Saturday, July 3, 2010

Philly.com: "Philly concert to salute the flashy 'Black Mozart' of the late 1700s"


[Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1745-1799)]

Arts & Entertainment
Posted on Fri, Jul. 2, 2010
By TOM DI NARDO
For the Daily News
“Pianist Charles Pettaway, a professor at Lincoln University, will illuminate this extravagant personality at a free concert Thursday. He'll perform a C Major piano sonata and the Adagio in F, speak about the composer and offer two video clips of an operetta overture and the finale of a Violin Concerto. 'I knew the Adagio because my onetime teacher Natalie Hinderas recorded it,' said Pettaway, adding that he 'only began more sleuthing about the composer after finding an unexpected link on YouTube two years ago.'

“He couldn't find any piano music among Parisian publishers, 'but luckily I discovered that a French pianist named Anne Roberts had recorded all 11 sonatas. She sent me the C Major, which is not on the level of Mozart but is a delightful work, full of charming melodies. Another link to Mozart was claimed by New York Philharmonic violinist Gabriel Banat, who wrote in a biography of Saint-Georges that Mozart had borrowed a melody from one of his Symphonie concertantes."

“The concert, a collaboration between the Trinity Center and the Pennsylvania Humanities Council, will be taped as part of the council's 'Humanities on the Road' series of cultural-themed programs that air on the Pennsylvania Cable Network. WHYY host Tracey Matisak, host for the show, will also emcee the concert, which will air this fall. [The life, fencing and music of Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1745-1799) are presented at AfriClassical.com]

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