Showing posts with label Charlie Albright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Albright. Show all posts

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Review: "A kind of extravagance that had showmanship but never felt cheap. With a fresh, clean, crystalline sound, he played with a kind of ease and smoothness that refuses to airbrush the music, but animates it from within."

Review from the Philadelphia Inquirer:

Thank you for the amazing review, The Philadelphia Inquirer, of my concert with the phenomenal Sarah Ioannides and The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia!

Excerpts:

"Such a display still has novelty, though Albright didn’t need it, so distinctive were his improvisational ideas and overall presence. Though the demure lyricism of “Fur Elise” is something one associates with music boxes, Albright took off from it in what turned into a tour of 19th-century pianism."
"As clever as he sounds, Albright, in fact, gave the improvisation something I rarely witness in such settings: a highly personal emotional depth, as if he was expressing his inner self rather than simply exercising his powers of invention. For those of us still feeling scarred by the Philadelphia Orchestra’s opening concert at Carnegie Hall — in which Lang Lang stomped all over a semi-improvised Rhapsody in Blue — this concert brought the art of classical-music improvisation to a new level."
"Of course, Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 was bound to show a more filtered version of Albright — it’s a tightly written concerto — though his personality was evident in his way of shaping a phrase with a kind of extravagance that had showmanship but never felt cheap. With a fresh, clean, crystalline sound, he played with a kind of ease and smoothness that refuses to airbrush the music, but animates it from within. You simply hear more Beethoven than usual and with a kind of rhythmic momentum that makes you listen more closely, no matter how familiar the music has become. And yes, he improvised the first-movement cadenza as Beethoven himself might have."
"Such a display still has novelty, though Albright didn’t need it, so distinctive were his improvisational ideas and overall presence. Though the demure lyricism of “Fur Elise” is something one associates with music boxes, Albright took off from it in what turned into a tour of 19th-century pianism."
"As clever as he sounds, Albright, in fact, gave the improvisation something I rarely witness in such settings: a highly personal emotional depth, as if he was expressing his inner self rather than simply exercising his powers of invention. For those of us still feeling scarred by the Philadelphia Orchestra’s opening concert at Carnegie Hall — in which Lang Lang stomped all over a semi-improvised Rhapsody in Blue — this concert brought the art of classical-music improvisation to a new level."
"Of course, Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 was bound to show a more filtered version of Albright — it’s a tightly written concerto — though his personality was evident in his way of shaping a phrase with a kind of extravagance that had showmanship but never felt cheap. With a fresh, clean, crystalline sound, he played with a kind of ease and smoothness that refuses to airbrush the music, but animates it from within. You simply hear more Beethoven than usual and with a kind of rhythmic momentum that makes you listen more closely, no matter how familiar the music has become. And yes, he improvised the first-movement cadenza as Beethoven himself might have."

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Improvised, 3-Movement Sonata from Audience Notes at Lee University

Improvised, 3-Movement Sonata from Audience Notes at Lee University - Live

Check out the second half of a recent concert I gave in Cleveland, Tennessee at Lee University!


Thursday, September 28, 2017

Review: "Improvisational Piano Fire"

Review: "Improvisational Piano Fire"


Thank you for the great time in Kansas City!

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"His felicitous energy was displayed in the brilliant musical showcase."
"To his advantage, having a strong sense of improvising has cultivated his flashy and spontaneous style of piano playing, which was thoroughly demonstrated in this program."
"Sincere sound at the piano."
"Remarkable agility at the piano."
"As a comparison, it (Albright's improvisation) had similar characteristics to a Rachmaninoff piece. This feat was downright impressive, it sounded like it was planned!"
"The way he navigated the keyboard with precision but also musicality showed off his extraordinary talent at the piano. Even though it is an extremely difficult piece to play, he made it seem natural and effortless, and it was pure entertainment to watch him play."
"Albright’s energy at the piano was completely captivating."
"He knew how to shape each individual jazz lick in the melody and in the bass line. His interpretation was mind-blowing with how quick and accurate he played the variations."
"His playing of the etudes was astonishing: he was always specific as to which lines or parts to bring out, and his overall shaping of each etude was convincing. They never sounded like exercises. Albright turned each into true concert pieces and thought a lot about the effect and character he wanted to give each etude."
"Albright was so well received by the audience that he played three encores. "



Monday, September 18, 2017

Review - "That's what happens when you give it your all."

Full Review: https://www.classical-scene.com/2017/09/17/albright-chopin-gardner/


Thank you to the Boston Musical Intelligencer for a wonderful review of my first concert of my new series at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston!

