AEOLIAN TAPESTRIES
Schedule
Sun, 12 Apr, 2026 at 05:00 pm
UTC-04:00Location
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Brookline | Brookline, MA
About the program:
Tarantella by French composer Camille Saint-Saëns, one of the great musical figures of 19th-century Paris, is a high-spirited showpiece for flute, clarinet, string quartet, and harp, and is filled with charm, sparkle, and rhythmic energy.
French composer Reynaldo Hahn is celebrated for his refined songs and his close ties to Parisian artistic life. Originally written as an art song for voice and piano, Hahn’s À Chloris is one of his most beloved melodies, known for its simplicity and lyrical beauty, and scored here for English horn, string quartet, and harp.
American composer and flutist Valerie Coleman (b. 1970), a major voice in today’s classical music world and founder of the acclaimed Imani Winds, wrote Umoja—the Swahili word for “unity.” Dynamic and rhythm-driven, the piece blends classical chamber writing with dance-like pulse and bold rhythmic drive, creating music that is both immediate and uplifting.
The Romanian Rhapsody No. 1 by Romanian composer George Enesco, one of Eastern Europe’s most important musical figures, is one of the great crowd-pleasers of the orchestral repertoire. Drawing on Romanian folk melodies and dance rhythms, this chamber arrangement preserves the work’s vivid character and building momentum, culminating in an exciting, fast-paced finale.
French composer André Messager was best known for his operettas and ballets, and for shaping musical life in Paris around the turn of the 20th century. His suite from the ballet Les Deux Pigeons is light on its feet and richly melodic, bringing the full ensemble together in a series of contrasting, dance-inspired movements in this arrangement for nonet.
From French elegance to folk inspiration and modern rhythmic energy, this program brings together familiar voices in fresh settings alongside lesser-known gems. By turns virtuosic, lyrical, and rhythmically charged, it showcases chamber music at its most colorful and engaging.
And if the word 'Aeolian' sounds intentional, it is. The title is a quiet wink to the wind that inspired our name, and still holds many other personal meanings for us as well. Hope to see you there!
Artists for this program are comprised of several core Mistral musicians—flutist Julie Scolnik, violist Stephanie Fong, violinist Irina Muresanu, and double bassist Donald Palma, as well as several dynamic guest artists from New York City: clarinetist Yasmina Speigelberg, violinist Emma Frucht and oboist Kemp Jernigan. Boston harpist Krysten Keches and French cellist Jean-Michael Fonateneau complete the roster for this exciting and varied program.
Where is it happening?
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Brookline, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:














