Aug. 26: Pianist Orli Shaham's Mozart Vols 2 & 3

Volumes 2 and 3 of Orli Shaham's Complete Piano Sonatas by Mozart

2-disc set released August 26 on Canary Classics

Singles released August 12 & 19

“a first-rate Mozartean” — The Chicago Tribune

The internationally-renowned concert pianist Orli Shaham is deep into a multi-year endeavor of recording all of Mozart’s piano sonatas. Volumes 2 and 3 of "Mozart: Complete Piano Sonatas" is released on Canary Classics (CC21) on August 26, 2022. Singles will be released on August 12 (Rondo All Turca: Allegretto from K.331) and August 19 (Allegretto from K.576).

In this two CD set, Orli Shaham performs the ever-popular Sonata K.331, including the Rondo Alla Turca; one of the most technically demanding piano works by Mozart - the Sonata in D major, K.576; and the Sonata in A minor, K.310, a work with enormous emotional depth. Says Ms. Shaham, “These sonatas give so many insights into Mozart’s mind, his personality, and his soul, and reveal fresh ideas about the music and its meaning with every hearing.” The complete list of sonatas on Volumes 2 and 3 is below.

Improvisation is a big part of Orli Shaham’s approach to this music. For months leading up to the recording sessions, she worked on sections that she felt Mozart left open to improvisation, experimenting with all kinds of ideas. The result is a great sense of spontaneity in each of the sonatas she recorded. "The act of improvisation allows you to feel some sense of what Mozart would have felt. He was a real flesh-and-bone human being, for all his genius, just like us,” said Ms. Shaham.

Critics call Shaham "an intelligent and sensitive guide" for this music. For a digital or physical copy of Volumes 2 and 3 (Canary Classics CC21, released August 26), contact ClassicalCommunications@gmail.com. Volume 1 (Canary Classics CC19) is also available.

"Her playing is defined by expressive and varied phrasing, always convinced of where it's leading" — Classical Musical Sentinel

Orli Shaham, piano

Mozart Piano Sonatas Vol. 2 and 3

K.282 ● K.283 ● K.310 ● K.331 ● K. 332

K.545 ● K.576

Canary Classics CC21
Release date: August 26, 2022*

*Singles released on August 12 (Rondo All Turca: Allegretto from K.331)
and August 19 (Allegretto from K.576)

Volume 2 (Total Time = 61:11)
[01-03] Piano Sonata in A Minor, No. 9, K. 310
[04-06] Piano Sonata in F Major, No. 12, K. 332
[07-09] Piano Sonata in D Major, No. 18, K. 576

Volume 3 (Total Time = 69:34)
[01-03] Piano Sonata in C Major, "für Anfänger", No. 16, K. 545
[04-06] Piano Sonata in E-flat Major, No. 4, K. 282
[07-09] Piano Sonata in G Major, No. 5, K. 283
[10-12] Piano Sonata in A Major, "Alla turca", No. 11, K. 331


Hailed as “a first-rate Mozartean” by Chicago Tribune, Orli Shaham has established an international reputation as one of today's most gifted pianists.

Orli Shaham has performed with many of the major orchestras around the world, and has appeared in recital from Carnegie Hall to the Sydney Opera House. She is Artistic Director of Pacific Symphony’s chamber series Café Ludwig in Costa Mesa, California and Artistic Director of the interactive children's concert series, Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard, which she founded in 2010.

In 2022, Ms. Shaham releases 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 over a dozen titles on Canary Classics, Deutsche Gramophone, Albany Records, SFS Media and more.

Orli Shaham is a Co-Host and Creative for the national radio program From the Top. She is on the piano and chamber music faculty at The Juilliard School and is chair of the board of trustees at Kaufman Music Center in New York. In 2022, Orli Shaham serves on the juries of both the Cliburn and Honens International Piano Competitions.

September: A "herculean feat" by Momenta Quartet (new dates)

Momenta Quartet presents:

Momenta Festival VII

New Dates!

