Insider Interview with Violinist Maya Magub

During the global pandemic, the British-American violinist Maya Magub – like so many others – turned to music for solace. Her recording of Six Consolations by Franz Liszt (five of which were arranged by her, and recorded here for the first time), with the pianist Hsin-I Huang is on a new album, “Consolations” (CRD 3540, release date June 3, 2022). In anticipation of the June 3 album release, singles are released on April 22 (Consolation No. 5) and May 13 (Consolation No. 3).. We recently spoke with the violinist and asked her about her arranging these iconic works, the recording process, her career in Hollywood, and more!

You’ve said that, because the album was made during the pandemic, you had quite a unique recording process - and that sometimes it was a more “democratic” process. How did that work? 

Yes. Hsin-I and I had been playing together before the pandemic, and one of the things I was most sad about losing out on at the beginning of it all (alongside the global toilet paper shortage anxiety!!) was the ability to play chamber music. The idea for this project came to me very early on, and I think it was my way of feeling connected. I never feel isolated if I have my violin with me! So, after recording several film scores from my newly-assembled home studio, I realized it could be possible to make a violin and piano album this way, with lots of discussion and collaboration but recording separately. 

Of course it is always ideal to play together in the same space, but we did find some really surprising silver linings in the process of recording remotely. We couldn't begin by playing through the music, but in the early stages of rehearsal that often results in one person imposing their vision on the other (ok, yes, often the violinist...!!). This time we had to begin with discussion.  

Before any recording could happen, it was necessary to map out which of us had the part with the most momentum at any point (either a whole piece or sometimes sections within a piece) and let that person record first. In the transcriptions of piano pieces, it sometimes felt right to give Hsin-I the freedom to record first without any prior discussion, as she would choose to play the solo piano version. There were times when her recording would be a surprise to me, because I had envisioned an entirely different tempo.  

With the Bach/Gounod ‘Ave Maria’, for example, I had imagined playing it slower with long drawn out legato lines, suited to the violin’s greater ability to sustain. If we had been rehearsing in a conventional way I would probably have stopped early on and suggested a slower tempo, and she instinctively would have followed my rubato in certain places. In this case, her recording was so beautiful, sincere and profound that, though I had imagined it differently, I hated the idea of changing anything. Because of our unusual recording process, I had the chance to listen and play through with it many times and, over time, I found small ways to use rubato in its original definition - robbing time but then giving it back. I found that it was possible to feel free enough without stretching the overall tempo, and came to feel that I had made it 'my own'.  

Later, I discovered that the piece first came to life while Gounod was improvising over someone else’s rendition of the Bach (the piano line). So perhaps this unusual process had actually allowed us to approach the music in the same way, by honoring the Bach and adapting to that rather than treating it as an accompaniment.  

We had a similar experience with one of the Liszt Consolations - No. 5. Again, Hsin-I's vision was faster than I had imagined, but sounded beautiful. I just had to rethink and keep an open mind. After living with her recording for a while I realized that slurring more notes together made a huge difference, and I now can't imagine the piece any other way!  

Of course there were also times when one of us felt strongly about a passage after it had been recorded, and that we couldn’t play it that way with enough conviction to make it our own. These were times to take advantage of the ability to re-record after more discussion (without needing to rebook a studio!). All in all it took a LOT of time, but was very much a musical collaboration, just as it would have been recording conventionally.   

How did you approach creating the arrangements of Lizst’s Consolations for violin and piano? How are they different from the original score for piano solo? 

In thinking about music as consolation, I remembered that Milstein had transcribed the wonderful ‘Lento Placido’, Liszt’s Consolation No 3, and I wondered what the other 'Consolations' would sound like for violin and piano. It was so exciting listening to them, because it was so easy to imagine them this way, and that's how this whole project evolved. 

Much of Liszt's Consolations have obvious melody lines perfectly suited to the violin, and there are often musical echos that work well as a piano ‘answering phrase’. Tempting as it was to steal all the best melodies for the violin(!), an important part of the transcription process was to find moments where the violin should rest and the piano answer. After that, it was a question of making the new piano part flow logically in its own right, sometimes adding and sometimes  taking away so that the voice-leading made sense in its own right. 

I was lucky with the keys: The set of six Consolations oscillate between the contrasting keys of D flat and E major, both of which lie very well on the violin. The key of E major uses the brightness and natural resonance of the E string, and D flat has a contrasting richness. In Consolation No. 4, which has a prayer-like quality, I realized I could introduce another color by introducing the mute - 'con sordino'

It felt important to make use of the full pitch range of the violin, and it was natural to use two different registers for a repeated melody, or to play in octaves. Liszt uses a lot of thirds and sixths in the melody of Consolation No. 5, and they translated well. Occasionally the original voicing felt awkward on the violin, and it was fun to find the most violinistic way to keep the original harmonies by inverting some of the intervals. This one felt a lot like a Kreisler encore by the time I'd finished!  

The mini 'cadenza' in Consolation No. 6 was another fun moment to transcribe: the notes had to be changed to make them lie well on the violin, but within Liszt's original contours, and it was exciting experimenting with different patterns until it felt 'right'. I tried to think about what Milstein may have done, an my inspiration was his transcription of No. 3 with it's mini cadenzas. 

The album is aptly titled Consolations – not just because the works by Liszt are the focal point of the album, but the whole collection is meant to console. What music did you listen to during the last two years when you needed consolation? 

Like so many people, I found myself listening to all sorts of different music during the pandemic. And sadly, with war and inequality rife in the world today, we are no less in need of consolation now. Sometimes we need upbeat music to cheer us up, but I often find that slower, more nostalgic music brings consolation by making me feel understood, in a way that more precise verbal language can’t.  

The other pieces on the program came from piles of my father's old albums for violin and piano, full of the best loved tunes - some written for violin and piano, and others transcribed from operas or the piano repertoire. I had performed many of these over the years for the wonderful UK charity, 'Everyone Matters', which brings concerts to care homes and hospices. The audiences there are so appreciative of a really great melody, especially one they remember from their past; but these short pieces are so well known that musicians tend to look down on them.  

Somehow the pandemic gave me back the ability to appreciate them for what they really are and draw on them for my own consolation. Choosing the selections for the album was a great opportunity to frame every piece within this theme of consolation, and I realized afterwards that this had made me approach and play them differently. Certainly listening to them as a collection feels very different from hearing one in isolation as an encore, and gives them an extra weight and profundity. I hope that's something that other listeners will feel on some level and take away from the album. 

In addition to your own albums, you have a career in Hollywood, featured on countless movie soundtracks and pop recordings. Out of all these projects, are there any that stand out from the others as favorites, or ones you were most excited to take a part in? 

Oh so many...! I really feel so lucky to be doing what I do, and to be immersed in it here where it all happens. I love walking into a studio - Fox, or Warners or Sony - where they are busy building sets for a movie, and knowing that Clint Eastwood can just wander into our recording at any moment! Every time we play for John Williams is a dream: the music is sublime and he hears everything. From Star Wars to his solo violin album with the wonderful Anne Sophie Mutter, it has been amazing just to be in the same room as him. I've had many exciting moments with icons like Burt Bacharach; Bono at the Hollywood Bowl (where Bill and Hillary Clinton asked to meet the musicians afterwards!); and Adele at the Grammys. We have worked with Alan Menken, Hans Zimmer, Danny Elfman... many legends and many exciting times! 

Insider Interview with Variant 6

On May 20, the vocal ensemble Variant 6 releases New Suns (Open G). The Philadelphia-based group’s debut full-length album celebrates a widely diverse range of styles and sounds of 21st century vocal music, with works by Joanne Metcalf, Jeremy Gill, Bruno Bettinelli, Benjamin C.S. Boyle, and Gabriel Jackson. We spoke Variant 6’s Elisa Sutherland, mezzo-soprano, about the album, choosing repertoire, collaborating with composers, and so much more.

How did you all meet, and at what point did you know you wanted to pursue a path forward as the ensemble Variant 6?

I met James Reese at Northwestern University - I was in my fifth year of a double degree program, voice and poetry, and he was a freshman voice major. I met the rest of the members of Variant 6 when I started singing with The Crossing in 2014. It was only a year and a half later, in the fall of 2015, that the six of us decided to form a one-on-a-part vocal ensemble. At that time, we had no idea what this ensemble would become; our only goal was to program and plan for one concert, and as soon as it was over, start planning for the next. 

Vocal ensembles of your size seem to either be specialists in contemporary music, or early music – and you seem to have your feet squarely in both worlds. Why is this? What is the throughline between the two periods and chamber-sized vocal ensembles? 

Our love of both early and contemporary music stems from the wide range of specialization that each of our singers has. James Reese and Jessica Beebe both have degrees in early music, and Rebecca Myers is becoming very well known across the country as a Bach interpreter. I have always loved complicated contemporary music, and I frequently perform solo chamber contemporary music, as well as with my other vocal sextet, Ekmeles, which specializes in microtonal tuning. We all bring our own interests and skill sets, and because we are all encouraged to put forward ideas, Variant 6’s programming reflects this. 

What qualities do you look for in a composer when searching for potential collaborators to commission?

I personally look for someone who is going to be interested in learning how our ensemble sings together. We have a unique voicing - we have two high sopranos, and two very high tenors, as well as an alto and a bass who are comfortable in their higher registers. We love singing music that allows us to use the meat of our voices – much of the music on New Suns features our bright, ringing singing. 

What do you hope listeners take away from the album? 

I’m excited for listeners to hear the complexity and beauty of one-on-a-part a cappella singing. I’m also interested to hear people’s reactions about the recording style; we purposely chose a closer, intimate sound, as opposed to a roomy, super reverberant aura. Our recording engineer used close mics to record us, and at any point during the recording you can pick out all six of our individual voices. You feel very exposed, but I also think listeners will feel like they get to know us individually over the course of the album!

