Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Preview: Upcoming Project Chamber Music: Willamette Valley concert

In its 10th Anniversary Season, Project Chamber Music: Willamette Valley turns toward intimacy, depth, and human connection with an uplifting spring residency and concert that brings together three artists of international stature: soprano Katharine Dain, violist Caitlin Lynch, and pianist Ieva Jokubaviciute.

This spring residency is part of PCM’s expanded anniversary season, doubling its programming for the first time with a second residency. The April 17 concert, This Love Between Us, explores love not as sentiment, but as a sustaining force that is inherited, tested, remembered, and renewed across generations.

Soprano Katharine Dain brings a searching musical intelligence shaped by a global career spanning the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Orchestra of the 18th Century, BBC Symphony Orchestras, and major opera houses and festivals throughout Europe and the U.S. Her acclaimed debut album Regards sur l’Infini received the Edison Klassiek Award and international praise for its emotional clarity and depth. She is joined by GRAMMY Award winner Caitlin Lynch, violist and founding Artistic Director of Project Chamber Music, whose work centers collaboration and mentorship, and Ieva Jokubaviciute, a pianist “riveting in every way” (The Washington Post) and celebrated worldwide for her insight, range, and adventurous musical partnerships. (Full artist biographies are available at pcmwv.org/artists.)

The concert takes its title and guiding philosophy from composer Reena Esmail, who shares: 

“Our love, our human connection, goes back so far in time. It is our very foundation. To recognize ourselves in one another is truly to remember that connection.... I wrote This Love Between Us through some of the darkest times in our country and in our world. But my mind always returns to the last line of this piece, the words of Rumi, which are repeated like a mantra over affirming phrases from each religion, as they wash over one another: ‘Concentrate on the Essence. Concentrate on the Light.’” 

Her work anchors an evening that moves fluidly between centuries, weaving together music by Brahms, Clara and Robert Schumann, Schubert, Frank Bridge, and Leilehua Lanzilotti, alongside Esmail’s own luminous meditation on connection. The program traces different forms of love and connection, offering a sonic portrait of the beauty and essentiality of our shared humanity: motherly tenderness in Brahms’ Sacred Lullaby; longing and loss in Bridge’s Three Songs; the intricate emotional world shared by Clara and Robert Schumann; and the ache of separation in Schubert’s Shepherd on the Rock. Shaped by texts from the ancient saint-poet Kabir, Friedrich Rückert, Heinrich Heine, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Wilhelm Müller, these pieces offer an intimate and hopeful meditation on connection, listening, and what binds us together. As Lanzilotti writes, “these moments can reveal love: joyful, enduring, always.”

SPRING MAINSTAGE CONCERT: This Love Between Us


Friday, April 17, 2026 | 7:30 PM  —  LaJoie Theatre, Chehalem Cultural Center, Newberg

Program:

Johannes Brahms, Two Songs for Alto, Viola, and Piano, Op. 91

Reena Esmail, This Love Between Us

Clara Schumann, Six Lieder, Op. 13

Robert Schumann, Adagio and Allegro, Op. 70

Leilehua Lanzilotti, of moments

Frank Bridge, Three Songs for Voice, Viola, and Piano, H. 76

Franz Schubert, The Shepherd on the Rock, Op. 129, D. 965


Meet the artists at a complimentary reception immediately following the concert! 


TICKETS: available at pcmwv.org


All ticket proceeds directly benefit need-based scholarships to provide music instruction to local kids; this particular concert supports the financial aid fund of Young Musicians & Artists, a local summer camp with a 60-year legacy. 

EDUCATION


The residency includes educational engagement at Willamette University, showcasing PCM’s long- standing belief in meaningful musical experiences through mentorship. These events are open to the public.