September 15, 16, 17 & 18, 2022

Featuring: Mexican Independence Day Celebration, Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, world premiere by David Glaser, Brahms' Horn Trio, and more

Four unique programs curated by each quartet member; free admission

"[the Momenta Festival] has become one of the most amazingly eclectic, never mind herculean feats attempted by any chamber ensemble in this city..." - New York Music Daily

Momenta Quartet presents its annual festival September 15-18, 2022 (rescheduled from June 2022). All four concerts are at the Broadway Presbyterian Church (601 W 114th St. New York, NY) at 7:30 pm, and admission is free.

The seventh edition of the festival features four diverse chamber music programs each curated by a different member of the quartet. With programs that blend the old and new, the "intriguing programming" (The New York Times) and "striking originality" (I Care If You Listen) of the Momenta Festival have been acclaimed by critics and fans alike.

The festival opens with a string quartet by the Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, paired with works by Americans Elizabeth Brown and Shawn Jaeger. On Mexican Independence Day (September 16), the quartet performs two string quartets by Julián Carrillo, as the group is in the midst of recording all of Carrillo's quartets for Naxos. Guest artists David Byrd-Marrow, horn and Nana Shi, piano join the quartet on September 17 for a whimsical work, In Memory of Perky Pat, and Brahms' monumental horn trio. The world premiere of David Glaser’s String Quartet No. 5, written for Momenta in memory of Mario Davidovsky, alongside Beethoven’s groundbreaking “Serioso” quartet, closes the festival.

"I continue to be surprised at the quality of programming each member of the quartet brings to the festival," says Momenta violist Stephanie Griffin. "We founded this festival in 2015 as an artistic outlet for each of our individual musical interests, and my colleagues have introduced so many new pieces and composers to audiences and myself across the seven years."

Admission to all concerts is free. Programs are subject to change.


Momenta Quartet's 2022 Momenta Festival

All concerts start at 7:30 pm (doors at 7 pm)
at the Broadway Presbyterian Church (601 W 114th St.) in Manhattan

Free admission, no tickets/reservations needed

SEPTEMBER 15: Distant Songs - curated by Michael Haas, cello

In the words of Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, “Music is, above all, a chant, a song the world sings about itself.” Momenta explores the influence of song and the human voice on this program featuring recent works by Silvestrov and American composers Elizabeth Brown and Shawn Jaeger.

Program:

Elizabeth Brown: Just Visible in the Distance (2013)

Valentin Silvestrov: String Quartet no. 3 (2011)

Shawn Jaeger: Thy Wondering Eyes (2010)


SEPTEMBER 16: A Mexican Independence Day Celebration - curated by Stephanie Griffin

Momenta continues its deep dive into the fascinating and under-explored world of historic Mexican composers. As part of the quartet’s ongoing project to make the world premiere recordings of Julián Carrillo’s complete string quartets for Naxos, Momenta will perform his String Quartet No. 5 (1937) and No. 11 (1962).

Julián Carrillo (1875 - 1965) was a Mexican composer, conductor and music theorist, who developed a theory of microtonal music which he called "The Thirteenth Sound" (Sonido 13).

Program:

Julián Carrillo: String Quartet No. 5

Julián Carrillo: String Quartet No. 11


SEPTEMBER 17: Horn Fifths - curated by Alex Shiozaki, violin

Guest artists: David Byrd-Marrow, horn and Nana Shi, piano

David Byrd-Marrow and Nana Shi join Momenta on this program exploring the horn and its harmonies. Having premiered Hirofumi Mogi’s In Memory of Perky Pat (2021) earlier this year, Momenta is reprising that whimsical piece for string quartet and french horn. Grażyna Bacewicz’s Piano Quintet No. 2 (1965) provides another take on harmony, replacing overtones with quintal harmonies in this angular and virtuosic quintet. To close the evening, we return to the comforting consonance of Johannes Brahms’s Horn Trio, taking us through a full range of emotions without leaning too much into the clash of dissonance.