Composer Margaret Brouwer's new album featured in Gramophone

Gramophone Review: BROUWER Reactions: Songs and Chamber Music

By Donald Rosenberg

Margaret Brouwer covers a lot of emotional territory in the music on her new CD, ‘Reactions’, which comprises works composed between 2005 and 2020, including one written in the throes of the pandemic. The American composer has the expressive skills to evoke the passions she sets out to describe – love, ecology, racism, even being trapped in telephone hell.

Read the full review HERE

Variant 6 in Philadelphia Inquirer: "No conductor. Few tuning forks. A sound all their own."

No conductor. Few tuning forks. A sound all their own. Philly’s Variant 6 choir is breaking out.

By David Patrick Stearns

Variant 6, Philadelphia’s emerging, enterprising chamber choir, is best defined by what it doesn’t do — or have. No leader. No conductor saying what to sing. Or how to sing it. Or where: Traditional concert halls aren’t among their favorite things. 

None of the six members in this ensemble of busy Philadelphia freelance singers has perfect pitch. Tuning forks are seldom used. Yet chords are so perfectly tuned that their blends almost sound electronic on the group’s first full-length album New Suns, which is being released in conjunction with its concert 8 p.m. May 21 at University Lutheran Church and shows what, amid so many “nots”, Variant 6 does do.

Read the full article here.

Cutting Edge Concerts: June 12 - "Japan Songs"

Cutting Edge Concerts 25th anniversary season continues with “Japan Songs” on Sunday, June 12 at Tenri Cultural Institute

Program features chamber music with shakuhachi, including a world premiere by Victoria Bond

Presented by Kyo-Shin-An Arts in collaboration with Arts at Tenri

The world premiere of Victoria Bond’s new work Winds of ACDEGA is front and center in a program dedicated to chamber music with shakuhachi (a type of Japanese flute). Scored for shakuhachi, violin, and cello, Bond's work is inspired by the varying, diverse, and random sounds of wind chimes. "As I stood very close to the chimes, I was captivated by the unusual sounds caused by the wind’s movement," said the composer. "The randomness of which pitch sounds when, and the overtones produced, are endlessly fascinating.” The work is presented by Cutting Edge Concerts in collaboration with Kyo-Shin-An Arts and Arts at Tenri in a program calledJapan Songs” on Sunday, June 12, 2022 at 4 pm at the Tenri Cultural Institute in New York City.

Another highlight on June 12's concert is Bond’s Autumn Mountains for soprano, shakuhachi, violin, cello, piano. This setting of an evocative poem by Princess Nukata from an 8th century collection of classical Japanese poetry brought to Bond's mind the atmosphere of fall colors and fog. Commissioned by Kyo-Shin-An Arts the work is part of an eclectic collection of songs by Paul Moravec, James Matheson, Aleksandra Vrebalov, Jay Reise, and Douglas J. Cuomo, all based on ancient Japanese poetry. Minoru Miki’s Autumn Fantasy for shakuhachi and piano completes the program.

Shakuhachi Grand Master James Nyoraku Schlefer is joined by soprano Deborah Lifton; violinist Sami Merdinian; cellist Laura Metcalf; and pianist Kathleen Supové. Tickets are $20, available online at MUSAE.me and at the door. Tenri Cultural Institute is at 43A W 13th St. In New York City. Proof of full vaccination will be required, and ticket holders must wear masks at the performance.

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival concludes the 2022 season on October 22 with a program of vocal music, including Victoria Bond's song cycle From an Antique Land, presented in collaboration with All Keyed Up. cuttingedgeconcerts.org

CALENDAR LISTING

Kyo-Shin-An Arts in collaboration with Arts at Tenri presents

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival
Victoria Bond, founder and artistic director

Japan Songs

Deborah Lifton, soprano; James Nyoraku Schefer, shakuhachi; Sami Merdinian, violin; Laura Metcalf, cello; Kathleen Supové, piano

June 12, 2022 at 4:00 pm

Tenri Cultural Institute
43A West 13th St.
New York, NY 10011

Tickets and details

PROGRAM

JAPAN SONGS – PART 1 (2020)
Autumn Mountains by Victoria Bond
Eight Thousand Spears by Paul Moravec
Not a Trace by James Matheson

The Winds of ACDEGA (2022) by Victoria Bond – World Premiere
Trio for shakuhachi, violin, cello

Autumn Fantasy (1980) by Minoru Miki
Duo for shakuhachi and piano

JAPAN SONGS – PART 2 (2020)
KEI’UN SONG praying for love by Aleksandra Vrebalov
In the blink of an eye… by Jay Reise
Tree of Pearls by Douglas J. Cuomo

All ticket holders must be fully vaccinated and wear masks at the performance. Proof of vaccination will be required. Unvaccinated audience will not be admitted. Tickets will be refunded in the event of illness or quarantine due to Covid-19.

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival

Inspired by Pierre Boulez's series, "Perspective Encounters", the composer and conductor Victoria Bond founded Cutting Edge Concerts in 1998. With 25 years of concerts, Cutting Edge Concerts has presented over 300 new works by more than 200 composers. Each program highlights the music of living composers, all of whom attend the concert. Along with performances by world-class ensembles and soloists, each program features on-stage discussions between host Victoria Bond and the composers.

Victoria Bond, artistic director

A major force in 21st century music, composer Victoria Bond is known for her melodic gift and dramatic flair. Her works for orchestra, chamber ensemble and opera have been lauded by The New York Times as "powerful, stylistically varied and technically demanding." Her compositions have been performed by the New York City Opera, Shanghai, Dallas and Houston Symphonies, members of the Chicago Symphony and New York Philharmonic, American Ballet Theater and the Cassatt and Audubon Quartets. Ms. Bond is also an acclaimed conductor, and is the principal guest conductor of Chamber Opera Chicago, and has held conducting positions with Pittsburgh Symphony, New York City Opera, Roanoke Symphony, and Bel Canto and Harrisburg Operas.

Kyo-Shin-An Arts and Arts at Tenri

Kyo-Shin-An Arts is a contemporary music organization with a mission to commission music and present concerts that bring Japanese instruments – specifically koto, shakuhachi and shamisen – to Western classical music. The excellent acoustics and intimate gallery setting of the Tenri Cultural Institute create a superb setting for chamber music concerts that offer audiences the rare opportunity to experience contemporary, classic and traditional music from two cultures.

Kyo-Shin-An Arts is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; Cheswatyr Foundation; Arts at TCI, and our generous individual donors.

Arts at Tenri Cultural Institute is made possible in part with public funds from Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Creative Engagement, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and administered by LMCC.

Variant 6: "New Suns"

Variant 6, vocal sextet, releases New Suns on Open G Records on May 20

Debut full-length album features commissions by Joanne Metcalf, Jeremy Gill, and Benjamin C.S. Boyle, plus works by Gabriel Jackson and Bruno Bettinelli

Philadelphia-based group celebrates 21st century a cappella vocal music

On May 20, 2022 the Philadelphia-based vocal sextet Variant 6 releases their debut full-length album New Suns on Open G Records. The album celebrates a widely diverse range of styles and sounds of 21st century vocal music, with works by Joanne Metcalf, Jeremy Gill, Bruno Bettinelli, Benjamin C.S. Boyle, and Gabriel Jackson.

In celebration of the album’s release, Variant 6 performs on Chris Grymes’ Open G Series at National Sawdust in New York City on May 20; and in their hometown of Philadelphia at University Lutheran Church on May 21.

The virtuosic artists of Variant 6 perform with award-winning ensembles around the country, including The Crossing, Room Full of Teeth, Ekmeles, Seraphic Fire and others. On the release of their debut full-length album, they write “The music we offer here celebrates the virtuosic potential of voices singing together. It represents a collection of some of our favorite repertoire from our first half-decade as an ensemble.”

Highlights include works commissioned by the group from Joanne Metcalf and Jeremy Gill. Metcalf’s The Sea’s Wash in the Hollow of the Heart (written in 2020) looks to the past with overt influences from medieval music, while feeling wholly contemporary. The work is set to a poem by Denise Levertov that inspired the album’s title: “Let in new suns that beat and echo in the mind like sounds.”

Gill’s Six Pensées de Pascal (2017) is made up of a symmetrical pitch construction (two scales moving in opposite directions and meeting in the middle). Finding common ground between the poet Blaise Pascal’s Pensées that defend Christianity through a collection of logical 'proofs’, and the composer’s own Atheism, Gill says “Essentially, I allowed myself complete freedom of thought and invention within a highly—and, it must be acknowledged, arbitrarily—restricted world.”

To celebrate the album's release, the sextet performs all of the repertoire on New Suns live in concert in New York City and in their hometown of Philadelphia:

  • May 20, 7:30 pm in Brooklyn: Chris Grymes’ Open G Series at National Sawdust. Tickets are $25 and available at NationalSawdust.org.

  • May 21, 8 pm in Philadelphia: University Lutheran Church. Tickets are $25 ($15 students) and available here.

New Suns

Variant 6, vocal sextet
Jessica Beebe & Rebecca Myers, sopranos; Elisa Sutherland, mezzo-soprano; Steven Bradshaw & James Reese, tenors; Daniel Schwartz, bass-baritone

Open G Records
UPC: 195269 164461
Release date: May 20, 2022

Track List

Benjamin C.S. Boyle - Supplice (2019)* -
[1] Tous ce qui ce chauffaient (2:42)
[2] Et que le feu me brûle! (3:48)
[3] Couchons-nous, mon vieux, il est tard (4:42)

[4] Gabriel Jackson - Zero Point Reflection (2014) (11:57)

Bruno Bettinelli - Excerpts from Madrigali a cinque voci miste (1993)
[5] Libere e lievi (2:04)
[6] Sia calmo il mio respiro (3:45)
[7] Quando tutto all’intorno (3:15)

Jeremy Gill - Six Pensées de Pascal (2017)* -
[8] L’éloquence continue (2:43)
[9] Il faut se tenir en silence (2:31)
[10] Les hommes sont si nécessairement fous (0:54)
[11] Le silence éternel (2:46)
[12] La puissance des mouches (2:51)
[13] L’an de grâce (2:50)

[14] Gabriel Jackson - Spring (2005) - (5:07)

[15] Joanne Metcalf - The Sea’s Wash in the Hollow of the Heart (2020)* - (4:15)

*composed or arranged for Variant 6

Variant 6 Biography

Variant 6 is a virtuosic vocal sextet that explores and advances the art of chamber music in the twenty-first century. The ensemble’s work includes radically reimagining concert experiences, commissioning substantial new works, collaborating closely with other ensembles, and educating a new generation of singers.

