Friday, June 19, 2026

Birds I'm Watching: Orange-crowned Warbler

Looking from my living room window into the garden, I was momentarily puzzled by a bird I saw this afternoon bathing in the fountain that sits just outside. It took me a moment to understand that I was looking at an Orange-crowned Warbler. 

These birds (despite their name) almost never show the orange crown. In 25 years of birding in Sonoma County only once before have I seen any orange at all on the head of an Orange-crowned Warbler, so this was quite a surprise. Perhaps the crown showed so clearly because the bird had been in the bubbling water coming up from the fountain and its feathers were wet. I grabbed my camera and managed to get a couple of shots through the window before the bird flew off. Nearby, an Anna's Hummingbird was enjoying nectar from Echium flowers.



Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Music I'm Listening To: Maria Dueñas with the San Francisco Symphony

I attended the Friday 12 June performance of the San Francisco Symphony at Davies Symphony Hall. On the program were a new piece by Iranian composer Iman Habibi entitled Zhian, the Korngold Violin Concerto, and, after intermission, Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade. On the podium was guest conductor Tianyu Lu, an entirely new name to me. The soloist in the concerto, I was excited to find was Spanish violinist, Maria Dueñas. I say “excited to find” because, being a subscriber to the symphony, I buy tickets in May for the following year’s season, and by June, the end of the season, I frequently forget who’s performing by the time the concert comes around. The Symphony never prints the full program on the tickets, so I wasn’t aware until I sat down with the program at my seat. More importantly, perhaps, I had never heard of Dueñas last year when buying the subscription, so, at that time I would have had no particular expectations. I became aware of her fairly recently and I’ve been impressed by what I’ve heard, so it was a very pleasant surprise to learn as I settled in that I was about to hear her in person. 

I wasn’t disappointed. While the Korngold isn’t among my favorite violin concertos, it has its moments and Dueñas attacked it with vigor. I particularly enjoyed the sound of her violin in the low register. It had an extraordinary, rich, throaty, tone that fit the concerto perfectly, I thought. According to some Internet sleuthing, she plays a number of different violins on loan to her but she appears to have played a 1779 Giambattista Guadagnini violin on Friday, this one on loan from the Karolina Blaberg Foundation via the Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben*. She was called back for an encore (something I didn’t recognize) after an extended standing ovation. The crowd loved it. Conductor Lu was great fun to watch. She’s a tiny woman but she is overflowing with energy. A fun concert all around.  

*Ms. Dueñas contacted me a couple of days later. She said she played the 1718 "Michelangelo" Stradivari violin, not the Guadagnini.



Related Posts with Thumbnails