Program:

Hirofumi Mogi: In Memory of Perky Pat (2021) for string quartet and horn

Johannes Brahms: Trio for Violin, Horn, and Piano in E-flat Major, Op. 40 (1865)

Grażyna Bacewicz: Piano Quintet No. 2 (1965)


SEPTEMBER 18: Visionary Sounds - curated by Emilie-Anne Gendron, violin

Momenta presents the world premiere of David Glaser’s String Quartet No. 5 (2022), written for Momenta in memory of Mario Davidovsky, alongside Davidovsky’s intricate Synchronisms No. 9 (1988) for violin and recorded electronic sounds. This exploratory evening also includes Mexican microtonal trailblazer Julián Carrillo’s final String Quartet No. 11 (1962); and Beethoven’s groundbreaking “Serioso” quartet.

Program:

Stefan Wolpe: Twelve Pieces for String Quartet (1950)

Mario Davidovsky: Synchronisms No. 9 (1988) for violin and recorded electronic sounds

David Glaser: String Quartet No. 5, in memoriam Mario Davidovsky (2022)*

Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet No. 11 in f minor, Op. 95 “Serioso” (1810)

*world premiere, written for Momenta


Momenta Quartet

Emilie-Anne Gendron, violin
Alex Shiozaki, violin
Stephanie Griffin, viola
Michael Haas, cello

Momenta: the plural of momentum – four individuals in motion towards a common goal. This is the idea behind the Momenta Quartet, whose eclectic vision encompasses contemporary music of all aesthetic backgrounds alongside great music from the recent and distant past. The New York City-based quartet has premiered over 150 works, collaborated with over 200 living composers and was praised by The New York Times for its “diligence, curiosity and excellence.” In the words of The New Yorker’s Alex Ross, “few American players assume Haydn’s idiom with such ease.”

Momenta has appeared at such prestigious venues as the Library of Congress, National Gallery of Art, the Smithsonian's Freer Gallery, Rubin Museum, Miller Theatre at Columbia University, the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study, Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Washington University in St. Louis, Ostrava Days in the Czech Republic, and at the internationally renowned Cervantino Festival in Mexico. Momenta has recorded for Centaur Records, Furious Artisans, PARMA, New World Records, and Albany Records; and has been broadcast on WQXR, Q2 Music, Austria's Oe1, and Vermont Public Radio.

The Momenta Festival VII is made possible through the generous support of the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, the Amphion Foundation, the Alice M. Ditson Fund, New Music USA, Chamber Music America, the Sparkplug Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. The 2022 Momenta Festival is supported by The Adele and John Gray Endowment Fund and through the generosity of many individual donors.

Violist Wenting Kang's "Mosaic"

Award-winning violist Wenting Kang releases "Mosaic" on Blue Griffin Records with pianist Sergei Kvitko

New album of works by Debussy, Fauré, Albéniz, de Falla, and more

Album highlights era of cultural exchange between Spanish & French composers

"What makes Mosaic so deserving of recommendation? ... Pacing, pitch, dynamics, intonation, vibrato—all are handled with extreme sensitivity and circumspection, the result a riveting treatment custom-designed to invite repeat visits." — Textura

Violist Wenting Kang, winner of the First Prize of the Tokyo International Viola Competition, has been praised as an "excellent violist" who “possesses a dark glowing sound” (New York Times). Her debut album Mosaic, on Blue Griffin Records (BGR609), is a collection of diverse and colorful pieces from France and Spain.

Featuring works by Albéniz, Casals, de Falla, Fauré, Akira Nishimura, Ravel, and Francisco Tárrega, the collection celebrates an era of a century ago in which Spanish and French composers frequently collaborated.

"These composers not only had a strong impact on each other´s work, but they were also very connected in their personal lives," Ms. Kang says. "Some of them were professor and student, such as Fauré and Ravel. Others were close friends and colleagues, such as Fauré and Albéniz, Ravel and Falla, Tárrega and Casals and de Falla, and on and on."

When choosing repertoire for the album, Ms. Kang considered scores that had been arranged for violin or cello, which also worked very well on viola, including Pablo Casals' arrangement of "Après un rêve" by Fauré, and Jascha Heifetz´s transcription of the Debussy’s song “Beau Soir." Nearly all of the music on Mosaic was adapted by Kang for viola.

Ms. Kang’s partner on this recording is Sergei Kvitko, critically acclaimed pianist and internationally sought-after producer and sound engineer, who wears all of these hats on this production. The CD was recorded in 2021 at the state-of-the art Estudio Uno in Madrid, Spain.

