Jump to a different year? Take your pick! ☸ 2000 ☸ 2001 ☸ 2002 ☸ 2003 ☸ 2004 ☸ 2005 ☸ 2006 ☸ 2007 ☸ 2008 ☸ 2009 ☸ 2010 ☸ 2011 ☸ 2012 ☸ 2013 ☸ 2014 ☸ 2015 ☸ 2016 ☸ 2017 ☸ 2018 ☸ 2019 ☸ 2020 ☸ 2021 ☸ 2022 ☸ 2023 ☸ 2024 ☸
San Francisco Performances presents Dover Quartet with Edgar Meyer
2016-10-30
Herbst Theatre
401 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94102-4522 USA
7:00 PM, Sunday, October 30, 2016
Back to the previous event! ☸ Up to the 2016 yearbox! ☸ Up to the 2016 event list! ☸ On to the next event!
[7:03 PM lights down, announcements, performers out]
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791): Divertimento for strings in D Major, K. 136
Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868): Duo in D Major for Cello and Double Bass (1823)
[7:36 PM banter from Camden, and an invitation to support the group by buying their new CD]
Antonin Dvorák (1841-1904): String Quartet in F Major, Op. 96, “American” (1895?)
[8:30 PM lights down, performers back out]
Edgar Meyer (b.1960): Quintet for Double bass and String Quartet (1995)
Had a thoroughly enjoyable day today!
Started off the day right with a stout cup of Major D and an egg sandwich for brunch, then puttered about the house enjoying a slow Sunday.
Hopped into the car a bit after lunch and enjoyed a light-traffic trip to San Francisco, and found a free parking spot (yay!) without too much search-trouble only a block or two from my initial destination, the Exploratorium, where I met my friends Jeff & Sandra. It was crowded, to be sure (as it should be, on a free-admission day), but not any worse than a typical busy day. Lots fun wandering around in there and playing with science-y exhibits. I think my favorite was doing mind-control on the fish (kept in a cylindrical aquarium surrounded by a dark/light striped background which could be rotated clockwise or counter clockwise, the fish would swim in the same direction as the turning background and speed up/slow down as they reacted to the moving stripes – the explanation mentioned something about trying to maintain their relative position (of perceived safety?)? Guess I should have studied it longer!
Did I mention that the museum was full of employees AND visitors decked out in festive Halloween costumes? The fat dude dressed up in a pink ballerina's tutu rollerblading down the Embarcadero was worth a chortle. And it was funny to see little kids suspiciously eyeing the ghouls and zombies and such who were helping with the various exhibits. It's hard to be scared when someone's offering you a bubble wand as big as your head!
Come 5 PM and it was closing time at the museum. We launched ourselves across town, re-parked, and reassembled at Little Gem, a fine addition to the civic-center dining scene. Plenty of tempting choices on the menu tonight – it was tough making a decision! – but I eventually settled on the bibimbap, which turned out to be a good choice, though it was very non-Korean. Or non-traditional. No meat (except the egg). No kimchee! But lots of yummy veggies and brown rice. Very filling! Desert was very tempting, but we demurred in order to head over to the venue without having to worry about making a last-minute dash.
Dusk was painting the dark edges of the low-lying clouds in faint shades of purple as we walked to Herbst – Maxfield Parrish would have been inspired by the spectacle, and City Hall was magically lit in complimentary white, the blue dome showing off quite well against the clouds. Probably should have tried to frame some photos, but I was feeling a little lazy, and unhappy about the various wires and posts that would have marred the view, so instead I tried only to capture it in my memory.
<(wip)>
Back to the previous event! ☸ Up to the 2016 yearbox! ☸ Up to the 2016 event list! ☸ On to the next event!