The Flagler name has long been associated with great music.
Henry Flagler, Standard Oil founding partner and Florida
developer, frequently hosted musical performances in Whitehall’s
elaborate Music Room, equipped with a 1,249-pipe J.H. &
C.S. Odell & Co. organ. Flagler’s son, Henry Harkness
Flagler, was instrumental in the organization of the New
York Symphony Society and served as its president. One of
Flagler’s granddaughters, Mary Flagler Cary, helped
establish and support the National Orchestral Association,
and collected autographed music manuscripts by Bach, Mozart,
Wagner, Chopin, and Brahms, now a highly prized part of
the Pierpont Morgan Library’s holdings. Another of
Flagler’s granddaughters, Jean Flagler Matthews, founded
the Flagler Museum, restored Whitehall’s Odell organ,
and in 1968 brought the New York Philharmonic, conducted
by Leonard Bernstein, to South Florida for a concert to
benefit the Museum. Now in its fourth season, the Flagler
Museum Music Series brings this tradition of great music
to the Museum, a National Historic Landmark which bears
Henry Flagler’s name, with performances by musicians
of exceptional talent in the intimacy of one of America’s
great homes.
Tickets are $50 per person, and include a champagne
and dessert reception with the performers following the
concert. Seating is limited and advance ticket purchase
is required. To purchase tickets call (561) 655 2833.
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Christopher
O’Riley
Tuesday, December 9, 2003, 7:30 p.m.
Hailed as "one of the most interesting and distinguished
pianists of his generation" by the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, Christopher O’Riley enjoys a
thriving concert career. His honors include top prizes
at the Van Cliburn, Leeds, Busoni, and Montreal competitions,
as well as an Avery Fisher Career Grant and the Andrew
Wolf Memorial Chamber Music Prize. He is a favorite
guest with the foremost orchestras in major cities
around the world and is the host of Public Radio International’s
From the Top, which showcases young musicians. O’Riley
has been featured on NPR’s Performance Today,
and he recorded the only classical album ever to earn
a four-star rating from Rolling Stone, which praised
his "unblinking virtuosity."
" ...(Christopher O'Riley) plays with a beauty, poetry, magnetism and individuality that are quickly addictive." - The Palm Beach Post
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Brentano
String Quartet
Tuesday, January 13, 2004, 7:30 p.m.
The Brentano String Quartet, formed in 1992, has
been consistently singled out for its technical brilliance,
musical insight, and stylistic elegance. The Los Angeles
Times called them “one of the great musical
hopes [in] a field overcrowded with contenders,”
while The New York Times praised them as “a
first-class ensemble.” The Brentano String Quartet
has established itself as one of the leading quartets
of its generation, winning such prestigious international
prizes as the Naumburg Chamber Music Award, the Cleveland
Quartet Award, and Great Britain’s Royal Philharmonic
Society Music Award. The ensemble has served as quartet-in-residence
at Princeton University, New York University, and
London’s Wigmore Hall. They have performed at
concert venues and music festivals around the world
and have been featured on Live from Lincoln Center
"The Brentano String Quartet is surely one of the premier chamber ensembles. It sets a standard for balance, ensemble, and aristry by which other groups will be measured." - The Palm Beach Daily News
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Leila
Josefowicz
Tuesday, February 10, 2004, 7:30 p.m.
Since her London and Carnegie Hall debuts with the
Academy of St. Martin in the Fields and Sir Neville
Marriner in 1990 and 1994 respectively, acclaimed
violinist Leila Josefowicz has performed with many
of the world’s most prestigious orchestras.
The Chicago Tribune called her “phenomenal”
and The Boston Globe hailed her “fearless execution”
and “astonishing insight.” She is a past
recipient of the Avery Fisher Career Grant, and her
first two recordings garnered the Diapason d’Or
prize. Her appearances on national television include
Evening at Pops with John Williams and the Boston
Pops, The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and the
NBC television special America’s Tribute to
Bob Hope. She performs on the 1739 “Ebersolt”
Guarnerius del Gesù violin.
"(Josefowicz's) Bach was an intimate as the Flagler Museum setting; her beethoven was a journey inward; her Franck noble and soaring."
- The Palm Beach Post |
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Windscape
Tuesday, March 16, 2004, 7:30 p.m.
Created in 1994 by five eminent woodwind soloists,
Windscape has won a unique place for itself as a vibrant,
ever-evolving group of musical individualists, an
“un quintet,” which has delighted audiences
throughout the United States, Canada, and Asia. Windscape’s innovative programs and accompanying
presentations are created to take listeners on a musical
and historical world tour – evoking through
music and engaging commentary vivid cultural landscapes
of distant times and places. The Washington Post hailed
them as “superb,” noting that “they
speak as well as they play.” Windscape currently
serves as Ensemble-in-Residence at the Manhattan School
of Music and brings extensive teaching experience
to these high-impact residencies.
“fabulously skilled, much sought-after, and usually footloose.”
- The Boston Globe |
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Ames
Piano Quartet
Monday, April 5, 2004, 7:30 p.m.
Since its formation in 1976, the Ames Piano Quartet
(the resident chamber music ensemble at Iowa State
University) holds a unique position in the chamber
music field as one of the few piano quartets in the
world. Its blend of lush string and piano sounds produces
an exquisite and rare sonority. The quartet
has toured throughout the world and has been awarded
numerous grants from the National Endowment for the
Arts. The ensemble has been featured on the popular
nationally syndicated radio programs The Listening
Room and St. Paul Sunday and has produced numerous
critically acclaimed recordings, including the Dvorak
quartets, called “one of the best chamber music
recordings of the century.”
“one of the most heavenly combinations of instruments around.” - The Washington Post
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View past and current seasons of the Museum's
Music Series:
2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2006
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