Happy Harpsichord Hour
[Outreach Event]
Saturday November 23, 2024
4:30PM
Are you curious about playing a harpsichord or seeing one up close? Now’s your chance! Join us for HAPPY HARPSICHORD HOUR!
Update: Please note date change to November 23rd
Artistic Director of CLE Concierto and Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory Faculty member, Dr. QinYing Tan, will introduce the instrument and present a mini-recital. You'll have the opportunity to touch and play the harpsichord yourself.
Enjoy spiced cider and treats during the event, hosted at a private music studio and residence in South Euclid, near Cleveland Heights. The address will be shared upon registration. Please sign up by November 20th. The registration fees are "Pay-What-You-Can," and all proceeds will support programming events at The Resonance Project.
Artists

QinYing Tan, Harpsichord
Lauded by Cleveland Classical as "an excellent soloist, a compelling performer who is equally comfortable handling long strings of notes... and singing through emotive melodies with her instrument,” Dr. Qin Ying Tan currently serves as harpsichord faculty at Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory of Music. Dr. Tan has appeared in concerts in Singapore, Shanghai, Germany, France, and has performed extensively across the United States of America. This season sees engagements with Hudson Historical Society and Library, City Music, the Historically-Informed Performance Practice Department at Case Western Reserve University, and the Baldwin-Wallace Bach Festival. In addition to her commitment to early repertoire, Tan regularly presents new music to her audiences and has premiered several pieces, most notably Cenk Ergun's sound installation piece, "Fomare" at the Cleveland Museum of Art and “Are You You” by Michi Wiancko with City Music.
As a pedagogue, Dr. Tan’s students have successfully gained admission into graduate programs in Michigan and Boston. Dr. Tan continues to cultivate an interest of historically-informed performance at the pre-college and college level in her role as a board member of the Northeast Ohio MTNA and harpsichord faculty at Baldwin Wallace Conservatory. Her passion for sharing historical music has also led her to lead dynamic workshops on baroque dance and historical keyboards in Southeast Asia where accessibility to period music is rare.
When not at work, Ying loves exploring and hiking around beautiful Cleveland with her family. She welcomes conversations about culture, history or how music can be a vehicle for social change and a tool to bring communities together.