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Peter Serkin Plays in Straus, at the Gratwick Concert |
| April 2006 |
For
the past 76 years, the annual Gratwick Concert has brought to campus
the most renowned classical musicians. The 76th concert, on Sunday
afternoon, April 23, featured pianist Peter Serkin. One of the greatest
pianists of his generation, Mr. Serkin actually made his second
appearance of the Gratwick series at this most recent concert. He
appeared as a member of the chamber music group, Tashi, in 1978.
His father, the great pianist, Rudolf Serkin, performed in 1941.
The Gratwick Concert foundation was established by Dr. Mitchell
Gratwick, a master at the school, in memory of his wife, Katharine
Perkins Gratwick, who was a graduate of the Girls School of 1924.
As the program indicates: "Great music greatly rendered in
surroundings so beautiful is expressive of Katharine. She loved
beautiful things and brought beauty into all that she touched."
Peter Serkin's program was a polyphonic masterpiece. He opened with
four keyboard pieces from the Renaissiance, the golden age of musical
polyphony. Following that he performed two works of Johann Sebastian
Bach, concluding with the remarkably difficult Chromatic Fantasy
and Fugue in D minor. After intermission, the polyphonic theme was
heard in one of Beethoven's last sonatas, and perhaps his most difficult,
the Hammerklavier, written toward the end of his life.

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