SEQUIM — Romance will be in the air when Heidi Fivash presents a “romantic era tour de force featuring Brahms, Liszt and Tchaikovsky” at 1 p.m. Tuesday, organizers said.
For its final Music Live at One of the season, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., brings back Fivash after snow canceled her February program.
Tickets are $10 at the door or in advance from the church office.
Fivash, a classical pianist and soprano, will perform a 30-minute show.
She grew up writing rock songs and playing guitar and singing with Seattle bands and has continued to expand her musical palette in recent years, she said.
Fivash currently works as the piano accompanist at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, teaches piano and voice at Port Angeles Music Academy and is studying with the Music for Healing and Transitions Program to become a certified music practitioner in therapeutic music.
Her program will feature Franz Liszt’s “Liebersträum,” S. 541, No. 3, or “Dreams of Love” set to the poem “Notturno” by Ferdinand Freiligrath; Amy Beach’s “Ah, Love, but a day!” based on Robert Browning poetry; Reynaldo Hahn’s “À Chloris” from 20 Mélodies, Book II; Josef Suk’s “Song of Love;” Tchaikovsky’s Pas de Deux from “The Nutcracker,” Op. 71 on piano; and Brahms’ Intermezzo No. 2 in A Major, Op. 118.
Fivash said Brahms composed six pieces for Clara Schumann, who was married to composer Robert Schumann, one of his friends.
She said, “Historians disagree about whether Brahms and Clara ever acted on this love, especially since they continued to be close friends for the next 30 years after Robert died … Still, it is clear how Brahms felt about Clara.
“His love for her can also be heard in this very romantic Intermezzo,” Fivash said.
While it’s not Christmastime anymore, Fivash said Tchaikovsky’s piece from “The Nutcracker” “stands well on its own and is too good to be limited to only a certain time of year.”
Fivash earned a bachelor’s degree in music composition from Western Washington University, as well as several awards and scholarships including the Presser Scholarship, given to just one outstanding music major each year.
Following college, she worked for several years as a piano tuner and technician.
In 2016, Fivash released an indie rock album, “Out With The Old,” as Heidi Five Ash.
She also has had several art pieces performed in the Seattle area, including two works for string quartet that were finalists in the Seattle Composers Alliance Call For Scores concerts.
She has performed with the Sammamish Symphony Orchestra as a violist, the Peninsula Singers as a soprano and the Peninsula College Jazz Ensemble as a pianist.
She also performs voice and piano at local retirement communities.
Music Live at One started more than 30 years ago as a musical outreach program to the community funding local, regional and global concerns at St. Luke’s. The half-hour concert in the church sanctuary is followed by dessert, tea and coffee, and camaraderie in the parish hall.
The church office is open from 9 a.m. to noon Monday through Thursday.
For more information, call 360-683-4862.