John Cage - 59 1/2 seconds for a string-player
John Ferguson (Violin)
John Cage - Sonata V for prepared piano
John Ferguson (Piano)
John Zorn - Carny
John Ferguson (Piano)
Alexander Scriabin - Etude No. 10 in D-Flat Major, Op. 8
Keti Sharumashvili (Piano)
January 18, 2010
Gary Noland’s music has received very high praise from some of this era’s leading musicians. He was born in Seattle in 1957 and raised in Berkeley, next to the famous People’s Park. As an adolescent, Gary lived for a time in Salzburg and Garmisch-Partenkirchen (home of Richard Strauss), where he absorbed many musical influences. He studied music at U.C. Berkeley, then at the Boston Conservatory, and finally Harvard University, where he received a Ph.D. Gary confesses to having “very restless tonal ears” and feels closest to composers with “all-encompassing” harmonic palettes, such as Strauss, Mahler, Korngold, Hugo Wolf, Ernst von Dohnanyi, David del Tredici, Frederic Rzewski and György Ligeti, to name just a few. He’s not terribly fond of “harmonically limited” music... We create a playlist consisting of the following works: Fantasy in E Minor for cello & piano (Op. 24), Humoresque for piano (Op. 3), Romance for viola & piano (Op. 10), Grande Rag Brillante (Op. 15), and Septet for clarinet, alto sax, French horn, two violins, double bass, and piano (Op. 43). To listen, click here.
Johannes Brahms - Intermezzo in C Major, Op. 119, No. 3
Alon Goldstein (Piano)
Johannes Brahms - Intermezzo in e minor, Op. 119, No. 2
Alon Goldstein (Piano)
Johannes Brahms - Intermezzo in b minor, Op. 119, No. 1
Alon Goldstein (Piano)
Franz Schubert - Six German Dances, D. 820
Alon Goldstein (Piano)

Anton Webern - Five Pieces for Orchestra Op. 10
John Ferguson (Conductor)
Indiana University (Orchestra)