All of Variant 6’s virtuosic artists regularly sing with the Grammy-award winning choir, The Crossing, and have performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Opera Philadelphia, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Roomful of Teeth, Bang on a Can and more.

June 11: Zappa and Stockhausen like you've never heard before

"Music in the Constellation: an in-person immersive audio experience" on June 11 at National Sawdust

Works by Frank Zappa, Stockhausen, Rameau and more on program curated by composer Greg Wilder for Chris Grymes' Open G Series

Over one hundred audio speakers will bathe the audience at National Sawdust in Brooklyn in sound, in an audio experience they could not possibly replicate at home. Music in The Constellation: An In-Person Immersive Audio Experience, presented by Open G Records on June 11 at 2 pm at National Sawdust, puts the state-of-the-art Meyer Sound System through its paces. Admission is free and tickets, available here, are required.

A guided tour of contemporary electronic music runs from music composed for a single moving speaker to a work that exploits the full 102-speaker Meyer Sound Constellation, using dozens of speakers mounted all around the audience in the four walls and the ceiling of the concert space. The program crafted by composer Greg Wilder includes seminal selections from Frank Zappa, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Jean-Phillippe Rameau, Wolfgang Miterer; music that’s rarely been heard in the way the composers intended. Commentary throughout the program will illuminate the dramatic shift in the way people will be creating and experiencing music for decades to come.

Tickets for Music in The Constellation at National Sawdust on June 11 at 2 pm are free, available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455. National Sawdust is located at 80 North 6th Street in Brooklyn.

CALENDAR LISTING

Chris Grymes' Open G Series at National Sawdust

Music in The Constellation: an In-Person Immersive Audio Experience

June 11, 2022 at 2 pm

National Sawdust
80 North 6th St
Brooklyn, NY

Program
Greg Wilder: Atlas (2022)
Frank Zappa: While You Were Art II (1985)
Kui Dong: Flying Apples (1995)
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Gesang der Jünglinge (1955-56)
Wolfgang Mitterer: Hallo, Mr. Bruckner (2009)
Allan Schindler: Vivre (2008)
Jean-Phillippe Rameau/Greg Wilder: Zaïs - Overture (1748/2022)

Tickets are free, available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455

National Sawdust's Covid protocols are at this link.

Chris Grymes' Open G Series

April 28 | Nia Imani Franklin
May 20 | Variant 6
June 11 | Music in The Constellation: An In-Person Immersive Audio Experience

Chris Grymes founded Open G Records with a philosophy to produce music that is rooted in the classical tradition, but delivered in a way that will resonate with current and future generations of music fans. Having released a half dozen recordings, Open G has expanded to include a concert series hosted at National Sawdust in Brooklyn.

About National Sawdust

National Sawdust believes that artistic expression empowers us all to create a more joyful and just world. They curate and produce music and artistic works rooted in curiosity, experimentation, innovation, and inclusivity. They present their work by engaging communities of artists and audiences at their state-of-the-art Williamsburg home and on their digital stage.

Maya Magub "Consolations" single released today

Violinist Maya Magub releases “Consolations” on CRD Records June 3

New album includes world premiere recordings of Magub’s own arrangements of Lizst's "Consolations" for violin and piano, with the pianist Hsin-I Huang

Singles released April 22 and May 13

... polished, stylish performances — The Strad

During the global pandemic, the British-American violinist Maya Magub – like so many others – turned to music for solace. Her recording of Six Consolations by Franz Liszt (five of which were arranged by her, and recorded here for the first time), with the pianist Hsin-I Huang is on a new album, “Consolations” (CRD 3540, release date June 3, 2022). In anticipation of the June 3 album release, singles will be released on April 22 (Consolation No. 5) and May 13 (Consolation No. 3).

Ms. Magub writes: "The global pandemic gave the world reason to look for consolations. The true power of art has been drawn upon by so many. And what greater consolation than music, an art form which expresses that which cannot be expressed in words."

After recording the Liszt, the rest of the album fell into place. Ms. Magub continued to seek out music for comfort, and found some gems in her father’s collection of old sheet music. Combined, the emotional weight of the pieces - including the Meditation from Thaïs by Massenet, Handel's Largo from Xerxes, and Gonoud's Ave Maria - is even greater. They console both performer and audience through nostalgia, the violinist says.

The album was recorded separately by Magub and Huang during the pandemic lockdown. Despite this, they evolved a new process of collaboration and musical dialogue, discovering some unforeseen benefits. The close microphone placement creates the immediacy of a small, intimate concert, and through discussion and experimentation from their home studios, a true collaboration emerged. "Somehow, to our delight, we found this to be an incredibly democratic and creative process, and one with huge and often surprising rewards. This process enabled a whole new type of creative dialogue with the benefit of experimentation over time," said Ms. Magub.

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.

With Magub's endless inventiveness driving each movement, [Telemann's Fantasies] shine here for what they really are: free-standing, varied concentrations of beautiful melody and sonority — BBC Music Magazine

Consolations

Maya Magub, violin
Hsin-I Huang, piano

CRD Records (3540)
Album Release Date: June 3, 2022*

*Singles released April 22 and May 13


Track List

[1] Robert Schumann
Abendlied (Op. 85, No. 12) 2:56

[02] Jules Massenet
Meditation from Thaïs 5:33

[03] Sergei Rachmaniov
Vocalise (Op. 34, No. 14) 6:06

[04-09] Franz Liszt Consolations S.172/R12
No. 1 Andante con moto † 1:56
No. 2 Un poco piu mosso † 3:34
No. 3 Lento placido* 4:11
No. 4 Quasi Adagio † 3:41
No. 5 Andantino † 2:09
No. 6 Allegro sempre cantabile † 2:46

[10] Bach/Gounod Ave Maria †† 4:01

[11] Fritz Kreisler Liebesleid 4:03

[12] Kreisler/Rimsky-Korsakov Chant Hindou from Sadko 3:43

[13] Dushkin/Paradis Sicilienne 3:49

[14] George Frederic Handel Largo from Xerxes †† 3:41

[15] Felix Mendelssohn On wings of Song (Op. 34, No. 2) †† 2:42

[16] Felix Mendelssohn Songs without Words (Op. 19, No. 1) 3:54

[17] Robert Schumann Träumerei (Op. 15, No. 7) 3:22

[18] Frederic Chopin 'Raindrop' Prelude 3:08

Total Time = 65:12

*transcription, Nathan Milstein

transcription, Maya Magub

†† revised transcription, Maya Magub

Maya Magub (pronounced MY-ah mah-GUB) is a British violinist based in Los Angeles. Her performance career has brought her to some of the world’s greatest concert halls as well as soundstages for multi-million dollar film productions.

As a solo artist Magub has performed concertos in London’s St-Martin-in-the-Fields, and Dvořák’s Romance in the Royal Albert Hall. She has given command performances for the Queen of England, the Prince of Wales, and Professor Stephen Hawking, and has played with numerous pop icons including Adele, Bono, Paul McCartney and Sting.

Ms. Magub was awarded scholarships at the Purcell School and the Royal Academy of Music in London, graduating with a 1st class degree in music from Cambridge University. She continued her studies at the Vienna Hochschule and as an ESU scholar at Aspen. Pursuing her passion for chamber music, she was a founding member of the Mainardi Trio, performing and broadcasting internationally for a decade, and she has played in chamber music festivals across the globe.


Pianist Hsin-I Huang (pronounced SHIN-ee Hwong) has performed with Chee-Yun Kim, Simone Porter, The Calidore String Quartet, and members of the LA Philharmonic. She has recorded scores for major films with music by Marco Beltrami and Ramin Djawadi.

Ms. Huang's album with violinist Blake Pouliot (Analekta Records) was nominated for “Classical Album Of The Year” at the 2019 JUNO awards and received 5 stars from BBC Music Magazine. She has appeared at the Hollywood Bowl, LA Philharmonic Chamber Music Series, Aspen Music Festival, Ravinia Festival, Grand Teton Winter Music Festival, La Virée Classique OSM, Fête de la Musique Mont Tremblant, Performance Today on public radio, Sundays Live at LACMA, South Bay Chamber Music Society, and the Innsbrook Institute.

May 13, in New York – A journey of the imagination!

CUTTING EDGE CONCERTS New Music Festival
Victoria Bond, Artistic Director

Puppet operetta How Gulliver Returned Home in a Manner that was Very Not Direct by Victoria Bond

On the program Kings, Giants & Robots: Vocal Music by Victoria Bond, Robert Paterson, and Herschel Garfein

May 13 at 8 pm at the Sheen Center

"...a gift to New Yorkers thirsty for new sounds" - Time Out New York

On May 13, Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival and Mostly Modern Projects co-present staged scenes from Victoria Bond's puppet operetta How Gulliver Returned Home in a Manner that was Very Not Direct. The production features puppets created by Doug Fitch, the renowned visual artist, designer and director, and libretto by Stephen Greco, prize-winning screen-writer and novelist, complementing the music by Victoria Bond. Fitch also directs the production.

