Thursday, May 26, 2011

Watch: Cafe Concert w/ Inbal Segev on WQXR

In 1990, a 17-year-old Inbal Segev left her native Israel to come to the U.S. to study at Yale University with the famed cello pedagogue Aldo Parisot. She went on to further studies at Juilliard and has been a New Yorker ever since, having settled on the Upper West Side with her husband and three children.

Yet Segev admits that there’s always been a side of her that feels like an expat and her eclectic musical tastes reflect that accordingly. In the WQXR CafĂ© she applied her 1673 Francesco Ruggeri cello to a suite of Celtic folk tunes, bringing out the hypnotic, insistent drone that one normally hears in bagpipe melodies. “I’m a pretty conservative player,” Segev admits. “But I like to explore new things and I like to use new elements and give new breath to old programs.”

Segev’s global inspirations go further. She has performed frequently with Fernando Otero, an Argentinian pianist and composer who won a Latin Grammy Award recently, and who is currently writing a “tango-infused” cello concerto for her. He'll join her to perform several of his own pieces in a recital at Le Poisson Rouge on June 1.


...to read the rest, visit WQXR here.



If you like what you hear, join us on June 1st for Inbal Segev, cello w/ special guest Fernando Otero. To learn more or purchase tickets, click here!

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