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

"a mosaic of musical jewels" — Melómano Magazine (Gold Medal review)

Mosaic

Wenting Kang, viola
Sergei Kvitko, piano

Blue Griffin Records (BGR609)

Track List

Claude Debussy
[01] Beau Soir (Transcr. J. Heifetz)
[02] Première Rhapsodie

Francisco Tárrega
[03] Recuerdo de la Alhambra (Transcr. R. Ricci)

Maurice Ravel
[04] Pavane pour une infante défunte (Transcr. V. Borisovsky)
[05] Vocalise-étude en forme de Habanera

Gabriel Fauré
[06] Élégie in C minor, Op. 24
[07] Papillon, Op. 77
[08] Berceuse, Op. 16 (Transcr. T. Butorac)
[09] Après un rêve, Op. 7, No. 1 (Transcr. P. Casals)

Isaac Albéniz
[10] Tango in D Major, Op. 165 No. 2 (Transcr. M. Rummel)

Akira Nishimura
[11] Fantasia on Song of the Birds

Pablo Casals
[12] El Cant dels Ocells-Song of the Birds

Manuel de Falla
Siete canciones populares españolas (Transcr. E. Colon)
[13] El Paño Moruno
[14] Seguidilla Murciana
[15] Asturiana
[16] Jota
[17] Nana
[18] Canción
[19] Polo

Total time = 70:52

Biographies

Chinese-born violist Wenting Kang is praised for her “dark glowing sound” by The New York Times. She is an active performer with orchestras and in recital halls across Europe and in the US, China and Japan. She is the principal violist of Orquesta Sinfonica de Madrid at the Royal Theatre of Spain and founding member and principal violist of Madrid Soloists Chamber Orchestra. A sought-after chamber musician, she has been a member of Dalia String Quartet and Imai Viola Quartet.

Kang won the top prize in the Tokyo International Viola Competition, and earned awards at the Johannes Brahms International Competition and the Primrose International Viola Competition. She studied at Central Conservatory in Beijing, the New England Conservatory in Boston, and at the Kronberg Academy in Germany, under the guidance of Nobuko Imai, Kim Kashkashian, Garth Knox, Donald Weilerstein, Miriam Fried, and Changhai Wang.


Sergei Kvitko’s career follows simultaneous paths as pianist, composer/arranger, and recording engineer, producer and owner of the Blue Griffin Recording label. As a pianist, he has earned critical acclaim for his "natural, appealing musicality and sensual understanding of piano tone” (The Chronicle-Herald). Active as a recitalist and soloist, Mr. Kvitko continues to perform across the United States, Europe and Asia.

Kvitko’s decades-long reputation as an internationally sought-after classical recording engineer and producer was recognized with a Latin Grammy nomination for Best Classical Album. Sergei Kvitko was born in Russia and began studying music at the age of six. His formal studies culminated with a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at Michigan State University, where he studied with Ralph Votapek.

Gramophone: "it's a joy to hear the gleaming singers of Variant 6"

Have you heard the 2022 Pulitzer Prize-winning composition?

Pulitzer Prize-winning composition "Voiceless Mass" by Raven Chacon commissioned by Present Music

Wisconsin-based contemporary ensemble celebrates with release of the video of the world premiere performance

"a mesmerizing, original work for organ and ensemble that evokes the weight of history in a church setting, a concentrated and powerful musical expression with a haunting visceral impact." Citation from Pulitzer Prize Committee

Present Music, a contemporary music ensemble in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, congratulates the composer Raven Chacon on winning the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Music. Present Music, along with the Wisconsin Conference of the United Church of Christ and Plymouth Church UCC, commissioned the winning work in 2021 for their long-running concert series, now in its 40th season. "Voiceless Mass" was written specifically for the Nichols & Simpson organ and its space at The Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Milwaukee. Present Music performed the world premiere on their annual Thanksgiving Concert; a video of that performance is below.

