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Classical Action presents Christine Brewer in concert, May 17

Classical Action: Performing Arts Against AIDS closes its 2012 Michael Palm Series of house concerts on Thursday, May 17, with a memorable evening of song from soprano Christine Brewer and pianist Craig Rutenberg. Held in the Tribeca loft apartment of supporters Simon Yates and Kevin Roon, who have hosted all concerts in the series since 2010, the upcoming recital is part of the New York City-based salon series named for the charity’s late benefactor. The performance begins at 7:30pm, following an hour of wine and hors d’oeuvres; tickets for this series-closing concert may be purchased online at www.classicalaction.org or by calling Classical Action at (212) 997-7717. For the first time in the history of the Michael Palm Series, the music may also be enjoyed beyond this cozy salon setting: the recital will be recorded for a broadcast presentation at a later date on SiriusXM’s Symphony Hall, channel 76.
 
Grammy Award-winning American soprano Christine Brewer, named one of the top 20 sopranos of all time by BBC Music magazine, was recently lauded as being “in outstanding voice…, floating her high passages effortlessly with clarity and a sound like molten gold.” The review continued: “With that devastating vocal beauty came a powerful stage presence; Brewer exuded a sense of peace to match the music” (St Louis Post-Dispatch). According to the New York Times’s Anthony Tommasini, she is “in her prime and sounding glorious,” while as London’s Sunday Times observes, “she brings a soaring opulence” to her interpretations. Fresh off a May 13 recital with Rutenberg at Alice Tully Hall, Brewer joins Classical Action for the first time on May 17.
 
While renowned for her stunning portrayals of Wagner, Strauss, Verdi, and Britten heroines, the soprano is equally at home on the recital stage, often appearing in concert and recital at some of the world’s greatest concert halls. To date, her 2011-12 highlights include singing Wagner and Beethoven for the Atlanta Symphony’s season-opening concert, undertaking the Wesendonck Lieder with the New World Symphony under Michael Tilson Thomas, and joining the San Francisco Symphony and Esa-Pekka Salonen for excerpts from the Ring cycle.
 
Pianist Craig Rutenberg, “whose playing range[s] from sterling directness to expansive beauty” (San Francisco Chronicle), has collaborated with many of the world’s greatest vocalists and is recognized as one of the most distinguished accompanists on the stage today. The upcoming performance marks his third collaboration with Classical Action, and his second appearance in the Michael Palm Series, following a 1996 recital with the late American tenor Jerry Hadley. Besides regularly partnering Brewer, Rutenberg has appeared in recital with Denyce Graves, Sumi Jo, Harolyn Blackwell, Susanne Mentzer, Frederica von Stade, Angelika Kirchschlager, and Dawn Upshaw, and, more frequently, Ben Heppner, Jerry Hadley, Olaf Baer, Simon Keenlyside, Stanford Olsen, and Thomas Hampson, with whom he performed at the White House under the Clinton administration. Rutenberg is also the Director of Music Administration at the Metropolitan Opera and a noted interpreter of operatic repertoire.
 
This tenth season of the Michael Palm Series began with a blazing performance by MacArthur Fellow violinist Leila Josefowicz and pianist John Novacek. The series’ second concert marked the first U.S. joint recital by legendary American baritone Thomas Hampson and rising bass-baritone Luca Pisaroni, Hampson’s son-in-law, in which they were joined by Carrie-Ann Matheson at the piano.
 
 
About Classical Action’s Michael Palm Series
 
Founded in 1993 by Charles Hamlen – currently the chairman of IMG Artists, the performing arts management company he co-founded in 1984, Classical Action: Performing Arts Against AIDS is a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, one of the nation’s leading industry-based, nonprofit AIDS fundraising and grant-making organizations. By drawing upon the talents, resources, and generosity of the classical, opera, and jazz communities, Classical Action raises funds through private house concerts, special events, and recording and merchandising projects. Classical Action became a fundraising program of BC/EFA in 1997. Since its founding in 1988, Broadway Cares has raised more than $195 million for essential services for people with AIDS and other critical illnesses across the United States. Additional information is available at classicalaction.org.
 
Michael Palm was a most generous and enthusiastic supporter of Classical Action. He was also the person who pioneered the concept of private benefit house concerts, hosting several at his own penthouse apartment 37 floors above Lincoln Center. A supporter of a wide range of performing arts and HIV/AIDS organizations, Palm died in 1998, but his memory thrives in the spirit and name of the Michael Palm Series, to benefit Classical Action.
 
 
Classical Action: Michael Palm Series 2012
 
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Christine Brewer, soprano
Craig Rutenberg, piano
At the home of Simon Yates and Kevin Roon, New York City
Tickets are $250 ($175 tax-deductible)
 
www.classicalaction.org
 
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