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Up to $30 Expires 4/10/14 Farmington Hills • Corner of Grand River & Haggerty Road Auburn Hills • 1 1/2 miles south of the Palace of Auburn Hills Feature your business with OyWhataDeal to acquire quality and eager new customers via risk-free and highly-targeted marketing By running an offer with OyWhataDeal, your promotion will be e-mailed to thousands of loyal subscribers who will read about your offer, visit your website, share your business with their friends and follow you on social networks like Twitter and Facebook. 58 March 13 • 2014 rrom Israel With Love After a decade, the Israel Philharmonic returns for Ann Arbor concert. I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer if iolinist Sharon Cohen clearly remembers the first time she heard Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in c minor, the piece she'll be play- ing Saturday evening, March 15, with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (IPO) at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor. "It was being played by the Berlin Philharmonic, and it has become one of my favorites," says Cohen, 30, in a phone conversation from Israel. "I was a student and got a standing ticket. I was in such awe of the music that, until it was over, I hadn't noticed that I had been standing for 70 minutes. "It's so moving that I love playing it. Bruckner's harmonies and orchestrations are so rich with many parts played simul- taneously by the string section. "I played it with the Boston Philharmonic so this will be my second time as I get to work with Zubin Mehta conducting:' This will be the eighth appearance of the orchestra for the University Musical Society. The last performance was in 2004. "When an orchestra features only one work, it has to be one of the great pieces of all time says Kenneth Fischer, UMS presi- dent "Certainly, the Bruckner piece ranks up there, and it's rarely heard:' Fischer, who has heard the orchestra on a number of occasions, particularly remembers when the IPO visited the Martha Cook Building at the university "We were there because Zubin Mehta's wife, Nancy Kovack Mehta, a native of Flint, lived at the residence when she was a student here. She went on to have an act- ing career:' Cohen, who terms working with Mehta "phenomenal; is beginning her second year with the IPO, organized in 1936 as the Palestine Orchestra by violinist Bronislaw Huberman, who brought together 75 European musicians fleeing the Nazis. "I've known I wanted to be a violinist since I was 3," says Cohen, attracted to the instrument while listening to lots of music with her parents. "I was persistent until I was 5, when they found a Juilliard Hungarian Harmonies B'nai Moshe presents concert true to its founders. Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer R oots — religious, national and cultural — will be celebrated in a concert planned for Monday evening, March 17, at Congregation B'nai Moshe in West Bloomfield. Two Jewish Hungarian musicians, violin- ist Klara Fenyo Bahcall and pianist Noemi Maczelka, will play three works by Karoly Goldmark (1830-1915), a Jewish Hungarian composer, in the area synagogue with Hungarian origins. Live From Budapest includes Suite for Violin and Piano, Op. 11 in E major; Sonata for Violin and Piano, Op. 25; and Suite for Violin and Piano, Op. 43 in Eb major. The musicians hope to use this program as the basis for a new recording. "Goldmark was a contemporary of Brahms, and his music is full of intricate harmony changes and lush melodies': says Bahcall, 58, who performs internationally and teaches violin, viola and chamber music at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Maczelka, who also appears internation- ally and is head of the Music Education Department at the University of Szeged in Hungary, considers these Goldmark works Klara Fenyo Bahcall special because they are not performed as often as his operas and violin concertos. "In the past 15 years, I've been trying to find and play the works of Jewish compos- ers' says Maczelka, twice awarded the Artisjus Prize for performance of contem- porary Hungarian music. "The reason has to do with my identity and heritage; I want to show how many excellent composers come from Jewish families:' The musicians, who have known each other for many years, got their first oppor- tunity to work together in 2012 when they performed a traditional classical program at a Szeged synagogue as part of a Jewish music festival. Szeged is Hungary's third- largest city. Both instrumentalists are familiar with Michigan. Bahcall is related to B'nai Moshe members Ruth and Joel Shayne of Farmington Hills. Maczelka has visited the