  • April 17  | 9:30 - 11am: Piano Masterclass with Ieva Jokubaviciute

  • April 18  | 10am - 12pm: Vocal Masterclass with Katharine Dain

 

Today's Birthdays

Claudio Merulo (1533-1604)
Giuseppe Tartini (1692-1770)
Sir Adrian Boult (1889-1983)
E. Y. (Yip) Harburg (1896-1981)
Josef Krips (1902-1974)
Franco Corelli (1921-2003)
Walter Berry (1929-2000)
Lawrence Leighton Smith (1936-2013)
Meriel Dickinson (1940)
Dame Felicity Lott (1947)
Diana Montague (1953)
Anthony Michaels-Moore (1957)

and

Dionysios Solomos (1798-1857)
Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
Harvey Cushing (1869-1939)
Robert Giroux (1914-2008)
Seymour Hersh (1937)
Barbara Kingsolver (1955)

and from the Composers Datebook:

On this day in 1865, American premiere of Mozart's Sinfonia Concertate in Eb, K. 364(320d) for Violin, Viola, and Orchestra took place in New York, with violinist Theodore Thomas and violist Georg Matzka (A review of this concert in the New York Times said: "On the whole we would prefer death to a repetition of this production. The wearisome scale passages on the little fiddle repeated ad nausea on the bigger one were simply maddening.”).

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Charles Burney (1726-1814)
Domenico Dragonetti (1763-1846)
Robert Casadesus (1899-1972)
Billie Holiday (1915-1959)
Ravi Shankar (1920-2012)
Ikuma Dan (1924-2001)

and

William Wordsworth (1770-1850)
Marjory Stoneman Douglas (1890-1998)
Donald Barthelme (1931-1989)
Daniel Ellsberg (1931-2023)
Francis Ford Coppola (1939)

and from the Composers Datebook:

On this day in 1918, the German conductor of the Boston Symphony, Karl Muck, is arrested and interned as an enemy alien after American enters World War I.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Johann Kuhnau (1660-1772)
André‑Cardinal Destouches (1672-1749)
Friedrich Robert Volkman (1815-1883)
Carlos Salzedo (1885-1961)
Andrew Imbrie (1921-2007)
Edison Denisov (1929-1996)
André Previn (1929-2019)
Merle Haggard (1937-2016)
Felicity Palmer (1944)
Pascal Rogé (1951)
Pascal Devoyon (1953)
Julian Anderson (1967)

and

Raphael (Rafaello Sanzio da Urbino) (1483-1520)
Joseph Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936)

From the New Music Box:

On April 6, 1897, the U.S. government granted Thaddeus Cahill a patent for his Telharmonium, or Dynamophone, the earliest electronic musical instrument. Cahill built a total of three such instruments, which utilized a 36-tone scale and used telephone receivers as amplifiers. The first one, completed in 1906 in Holyoke, Massachusetts was 60 feet long and weighed 200 tons. It was housed in "Telharmonic Hall" on 39th Street and Broadway New York City for 20 years.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Louis Spohr (1784-1859)
Albert Roussel (1869-1937)
Herbert von Karajan (1908-1989)
Goddard Lieberson (1911-1977)
Carlos Guastavino (1912-2000)
Richard Yardumian (1917-1985)
Evan Parker (1944)
Julius Drake (1959)

and

Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909)
Booker T. Washington (1856-1915)
Arthur Hailey (1920-2004)

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1731)
Bettina Brentano von Arnim (1785-1859)
Hans Richter (1843-1916)
Pierre Monteux (1875-1964)
Joe Venuti (1898-1978)
Eugène Bozza (1905-1991)
Muddy Waters (1915-1983)
Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004)
Sergei Leiferkus (1946)
Chen Yi (1953)
Thomas Trotter (1957)
Jane Eaglen (1960)
Vladimir Jurowski (1972)

and

Robert E. Sherwood (1896-1955)
Marguerite Duras (1914-1996)
Maya Angelou (1928-2014)

Friday, April 3, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Jean‑Baptiste‑Antoine Forqueray (1699-1782)
Edward Elzear "Zez" Confrey (1895-1971)
Sir Neville Cardus (1888-1975)
Grigoras Dinicu (1889-1949)
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895-1968)
Louis Appelbaum (1918-2000)
Sixten Ehrling (1918-2005)
Kerstin Meyer (1928-2020)
Garrick Ohlsson (1948)
Mikhail Rudy (1953)

and

Washington Irving (1783-1894)
John Burroughs (1837-1921)
Herb Caen (1933-1997)
Dr. Jane Goodall (1934-2025)

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Today's Birthdays

Franz Lachner (1803-1890)
Kurt Adler (1905-1988)
April Cantelo (1928)
Marvin Gaye (1939-1984)
Raymond Gubbay (1946)
Richard Taruskin (1945-2022)

and

Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875)
Émile Zola (1840-1902)
Max Ernst (1891-1976)
Camille Paglia (1947)