Excerpts:

"Charlie Albright brought an inspired approach, holding nothing back in a masterful display of musicality. His extraordinary technique always foregrounded both expressiveness and structure."
"Striking rendering."
"Characteristic of Albright’s approach was an arch-like shaping of long phrases, entering softly gently, building toward a peak, before returning altered from the traversal."
"Breath-taking intimacy, as though wooing an absent beloved."
"The study in thirds, No. 6 in G-sharp Minor, painted a gorgeous impressionist canvas with shimmering pastels and flashes of light."
"Crested a tidal wave of ineffable and unstoppable emotion."
"A sublime and unbridled threat of cosmic forces."
"The Etude in C Minor received a Byronic grandeur and subjectivity; its sublime cosmic scale engulfed worlds and difficulties into seamless and fractious beauty."
"Albright gave us a taste of the next Gardner concert with a brief improvisation, a moody, flowing late-Romantic piece evocative of Rachmaninoff but expressive of a distinctly modern and utterly authentic content."

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

"A Grand Homecoming: Piano Star Returns 10 Years After Centralia College Graduation - Sold Out Show: Charlie Albright Returns for His Fifth Benefit Show at Corbet Theater"

Full Review: 


Happy to have been able to perform back at the Centralia College!  Thank you for the great review, The Chronicle!

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"“I think I know most of the people in the audience,” Albright said to laughter from the 500-some members of the audience. It was one of many easygoing conversational breaks during an electrifying two-hour piano concert by an international musical sensation who seemed just as happy to be playing for a hometown audience as his old neighbors were to be listening to him."
"“When in Rome, do as the Romans do,” he said, then paused dramatically. “Or at least what you can get away with. Here’s ‘Great Balls of Fire.’”"
"The concert was a benefit hosted by the Centralia College Foundation. Albright donated his time and talents to raise money for the college. The foundation netted about $14,500 from the show, said Julia Johnson, who organized the event. About $10,000 will go toward music scholarships in Albright’s name that will be given out at Centralia College over the next few years, she said. The remaining $4,500 will go toward maintenance of the college’s Charlie Albright Piano, on which the namesake performed during the show."
"This is the fifth benefit concert Albright has performed at Centralia College since he graduated in June 2007 as a Running Start student with both his Centralia High School diploma and Centralia College associate of science degree."

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Crazy Jazz/Ragtime on an Electric Piano

Currently one of my favorite pieces,

...the Kapustin Variations, Op. 41 is a combination of jazz and ragtime that is just a blast!  Playing this and other pieces at the Rockefeller University in New York City on 2/8/2017!  Hope you enjoy!


Monday, January 23, 2017

Recording at the New Steinway Hall

Recording Time!

It has been a little while since I've done a recording for recording's sake, so it was great to be back at it.  The Stecher and Horowitz Foundation in New York runs the New York International Piano Competition, which I took part in back in 2006 (though at that point, it was a national competition).  

Each year, they commission a brand new piece of music from a composer, and decided to make a compilation recording of each commission from each biennial competition.  My year, Michael Torke wrote Bays of Huatulco (renamed Blue Pacific), which I was asked to record on the brand new Steinway Spirio piano, which is Steinway's amazing new player-piano.

The recording went great, and I'm looking forward to hearing how it turns out!  Check out some pics!

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Gershwin Extravaganzas with the Boston Pops!

Whew! It's hard to believe that the 2015/2016 Season is over, but what better way to end the season that with Gershwin Extravaganzas with the One-and-Only Boston Pops?!?

The last few weeks have been quite a tour-de-force for me, at one point performing 5 concerts with 3 different programs in 7 days.  Whew!  But boy, were they fun!

On Tuesday, I took the Acela train up to Boston, where I met my mom (who flew out from Seattle) and my sister.  My former piano teacher, Mrs. Adsit, was also able to come out the day after from Michigan to see the concerts.

The conductor was the amazing David Charles Abell, who is a brilliant musician.  The all-Gershwin concerts on Wednesday and Thursday also had the phenomenal singers Nicole Cabell and Nmon Ford.

The concerts were like huge parties, with changing lights, audiences going wild, and smiles on everyone's faces.  How fun!

Boston Musical Intelligencer:

"A very accomplished improviser, he (Charlie Albright) first appeared with a successful solo fantasy on the songs just performed by Cabell and Ford, before the joining the orchestra for the charming "Promenade" from Shall We Dance, the number also known as "Walking the Dog." Returning at the end of the second half, he closed the official part of the concert with a vigorous, flexible, shapely and, shall we say, improvisatory take on Rhapsody in Blue.  The whole evening rang with brilliance, energy, occasional poignancy, and frequent high spirits that characterize Gershwin and his work.  All around, a well-planned survey and a splendid tribute."

