Margaret Bonds

Concert Review: Ema Nikolovska at the Folly Theater

Sharing the gloriously odd feature embedded above is the best way to illustrate why I’m smitten with Ema Nikolovska. I was swooning by the conclusion of the operatic vocalist’s United States recital debut at the Folly Theater on Wednesday, March 6.

The voice of the Berlin resident and native Macedonian is good, but good voices are a dime a dozen. Nikolovska is special because she’s a goofball. Her quirky sense of humor and bold creativity are distinctive qualities in the po-faced realm of classical music.

Her delivery of typical repertoire- art songs by Franz Schubert and a set of Claude Debussy compositions she characterized as “a lot of ennui”- was faultless. Yet the unconventional elements of the program were best.

A reading of Margaret Bonds’ “Songs of the Seasons” was exceptionally romantic. The sympathetic playing of pianist Howard Watkins enhanced each endearing moment.

Even better, Nikolovska’s take on Nicolas Slonimsky’s “Five Advertising Songs” almost had the audience of about 300 rolling in the aisles. (Here’s the original "Children Cry".) Paying the Harriman-Jewell Series $20 for the recital was a deal, even if it wasn’t half as freaky as the video.

Concert Review: Samantha Ege at the Folly Theater

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Millions of people heard Scott Joplin’s 1902 composition “The Entertainer” for the first time in 1973.  Recorded for the soundtrack of “The Sting,” Marvin Hamlisch’s rendition was a fluke hit.  I was among the dumbstruck listeners who asked “what is this amazing music, and why haven’t I heard anything like it before?”

I had a similar experience at the Folly Theater on Sunday, May 15.  Samantha Ege didn’t play ragtime at her free piano recital for an audience of about 200.  Instead, the British musicologist revived the neglected compositions of African American women.  Selections by the likes of Florence Price sounded as if Claude Debussy had moved to Chicago to become the music director of an African Methodist Episcopal congregation.

The obscurity of the seamless melding of European classical music with American blues and gospel is a cultural crime.  In the remarkably sensitive hands of Ege, the works of Price, Margaret Bonds, Zenobia Powell Perry, Betty Jackson King and Nora Holt seem no less delightful or significant than the output of George Gershwin and Aaron Copland.