The work is a journey of the imagination based on the classic 17th century satirical novel by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels. Told through music and animated objects, the story follows the title character as he travels to a series of strange lands.

Ms. Bond said, "Doug Fitch’s puppet creations and stage direction brings the first scene of our puppet operetta to life. I am thrilled that both he and librettist Stephen Greco are part of the creative team.”

The opera was commissioned by American Opera Projects. How Gulliver Returned Home in a Way that was Very Not Direct was supported by a Production Grant from the Jim Henson Foundation.

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival (Victoria Bond, founder and artistic director) partners with Mostly Modern Projects for this presentation. The performance features soprano Ariadne Greif, tenor Glenn Seven Allen, and baritone Jonathan Green as soloists with the American Modern Ensemble conducted by Victoria Bond. Also on the program are Herschel Garfein's King of the River and Robert Paterson's The Companion.

The performance takes place at the Sheen Center for Thought & Culture (18 Bleecker St, New York, NY) on May 13, 2022 at 8:00 pm. Tickets available here.

The next Cutting Edge Concerts performance is June 12, a co-presentation with Kyo-Shin-An Arts at Tenri Center in New York. Details at CuttingEdgeConcerts.org

CALENDAR LISTING

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival (Victoria Bond, founder and artistic director) and Mostly Modern Projects present

Kings, Giants & Robots

May 13, 2022, 8:00 pm

Sheen Center
18 Bleecker St
New York, NY 10012
Tickets and details

PROGRAM

VICTORIA BOND—How Gulliver Returned Home in a Manner that was Very Not Direct (puppet operetta)

HERSCHEL GARFEIN—King of the River, text by STANLEY KUNITZ

ROBERT PATERSON—The Companion (one-act opera from Three Way),
libretto by DAVID COTE

with American Modern Ensemble
Geoffrey Andrew McDonald (Garfein and Paterson) & Victoria Bond (Bond), Conductors
Doug Fitch (Bond) & John de los Santos (Paterson), Directors

CAST

Ariadne Greif, Soprano
Glen Seven Allen, Tenor
Phillip Bullock, Baritone
Keith Phares, Baritone
Jonathan Green, Baritone

Presented by Mostly Modern Projects & Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival

This program is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature.

Victoria Bond, artistic director

A major force in 21st century music, composer Victoria Bond is known for her melodic gift and dramatic flair. Her works for orchestra, chamber ensemble and opera have been lauded by The New York Times as "powerful, stylistically varied and technically demanding." Her compositions have been performed by the New York City Opera, Shanghai, Dallas and Houston Symphonies, members of the Chicago Symphony and New York Philharmonic, American Ballet Theater and the Cassatt and Audubon Quartets. Ms. Bond is also an acclaimed conductor, and is the principal guest conductor of Chamber Opera Chicago, and has held conducting positions with Pittsburgh Symphony, New York City Opera, Roanoke Symphony, and Bel Canto and Harrisburg Operas.

May 20: Variant 6 at National Sawdust

May 20: Variant 6

vocal sextet presented by Chris Grymes’ Open G Series at National Sawdust performing music from their debut album New Suns

A celebration of 21st century vocal music by Joanne Metcalf, Jeremy Gill, Bruno Bettinelli, Benjamin C.S. Boyle and Gabriel Jackson

"luminous....perfectly calibrated and adventurous" - Broad Street Review

On May 20, 2022 at 7:30 pm the vocal sextet Variant 6 performs their debut full-length album New Suns (Open G Records) with a concert on the day of the album's release at National Sawdust presented by Chris Grymes’ Open G Series. The ensemble performs the same program again in their hometown of Philadelphia on May 21.

Variant 6’s virtuosic artists regularly sing with the Grammy-award winning ensemble The Crossing, and have performed with Roomful of Teeth, Philadelphia Orchestra, Opera Philadelphia, Los Angeles Philharmonic and other internationally recognized ensembles.

Variant 6 performs Six Pensées de Pascal by Jeremy Gill at National Sawdust (2019)

The program represents a widely diverse range of styles and sounds of 21st century vocal music, with works by Benjamin C.S. Boyle, Bruno Bettinelli, Jeremy Gill, Gabriel Jackson, and Joanne Metcalf. Variant 6's recordings of these works are collected on their new album, New Suns (Open-G Records), which is also released on May 20.

“The music we offer here celebrates the virtuosic potential of voices singing together," wrote the members of Variant 6. "It represents a collection of some of our favorite repertoire from our first half-decade as an ensemble.”

Highlights include works commissioned by the group by Jeremy Gill and Joanne Metcalf. Jeremy Gill’s Six Pensées de Pascal (2017) finds common ground between the poet Blaise Pascal’s Pensées that defend Christianity through a collection of logical 'proofs’, and the composer’s own Atheism. “Essentially, I allowed myself complete freedom of thought and invention within a highly—and, it must be acknowledged, arbitrarily—restricted world," said Gill. Metcalf’s The Sea’s Wash in the Hollow of the Heart (2020) looks to the past with overt influences from medieval music, while feeling wholly contemporary. The work is set to a poem by Denise Levertov.

Tickets for Variant 6 at National Sawdust on May 20 at 7:30 pm (doors at 6:30 pm) are $25 for general admission and are available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455. National Sawdust is located at 80 North 6th Street in Brooklyn.

CALENDAR LISTING

Chris Grymes' Open G Series at National Sawdust:

Variant 6 performing their debut album New Suns

May 20, 2022 at 7:30 pm (doors at 6:30)

National Sawdust
80 North 6th St
Brooklyn, NY

Program

Benjamin C.S. Boyle: Supplice (2019)*
Gabriel Jackson: Zero Point Reflection (2014)
Bruno Bettinelli: Excerpts from Madrigali a cinque voci miste (1993)
Jeremy Gill: Six Pensées de Pascal (2017)*
Gabriel Jackson: Spring (2005)
Joanne Metcalf: The Sea’s Wash in the Hollow of the Heart (2020)*

*composed or arranged for Variant 6

Variant 6

Jessica Beebe, soprano; Rebecca Myers, soprano; Elisa Sutherland, mezzo-soprano; Steven Bradshaw, tenor; James Reese, tenor; Daniel Schwartz, bass-baritone

Tickets are $25 for general admission, and are available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455

National Sawdust's Covid protocols are at this link.

Variant 6 Biography

Variant 6 is a virtuosic vocal sextet that explores and advances the art of chamber music in the twenty-first century. The ensemble’s work includes radically reimagining concert experiences, commissioning substantial new works, collaborating closely with other ensembles, and educating a new generation of singers.

All of Variant 6’s virtuosic artists regularly sing with the Grammy-award winning choir, The Crossing, and have performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Opera Philadelphia, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Roomful of Teeth, Bang on a Can and more.

Chris Grymes' Open G Series

April 28 | Nia Imani Franklin

May 20 | Variant 6

June 11 | Music in The Constellation: An In-Person Immersive Audio Experience

Chris Grymes founded Open G Records with a philosophy to produce music that is rooted in the classical tradition, but delivered in a way that will resonate with current and future generations of music fans. Having released a half dozen recordings, Open G has expanded to include a concert series hosted at National Sawdust in Brooklyn.

About National Sawdust

National Sawdust believes that artistic expression empowers us all to create a more joyful and just world. They curate and produce music and artistic works rooted in curiosity, experimentation, innovation, and inclusivity. They present their work by engaging communities of artists and audiences at their state-of-the-art Williamsburg home and on their digital stage.

Insider Interview with Pianist Ana-Marija Markovina

On January 7, 2022, Pianist Ana-Marija Markovina released a massive and comprehensive set of solo piano works by Felix Mendelssohn (Hänssler Classic, HC18043), twelve discs in all. In this insider interview, we spoke to the pianist about embarking on such a task, why the composer is underrated, her love for literature, and so much more!

What inspired you to record the complete solo works for Mendelssohn?  

Mendelssohn is, in my opinion, one of the most underrated composers ever. Some pieces, such as the Variations Sérieuses, have become quite famous and are present on concert stages and in musical institutions. The Songs without Words - Lieder ohne Worte - also enjoy great popularity. But otherwise? One knows hardly anything about Mendelssohn's vast oeuvre. I was interested in the reason for this lack of presence in people's consciousness. One of the reasons is certainly to be found in the dark times when Jewish music was forbidden or at least frowned upon. And it wasn't just the 12 Nazi years here. There were always anti-Semitic attitudes, just think of Wagner. Wagner despised Mendelssohn because he was Jewish. He wrote nasty things about him, what was terrible.  This attitude is certainly one reason why Mendelssohn could not occupy the same space in the general consciousness as, say, Chopin or Brahms. I find that tragic and want to change it. 

And the reason why it is a complete recording is that I am trying to make only complete recordings. I'm always interested in wholeness in every sense. I am more fascinated by becoming than by being. The fascination for me is the path of life, the development, the growth. And I experience that only if I identify completely with the work, get to know everything, explore every corner of a composer’s life and work, and don't "cherry-pick".  

What does your box set bring to the Mendelssohn canon that was previously missing? 

First and foremost, I would like to mention the sketches, the fragments. They give us an important new insight into Mendelssohn's working methods. It is more exciting for me to see what he discarded than what he published. And, what is also a novelty: I have recorded the different versions whenever I could find them. From this it is evident that Mendelssohn very consciously edited his works when he was to publish them. The thing he lacked most in life was: Time. He had no time. He worked incredibly hard, was a successful music manager, a family man, and a helpful friend. This led to the fact that he wrote down, for example, a small song without words quite inspired but quickly, and he did not write it down exactly. When it came to publication, however, he wanted to go back to work, because he was seldom satisfied with his results. And this revising was particularly interesting for me. One can then best sense how he thought and what musical conception he had. 

In addition, there are some works that have never appeared in the context of a complete recording such as the solo version of the Capriccio MWV U 87, some songs newly added by Larry Todd and smaller works. 