“Voiceless Mass” is scored for organ, flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, two percussionists, strings and sine tones. Raven Chacon writes:

This work considers the spaces in which we gather, the history of access of these spaces, and the land upon which these buildings sit. Though ‘mass’ is referenced in the title, the piece contains no audible singing voices, instead using the openness of the large space to intone the constricted intervals of the wind and string instruments. In exploiting the architecture of the cathedral, Voiceless Mass considers the futility of giving voice to the voiceless, when ceding space is never an option for those in power.

About Present Music

Since its founding in Milwaukee in 1982, Present Music’s mission has been to commission and perform new concert music, bringing over 80 new works to life. Audiences “can almost always expect Present Music to bring on the unexpected” (The Shepherd Express) with programming that introduces innovative concert formats, embraces a broad diversity of repertoire, and makes the music of our time accessible to audiences with deep expression and serious fun.

The Present Music ensemble ranges from a core group of seven musicians to an ensemble of twenty or more. The group has worked closely with many of the nation's top composers, including John Adams, Henry Brant, David Lang, Caroline Shaw, Ingram Marshall, Missy Mazzoli, Bright Sheng, Roberto Sierra, and Michael Torke; and has a long and impressive track record for identifying outstanding talent early in the artists’ careers. Present Music is the winner of an impressive six ASCAP/Chamber Music America’s Adventurous Programming Award. Their discography includes world premiere recordings on the Argo, Albany, Aoede, Northeastern, Naxos, and Innova labels.

The group is led by Co-Artistic Directors violinist/composer Eric Segnitz and conductor David Bloom. Present Music was founded by conductor Kevin Stalheim, who was Artistic Director for the first 37 years of the ensemble’s existence until 2019.

About Raven Chacon

Raven Chacon is a composer, performer and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, collaborator, or with Postcommodity, Chacon has exhibited or performed at Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, REDCAT, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Borealis Festival, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Chaco Canyon, Ende Tymes Festival, 18th Biennale of Sydney, and The Kennedy Center. Every year, he teaches 20 students to write string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project (NACAP). He is the recipient of the United States Artists fellowship in Music, The Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, the American Academy’s Berlin Prize for Music Composition, and the Pew Fellowship. He lives in Albuquerque, NM.

July in NYC and Newport: Pianist Inna Faliks in recital

Ukrainian-American Pianist Inna Faliks in recital at Brooklyn's Bargemusic July 3 & Newport Classical Music Festival July 7

Programs feature works by Clara Schumann, Ravel, and more

This July, the Ukrainian-American Pianist Inna Faliks brings the high romance of Clara Schumann's Piano Sonata in G minor and the colorful impressionism of Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit to two recital programs on the East Coast.

The pianist returns to Brooklyn's floating concert hall for Bargemusic (Brooklyn, NY) on July 3, 2022 at 4 pm. Pairing the Schumann with Ravel, the program marks Ms. Faliks' only NYC appearance this Summer.

This season, Ms. Faliks has performed the works works in recitals across the country. In her only New York appearance this summer, she brings the two pianistic masterpieces together on this compelling program.

On July 7 at 7:30 pm she performs the same repertoire at Newport Classical Music Festival, adding music by Timo Andres, Paola Prestini, and Billy Childs that she commissioned and recorded on her highly acclaimed album "Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel".

Ms. Faliks recorded Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit on her debut album "Sound of Verse" (2009), and her performance of Clara Schumann's G minor Sonata is on her 2021 album "The Schumann Project, Vol. 1".

Calendar Listing

Masterworks Series: Clara Schumann & Ravel

July 3, 2022 at 4 pm

Bargemusic
1 Water St.
Brooklyn, NY

Tickets and details available here

PROGRAM

Clara Schumann: Piano Sonata in G minor
Maurice Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit


Newport Classical Music Festival
July 7, 2022 at 7:30 pm

Castle Hill Inn
590 Ocean Ave.
Newport, RI

Tickets and details available here

PROGRAM

Clara Schumann: Piano Sonata in G minor
Maurice Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit
Paola Prestini: Variations on a Spell
Timo Andres: Old Ground
Billy Childs: Pursuit


“Adventurous and passionate” (The New Yorker) Ukrainian-born American pianist Inna Faliks has made a name for herself through her commanding performances of standard piano repertoire, as well genre-bending interdisciplinary projects, and inquisitive work with contemporary composers. After her acclaimed teenage debuts at the Gilmore Festival and with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, she has performed on many of the world’s great stages in recital and with many major orchestras, performing with conductors Leonard Slatkin, Keith Lockhart and many others.

