Piano Duo Concert

Reynolds Recital Hall
Come see some of our piano students and faculty perform together in this semester's Piano Duo Concert! The concert will be held Saturday, February 8 at 11:00 a.m. and is free for everyone.
Come see some of our piano students and faculty perform together in this semester's Piano Duo Concert! The concert will be held Saturday, February 8 at 11:00 a.m. and is free for everyone.
NMU students, staff, faculty and members of the Marquette community can pop-in for one piece or stay for the entire noon hour concert in NMU's Reynolds Recital Hall: Tuesday January 21, 2025 12pm. Performers will include Dr. Theresa Camilli (piano), Adam Hall (cello), and Danielle Simandl (violin) who comprise the Superior String Alliance Chamber Players! More info can be found at superiorstringalliance.org. Admission is free.
Students perform a piece or pieces of their choice on their instrument as a requirement of their program. Join us in Reynolds Recital Hall on Friday, February 7 at 1:00 p.m. for the first student recital.
The Beaumier Heritage Concert Series and 2025 Winter Roots Festival are proud to announce a performance by the Finnish folk supergroup, Frigg, on Thursday, February 27 at 7:30 p.m. The concert will be held in the Reynolds Recital Hall on the campus of Northern Michigan University. Advanced tickets for the concert can be purchased online at tickets.nmu.edu.
The prices are as follows:
General Public - $20 adv./$22 door
NMU Students and under 18 - $10 adv/$12 door
Due to the limited number of seats, advanced ticket purchases are highly encouraged.
This concert will be part of the 2025 Winter Roots Festival which is a collaboration between the Beaumier U.P. Heritage Center, Hiawatha Traditional Music Coop, the Peter White Public Library and the City of Marquette Arts and Culture Center. For more information visit, www.nmu.edu/beaumier or call 906-227-3212. To purchase tickets over the phone call 906-227-1032.
Here is a video of Frigg performing live: https://youtu.be/8VsaplLkEck?si=Ed9vqHp9tWQbJvOe
It’s February 2000. A group of teenage folk music enthusiasts spend a weekend shut away in Pelimannitalo, a folk music house in Kaustinen – the heart of Finnish folk music. Violins are played, musical thoughts flying about, new songs learned with gusto. A true passion for traditional Nordic music is audible, visible and aglow! The first demo tapes are recorded, and the future is being planned. This group starts calling itself Frigg.
The band’s line-up is established as an ensemble of four violins, string instruments and a double bass. In the spring of 2002, the band’s first album is published, and Frigg is becoming a popular topic of discussion amongst the Nordic folk music circles. As the Nordics become ever smaller, European folk music events quickly become familiar to the band.
Frigg’s pace only accelerates and a hunger for more grows. Their music is living and taking on new directions and nuances. Audiences are in awe of the band’s ability to transport listeners to traditional Finnish polska, bluegrass and Balkan rhythms and all the way to the dynamics of classical music, as if there were multiple groups performing on stage! The tight ensemble performance and a candid stage presence work. Frigg is able to turn their gigs into a scenic experience, giving their listeners a break from the greyness of the world.
Frigg will go on to visit the WOMAD Festival at the invitation of the BBC, visit the Rainforest World Music Festival in the rainforests of Borneo, and tour Japan and Australia. The joyful Nordic folk music laced with Bluegrass is a knockout in North America and one state after the other get their share of Frigg fever. As icing on the cake, Frigg is invited to perform at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival along with the best of the best in Roots music. In addition to their own concerts, the band performs spectacular projects together with symphony orchestras, choirs and brass bands. New music is released at a steady pace, with albums repeatedly appearing in the listings and raving album reviews of fRoots, Songlines, Rhythms.au and numerous other world music portals.
And now, after two decades, ten albums, around a thousand gigs in thirty countries and tens of thousands of kilometers travelled, that same passion still burns. The hypnotic combination of that now- famous violin sound, the irresistible forward-pushing strum of string instruments and the pulse from the double bass, all together continue to create new paths. Just like the steady flow of a mountain stream in the springtime, the origins of which are precisely known.
For more information visit www.nmu.edu/beaumier or call 906-227-3212. To purchase tickets over the phone call 906-227-1032.
On Tuesday, November 19 (12-12:45pm) NMU will host a performance by the Superior String Alliance Chamber Players in Reynolds Recital Hall. Performers will include Adam Hall (cello), Dr. Theresa Camilli (NMU piano faculty), and Danielle Simandl (violin). NMU students, staff, faculty and members of the Marquette community can "pop-in" for one piece or stay for the entire concert! No tickets required.
Senior music program student John Fatla will perform his senior recital on Thursday, November 14. Join us at Reynolds Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m. to celebrate his musical and educational journey!
Join us in Reynolds Recital Hall 3:00 p.m. Sunday, November 10 to celebrate senior percussionists Darren Hicks and Quinten Mosher for their senior recital! This concert is in partial fulfillment of the Bachelor's in Secondary Music Education program and will feature several different percussion pieces as well as feature some other students and faculty.
We hope to see you there!
On Tuesday, November 19, 2024 NMU will host a performance by the Superior String Alliance Chamber Players. Performers will include Adam Hall (cello), Dr. Theresa Camilli (piano), and Danielle Simandl (violin). The performance will take place at NMU’s Reynolds Recital Hall at noon on November 19. NMU students, staff, faculty and members of the Marquette community can pop-in for one piece during the noon hour or stay for the entire concert. Adam, Theresa, and Danielle will perform Lucio Amanti's Jazz Suite, Leonard Bernstein's Three Meditations from Mass, and Dmitri Shostakovich’s Jazz Suite No. 1. Admission is free. More info can be found at superiorstringalliance.org.
Saturday, October 26 at 4:00 p.m., senior Secondary Music Education major Nicholas Wegrzyn will be celebrating his academic and musical career with a presentation on the life, achievements, and influence of Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos. Following the presentation, Nick will be performing a piece by Villa-Lobos on saxophone.
This concert is free for everyone!
Senior Secondary Music Education major Aubrey Svoboda will be performing her senior recital on Wednesday, October 16, 2024. Join us in Reynolds Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m. to celebrate her musical journey!