Comments & Reviews
- From patrons:
Absolutely beautiful!!! - L. B.
Wonderful, a great musical treat. - A.J.
Thank you for such a lovely evening - it reminded me of another century in Salzburg. Lovely venue, lovely people, very fine musician.
I am happy to have discovered you. - C.M.
Breathtaking! - B. B.
What a treat! Will be back again with friends! - J.B.
- From patrons:
Absolutely beautiful!!! - L. B.
Wonderful, a great musical treat. - A.J.
Thank you for such a lovely evening - it reminded me of another century in Salzburg. Lovely venue, lovely people, very fine musician.
I am happy to have discovered you. - C.M.
Breathtaking! - B. B.
What a treat! Will be back again with friends! - J.B.
From the press:
Stepping into Tim Wallace's Studio 59, in a converted church on Barber Street, feels like dropping into another era.
The airy space, framed by soaring arched ceilings, is packed with eclectic antiques and Tiffany-style lamps. Victorian tapestries offset cupid statues suspended on the wall above the front door. Candlelight licks neoclassical figurines perched behind nearly every piece of furniture.
It's a space meant to invoke an 18th-century drawing room, a hub of classical music in homes ..... and is the product of a 25-year dream.
Wallace, a charming host with a soothing voice and genteel manner, puts visitors at ease, serving refreshments and urging patrons to look around.
Each show offers themes. "Winds of Change" was a recent motif, and the program was complemented with original poetry set to improvised music performed by Wallace, a soprano and clarinetist. Wallace is sublimely focused as he follows the cues of the soprano and clarinet.
- Waterbury Republican
Stepping into Tim Wallace's Studio 59, in a converted church on Barber Street, feels like dropping into another era.
The airy space, framed by soaring arched ceilings, is packed with eclectic antiques and Tiffany-style lamps. Victorian tapestries offset cupid statues suspended on the wall above the front door. Candlelight licks neoclassical figurines perched behind nearly every piece of furniture.
It's a space meant to invoke an 18th-century drawing room, a hub of classical music in homes ..... and is the product of a 25-year dream.
Wallace, a charming host with a soothing voice and genteel manner, puts visitors at ease, serving refreshments and urging patrons to look around.
Each show offers themes. "Winds of Change" was a recent motif, and the program was complemented with original poetry set to improvised music performed by Wallace, a soprano and clarinetist. Wallace is sublimely focused as he follows the cues of the soprano and clarinet.
- Waterbury Republican