Santa Barbara Music Club

Suites and Sonata

Saturday, Jan 13, 2024 3:00 pm

St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church

4575 Auhay Dr., Santa Barbara, CA

Image: Claude Debussy by Atelier Nadar (Adam Cuerden)

The Santa Barbara Music Club presents more exquisite classical music on Saturday, January 13, 2024, at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 4575 Auhay Dr., Santa Barbara. Pianist and composer Eric Valinsky will perform Claude Debussy’s Suite bergamasque and the concert premiere of the “Summer” and “Spring” movements from his own work Wisperfal (2010), a piece based on Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons. Violinist Sofia Malvinni and pianist Betty Oberacker will perform Reinhold Glière’s opulent Romance, Op. 3 and Serge Prokofiev’s popular Sonata in D major, Op. 94. Admission is free; parking is ample and convenient.

Directions to St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church:

101 – exit Turnpike.
From north – turn RIGHT.
From south – turn LEFT.

Turn LEFT onto Hollister.
Stay in RIGHT LANE & go 3 streets. Auhay is after PUENTE.

Turn RIGHT onto Auhay, then immediately RIGHT onto Arroyo.
Church parking lot is on LEFT.

Program Details

Suite bergamasque, L. 75
Claude Debussy
(1862-1918)
  • Prélude
  • Menuet
  • Clair de lune
  • Passepied
Wisperfal (2010) Concert Premiere
Eric Valinsky
(b. 1952)
  • Summer
  • Spring
Eric Valinsky, piano
Romance, Op. 3
Reinhold Glière
(1874-1956)
Sonata in D Major, Op. 94
Serge Prokofiev
(1891-1953)
  • Moderato
  • Scherzo: Presto
  • Andante
  • Allegro con brio
Sofia Malvinni, violin
Betty Oberacker, piano

The Performers

A native Manhattanite, Eric Valinsky has, for more years than he would like to admit, maintained dual careers in computer systems architecture and music. He was educated at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and the University of Illinois, finally achieving his DMA in music composition from Columbia University. He studied composition with Walter Aschaffenburg, Salvatore Martirano, Jack Beeson, and Darius Milhaud; piano with Sara Crawford Drogheo and Emil Danenberg; and conducting with Harold Farberman. While living in Los Angeles, he became music director and composer-in-residence for The Storie-Crawford Dance Theatre Ensemble. Returning to New York, he served in a similar capacity for Danny Buraczeski’s Jazzdance, Uris Bahr and Dancers, and The New American Ballet Ensemble as well as composer-in-residence for The Rachel Harms Dance Company, Opera Uptown, and the Dance Department at City College of New York. He is currently Music Director for the American Dance & Music Performance Group and moonlights as founder and partner of Inlineos LLC, a strategic Internet consulting company.

Sofia Malvinni, violin, started violin lessons at age three with her mother, a Curtis Institute of Music and UCSB alumna. A Santa Barbara Music Club scholarship awardee, Sofia has won numerous prizes and awards, including First Prize in the 2019 Performing Arts Scholarship Foundation Junior Competition. She is a three-time winner in the Santa Barbara Youth Orchestra Concerto Competition, where she has served as concertmaster for the last four years. At age 11, she performed the Bach Double Concerto with the Santa Barbara Symphony under the direction of Nir Kabaretti at the Granada Theater. In May of 2022, she was invited by Maestro Kabaretti to play in the first violin section of the Santa Barbara Symphony.

Sofia is currently attending the San Francisco Conservatory of Music as an undergraduate violin major in the studio of Professor Simon James. She plays on a 1741 Guarneri copy by renowned German maker Bernd Dimbauth and is striving to win a competition where she can receive the loan of an old Italian instrument to further her career ambition to be a soloist.

Betty Oberacker, pianist, is internationally acclaimed for her interpretations of both traditional and contemporary solo and chamber music repertoire, and has toured throughout Europe, Israel, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico and the U.S., including performances at Carnegie Hall, Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Berlin Philharmonic Hall and Vienna Musikverein. She has been Artist-in-Residence at 55 universities, conservatories and music festivals worldwide, and many important composers have dedicated their compositions to her. Her musical gifts were evidenced at three, when she began to play the piano and compose entirely by ear. Piano lessons started at age seven, and at nine she was accepted on scholarship as the only child student of the noted pianist Beryl Rubinstein. Her BM/MM Degrees are from the Cleveland Institute of Music, and her DMA Degree is from Ohio State University, where she was concomitantly a member of the piano faculty. Her discography includes Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier (Clavier Records), A Bach Commemorative Recital (MIT Great Performances Archives), Chamber Music of Emma Lou Diemer (Orion), Schönberg’s Pierrot Lunaire (Century), John Biggs’ Variations on a Theme of Shostakovich (VMM), and Diemer’s Piano Concerto (MMC), the latter two works composed for Oberacker. Honors accorded her include a Fulbright Research Fellowship to Italy and the University of California Distinguished Teaching Award, and her students hold important positions as performers and teachers in the U.S., Asia and Europe. Dr. Oberacker is UCSB Professor Emeritus, and enjoys an active performing, teaching and chamber music coaching schedule.