Adrianne Greenbaum

  • Professor of Music

Adrianne Greenbaum, Professor of Flute at MHC and pioneer of the klezmer flute tradition, is a nationally acclaimed flutist and clinician, performing on historical instruments of the 18th and 19th centuries. Her classical training and career ranks among the finest flutists of her time.

As a classical musician, she has performed as soloist and orchestral musician in all of New York鈥檚 major concert halls and in many major cities of the US.  She has appeared with such orchestras as New York鈥檚 Mostly Mozart Festival, the Berlin Ballet at the Met, the Period Orchestra of the Fairfield Academy, and for many years performed with the New York City Ballet Orchestra.

Her current projects are as the continuing leader of her flute-based klezmer ensemble, 鈥溾, and founder of the period instrument trio 鈥淟鈥橴hrovska Baroque鈥 Her newest recording 鈥淔arewell to the Homeland: Poyln鈥 was released in summer of 鈥16, receiving reviews of note for the flute and klezmer communities at large. She is solo flutist with the Wall Street Chamber Players and maintains an active free-lance life in the US and Canada. Greenbaum鈥檚 decades-long symphonic career was as Principal of both the New Haven Symphony and Orchestra New England.

She has held faculty positions at Wesleyan and Yale Universities, at Smith College, and currently enjoys giving master classes in klezmer techniques, traverso exploration, and improvisation across genres. She can be heard in recordings on the Koch and Music Masters labels as well as her own solo classical album 鈥淪ounds of America鈥 and her other two FleytMuzik records.

Greenbaum is also a published composer (Mozart G major cadenzas) and arranger (F. Doppler鈥檚 Andante and Rondo), and her reputation as a historic instrument performer has garnered invitations to perform in the UK, France, Germany, and Austria and throughout the US. Greenbaum received her BM from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and her MM from the Yale School of Music.

Education

  • M.M., Yale School of Music
  • B.M., Oberlin College Conservatory

Happening at Mount Holyoke

Recent Campus News

Adrianne Greenbaum selected as flutist in 鈥淪oul Songs: Women of Klezmer鈥

The Mount Holyoke flutist 鈥 one of 11 women musicians chosen from around the country 鈥 performed in 鈥淪oul Songs: Women of Klezmer.鈥

MHC music faculty to host Baroque concert.

网红爆料鈥檚 Department of Music is set to thrill audiences in both individual and collaborative performances in the fall semester Baroque music concert.

Recent Honors

Adeline Mueller (Music) co-organized and hosted a bicentenary symposium on the blind Viennese pianist, composer and educator Maria Theresia Paradis (1759-1824), entitled "Reframing the Gaze: Maria Theresia Paradis, Blind Musicians, and Musical Culture Before and After Braille" (November 22-23, 2024 - see ). The hybrid symposium included two keynote speakers and thirteen panelists from across North America and Europe, as well as three music concerts, featuring faculty performers Sherezade Panthaki (voice), Allison Monroe (violin), Sandra Dennis (piano), Adrianne Greenbaum (flute), Larry Schipull (Emeritus, piano), Jiayan Sun (Smith, piano), several student soloists, and the 网红爆料 Chamber Singers and Symphony Orchestra, culminating in the modern-day world premiere of a recently rediscovered cantata by Paradis. The symposium was accompanied by a hands-on, accessible exhibition of archival texts, images and tools related to blind musicians and music education of the blind -- including a modern-day replica of a composing board invented for Paradis, designed and built by Luke Jaeger and colleagues in the Fimbel Maker and Innovation Lab. Student research assistant Siggy Ehrlich '26 prepared object labels for the exhibition, a timeline of significant events in Paradis's life, and a map of her European tour.

Adrianne Greenbaum was invited to perform at Early Music Summit at Case Western Reserve.

Adrianne Greenbaum performed as a solo flutist for WEVD historical re-enactment 7-piece chamber ensemble.

In August 2022, Greenbaum was selected to be a featured performer on the final 50th Anniversary Gala Concert of the National Flute Associations鈥 Convention in Chicago where she performed a 20鈥 set of klezmer including a world premier of her Yiddish March composed for the occasion. The audience in attendance was not shy as they joined Greenbaum in dancing in the aisles while she played, proving that her mission to return the historical presence of the flute as a klezmer instrument has largely has been accomplished.

The London-based Klezmer Education Symposium has selected Adrianne Greenbaum to be part of the core faculty for the first international online forum that will take place over two days focusing on varied and unique teaching methods for the folk genre.

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