“From Sea to Shining Sea”—Music to celebrate America’s 250th
Campus Arts Event
“From Sea to Shining Sea”—Music to celebrate America’s 250th
American pianist David Witten celebrates America's 250th Birthday with works by American and Italian-American composers, including pieces tied to George Washington and portraits of Hollywood icons by Castelnuovo-Tedesco.
FREE
Teatro of the Italian Academy
April 16, 2026 | 7:00 pm
Learn more

Repertoire

Alexander Reinagle (1756–1809)
Sonata No. 2 in E Major (1790) (from The Philadelphia Sonatas)
Allegro
Adagio
Allegro
George and Martha Washington engaged Alexander Reinagle to teach piano to their granddaughter, Nelly Custis
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895–1968)
Le Stagioni (The Seasons), Op. 33 (1924)
Autunno (Autumn)
Two Film Studies, Op. 67 (1931)
Charlie (Charlot) Allegretto malinconico
Mickey Mouse (Topolino) Moderato
Stars: Four Sketches for Piano, Op. 104 (1940)
(ii) Deanna Durbin
Words and Music by Francis Hopkinson (1737–1791)
Songs for Harpsichord or Fortepiano (1788)
(i) Come, Fair Rosina
(ii) My Love is Gone to Sea
(vi) Over the Hills
Grace Renée Pfleger, mezzo-soprano
Francis Hopkinson, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, dedicated these songs to George Washington
Judith Lang Zaimont (b. 1945)
A Calendar Set (1972–78)
November (“November’s sky is chill and drear” – Sir Walter Scott)
July (“The Glorious Fourth!”)
Charles Ives (1874–1954)
Variations on “America” for Organ (1891)
Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829–1869)
The Banjo (1853)
Gottschalk imitates mid-19th-century African-American banjo techniques

Performers

David Witten
pianist
Grace Renée Pfleger
mezzo-soprano

Location

Teatro of the Italian Academy
1161 Amsterdam Avenue
New York, NY 10027

About The Performance

American pianist David Witten returns to the Italian Academy to celebrate America’s 250th birthday with music by American and Italian-American composers. The program includes works by musicians who were personal friends of George Washington. Witten’s sold-out and warmly received 2024 recital at the Academy was part of Carnegie Hall’s festival “Fall of the Weimar Republic: Dancing on the Precipice.”

Carnegie Hall’s latest citywide festival, United in Sound: America at 250—a multifaceted reflection of the United States at 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence—is the occasion for Witten’s unique and surprising program.

Witten, familiar to Italian Academy audiences from dazzling performances over the past several years, is a musician specializing in works by composers at risk of being unfairly forgotten, particularly the music of Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895–1968), a Jewish Italian who immigrated to the US in 1939. He wrote scores for more than 200 Hollywood films over the following 25 years. He became a US citizen in 1946. David Witten recorded Castelnuovo-Tedesco’s music for solo piano and celebrated it with a recital at the Italian Academy in 2018.

In this recital, Witten will perform some of Castelnuovo-Tedesco’s irresistible portraits of Hollywood stars: Charlie Chaplin, Mickey Mouse, and Deana Durbin. He’ll also perform a sonata by Alexander Reinagle, a pianist and composer hired by George and Martha Washington to give lessons to their granddaughter (Nelly Custis); music of Francis Hopkinson, who signed the Declaration of Independence and dedicated his music to George Washington; Charles Ives’s Variations on “America”; Judith Lang Zaimont’s preludes evoking the months of the year; and Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s inimitable work “The Banjo.”

For more details, please visit the event website.

Images: Grace Renée Pfleger, mezzo-soprano (left), David Witten, pianist (right)/ courtesy of Italian Academy