If you could single out just one or two, what solo piano works do you wish the world knew about? In other words, are there any pieces that you wish were just as well-known as the composer’s “greatest hits”? 

Yes, of course. First of all, there are the early sonatas. I appreciate them all, but especially the Sonata in C minor. The beginning of the first movement is strongly reminiscent of Beethoven's "Pathetique" and is very impressive. But also the F minor Sonata MWV U 23 - inconceivable that an 11 year old child wrote this! We think first of Mozart when it comes to the subject of child prodigies, but Mendelssohn is at least as great a phenomenon. I am also particularly enthusiastic about some less know later piece, the etudes e.g,, especially B flat minor MWV U 117 and A minor MWV U 142. 

You’ve made a name for yourself recording the complete works for piano of a few composers now. With each of these sets, how do you begin the process of such a massive undertaking? 

That's quite simple: I read. I read as much literature as I can. That helps me to immerse myself in the composer's world. Into his or her everyday life, their relationships with other people. I try to understand how he or she grew up, what the upbringing was like, whether the parents were loving, nurturing and understanding or punitive and destructive. In Mendelssohn's case, the family history is particularly exciting because of the great Moses Mendelssohn, who shaped the family for generations, indeed who shaped his entire era and humanity to this day as a humanist philosopher.  

Furthermore here is the fact that the family was very rich. Felix and Fanny never had financial worries, that was not an issue at all. On the contrary: they rather tried to hide their wealth and therefore worked all the more diligently. I internalise all this before I start practicing. The atmosphere, the spirit of the works is then much closer and easier for me to grasp. 

What insights about Mendelssohn did you gain in the process of recording the album? 

His life itself. The essence of his being! He was a very generous man - one experiences this above all in the infinite wealth of ideas of his melodies. And in what he did not publish. He did not have to carry out every idea, that is also a sign of a gigantic talent, a sign of his modesty, his seriousness and just his generosity. I can talk about that now with greater certainty, with a certain clarity. And I could not do that before. Before, before the recording, I knew his music, but now it flows through my veins, so to speak. 

What do you hope listeners take away from the album?  

First of all, many hours of beautiful music. And then the realization that even the greatest talent in the cosmos must work hard, because otherwise the talent is worthless. Mendelssohn, with all the privileges in his life, wealth and talent, was hardworking and modest. He was a wonderful character, everyone loved him. I think, I hope, you can hear that. And that's a beautiful contribution to a happy life, isn't it? 

New from guitarist/composer Frederic Hand

Across Time: new album by guitarist and composer Frederic Hand

Compositions and performances span 40 years of Hand’s career

Released on ReEntrant, an imprint of New Focus Recordings, April 22, 2022

The guitarist and composer Frederic Hand was a student of the legendary classical guitarist Julian Bream, and has been the guitarist and lutenist at the Metropolitan Opera for nearly 40 years. Across Time” (ReEntrant/New Focus, release date April 22, 2022), an album of original compositions, showcases four decades of Hand’s music. The selections demonstrate his inspirations from diverse traditions and his range of musical language.

His arrangement of Simple Gifts, the Shaker melody made famous by Aaron Copland’s masterpiece Appalachian Spring, reflects his emotional reaction upon hearing Copland’s setting for the first time.

Trilogy and Late One Night (1977) are the earliest works on this collection. They show off Hand’s compositional style, incorporating jazz rhythms and harmonies into classical forms. These tracks, originally on his album “Trilogy,” were recorded and released in 1982, and have been digitally remastered with 21st century technology.

On the other end of the timeline, Hand composed Renewal, Ballade for Astor Piazzolla and The Passionate Pilgrim in 2021. Three songs: A Poet’s Eye, I Am and There Is a Splendor, feature vocals by Lesley Hand, with texts by William Shakespeare and the Italian philosopher Marsilio Ficino. Cooper Lake was inspired by one of Hand’s favorite places to soak up the great natural beauty of the Catskills.

Contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com to request a physical CD or digital copy of this recording.

Across Time

Guitar solos and songs by Frederic Hand

ReEntrant/New Focus (REN02)
Release date: April 22, 2022

TRACKS

[01] Renewal 6:48

[02] Ballade for Astor Piazzolla 4:12

[03] The Passionate Pilgrim 2:46

[04] The Poet’s Eye 2:17

[05] I Am 2:55

[06] Romantic Etude 3:21

[07] A Waltz for Maurice 4:32

[08] Simple Gifts 2:34

[09] There is a Splendor 3:28

[10-12] Trilogy
1. Moderato 4:31
2. Gently 3:17
3. Allegro 4:05

[13] Late One Night 3:56

[14] Cooper Lake 3:07

Total=51:54

Frederic Hand, guitar
Lesley Hand, vocalist
(tracks 4, 5 & 9]

Recommended tracks for Classical radio: [02] Ballade for Astor Piazzolla, [06] Romantic Etude, [07] A Waltz for Maurice, [08] Simple Gifts, [12] Trilogy: Allegro, and [14] Cooper Lake

Victoria Bond: celebrating RBG in Stockton, "Gulliver" in NYC

Composer Victoria Bond

April 2-3 in California: Stockton Symphony premieres "Ruth Bader Ginsburg: In Tune with Justice"

May 13 in NYC: Mostly Modern Ensemble performs staged scenes from Bond's puppet operetta based on Gulliver's Travels, directed by Doug Fitch


Ruth Bader Ginsburg: In Tune with Justice
Stockton, CA

On April 2 and 3, Stockton Symphony in California presents the world premiere of a new work by Ms. Bond, drawn by the life and legacy of the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg: In Tune with Justice was commissioned by Stockton Symphony. It features narrative text by Jane Vial Jaffe, drawn from biographies of Ginsburg and from Ginsburg's interviews, speeches, and court cases. Victoria Bond says, "The late Justice Ginsberg was an inspiration to me, and I wanted to write a work that added music to her forceful words."

Justice Ginsburg was a passionate music lover. “If I could choose the talent I would most like to have, it would be a glorious voice,” she was known to say. “I grew up with a passion for opera...My all-time favorite is The Marriage of Figaro.”

With this tidbit of knowledge, Victoria Bond chose the overture to The Marriage of Figaro as the jumping off point for her composition. RBG's own boundless energy is mirrored by the energetic pulse of the music. Bond cleverly incorporates melodic fragments of America the Beautiful and The Star Spangled Banner, giving the composition a uniquely American flavor.

Stockton Symphony music director Peter Jaffe leads the ensemble, along with narrator Tama Brisbane, Inaugural Poet Laureate of the City of Stockton, in these world premiere performances on April 2 and 3. Tickets and details available at this link.


Puppet operetta in New York City

On May 13 in New York City, staged scenes from Victoria Bond's puppet operetta How Gulliver Returned Home in a Manner that was Very Not Direct will feature puppets created by Doug Fitch, the renowned visual artist, designer and director, and libretto by Stephen Greco. Fitch also directs the production.

The work is a journey of the imagination based on the classic 17th century satirical novel by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels. Told through music and animated objects, the story follows the title character as he travels to a series of strange lands.

Ms. Bond said, "Doug Fitch’s puppet creations and stage direction brings the first scene of our puppet operetta to life. I am thrilled that both he and librettist Stephen Greco are part of the creative team.

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival (Victoria Bond, founder and artistic director) partners with Mostly Modern Projects for this presentation. The performance features soprano Ariadne Greif, tenor Glen Seven Allen, and baritone Peter Van Derick as soloists with the American Modern Ensemble conducted by Geoffrey Andrew McDonald. Also on the program are Herschel Garfein's King of the River and Robert Paterson's The Companion.

The performance takes place at the Sheen Center for Thought & Culture (18 Bleecker St, New York, NY) on May 13, 2022 at 8:00 pm. Tickets available here.


Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival 25th Anniversary Season

April 6, 4:30 pm: Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival in partnership with Percussia presents the world premiere of Victoria Bond's From the Atlas of Imaginary Places. The work features music inspired by Danzibar, Circe's Island and Shangri-La – all fictional places.

The program also includes music by Alexis Lamb and Dennis Tobenski. St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Jackson Heights, New York. Admission is free.

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival continues its 25th anniversary season with performances through October. Further details are on the festival's website.

  • June 12, the festival partners with Kyo-Shin An Arts in a performance at Tenri Cultural Center.

  • October 22, baritone Michael Kelly performs Victoria Bond's "From an Antique Land" alongside songs by Dalit Warshaw and David Del Tredici. Co-presentation with All Keyed Up.

In honor of International Women's Day, Theodore Presser Company and Carl Fischer Music Presser updated The Power of Women, their easy-to-browse catalog of repertoire featuring a multitude of works by a diverse group of women composers featuring Victoria Bond.


Victoria Bond's album Illumination was released in fall 2021 on Albany Records. It includes world premiere recordings of her works for solo piano and piano and orchestra. Pianist Paul Barnes, one of Bond's longtime collaborators, delivers stunning performances. Buy/listen here.


Biography

A major force in 21st century music, composer Victoria Bond is known for her melodic gift and dramatic flair. Her works for orchestra, chamber ensemble and opera have been lauded by The New York Times as "powerful, stylistically varied and technically demanding."

In addition to Illumination (2021), Victoria Bond's discography includes The Voices of Air (Albany, 2020), Soul of a Nation (Albany, 2018), Instruments of Revelation (Naxos, 2019), Peculiar Plants (Albany, 2010) and a recording of chamber and vocal music (Albany, 2022). Victoria Bond’s compositions have been performed by the New York City Opera, Shanghai, Dallas and Houston Symphonies, members of the Chicago Symphony and New York Philharmonic, American Ballet Theater and the Cassatt and Audubon Quartets.

