February 11, 2018 | 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Cost:
$10
Mitchell Auditorium at College of St. Scholastica
1200 Kenwood Ave, Duluth, 55811

Additional Information

Composers' so-called "late style" works often take on a depth of meaning for their audiences. These pieces can be understood either as a crystallization of the composers' lifelong work or as final statements before "meeting their maker." In Nicholas Susi's first recital at CSS, the sacred music of Franz Liszt helps to pull out spiritual implications from the final piano sonata of Franz Schubert.