Graduate Recital: Guillermo Salas-Suárez, baroque violin (DMA)

Guillermo Salas Suarez
Friday, February 12, 2021, 7:30 PM (EST)

Stylistic traditions of solo violin from Germany, France, Italy, and Spain from the middle 17th - 18th centuries.  
FREE VIRTUAL EVENT

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Guillermo Salas-Suárez, baroque violin
Sarah Coffman, baroque cello & viola da gamba
QinYing Tan, harpsichord

Program:
program notes

Antonio Bertali, Ciaccona from Partiturbuch Ludwig

Johann Sebastian Bach, Partia 3.za from Sei Solo ã Violino senza Basso accompagnato

1. Preludio
2. Loure
3. Gavotte en Rondeaux
4. Menuet i.re
5. Menuet 2.de
6. Bourée
7. Gigue

Jean-Marie Leclair, Sonata VII from Troisième Livre de Sonates a Violon Seul Œuvre V

1. Largo
2. Allegro
3. Adagio
4. Tempo Gavotta. Allegro

Joseph Herrando, Sonata â Solo Yntitulada El jardín de Aranjuez en tiempo de Primavera, con diversos cantos de páxaros y otros animales from Tres Sonatas para Violín y Bajo Solo y una más para Flauta Traversa o Violín

1. Allegro
2. Andante
3. Allegro moderato


Costa Rican violinist Guillermo Salas-Suárez is currently working towards a doctoral degree in Historical Performance at Case Western Reserve University, under Dr. Julie Andrijeski. Previously he studied with Bulgarian pedagogue Dr. Borislava Iltcheva. He can be seen performing with a myriad of ensembles, including the Austin, Indianapolis, and Atlanta Baroque Orchestras, the Jeune Orchestre de l’Abbaye (France), the Orquesta Sinfónica de Heredia (Costa Rica), among others. His musicological research has been featured in conferences at Indiana and Boston Universities. Mr. Salas-Suárez has shared the stage with conductors and soloists such as Manfred Honeck, Yefim Bronfman, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Lang Lang, and Renée Fleming, in venues such as the Sala São Paulo, the Aspen Music Festival, and the National Theatres of Costa Rica, Panama, Nicaragua, and Honduras. In the field of Historical Performance, he has collaborated and trained with seminal figures like Malcolm Bilson, Jeanne Lamon, Paolo Pandolfo, Barthold Kuijken, Ryo Terakado, Enrico Gatti, and Stanley Ritchie, at the early music festivals in Boston, Bloomington, Amherst (US), Urbino (Italy), Daroca (Spain), and Saintes (France). As concertmaster and soloist, he has appeared with the Sewanee Symphony, the Honduras Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Camerata San Carlos.