The New York Times praised Victoria Bond's conducting as "full of energy and fervor." She is principal guest conductor of Chamber Opera Chicago, and has held conducting positions with Pittsburgh Symphony, New York City Opera, Roanoke Symphony, and Bel Canto and Harrisburg Operas. Ms. Bond is Artistic Director of Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival in New York, which she founded in 1998, and is a frequent lecturer at the Metropolitan Opera Guild.

New album of chamber and vocal music by Margaret Brouwer

New album of works by Margaret Brouwer released on April 8 on Naxos

World premiere recordings of 21st century chamber and vocal music by the award-winning composer

(Brouwer) has a talent for taking the simplest melody and through her expansive array of compositional techniques, develop it into a polished musical gem. — ClevelandClassical

Margaret Brouwer is a composer who wears her heart on her sleeve. Her new album, “Reactions - Songs and Chamber Music”, (Naxos 8.559904, rel. April 8, 2022) is a collection of chamber music and songs that explicitly express the composer’s emotions, moods and unique view of the state of affairs of the world.

The centerpiece of the album is Declaration, for mezzo-soprano, violin and piano. This set of four songs has texts ranging from Thomas Jefferson to Brouwer herself, which address the fundamental issues and effects of violence and war and the equality of all people.

In Rhapsodic Sonata, for viola and piano, Brouwer expresses a more personal, and no less deep, emotion: the joys and difficulties of love. The most recent work on the album is “I Cry – Summer 2020” for violin and piano. It’s the composer’s response to the pandemic, isolation, loss, and racial injustice that she, and much of the rest of the world, suffered in 2020. Brouwer effectively fits all of it into this compact four minute piece.

The collection concludes with comic release, persuasively performed by Mari Sato as both violinist and narrator. “All Lines Are Still Busy" dramatizes a “please hold” moment that we all can relate to.

Most of the selections on the album were recorded in Cleveland at the Cleveland Institute of Music, where Brouwer was head of the composition department from 1996 – 2008. The recordings were made in 2021, at the height the pandemic.

Brouwer is that rarity, a contemporary composer whose music is accessible and engaging for a wide range of audiences, but whose work doesn't sound like movie music. — St. Louis Post Dispatch

Reactions
Songs and Chamber Music by Margaret Brouwer

Rhapsodic Sonata · Declaration · The Lake
I Cry - Summer 2020 · All Lines are Still Busy

with Eliesha Nelson, viola; Shuai Wang, piano;
Sarah Beaty, mezzo-soprano; Mari Sato, violin; and Brian Skoog, tenor

Naxos (8.559904)
Release Date: April 8, 2022

Track List

[01-03] Rhapsodic Sonata
I. Cáritas 10:31
II. …fair as the moon, bright as the sun… 04:47
III. Blithesome Spirit 04:54
Eliesha Nelson, viola; Shuai Wang, piano

[04-07] Declaration
I. Thorn 04:29
II. Scattering in Fear 02:30
III. …all men and women are… 01:12
IV. Whom do you call angel now 05:30
Sarah Beaty, mezzo-soprano; Mari Sato, violin; Shuai Wang, piano

[08] I Cry - Summer 2020 03:57
Mari Sato, violin; Shuai Wang, piano

[09] The Lake 11:09
Brian Skoog, tenor; Shuai Wang, piano

[10] All Lines Are Still Busy 06:19
Mari Sato, violin and narrator

Total Time = 55:18

Recommended tracks for classical radio:

[2] Rhapsodic Sonata: …fair as the moon, bright as the sun…

[7] Declaration: Whom do you call angel now

[8] I Cry - Summer 2020

Visit Margaret Brouwer's website
Bios, photos and more on Brouwer's
Digital Press Kit

Request a copy of this CD


The composer Margaret Brouwer has been praised for her “gift for both lyricism and humor” (American Record Guide), with her music described as “utterly luminous in its beauty” (St. Louis Post Dispatch).

The 2022 recording of Brouwer’s music, “Reactions” (Naxos Classics) features performances by members of Blue Streak Ensemble, a chamber group that Brouwer founded in 2011. It is one of a dozen titles in her discography, which includes recordings of selections from her catalogue of over 200 orchestral, chamber, vocal and keyboard compositions.

Margaret Brouwer is in high demand for new works, as evidenced by the extensive list of orchestras, chamber ensembles and festivals who have commissioned and performed her music. Topping the list are the St. Louis, Seattle, Dallas and Royal Scottish symphonies and the City of Birmingham Orchestra. She was head of composition at the Cleveland Institute of Music (1996 – 2008), and her long list of awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, American Academy of Arts and Letters and Cleveland Arts Prize.

Pianist Orli Shaham joins Juilliard piano faculty

Pianist Orli Shaham joins
Juilliard piano faculty

This week, the Juilliard School announced that Orli Shaham is joining the prestigious school's piano faculty in the 2022-23 academic year. Ms. Shaham is an alumna of the school (Pre-College '93; and the cross-registration program with Columbia University '97), and for the past two years has taught at Juilliard as an interim faculty member. Pianists Soyeon Kate Lee and Shai Wosner also join the faculty.

Ms. Shaham says "I am honored and humbled to join the stellar faculty at The Juilliard School. In my years as interim faculty, I've seen firsthand how brilliant and inspiring these students are, and I'm thrilled to continue to dig into it all with them! Congratulations too to my fellow new faculty members, pianists Shai Wosner and Soyeon Kate Lee, I can’t wait to work alongside you and the rest of the Juilliard faculty and staff."

In a statement, department chair Veda Kaplinsky says that Shaham, Lee, and Wosner each "embody the ideals that are so fundamental to our mission: a passion for teaching, a keen intellect, and superb artistry. We look forward to having them join our exceptional faculty and to working alongside them." Dean David Serkin Ludwig adds that they also each "possess the rare combination of great artistry and outstanding teaching ability that defines the Juilliard faculty."

Orli Shaham, who was born in Israel and grew up in New York, is the artistic director of both the Pacific Symphony’s chamber series Café Ludwig in Costa Mesa, California, and the interactive children’s concert series Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard, which she founded in 2010. Also a regular guest host on National Public Radio’s From the Top, she’s chair of the board of trustees at Kaufman Music Center in New York City.

This season, Shaham is releasing the second and third volumes of the complete Mozart Piano Sonatas. Her Mozart recording project also includes volume 1 of the Piano Sonatas and her album of Piano Concertos with St. Louis Symphony, all of which are part of her discography of a dozen titles on Canary Classics. After receiving her bachelor’s degree at Columbia University, where she participated in the Barnard-Columbia-Juilliard exchange, she pursued graduate studies in historical musicology at Columbia. She is a winner of the Gilmore Young Artist Award and the Avery Fisher Career Grant.

April: composer/singer Nia Imani Franklin @ National Sawdust

April 28: Chris Grymes' Open G Series at National Sawdust - Composer/Pianist/Vocalist Nia Imani Franklin

Music by Missy Mazzoli, Tomeka Reid, and Nia Franklin herself in a program that celebrates women composers

Performances by cellist Matt Haimovitz, pianist Rieko Tsuchida, violinist Lady Jess and more

Open G Series continues on May 20 with vocal ensemble Variant 6 and sound artist/electronic composer Greg Wilder on June 11

On April 28, Chris Grymes' Open G Series at National Sawdust presents Nia Imani Franklin in a program highlighting new music by American women. Nia Imani Franklin, named Miss America in 2019, is an enormously accomplished and versatile singer, pianist and composer.

Ms. Franklin curated the program, which includes music from her debut EP, Extended, as well as works by Missy Mazzoli, Jessie Montgomery, Tomeka Reid, and Sato Matsui. In addition to Ms. Franklin, performers include cellist Matt Haimovitz, violinist Lady Jess, vocalist Jerenae Raeford, and pianist Rieko Tsuchida.

With a mastery of styles ranging from R&B to Western classical, Ms. Franklin’s soulful and eclectic music is a true joy to hear. Her gospel singing background in church contributed to her love for music at a young age, having written her first song at the age of five. Ms. Franklin has a Bachelor of Music degree in theory and composition and a Master of Music degree in composition. Her works include opera and instrumental music.

Nia Imani Franklin

Matt Haimovitz

Lady Jess

Chris Grymes’ Open G Series at National Sawdust continues in Spring 2022 with performances by vocal ensemble Variant 6 on May 20 celebrating the release of their new album New Suns, featuring works by Jeremy Gill, Gabriel Jackson, Joanne Metcalf, Benjamin C.S. Boyle, and Bruno Bettinelli. On June 11 sound artist and electronic composer Greg Wilder presents a program that highlights the state of the art Meyer Sound SpaceMap sound system with 106 speakers, which was installed at National Sawdust this year.

Tickets for Nia Imani Franklin's performance on April 28 at 7:30 pm are $20 for general admission and are available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455. National Sawdust is located at 80 North 6th Street in Brooklyn.

CALENDAR LISTING

Chris Grymes' Open G Series at National Sawdust:
Composer/Vocalist Nia Imani Franklin

with Matt Haimovitz, Lady Jess, Mozoot, Nia Imani Franklin, Jerenae Raeford, Victor Pablo, and Rieko Tsuchida

April 28, 2022 at 7:30 pm

National Sawdust
80 North 6th St
Brooklyn, NY

Program

Nia Imani Franklin: Afro-dite
Missy Mazzoli: Beyond the Order of Things
Tomeka Reid: Volplaning
Nia Imani Franklin: like air, rising high
Nia Imani Franklin: Burgundy in Autumn
Jessie Montgomery: Strum
Nia Imani Franklin: EndSun
Nia Imani Franklin: Manhattan Shower Thoughts
Nia Imani Franklin: Runnin' Band
Nia Imani Franklin: Ample Hills
Sato Matsui: L'Oiseau Solaire
Nia Imani Franklin: Chrysalis Extended

Tickets are $20 for general admission, and are available at nationalsawdust.org or (646) 779-8455

National Sawdust's Covid protocols are at this link.