Ms. Faliks collaborates with and premieres music by some of today’s most significant composers, including Billy Childs, Richard Danielpour, Timo Andres and Clarice Assad. She is known for her poetry-music series Music/Words, and has worked with a number of prominent poets. She regularly tours her monologue-recital Polonaise-Fantasie, the Story of a Pianist, which tells the story of her immigration to the United States from Odessa (recorded on Delos). Besides Reimagine, her discography includes all-Beethoven and Rachmaninoff/Ravel/Pasternak discs for MSR Classics, and the Master and Margarita project, featuring three world premieres on Sono Luminus.

In addition to her other impressive accomplishments, Faliks is a respected educator and is head of Piano Studies at UCLA. She is also a published writer, with articles and essays appearing in Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post, among other media outlets. Her musical memoir, “Weight in the Fingertips,” will be out in 2023, published by Globe Pequot. Inna Faliks is a Yamaha Artist.

June 22: Pianist Inna Faliks at The Wallis and beyond

June 22: Ukrainian-American Pianist Inna Faliks performs works by Billy Childs, Timo Andres, Paola Prestini and more at The Wallis

Program features first live performance of critically acclaimed album Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel in its entirety

Plus, July 3 recital in Brooklyn and performances in Flagstaff and Madison

A long-awaited recital, the Ukrainian-American pianist Inna Faliks comes to the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on June 22, 2022 at 7:30 pm to perform her internationally acclaimed album Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel in full for the first time.

The program features the live premieres of nine imaginative and rich new works for the piano commissioned by Ms. Faliks, alongside masterpieces by Beethoven and Ravel. Nine contemporary composers, including Paola Prestini, Billy Childs, Timo Andres, and six on UCLA's faculty - Richard Danielpour, Peter Golub, Ian Krouse, David Lefkowitz, Mark Carlson and Tamir Hendelman - were commissioned to craft responses to Ludwig van Beethoven’s Bagatelles, op. 126 and Maurice Ravel’s Gaspard de la Nuit.

When Ms. Faliks asked Billy Childs to reimagine Ravel’s “Scarbo” (from Gaspard de la Nuit), he latched on to the image of Scarbo as an evil goblin. “It turned into - in my mind - a sadly familiar American storyline, in which a Black man is being pursued,” said Childs. His composition “Pursuit” brings out the urgency of the moment, simultaneously crafting a new work as fiendishly difficult to play as Ravel’s notorious finger-buster.

In this homage to Beethoven and Ravel, the Ukrainian-born American pianist ties together three centuries of music and a range of social commentary and interpretations with her acclaimed artistry and impressive technique. The entire program is featured on her widely critically acclaimed album Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel (Navona NV6352; release date June 11, 2021), which features the world premiere recordings of the commissioned works.

Tickets for the June 22 concert at The Wallis Annenberg Performing Arts Center (9390 N. Santa Monica Blvd.) in Beverly Hills, CA are available at TheWallis.org.

In addition to the June 22 recital at The Wallis, Pianist Inna Faliks can be found across the country this Summer:

  • June 11 & 12 at Bach Dancing and Dynamite Festival (Madison, WI): Inna Faliks performs chamber music by Roberto Pena, Brahms, Mozart, and Beethoven alongside solo selections from her album Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel.

  • June 19 at Flagstaff Piano Festival (Flagstaff, AZ): Ms. Faliks performs a solo piano recital.

  • July 3 at Barge Music (Brooklyn, NY): Ms. Faliks returns to Brooklyn's floating music hall to perform Clara Schumann's passionate and rarely heard G minor Piano Sonata and Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit.

