana. 

We concluded the interview with the question: what would you say to the new generation of musicians? Chucho’s answer was the summary of the musician that he is; he mentioned discipline as the number one characteristic a musician must have. Discipline plus passion for music have spurred this now 79-year-old Afro-Cuban jazz master to continue his musical journey that includes writing an opera, touring around the globe with a robust calendar of performances, and now, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, connecting with his audience via online recitals on social media. I invite you to watch and enjoy Chucho Valdés in conversation.

Click this link to view Chucho Valdés in conversation 


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Pick of the Week from Concerts from the Library of Congress

May 4, 2020

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From our 2017-2018 season, this Pick of the Week brings you a two-piano performance by Louis Lortie and Hélène Mercier. We paired it with a lecture by Blair Johnston on Rachmaninoff's last orchestral work Symphonic Dances. This performance and lecture celebrated the Library's acquisition of the manuscript of the two-piano version of this iconic work for which the Library now possesses all primary source materials.  We hope you enjoy!


Louis Lortie and Hélène Mercier

Canadian pianists Louis Lortie and Hélène Mercier have been performing together since their student days and have developed a remarkable sensitivity to the four-hand and two-piano literature. Their program features staples of the Russian two-piano repertoire, with a few additional gems. 


His "Last Work:" Hearing Ghosts in Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances

Blair Johnston, PhDAssociate Professor of Music Theory, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University.

Blair Johnston speaks about Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances, Rachmaninoff's last completed orchestral work. The Library of Congress now holds all of the significant primary source materials for this iconic work.

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Pick of the Week from Concerts from the Library of Congress

May 8, 2020

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From our 2016-2017 season, this Pick of the Week brings you British cellist Steven Isserlis and Canadian pianist Connie Shih. We paired it with Isserlis' pre-concert talk in which he discusses his journey as a cellist, chamber musician and author. We hope you enjoy!


Friday, April 21, 2017

Steven Isserlis, cello 

Connie Shih, piano

Who is ready for a Fauré foray by cellist Steven Isserlis and Canadian pianist Connie Shih? The program is filled with gems from the familiar to the Martin-new, including a work composed by Thomas Adès for Isserlis. 

SHOSTAKOVICH
Sonata for cello and piano in D minor, op. 40

MARTINŮ
Sonata no. 1 for cello and piano, H. 277

HAHN
Deux improvisations sur des airs irlandais

FAURÉ
Cello Sonata no. 2 in G minor, op. 117

ADÈS
Lieux retrouvés


Pre-concert Talk:
Steven Isserlis

Acclaimed worldwide for his profound musicianship and technical mastery, British cellist Steven Isserlis talks with Music Specialist Nicholas Brown about his work as a cellist, chamber musician and author.

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The birth of ethics : reconstructing the role and nature of morality / Philip Pettit ; with commentary by Michael Tomasello ; edited by Kinch Hoekstra.

[New York, NY] : Oxford University Press, [2018]