Chris Grymes' Open G Series

April 28 | Nia Imani Franklin

May 20 | Variant 6 album release party

June 11 | Sound Artist/Electronic Composer Greg Wilder

Chris Grymes founded Open G Records with a philosophy to produce music that is rooted in the classical tradition, but delivered in a way that will resonate with current and future generations of music fans. Having released a half dozen recordings, Open G has expanded to include a concert series hosted at National Sawdust in Brooklyn.

About National Sawdust

National Sawdust believes that artistic expression empowers us all to create a more joyful and just world. They curate and produce music and artistic works rooted in curiosity, experimentation, innovation, and inclusivity. They present their work by engaging communities of artists and audiences at their state-of-the-art Williamsburg home and on their digital stage.

Cutting Edge Concerts - Silver Anniversary Season

CUTTING EDGE CONCERTS New Music Festival

Victoria Bond, Artistic Director

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival Announces 25th Anniversary Season

Featuring world and regional premieres by founder and Artistic Director Victoria Bond

New venues and new collaborators

"...a gift to New Yorkers thirsty for new sounds" - Time Out New York

Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival exists to celebrate, support and promote the work of living composers. Over the past 25 years, works by more than 200 composers have been played by world-class ensembles and soloists in the country. Audiences have delighted to dozens of world premieres and hundreds of on-stage conversations with the composers themselves.

The 2022 season marks the 25th year of the concert series, which Chamber Music America has called "a full-throttle commitment to contemporary music." To celebrate the occasion, this season will include world and regional premieres by founder and artistic director Victoria Bond.

The Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival 2022 will be presented across New York City for four performances, each in partnership with a different arts organization.

  • April 6, 2022 | From the Atlas of Imaginary Places (Percussia, partner) at St. Mark's Church in Jackson Heights

  • May 13, 2022 |The Adventures of Gulliver (Mostly Modern Projects, partner) at the Sheen Center

  • June 12, 2022 | Japan Songs (Kyo-Shin-An Arts, partner) at the Tenri Cultural Center

  • October 22, 2022 | From an Antique Land (Keyed Up Music Project, partner) at the Tenri Cultural Center

The theme of the season is Bringing People Together. "Because of the stress, loneliness and isolation of the past year, now is the time to bring people together with music that expresses uplifting spiritual themes of hope," artistic director and founder Victoria Bond says. In addition to the in-person programming, audiences will be able to enjoy the concerts virtually through a live-stream. Program details available below.

CUTTING EDGE CONCERTS

2022 Season Programs

In addition to the in-person programming, audiences will be able to

enjoy the concerts virtually through a live-stream.

World premiere

April 6, 2022: From the Atlas of Imaginary Places

Percussia, partner | St. Mark's Church in Jackson Heights

Victoria Bond’s composition From the Atlas of Imaginary Places will be premiered by the new music ensemble Percussia which commissioned it. Also on the program is Murmuration by Alexis Lamb. The concert is presented in conjunction with Poetry at St. Mark’s.

May 13, 2022: The Adventures of Gulliver

Mostly Modern Projects, partner | Sheen Center

Scenes from the puppet opera The Adventures of Gulliver based on the imaginary world of Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels by composer Victoria Bond, librettist Stephen Greco and director Doug Fitch will be presented for the first time with puppets. Also on the program is King of the River by Hershel Garfein and The Companion by Robert Paterson. Featuring soloists from the American Modern Ensemble.

World premiere

June 12, 2022: Japan Songs

Kyo-Shin-An Arts, partner | Tenri Cultural Center

Japan Songs is a collection of songs by various composers based on Haiku poetry. The composers are: Aleksandra Vrebalov, James Schlefer, Paul Moravec, Douglas Cuomo, Jay Reise and Victoria Bond. Performed by shakuhachi player James Schelefer and guest artists.

New York premiere

October 22, 2022: From an Antique Land

Keyed Up Music Project, partner | Tenri Cultural Center

Victoria Bond’s song cycle From an Antique Land will be performed by baritone Michael Kelly and pianist Bradley Moore. Also on the program is Different Loves by Dalit Warshaw, performed by the composer, selected songs by David Del Tredici performed by Michael Kelly and Marc Peloquin and The Temple in the Mist and Three Minds by Narong Prangcharoen, performed by Marc Peloquin.

CUTTING EDGE CONCERTS

A short history

Inspired by Pierre Boulez's series, "Perspective Encounters", the composer and conductor Victoria Bond founded Cutting Edge Concerts in 1998. With 25 years of concerts, Cutting Edge Concerts has presented over 300 new works by more than 200 composers. Each program highlights the music of living composers, all of whom attend the concert. Along with performances by world-class ensembles and soloists, each program features on-stage discussions between host Victoria Bond and the composers.

For the 20th anniversary, New Music Box published a feature on the festival and its many highlights and accomplishments. In it, Victoria Bond wrote "I launched the Cutting Edge Concerts New Music Festival in 1998 with the purpose of presenting the music of living composers, including—but not limited to—my own work. I was eager to know what my composition colleagues were writing and to have a way of bringing their music to the public. I also knew many performers interested in new music, and the thought of putting these together was intoxicating."

Victoria Bond, Artistic Director

A major force in 21st century music, composer Victoria Bond is known for her melodic gift and dramatic flair. Her works for orchestra, chamber ensemble and opera have been lauded by The New York Times as "powerful, stylistically varied and technically demanding." Her compositions have been performed by the New York City Opera, Shanghai, Dallas and Houston Symphonies, members of the Chicago Symphony and New York Philharmonic, American Ballet Theater and the Cassatt and Audubon Quartets. Ms. Bond is also an acclaimed conductor, and is the principal guest conductor of Chamber Opera Chicago, and has held conducting positions with Pittsburgh Symphony, New York City Opera, Roanoke Symphony, and Bel Canto and Harrisburg Operas.

April 20 at Strathmore: 20 years of Defiant Requiem

"We were hungry, we were tired, we were sick. But we had something to live for."

Wednesday, April 20 in North Bethesda, MD
at The Music Center at Strathmore

Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín
20th anniversary performance

Complete live performance of Verdi's Requiem, interspersed with historic film, testimony from survivors and narration tells the moving story of courageous performances by prisoners in a WWII concentration camp

Read about Defiant Requiem in The New York Times, LA Times, Chicago Tribune and more

Praised by The New York Times as "Poignant...a monument to the courage of one man to foster hope among prisoners with little other solace," Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín celebrates its 20th anniversary with a performance at Strathmore in North Bethesda, MD on Wednesday, April 20, 2022 at 7:30 pm. Complete details below.

The "extraordinarily beautiful and moving" concert/drama commemorates the courageous Jewish prisoners in the Theresienstadt Concentration Camp during World War II who performed Verdi's Requiem 16 times, as an act of defiance and resistance to their Nazi captors. Defiant Requiem is a complete live performance of Verdi's Requiem interspersed with historic film, testimony from survivors and narration that tells this tale of audacious bravery.

Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín was created by Murry Sidlin, who will conduct the performance. It features soprano Jennifer Check, mezzo-soprano Ann McMahon Quintero, tenor Cooper Nolan, bass-baritone Nathan Stark; the Orchestra of Terezín Remembrance. A chorus of regional ensembles includes the American University Chamber Singers, The Catholic University of America Verdi Choir, Longwood University Camerata & Chamber Singers, University of Virginia Chamber Singers, Virginia Commonwealth University Commonwealth Singers, and the Virginia State University Concert Choir.

Since the world premiere performance twenty years ago, Defiant Requiem has had a profound and lasting impact on the communities and audiences who have experienced this powerful story live. The April 20, 2022 performance at Strathmore commemorates this twenty year milestone. The concert benefits the Foundation’s continuing efforts to honor the brave Jewish prisoners in Theresienstadt, educate future generations about why the Holocaust must never be forgotten, and foster conversations about contemporary issues including rising Holocaust ignorance and denial, antisemitism, and racism.

Ticketing information and more for Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín is available in the calendar listing below.

The Defiant Requiem Foundation also produced an Emmy-nominated documentary film narrated by Bebe Neuwirth that has been praised as a "gripping documentary" (Examiner.com), with "a very powerful message" (CNN). More information is at DefiantRequiem.org

CALENDAR LISTING

Defiant Requiem: Verdi at Terezín

Wednesday, April 20 at 7:30 pm

The Music Center at Strathmore
5301 Tuckerman Lane
North Bethesda, MD 20852

Tickets at strathmore.org

Murry Sidlin, creator & conductor

Jennifer Check, soprano
Ann McMahon Quintero, mezzo
Cooper Nolan, tenor
Nathan Stark, bass-baritone

Orchestra of Terezín Remembrance

with a chorus of regional ensembles:

American University Chamber Singers
Daniel Abraham, director

The Catholic University of America Verdi Choir
Murry Sidlin, interim conductor

Longwood University Camerata & Chamber Singers
Pamela McDermott, director

University of Virginia Chamber Singers
Michael Slon, director

Virginia Commonwealth University Commonwealth Singers
Erin Freeman, conductor

Virginia State University Concert Choir
Patrick D. McCoy, interim director

Presented by The Defiant Requiem Foundation with the generous support of Jeff Schoenfeld and our other sponsors. Proceeds to benefit the Foundation’s ongoing educational programs and initiatives.

Insider Interview with Jeremy Gill

For his new work for the Grammy Award-winning Parker Quartet, Jeremy Gill drew inspiration from a book described as a “kaleidoscope of postmodern fairy tales.” Motherwhere is a concerto grosso for the Parkers and New York Classical Players, who perform the world premiere on April 1, 2022.

In our insider interview with Jeremy, we spoke about his love for reading, collaborating with the Parkers and NY Classical Players, and writing for string quartet and orchestra.

Tell us a little about Night School: A Reader for Grownups, the book which your composition Motherwhere is based on. How did you come across this fascinating collection of stories? What gripped or fascinated you about it?