Calendar Listing

Pianist Inna Faliks
Reimagine: Beethoven and Ravel
June 22, 2022 at 7:30 pm

The Wallis Annenberg Center for Performing Arts
9390 N. Santa Monica Blvd.
Beverly Hills, CA
Tickets available here

PROGRAM

Peter Golub: Bagatelle
Ludwig van Beethoven: Bagatelles opus 126: Andante con moto, Cantabile e compiacevole
Tamir Hendelman: Bagatelle
Beethoven: Bagatelle # 2, Allegro
Richard Danielpour: Bagatelle
Beethoven: Bagatelle # 3. Andante, Cantabile e grazioso
Ian Krouse: Etude 2a - ‘ad fugam’
Beethoven: Bagatelle # 4, Presto
Mark Carlson: Sweet Nothings
Beethoven: Bagatelle # 5. Quasi allegretto
David Lefkowitz: Bagatelle
Beethoven: Bagatelle # 6. Presto, cut time then Andante amabile e con moto

Pause

Paola Prestini: Variations on a Spell (response to Ondine by Ravel)
Timo Andres: Old Ground (response to Le Gibet by Ravel)
Billy Childs: Pursuit (response to Scarbo by Ravel)
Ravel: Gaspard de la nuit Maurice Ravel

“Adventurous and passionate” (The New Yorker) Ukrainian-born American pianist Inna Faliks has made a name for herself through her commanding performances of standard piano repertoire, as well genre-bending interdisciplinary projects, and inquisitive work with contemporary composers. After her acclaimed teenage debuts at the Gilmore Festival and with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, she has performed on many of the world’s great stages in recital and with many major orchestras, performing with conductors Leonard Slatkin, Keith Lockhart and many others.

Ms. Faliks collaborates with and premieres music by some of today’s most significant composers, including Billy Childs, Richard Danielpour, Timo Andres and Clarice Assad. She is known for her poetry-music series Music/Words, and has worked with a number of prominent poets. She regularly tours her monologue-recital Polonaise-Fantasie, the Story of a Pianist, which tells the story of her immigration to the United States from Odessa (recorded on Delos). Besides Reimagine, her discography includes all-Beethoven and Rachmaninoff/Ravel/Pasternak discs for MSR Classics, and the Master and Margarita project, featuring three world premieres on Sono Luminus.

In addition to her other impressive accomplishments, Faliks is a respected educator and is head of Piano Studies at UCLA. She is also a published writer, with articles and essays appearing in Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post, among other media outlets. Inna Faliks is a Yamaha Artist.

Insider Interview with Momenta Quartet

Momenta Quartet presents its annual Momenta Festival June 14-17, 2022. All four concerts will be at the Broadway Presbyterian Church (601 W 114th St. New York, NY), and admission is free.The seventh edition of the festival features four diverse chamber music programs each curated by a different member of the quartet. In this insider interview, we spoke with each member of the quartet about their unique programs.

Note: Moments Festival VII has been re-scheduled for September 15-18, 2022. The section about the June 17th program (which happened as scheduled) is below. For info on the forthcoming programs click here.


Momenta Festival VII closes out on June 17 with a “Juneteenth Celebration” curated by violist Stephanie Griffin. Her program includes a world premiere by Jazz bassist and compsoer HIlliard Greene, alongside works by Alvin Singleton (whose complete string quartets were just recorded by Momenta) and Yusef Lateef.

Momenta Quartet just released a recording of Singleton’s complete String Quartets. What compositional style through-lines do you see in these works, and what makes them stand apart?  

It was quite a journey to learn, perform and eventually record all four string quartets by the esteemed African American composer Alvin Singleton. Delving into his complete works (so far!) for this medium gave us all deeper insights into the development of his musical language.  

Interestingly, the last quartet we learned was his first, which he composed in 1967, which we are featuring on our Momenta Festival Juneteenth celebration concert on June 17th. Cast as a Passacaglia and Fugue, it is the most “traditional” of the four pieces on its surface. It opens with a lyrical cello solo in a somewhat expressionist vein. The viola joins – followed by second and first violins, engendering soulful free atonal counterpoint. Variations ensue – building up to the whirlwind of activity, which will be the fugue. I introduce the fugue subject on the viola – and what a subject it is! It is unusually long for a fugue subject and it abounds in jagged rhythms and wild turns of phrase. Not your mother’s fugue – or maybe it is – depending on who your mother is! This quartet seems so different from the other three, but if you isolate the solo lines, Alvin’s distinctive melodic style is already apparent.  

