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Katharine Rawdon, flutist

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LIVE-STREAM of the Launch Concert! - Thursday, Feb. 23, at 7:30pm GMT (2:30pm EST)

February 21, 2023 in Concerts, Lisbon, New Music

Join us in celebrating the official launch of the CD (flut)uações via this link:  https://m.youtube.com/@misomusicportugal . The hour-long program showcases recent music for flutes, percussion, and cello by prominent Portuguese composers.

PROGRAM

Ivan Moody - Istella - for bass flute, vibraphone and crotale

Anne Victorino de Almeida - Três Poemas e um Violoncelo - for solo cello

Carlos Marecos - Five for Two - for piccolo, C, alto and bass flutes, vibraphone, marimba and percussion

Katharine Rawdon - Places I Go in my Sleep - for solo flute

Andreia Pinto-Correia - Sobre um Quadro de Júlio Pomar - for C and alto flute and cello

Alexandre Delgado - Suite “O Doido e a Morte” - for bass and C flute, marimba and vibraphone

PERFORMERS

Katharine Rawdon, flutes

Catherine Strynckx, cello

Francisco Cipriano, percussion

Enjoy a free concert online of some of the best, most atmospheric music from the musical hotspot that is LISBON!

For more about the program, click through to this article in Serenade Magazine, and about the (flut)uações project, click here.

See you there! All Photos © Manuel Luís Cochofel

Catherine Strynckx, cello

Francisco Cipriano, percussion

Katharine Rawdon, flutes and Catherine Strynckx, cello

Tomás Quintais and Eduardo Mota, of Neper Música editors

Tags: concerts, New Music, Lisbon, Live-stream, Portuguese composers, low flutes, solo flute music, flute and percussion, flute and cello

Steven Wasser (R) at the Powell Factory in Maynard, Massachusettes, welcoming Tomás Miranda (L) , the Powell-certified luthier in Portugal.

Remembering…Steven Wasser, CEO of Powell Flutes

January 30, 2023 in Concerts, Powell Flutes

There’s really nothing so wrenching as discovering that a friend has been sick and passed away, without you even knowing. Such are the trials of living overseas, I suppose…the Atlantic ocean… the pandemic…traveling—not much.

So it was with shock on top of great sadness that I belatedly happened upon the news (scrolling Instagram, of all places) of the passing of the truly amazing person that was Steven Wasser.

Steven Wasser was the owner and President of Powell Flutes for 30 years, a friend, and might I say a fan of mine going back many years. His obituary reads like the achievements of five very accomplished men—in business, philanthropy, mentoring, and community and family life.

My remembrance here is more personal: what it means to a musician to have a true supporter, and what it meant to flutists to have a real music lover as head of the flute company.

Steven and his wife Stephanie visited Lisbon back in 1994, and we connected as I had recently bought a (newer) Powell in Boston. We visited the Jerónimos Monastery (a World Heritage site) and guess what? Steven told ME all about it! Hmm, I’d lived in Lisbon already for 5 years but no, HE was the one who’d done his homework. Vintage Wasser!

This was the same curiosity and intellect he brought to Powell Flutes, where he championed all sorts of innovations (in a tradition-bound industry) for thirty years, keeping Powell well on top of the totem pole of flute-makers. He turned the shop into a mini-United Nations, bringing in formidable talent from across the globe. The loyalty he inspired was in itself inspiring; I later met the senior artisan who had made my flute; he had been at Powell for over 20 years. Success in handcrafted instrument-making depends on this kind of dedication and continuity, and Steven assembled the most wonderful team.

Steven came to an orchestra concert here in Lisbon back in 1994, and in 2014 drove for hours to attend a Syrinx : XXII concert in Westchester, NY. He loved it so much he asked me to become a Powell Artist, and to give masterclasses for Powell—and he kept his word. This unexpected support, coming from someone who has fantastic flutists passing through “the shop” on a regular basis, was worth so much to me. Many years into an orchestra position, one starts to feel taken for granted…because…one IS taken for granted. It’s a job. (Only, music can never really be just “a job”!)

I last saw Steven a few months before Covid landed, in Midtown Manhattan—for him, another long drive to hear us play. “Making us look good, as usual” was his kind compliment. His being there was the main compliment, of course!