My wife and I are both avid readers, and a couple of years ago we decided that we would try something new: we would each read an author we had never read before whose last name began with A, B, C, etc., through Z. We chose our books (mostly) from the shelves of the McNally Jackson on Prince Street, in Greenwich Village, one of our favorite local bookstores.

My “B” author was Zsófia Bán, and I loved her book from the very first reading, for so many reasons. Firstly, her language itself is wonderfully musical – its rhythms and cadences – despite the fact that I was reading her in translation! (This is a great credit to her translator, Jim Tucker, who managers to translate her Hungarian into a wonderfully idiosyncratic, though natural-sounding English.) Secondly, she manages to perfectly balance whimsy and wisdom, such that one’s never entirely sure if she’s being serious or having a laugh; in this way, she recalls Italo Calvino (one of my favorite writers). Thirdly, she often allows the reader to watch her think “on the page” – we get to follow her train of thought and thrill at her obviously quick wit and sharp, sharp mind (here she recalls Anne Carson to me, another favorite). Fourthly (I could go on and on), she manages somehow to create a unity of twenty-one distinct and seemingly unrelated tales.

There is a magical through-line that runs from the first tale (depicting the surprising disappearance of “Motherwhere” – a kind of Ur-mother – all the way to the last tale titled “The Miraculous Return of Laughter,” in which a (maybe) post-Soviet “thaw” is translated into the contagious spread of existential merriment. My subsequent readings revealed many more layers, and unearthed unexpected connections between tales, sometimes via seemingly insignificant details. This, like her language, is very musical – as when a melodic fragment turns up much later in a work, in an entirely different context…

You’ve said “I wanted to evoke, musically, the experience of reading [Night School]. What was your experience reading it, and how does that translate to your composition?

Ultimately, I felt most strongly that the book is somehow many wildly, beautifully varied expressions of a few simple themes or ideas. Absence is one theme – this is obviously Motherwhere’s “condition,” but most of the characters that appear in the book are profoundly alone, and many of them are acutely aware of being so. One of the funniest stories is “Mrs. Longfellow Burns,” a campy, mocking quasi-biography of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in which Mrs. Longfellow – who ends in ashes – is somehow the lonely heart of “his” story. Another theme is the feminine perspective, which for me as a male reader made each character freshly “Other”, and had me constantly reevaluating my assumptions about motivation and desire.

My work – a concerto for string quartet and string orchestra – takes the form of twenty-one bagatelles, with each bagatelle corresponding to one story (in the order in which they appear in the book). In order to translate her use of “themes” into musical ideas, I came up with some very basic musical conceits that run throughout all the bagatelles. These are purely musical (not correlated to her literary themes) – symmetry (primarily pitch-based, with the D above middle C acting as fulcrum), the open strings, and the exploration of like-interval sonorities (sections based mostly on seconds, thirds, fourths, etc.).

Having these abstract musical anchors allowed me then to “react,” compositionally, to each of her tales. Sometimes, I made a very detailed reflection of her story in the music. One example is “What Is This Thing Called the Exchange Reaction,” which depicts a love quadrangle told through the guise of a couples ping-pong match: my four quartet members each assume a specific character in the story, and musically play out their shifting relationships. It’s a literal transposition of the story into music. When the (spoiler alert!) two female characters wind up going off together, they transform into the “Two Fridas” of the ensuing story. Other times, my musical reflections are more circumspect: “How I Didn’t” gives six parodic accounts of how and when the author did not meet a literary personage she admires, but my music is entirely concerned with only the final non-meeting, which takes place at the edge of the North Sea (the sea as Ur-mother is another of her important themes). Most often, though, my musical reflections of Bán’s tales are more purely emotional – music is, literally, non-narrative, so the best way I could find to encapsulate the experience of reading her was to try to match up the emotional evocations of the music and the tale – what was the emotional residue left by the tale? This was probably my most typical approach to writing each bagatelle.

The work features the award-winning Parker Quartet, a group with whom you’ve collaborated numerous times. Tell about the collaborative process of writing music for them.

I love the Parker Quartet – I first wrote for them in 2006, when they were relatively newly minted. I had received a commission from Market Square Concerts (Harrisburg, PA) to compose a 25th anniversary piece and I had my pick of the artists appearing that season. I responded deeply to the Parker Quartet’s playing and I wrote them a letter, included some of my music, and told them that I wanted to write for them but ONLY if they wanted a piece from me. In their typical, thoughtful and thorough way, they took the requisite time to get to know my music. They responded well to it, and said they’d love a piece from me. We had a wonderful first collaboration.

Over the ensuing years I’ve gone to hear them whenever we’re in the same general area, and we’ve worked together on other projects – I produced their wonderful recording of Mendelssohn quartets, for example. The last piece I wrote for them was Capriccio, an hour-long quartet in 27 movements commissioned by Chamber Music America. Capriccio felt like the ultimate string quartet composition for me (in that piece, I wrote that I aimed “to encapsulate, technically, expressively, and texturally, all that is possible for the string quartet”), so a next work for them would have to be completely different. Enter Motherwhere, a concerto for string quartet with string orchestra…

Writing for the Parkers is every composer’s dream: I feel like they “get me” completely, and always find in my music exactly what I hoped they would find (and often pleasantly surprise me by amplifying things I only partially realized myself). They are technically perfect, but go so far beyond that in their understanding and sense of the music. They complement one another perfectly – I feel like they are THE string quartet of today, and I’m lucky to have worked with them so often and for so long.

Motherwhere is scored for string quartet and string orchestra. You don’t see that every day! Which compositions for this instrumentation inspired you? How does the quartet’s solo part stand apart from the string orchestra accompaniment?

There is one great work for string quartet and string orchestra that I know – Elgar’s Introduction and Allegro – but there are many wonderful works for string orchestra that make incidental use of a solo quartet: Bartók’s Divertimento, Stravinsky’s Concerto in D, Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge, Vaughan-Williams’s Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis. These are a few of the nearly two dozen works I repeatedly revisited while composing Motherwhere. My solo quartet stands apart from the ensemble in its musical function – it is the primary source of musical material, and usually carries the expressive weight of each bagatelle.

The last concerto I wrote before Motherwhere was Concerto d’avorio for four-hands piano and orchestra, and I learned in that piece that a chamber music “soloist” is quite different from a solitary soloist. Throughout, the chamber music soloist needs to function as a chamber group – not as a collection of independent soloists. This might seem obvious (or inconsequential), but this way of thinking about the soloists was crucial for me. It also makes rehearsing the piece a (hopefully) more pleasant task – the quartet will spend a lot of time learning the piece away from the orchestra, and that learning process would be dreadful if the four parts only made sense in the context of the orchestra – they need to have their own, chamber identity that feels compelling on its own.

What do you hope audiences get from hearing this music?

I want the audience to feel – in so far as this is possible – my love and admiration for Night School, Bán’s wonderfully fun, inventive, witty, touching, thrilling book. If I managed to capture half of her infectious spirit and can translate that to the audience, this will be a great success! I hope, too, that the audience senses some of the affection I have for the Parker Quartet: writing for them is such a joy, and I hope that joy is manifest in the notes I wrote for them.

This is my first time working with New York Classical Players; they are fantastic, and Dongmin Kim is a wonderful conductor and – from everything I’ve heard – an ideal collaborator. The string orchestra is one of the most mind-bogglingly varied and malleable ensembles, and my approach to writing for the string orchestra throughout is to let it sound well. This, again, may seem obvious, but the older I get, the more I find myself focusing on creating the ideal musical environment in which musicians can sound and play their best. Musicians play the music they love because it gives them great pleasure to do so, and my aim is to afford them the kind of pleasure that draws them back to the work for repeated doses. When that mutual affection comes off the stage and makes its way into the audience – that’s when everything is working as it should.

Jeremy Gill – world premiere performed by Parker Quartet

Jeremy Gill’s new music for the Grammy award-winning Parker Quartet is inspired by a “kaleidoscope of postmodern fairy tales”

World premiere of “Motherwhere” on April 1 with Parker Quartet with New York Classical Players, Dongmin Kim, conducting

For his new work for the Grammy Award-winning Parker Quartet, Jeremy Gill drew inspiration from a book described as a “kaleidoscope of postmodern fairy tales”1. Motherwhere is a concerto grosso for the Parkers and New York Classical Players, who perform the world premiere on April 1, 2022.

This book, “Night School: A Reader for Grownups,” by the Hungarian author Zsófia Bán, is a volume of short stories which range from “a meditation on the Mathematics of Randomness, to a "blog opera" based on Fidelio, to a love story found in a bottle on a Borneo beach”2. Gill was so enraptured with it that, he says, “I wanted to evoke, musically, the experience of reading her book.” He converted this literary “bag-of-tales” into 21 connected musical “bagatelles,” in a compact 24-minute work that traces the emotional thread from Motherwhereʼs absence (the first story) through the unexpected “Miraculous Return of Laughter” of the final story.

“Motherwhere” continues Jeremy Gill’s ongoing collaboration with the award-winning Parker Quartet, and is his first work for New York Classical Players.

Performance is April 1 (W83 Auditorium in New York) at 7:30 pm. Free tickets available on New York Classical Players' website.

Calendar Listing

NYCP presents the world premiere
of Jeremy Gill's

Motherwhere
Bagatelles for Strings, after Bán

April 1, 2022 at 7:30 pm

W83 Auditorium
150 W 83rd St
New York, NY

New York Classical Players
Dongmin Kim, conductor
Parker Quartet
Madeline Fayette, cello

Program

TCHAIKOVSKY: Andante Cantabile for Cello and String Orchestra
JEREMY GILL: Motherwhere: Bagatelles for Strings, after Bán (premiere)
TCHAIKOVSKY: Serenade for Strings

Free tickets available on New York Classical Players' website