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Post-Neo Trio

Mikhail Horowitz, Justin Kolb, and Abby Newton, aka the Post-Neo Trio, will perform at the Belleayre Music Festival on July 25.

Mikhail Horowitz, Justin Kolb, and Abby Newton, aka the Post-Neo Trio, will perform at the Belleayre Music Festival on July 25.



“I visit about 30 schools a year in North America, talking to kids about Classical music, and I tell every one of them, ‘There’s a Classical music composer within an hour of your house, I don’t care where you live,’” pianist Justin Kolb says. Kolb belongs to the Post-Neo Trio, which will prove his thesis by performing two works by Hudson Valley composers at the Belleayre Summer Music Festival on Friday, July 25.

The centerpiece of the concert will be “Remembering Felix” by Robert Starer, a celebrated Woodstock composer who died in 2001. The libretto was written by his longtime partner, novelist Gail Godwin. It tells the tale of Felix, a concert pianist and teacher, who dies and is remembered by his concert agent, publicist, accountant, students, and two critics, who disagree about Felix’s talent.

The Post-Neo Trio is a “supergroup” of local heroes. There are three instruments: cello, piano, and voice. The voice is not a tenor or soprano, but that of poet Mikhail Horowitz (who plays all 11 roles in “Remembering Felix”). Cellist Abby Newton performs with symphony orchestras, as well as with the Celtic trio Ferintosh, where she is known for her deft, prayerful solos. Kolb has played in over a hundred recital halls throughout Europe and the Middle East.

Kolb and Horowitz will also present selections from David Alpher’s “Land of the Farther Suns,” a musical setting of ten poems by Stephen Crane. The score is jazz-inspired and frisky. In 1992 “Land of the Farther Suns” was recorded with Garrison Keillor as narrator. Alpher lives in Stone Ridge.

William Bolcom, who is perhaps the most prominent living American composer, wrote “ This massive three and a half hour work includes a chamber choir, a children’s choir, a madrigal group, a folk singer, a rock singer, a country singer, a speaking actor, a coloratura soprano, and a symphony orchestra. The main chorus contains 50 to 80 voices. In 2006, a recording of the piece received three Grammys. Kolb has arranged two of the poems from “Songs of Innocence and of Experience” for piano and spoken voice: “The Tiger” (“Tiger, tiger, burning bright...”) and “London.” (The score for “London” gives the tempo as “apocalyptic rock” and is dedicated to John Lennon.)

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