Date:

Friday

May 15, 2026
Time: 7:00 PM
Location: Satterlee Hall at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral

This concert was originally scheduled for February 2nd, but was cancelled due to inclement weather. May 15th is the rescheduled date!

Join celebrated pianist Andy Armstrong for Columbia's favorite chamber music series: ANDY & FRIENDS. Not only does Andy bring some of his internationally acclaimed musician friends together, but you'll likely feel like one of Andy's friends by the end of each performance! 

All concerts start at 7:00 PM at Satterlee Hall at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral.

On May 15, acclaimed pianists Andy Armstrong and Jeewon Park will join forces for an exciting evening of music for one piano, four hands. This special collaboration showcases the artistry, precision, and musical dialogue that make four-hand piano repertoire so captivating, as the two performers share a single instrument in works filled with energy, lyricism, and dazzling coordination. Audiences can look forward to a program that highlights both the intimacy and brilliance of this unique performance style, brought to life by two distinguished musicians celebrated for their expressive playing and dynamic stage presence.

CONCERT PROGRAM

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Overture from The Marriage of Figaro, K. 492 (1786)

Edvard Grieg
From 4 Norwegian Dances, Opus 35 (1880)
No. 2 Allegretto tranquillo e grazioso
No. 1 Allegro moderato

Germaine Tailleferre
Image for Piano 4-hands (1918)

Franz Schubert
Fantasie in F minor, D. 940, for 4-hands (1828)
Allegro molto moderato – Largo – Allegro Vivace – Tempo I

Intermission

Samuel Barber
Souvenirs, for Piano 4-hands, Opus 28 (1952) 
Waltz (1910-1981)
Schottische
Pas de deux
Two-step
Hesitation Tango
Galop

John Philip Sousa
The Stars and Stripes Forever (1897), arr. Russell Ronnebaum

 

ABOUT ANDY ARMSTRONG, piano

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Praised by critics for his passionate expression and dazzling technique, pianist Andrew Armstrong has delighted audiences across Asia, Europe, Latin America, Australia Canada, and the United States, including performances at Alice Tully Hall, Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, London’s Wigmore Hall, the Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory, and Warsaw’s National Philharmonic.

Andrew’s orchestral engagements across the globe have encompassed a vast repertoire of more than 60 concertos with orchestra as well as solo recitals and in chamber music concerts at festivals around the globe.

This 2025-26 season, Andrew will perform Grazyna Bacewicz’s Piano Concerto and Beethoven’s Triple Concerto both with the South Carolina Philharmonic.  This October 2025, Andrew launches the first presentation of his Tuscan Music Festival, October 11-19.  Throughout calendar year 2026, Andrew joins longtime friend and duo partner, Two-Time Grammy Winning violinist James Ehnes in a cross-country tour across Canada, playing in each capital, province, and territory. Back in the States, year-round, Andrew directs and hosts six thriving chamber music series. Three of them are in South Carolina – in Beaufort (USCB Chamber Music), in Columbia (SC Philharmonic’s Andy & Friends), and in Greenville (Sigal Music Museum presents Andy & Friends, a combination of evening chamber music concerts and daytime workshops with students at the remarkable public arts high school, the Fine Arts Center).  He also directs New Canaan Chamber Music in Connecticut, Fabbri Chamber Concerts in NYC at Fabbri Mansion’s 1609 Italian Renaissance Library, a rare, intimate jewel with only 80 seats, and A Little Night Music at Tuckerman Hall in Worcester, MA, the vibrant city where Andrew lives happily with his wife Esty, their three children Jack (19), Elise (14), and Gabriel (8), and their dog Dooker.

ABOUT JEEWON PARK, piano

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Praised for her “deeply reflective playing”(Indianapolis Star) and “infectious exuberance” (New York Times), Korean-American pianist Jeewon Park has garnered worldwide acclaim as a remarkably lyrical and poetic musician with dazzling technique and extensive repertoire. Equally at home in the classic and contemporary repertoire, her recent seasons have featured performances ranging from J.S. Bach’s Goldberg variations, and Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy to the world premieres of Earth by Aaron Jay Kernis and Voyage Out by Sebastian Currier. Critics have described her performances as “ravishing in execution, radiant in timbre,” “unadulterated commitment to music, to lift the compositions in honor” and “ultimate grandeur and sheer delight,” lauding her “warm musicality and seemingly easy virtuosity,” and “impeccable taste and skill.”


Since making her debut at the age of 12 performing Chopin’s First Concerto with the Korean Symphony Orchestra, Ms. Park has appeared as concerto soloist with orchestras including the KBS Orchestra, Hwa-Eum Chamber Orchestra, Charleston Symphony, Mexico City Philharmonic, Monterey Symphony, and The Florida Orchestra, and has performed in major venues as recitalist and chamber musician across North America, Asia and Europe.


This season, Jeewon Park celebrates her 13th year as the co-artistic director of the Performing Artists in Residence series at Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, MA, along with her husband, cellist Edward Arron. A devoted chamber musician, Ms. Park is a founding member of the Palladium Chamber Players in residence at St. Petersburg College in Florida, and has performed at virtually all of the prestigious chamber music series and festivals in the United States, such as Caramoor, Lake Champlain, Manchester, Seattle Chamber Music Society, Chamber Music Northwest, Music in the Vineyard, Spoleto USA, Tucson, Bridgehampton, New York’s Metropolitan Museum, the 92nd Street Y, Maui,Taos, Norfolk, Chautauqua, Bargemusic, Brooklyn Chamber Music Society, Pablo Casals, and Four Seasons.


Internationally, she has been invited to perform as a soloist in the inaugural festival of The IBK Chamber Hall at the Seoul Arts Center, Seoul Spring Festival and the Great Mountains Music Festival in Korea, Emilia-Romagna Festival in Italy, Music Alp in Courchevel in France, and Kusatsu Music Festival in Japan, among others. In September of 2022, Ms. Park was invited as the guest leader, pianist and curator for the Daejeon Philharmonic Orchestra chamber music series in Korea. She has premiered important new works by leading composers such as David Ludwig, Lisa Bielawa, Nick DiBerardino, and Paul Moravec. In January of 2021, Ms. Park’s recording of Beethoven’s Complete Works for Cello and Piano with cellist Edward Arron was released on the Aeolian Classics Record Label. She received the Samuel Sanders Collaborative Artists Award from the Classical Recording Foundation.


Ms. Park has been heard in numerous live broadcasts on National Public Radio and New York’s Classical Radio Station, WQXR. She came to the U.S. in 2002, after having won all the major competitions in Korea, most notably Joong-Ang and KBS competitions. She attended Yonsei University in Korea, The Juilliard School and Yale University, where she was awarded the prestigious Dean Horatio Parker Prize for best fulfilling Dean Parker’s lofty musical ideals. Subsequently, she earned her doctoral degree in musical arts from Stony Brook University. Her teachers include Young-Ho Kim, Herbert Stessin, Claude Frank and Gilbert Kalish. A dedicated teacher, she is Artist-in-Residence in Piano and Director of Keyboard Studies at Williams College, where she is also the Artistic Director of the Williams Chamber Players. Ms. Park previously served on piano faculty at the New England Conservatory and University of Massachusetts Amherst, and has given master classes at Amherst College, Swarthmore College, University of Washington, and University of South Carolina, among others. Ms. Park performs on Steinway pianos provided through the courtesy of Steinway and Sons in New York. She is an avid gardener and a baker. She volunteers for The Guiding Eyes for the Blind as a puppy raiser. Ms. Park currently lives in Amherst, MA with her family, and their sock-stealing Labrador retriever.