Edge Media Network: 

"In one of the concert's more delightful diversions, Albright -- a rising piano soloist -- displayed his improvisational skills with a short interlude in which he mashed those two songs together. The boyish Albright later ended the evening with his distinctive and highly lyrical take on the "Rhapsody in Blue."

Here are some pictures!

-Charlie

Liz and James Watson (SGma and SGpa) with Mrs. Adsit

Charlie Albright with the Boston Pops

Charlie Albright with the Boston Pops

Fancy Hotel Lobby

Lillian, Mrs. Adsit, and Oma (my mom)

Charlie Albright with the Boston Pops

Charlie Albright with the Boston Pops

Boston Symphony Hall

Taking bows with Nicole Cabell, Nmon Ford, and David Charles Abell after our encore

Charlie Albright with Mrs. Adsit and David Charles Abell

Boston Symphony Hall during Rehearsal


Awesome pic from Winslow Townson

With Oma (mom) at the Boston Public Library

Charlie Albright Backstage at Symphony Hall with David Charles Abell, Nmon Ford, and Nicole Cabell

Thursday, March 24, 2016

"청중 사로잡는 피아니스트 찰리 올브라이트 (Charlie Albright) 보스톤 공연" - 보스톤 코리아 (Boston Korea)

보스톤 코리아 신문 기사

보스톤 코리아에서 기사가 나왔습니다!  보스톤에서 솔로 연주 3월 27일 2016년 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum에서 하고, 5월 18일/19일에 보스톤 팝스와 Symphony Hall에서 합니다!

한번 읽어 보세요! 

http://www.bostonkorea.com/news.php?code=&mode=view&num=23312

-찰리

Charlie Albright, Pianist

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Boston Korea Article

Check out the article in Boston Korea (in Korean) about the upcoming 3/27/2016 recital at the Gardner Museum and the 5/18-19 concerts with the Boston Pops at Symphony Hall!

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

My Visit to Omaha, Nebraska

My time in Omaha was fantastic.

It's really one of the cleanest and newest-feeling cities in all of the midwest, with new buildings and clean roads everywhere.  The concert hall, the Holland Center for the Performing Arts, was apparently built in the past 10 years and was absolutely gorgeous.

Check out some pictures below and click here for a review of the concert!


Hyatt Place is one of my favorite hotel chains.

Talk about a practice room! | Charlie Albright

Practice room with a view! | Charlie Albright

Practice room with a view! | Charlie Albright

CenturyLink Center | Charlie Albright

Park between concert hall and hotel | Charlie Albright

Beautiful Omaha | Charlie Albright

Burrito time | Charlie Albright

Beautiful Omaha | Charlie Albright

Holland Center for the Performing Arts | Charlie Albright 
Steinway :) | Charlie Albright

Holland Center | Charlie Albright

Practice room #2 | Charlie Albright 
Lunch and Modern Family | Charlie Albright

With the amazing Jacques Lacombe | Charlie Albright

Omaha Filet | Charlie Albright

A real-life comic book store, like in the Big Bang Theory  | Charlie Albright 
Geese | Charlie Albright

Pre-concert! | Charlie Albright

Charlie Albright with the Omaha Symphony

Charlie Albright with the Omaha Symphony

Dinnertime | Charlie Albright

Off to New York City! | Charlie Albright

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Back with the Boston Pops!

The Boston Pops is awesome.



What else is there to say?  It's just awesome.  Maestro Keith Lockhart is amazing, and the orchestra is just plain fun.

That's why I'm so excited to be back to perform with them...not once...not twice...but three times this May, 2016!

The first concert is in Purchase, NY on May 1, 2016 with my wonderful friend and mentor, Maestro Keith Lockhart.

The second and third concerts will be at Boston's Symphony Hall with Maestro David Charles Abell, who I'm also looking forward to working with.

We'll be performing the Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue (another awesome piece) at all three concerts, so I hope to see you at one of them!

Here's a link to the Boston performances: https://www.bso.org/Performance/Detail/79093

Monday, February 15, 2016

Review | "Breathtaking, unbelievable control and speed, what we saw seemingly impossible, yet tossed off with no apparent effort."

