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Show '?e&u&vuf 1 , ffODMUM 2006 WDOflOffi) DM) SDU 7 DO and Janove performed for Sunday's concert series Elias gii mm Students, faculty, and members of the community filled the Vieve Gore Concert Hall last Sunday afternoon to enjoy the first concert series event of the new year. Gerald Elias and Marjorie Janove, renowned local performers, entertained a nearly full concert hall on Jan. 29 with several duos and solos performed on the violin and the piano. Sundays concert began shortly after 3 p.m. with a piece by Mozart with Elias on the violin and Janove on the piano. This was then followed by a piece composed by the twentieth-centur- y Japanese composer, Toru Takemitsu. The audience then enjoyed the privilege of hearing a solo piece composed by Elias himself. The piece was entitled Vadoro Variations. According to Elias, it is based on the first verse of Cleopatras love aria from Handels opera, Julius Caesar. Elias stated in the concert program, The variations themselves explore aspects and effects of love from different angles, beginning with the most conflicting and ending with the most unifying. The music is part of a larger project that Elias plans to combine with the choreography of his daughter, Kate, who is a modern dance major in College in Vermont. Janove then followed with her own solo of a piece by George Gershwin called Rhapsody in Blue, which was awarded with a standing ovation from the entire concert hall. The final piece in the program was a work by Claude Debussy performed once more by both Elias and Janove. However, the musi Mid-dlebu- ry cians surprised the audience with one more performance of a Gershwin piece before the audience sent them out with another standing ovation. The next concert series event will be An Evening of Baroque Chamber Music, which will take place on Sunday, Feb. 19 at 3 p.m. in the Vieve Gore Concert Hall. These events are free to all Westminster students. Elias, a violinist, teacher, conductor, and composer, has been associate concertmaster of the Utah Symphony since 1988. He has also been a Boston Symphony violinist, first violinist of the Abramyan String Quartet, adjunct professor of music the University of Utah, and music director of the Vivaldi Candlelight Concert series. Elias has even entertained audiences with chamber music and solo recitals on four continents, including Australia. 555m55!i55 Gerald Elias performed last Sunday with pianist Magorie Janove for the Westminster Conceit Series. Violinist A native New Yorker, Elias began violin lessons at the age of eight with a fa- mous violinist and after nine months was awarded a full scholarship to the Interlochen Summer Music Camp. After receiving his Bachelor and Masters degrees from Yale in 1975, Elias joined the Boston Symphony as a member of the violin section and became a teacher at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute. He then moved to Utah and began teaching at the University of Utah in 1989 shortly after joining the Utah Symphony. In 2005, Elias was named Studio Teacher of the Year by the Utah chapter of the American String Teachers Association. Janove, a Westminster piano instructor, has performed in Utah for more than 20 years as a soloist, recitalist and chamber musician. She has performed with the Nova String Quartet and has been a soloist several times with the Utah Youth Series. She has also frequently soloed with the Utah Symphony as pianist and harpsichordist and has presented solo recitals at Temple Square. Janove received a bachelor of music degree, with a major in piano and minor in cello performance at Chicago Music College. She then completed a masters and doctorate of musical arts degree with distinction at Indiana University in piano performance. 3a T-eaturinq ZOOJ 'Summit Guest: IJean Cardinal Spedal Golsga Grad progonn open to dl cdtege graduates tse pest two years) and ydarrtswhaw3 graduate by 53IVOA Forcomp&te detoils edi Doug at 9L5120CL 0 m msocs CikhafLy 4 fisrs Sab Kdk&y CbMkMial Bra &.!& flSQ0 |