Steven was a Renaissance man—he also collected art by Jewish-American immigrants of the 1930s, and showed me the art he had up in his corner office at Powell. It was real luck for the company that Powell was purchased by Steven in 1986, only the second owner after Mr. Powell himself. A Harvard MBA “star”, he might well have bought a company with less tradition to navigate, and fewer nitpicky details of physical construction to deal with. But I suspect the challenges of balancing tradition with innovation, taking artistic decisions, managing artists, and hand-crafting beautiful objects were the draw for him. Visiting the shop in Maynard, on two floors of an old textile mill, Steven proudly told me “Powell is the only tenant that still makes things”.

I will remember Steven fondly and often—every time I pick up one of my Powell flutes. He was far too young, at 70, and I had looked forward to our meeting again. But I’m so grateful to have known him, and I extend my deepest sympathies to his family—and to the extended family of Powell flute players.

Tags: Powell Flutes, Flute, Syrinx : XXII, flute master class
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Wait!…I Have an Idea!

December 31, 2022

This is the “sound” of a great chamber music rehearsal.

Whereas many consider classical music to be a “fixed” thing, more or less set in stone way back when (or perhaps yesterday) by the composer, I find it much more fun—and much closer to the “compositional mindset”—to allow the novel idea, the heretofore unthought-of thought, the naughty switcheroo, the radical rewrite…well, an IDEA! to enter the arena and offer itself as a possibility. Perhaps we end up tossing it out, but the process of considering options is liberating in itself.

My dear AC is the ringmaster of this particularly delightful and surprisingly practical circus. If more than ten minutes of rehearsal go by without AC uttering “Wait! I Have an Idea!” then I fear something is amiss.

While—I confess—I frequently have the knee-jerk reaction that you SIMPLY CAN’T DO THAT (call it "Orchestra-On-The-Brain” syndrome), it often turns out that the idea, or another that follows on its heels, is pure genius!

Recently such a sequence occurred. My knee jerked and I said: “NO!” to AC, “your idea veers TOO FAR from the score” (after all, this was recent music…), alters the soundscape TOO MUCH—in short, is NON-PERMESSO.

But God—the God of Good Ideas and Permission—smote me down! For immediately thereupon, what did I myself utter but “Wait!… I Have an Idea!”. And my idea was waaaaay more radical than AC’s, which I had voted to scrub a mere 30 seconds earlier. Apparently, the God of Good Ideas and Permission has a sense of humor…

And AC, being not afflicted with the dreaded OOTB syndrome, was happy to indulge me my way-radical idea, and, after several other volleys of “I Have an Idea!” ping-pong, we arrived at an extra-genius version of music that was already damn good! (Someday we may even play our version for the composer!)

Now, if only we had written down exactly what we cooked up…

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#100days Raw Materials Project https://www.instagram.com/katharine.rawdon/

#100 days … of Winging it! An ongoing experiment in plundering the creative subconscious

November 01, 2022 in Creativity, Imagination

What’s up? Classes have started, concerts loom, a CD is about to be released into the world…

But what’s REALLY up?

I’m having FUN. I’m making a bit of a mess, going for broke, pushing the envelope, getting over fears, overcoming perfectionistic tendencies…yeah, but mostly, I’m having FUN.

The fun occurs in my practice room, set up with a Zoom recorder and my phone for the video, and my flutes (and such) to blow across, with anything that catches my attention as fodder for creativity.

I’ve been captivated by a number of “100-day Projects”, mostly by artists, who set themselves a goal of doing SOMETHING 100 days straight. It’s a challenge to any creative, to keep the juice going, persist, accumulate, and see what happens.

So I decided to do a series of music improv clips, little videos (yeah, Instagram is visual…) mostly to see if I could do it. Keep the creative juice flowing. And, um, overcome the tech-fear. Cables!! Buttons, back and forth, computer to phone, etc. Teenager called for help in desperation!

I won’t comment on the results, because I’m doing this for the PROCESS. (I would link to a brilliant essay by Pedro de Alcantara, only I cannot locate it just now). So I will only relate that the PROCESS is revealing—to me, at least. For a classical musician, having spent years deciphering scores composed by others to “compose”, on the spot, letting the subconscious brain into the act—OK, it’s always been there!— to INVITE the subconscious brain in, welcome it, give it time, space, and food for thought… well, it’s something completely different. Addictive.

Each day an “Is-creativity-still-there-monster” rears its head. Each day SO FAR ( at # 39 or so right now) it has been. (Hand in hand with surprise is simply …gratitude.)

Check out my progress on Instagram here.

#100days—100 days NOT NECESSARILY IN A ROW …I’m no slave!

Tags: flute, improvisatioon, improvisation, tech, Instagram, Social media, Composing
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© Katharine Rawdon 2025