Review - The Boston Musical Intelligencer
Full Review: http://www.classical-scene.com/2016/02/14/variations-gardner-albright/

"Breathtaking, unbelievable control and speed, what we saw seemingly impossible, yet tossed off with no apparent effort."
"Brilliant and fun pianism rewarded those of us who braved the bitterly cold Sunday afternoon. Albright’s marvelous touch came with clearly articulated tones in both hands, left and right as independent as you’ll ever hear, while his stunning technique disappeared into the music. Most striking, however, was the joy he radiated throughout; Albright clearly loves sharing his playing with us."
"He found the complexity in the score itself and brought out the Mozart’s richness."
"His wide range of touch comprised legato arpeggios in the third, big staccato chords in the fourth, and a light skipping tinged with sadness in the fifth. The minor key eighth variation was taken poco adagio, melancholy and regretful, suffused with the solemn grandeur of a bygone baroque era. The final variation was played allegro vivace, with beautiful running fingerwork in the left hand as the theme rang out triumphantly in the right."


Monday, February 1, 2016

Review - "Charlie is a rare talent - delicacy and accuracy combine with strength and agility to create masterful performances that place him among the best players in the world."

"Charlie is a rare talent - delicacy and accuracy combine with strength and agility to create masterful performances that place him among the best players in the world."

Had a fantastic time working with Jindong Cai and Xiaogang Ye alongside the Seattle Symphony this weekend performing the Starry Sky Concerto! :)


Charlie Albright with Composer Xiaogang Ye and Conductor Jindong Cai after a performance with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra at Benaroya Hall | Photo Credit: Chad Cannon Music

Thursday, January 14, 2016

"A performance by pianist Charlie Albright is timeless." - San Francisco Classical Voice

HomeLou Fancher of the San Francisco Classical Voice wrote that "A performance by pianist Charlie Albright is timeless."
"Shut your eyes and open your ears to his all-Schubert series, recall one of his five collaborative appearances with celebrated cellist Yo-Yo Ma, or catch the 2009 “Waltz Improvisation” video on his website to experience a sonic time warp.
Albright’s exuberant playing could be that of a 7-year-old...Or it could be the soulful playing of a seasoned master, age 75."

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Come with Me on my First International Flight in Suites Class!

Last month, I had the chance to use some miles to fly from JFK to ICN (South Korea) in Asiana Airlines' First Suites Class on the A380. It was amazing.

I took tons of pictures and video, and put them together here. Please have a see and subscribe...and share! :)

Hope to do it again soon!

-Charlie



Sunday, December 20, 2015

BBC Performing Groups Best of 2015!

I feel incredibly honored.

My performance with the BBC Concert Orchestra and Maestro Keith Lockhart of the Shostakovich Piano Concerto No. 2 was chosen as among the "BBC Performing Groups Best of 2015!"  There will be a rebroadcast on 12/30 on BBC Radio 3!

This is an incredible honor, and I am very thankful!


Thursday, December 17, 2015

Portland Piano International (PPI) - Two Days, Two Concerts, Two Programs. Plus Liberace.

I had the opportunity to perform at Portland Piano International on December 5 and 6.

An amazing series with...get this...the renowned pianist and teacher Arnaldo Cohen as the Artistic Director! I remember attending this series growing up as a kid, when Mrs. Adsit would take me down to hear artists like Richard Goode perform.  It's a phenomenal series, and I was and still am extremely honored to have been invited to perform on it!

But, that doesn't mean that I wasn't in for some work!  I gave two concerts (Saturday and Sunday), playing two completely different programs.  Here they were:

Saturday, December 5:
Janácek Sonata 1.X.1905
Beethoven Eroica Variations
Albright Improvisation
Chopin Etudes, Op. 25

Sunday, December 6:
Mozart Variations on "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star"
Chopin Variations on "La Ci Darem La Mano"
Menotti Ricercare and Toccata on a Theme from "The Old Maid and the Thief"
Albright Improvisation
Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition

The audiences were amazing, with the hall about 2/3 full the first day and pretty much completely full the second! I got to give three encores each night, including playing the Liberace Christmas Medley to end.  Talk about an ender!

It was an honor to play on the series and to work with Maestro Cohen, as well as everyone involved with PPI.  It was a great weekend.




I had a French press in my hotel room! The Heathman is apparently one of the Top 500 Hotels in the World!

Charlie Albright's mom came down from not-so-distant Centralia, WA
Charlie Albright looking awfully happy at the mic.
Portland Piano International
Charlie signing signs
Meeting the audiences
Charlie Albright in Concert
Meeting the Audiences
Charlie Albright in Concert
Charlie Albright meeting the audiences
Program Book for Charlie Albright at Portland Piano International
Sponsors of Charlie Albright's Portland Piano International Concerts and Artistic Director Arnaldo Cohen
A personalized menu just for us?!?
Maestro Arnaldo Cohen and Charlie Albright
Lincoln Hall
John Helmer's...fine hats, coats, and other things.