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Come celebrate 25 years of Chamber Music as a Living Art-25 years of steadfast commitment to music not only of our own time but of our own community.
Come hear the 99th-102nd works commissioned and premiered by Pacific Serenades, each the centerpiece of a program which includes treasured masterpieces of the past-music by Bach and Handel, Prokofiev and Arensky, Mozart and Dohnanyi, Haydn and Ravel.
With our hallmark commitments to performances of exceptional quality, to great music that touches your soul, and to personal warmth, you will be part of a musical experience like no other. Our artists, including principals of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the LA Philharmonic, and the Long Beach Symphony, are among the finest anywhere. And you will be hard pressed to find a friendlier bunch of musicians and fellow music lovers.
Subscribe to our Neigbhorhood Church Series or our UCLA Faculty Center Series by January 15, 2011, and you will have the opportunity to bring a friend who is new to... » read more
 Dwayne Milburn—whose newest work, Chamber Jams, for flute, oboe, cello, and harpsichord, is the 99th piece commissioned and premiered by Pacific Serenades—is continuing to play out what he calls his "Army Rondo." » read more
 "While at Yale, I toured southeast Asia with an orchestra. I decided to study Chinese because of it, and with all the credits I accumulated in that area, I ended up with a BA in East Asian Studies." » read more
The Raquel home was rented by Hollywood silent film star Mary Pickford in 1918. » read more
 Our newest CD, Border Crossings, includes Pacific Serenades commissioned works by two Latin American-born composers and by two composers overtly influenced by Latin... » read more
 I met Vladimir Chernov when I was a freshman at UCLA, studying voice, and he was a guest Professor. I hardly knew what to make of him, the first few times we met, with his shock of silver, jaw-length hair, and his impeccable three-piece suits. There is an intensity and a grandeur with which he does things that can be unnerving, and as a Texas girl I had certainly never met anyone like him. » read more
 At the genesis of Pacific Serenades, a concert repeated over two nights at the home of Lee Burns in 1982, three new pieces were premiered alongside Baroque and Renaissance pieces for organ. The first commissioned work of Pacific Serenades was premiered on those concerts. Composed by Roger Bourland, entitled Cantilena for flute and organ, this debut work was commissioned out of pocket by Artistic Director and founder of Pacific Serenades, Mark Carlson.
"I paid Roger $150 for that first piece," Mark shared with me as we sat down in Roger's living room on a recent afternoon. "And tickets were $5!"
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 Eric Charnofsky is like a musician from an earlier era—one who is equal parts performer and composer. An active pianist of formidable skills—you might have heard him perform with the LA Phil during its 2000-01 season, when he was a finalist for the orchestra's keyboard position—he is also a prolific composer. Add to that his life teaching full-time, at Case Western Reserve University where he teaches 20th century music history and keyboard ensemble courses, and at the Cleveland Institute of Music, where he teaches symphonic literature, and you have an extremely active musical life. » read more
 "What a fantastic mission Pacific Serenades has! I totally support this idea and think it is important. Who wouldn't have wanted to work with a Beethoven and to see the process of the creation of a new piece? Musicians who don't compose owe it to themselves to get involved in playing new music. It's so exciting to premiere a piece, to play a piece which no one has ever done. Having insight into the creative process keeps you learning, keeps you alive as a musician. And for me, it heightens the experience to get to play a standard repertoire piece and then, with the same people, play a new piece." » read more
 Growing up in the Bay Area was significant [for me] because this area witnessed an influx of musicians visiting from Perú and Bolivia when I was a child. This had a profound effect on me, exposing me to the music of my mother's culture. » read more
 Violinist Tereza Stanislav, who was appointed Assistant Concertmaster of the LA Chamber Orchestra in 2003 by Jeffrey Kahane, made her Pacific Serenades debut in January of 2010. This interview was written in preparation for that program. » read more
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