Free. Free Parking in the lot in front of the tower on Euclid Avenue also along Bellflower Rd behind the tower, a great place to hear the concert.
You can also tune in on your computer, tablet, or smart phone through our YouTube channel
Keiran Cantilina
McGaffin Carillon, Cleveland
Program
J. S. Bach (1685-1750 arr. Bernard Winsemius
Sonata No.1 (for violin, BWV 1001)
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) arr Luc Rombouts
Für Elise
Claude Debussy (1862-1918) arr. Luc Rombouts
Clair de Lune
Geert D’hollander (1965- )
Old Style Variations on “O Waly Waly”
Andy Li (2001- )
St. Anne’s Garden in a Fding Summer
Traditional Spiritual arr. Péter Wolf
Give Me That Old Time Religion
Richard and Robert Sherman (1928,1925-2024,2012)
Spoonful of Sugar (from “Mary Poppins”)
EJAe and co. (1991) arr. Joey Brink
Golden (from “Kpop Demon Hunters”)
Traditional English arr. Sally Slade Warner
Scarborough Fair
Paul Simon (1941- ) arr. Keiran Cantilina
The Sound of Silence
George Harrison (1943- ) arr. Joey Brink
Here Comes the Sun
Keiran Cantilina
Keiran Cantilina was introduced to bell instruments during his university years, where he was a player of Cornell University's historic twenty-one-bell chime. During his graduate studies at the University of Minnesota, Keiran began studying the carillon with Dave Johnson at the House of Hope carillon in St. Paul. In 2018–2019 he studied carillon in Belgium—the cradle of world carillon culture—with Koen Van Assche on a scholarship from the Belgian American Education Foundation. He graduated from the Royal Carillon School in Mechelen and was a finalist in the Queen Fabiola International Carillon Competition held in 2019. Keiran is a Carillonist Member of the Guild of Carillonists in North America. He has a BS in biological sciences and an MS in bioproducts and biosystems engineering. He is a principal research engineer in biomedical engineering at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute. Keiran is president of the board of directors of the Friends of the McGaffin Carillon in University Circle.
The carillon can be heard from the grounds around the tower including the Case Western Reserve Campus behind the tower away from the Euclid Avenue traffic noise. Concerts are rain or shine and your car is also a place to hear the concert. Horn honking is an accepted form of applause at the end of the program.
Send music requests to info@ucbells.org
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