I think the main way in which he changed stylistically between this first quartet and the other three was adopting his own distinctive brand of “minimalism.” I hesitate to even use that word, since it has the connotations of Philip Glass and Steve Reich – or even Feldman, on the other side of the minimalist spectrum. Getting past those conceptions of what “minimalism” is – I think it applies to Alvin’s music in his use of repetition, large-scale sections of rhythmic and even pitch unisons (especially apparent in String Quartet no. 4 “Hallelujah Anyhow”) and his signature use of silence.  

You will not hear this in String Quartet no. 1, but a hallmark of Alvin’s compositional style is the way he juxtaposes wildly different sections with long silences in between. It’s as if, after String Quartet no. 1, he replaced the traditional idea of “development” with an almost Zen-like approach of letting the listener experience sections of music with wildly different expressions and giving them the silences in between to draw their own connections. 

One of the quartets was written for Momenta. How does this work stand out, and is there any particular traits the group has that the composer incorporated into the work?  

String Quartet no. 4 “Hallelujah Anyhow” was commissioned for Momenta by Chamber Music America, and we had the joy of premiering it on our last in-person Momenta Festival before the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2019.  

It stands out in its bold and uncompromising use of unisons. Like his string quartets Nos. 2 and 3, it shows Alvin using his signature technique of juxtaposing contrasting sections with dramatic silences in between. But while those pieces have extended sections in rhythmic unison, “Hallelujah Anyhow” starts with a long and arresting passage with all four of us in pitch and rhythmic unison – and that material keeps recurring throughout the piece. It’s brash, bright and rhythmic. To me it evokes the feeling of a big band at times. The unisons are broken up by glimmers of slow, dark harmonies, which will later take more prominence in the piece.  

One would have to ask Alvin himself (but he probably won’t tell you!) if he factored in the personality of Momenta itself in this commission. If I may blow Momenta’s horn for a moment, though, I think this kind of writing shows that, based on his extensive experience with us in our performances of his second and third quartets, he knew he could trust us to be able to play this! It is no small feat to pull off a performance with all the pitch unisons and jagged rhythms. Out of all of his pieces, this was by far the most challenging in the recording session. (Alvin Singleton: Four String Quartets available for purchase here)  

How did you get to know Alvin Singleton and what attracts you to his music?  

We first met Alvin Singleton when Tom Buckner invited us to play his second and third quartets on Alvin’s 75th birthday concert on the Interpretations series at Roulette. On that same concert I played his solo viola piece “Argoru” and his graphic score piece “Be Natural” (1974), which I will be playing with Michael and guest bassist Hilliard Greene on the June 17th Momenta Festival program.  

We immediately loved Alvin both as a human being and a composer. Many things attract me to his music  - above all its freshness, originality and sense of spontaneity. As an improviser myself, I feel a kinship between Alvin’s aesthetic and the world of avant-garde jazz. And it turns out that Alvin is not directly trying to mimic jazz in any way, but he had tried his hand at it on the piano many years ago and has deep friendships with some of today’s leading figures in avant-garde jazz, including Wadada Leo Smith and Henry Threadgill. We will honor that by including the great jazz bassist Hilliard Greene in our interpretation of “Be Natural.” 

June: A "herculean feat" by Momenta Quartet

Momenta Quartet presents:

Momenta Festival VII

June 14, 15, 16, & 17, 2022

Four concerts each curated by a different quartet member

"[the Momenta Festival] has become one of the most amazingly eclectic, never mind herculean feats attempted by any chamber ensemble in this city..." - New York Music Daily

Momenta Quartet presents its annual Momenta Festival June 14-17, 2022. All four concerts will be at the Broadway Presbyterian Church (601 W 114th St. New York, NY), and admission is free.

The seventh edition of the festival features four diverse chamber music programs each curated by a different member of the quartet. With programs that blend the old and new, the "intriguing programming" (The New York Times) and "striking originality" (I Care If You Listen) of the Momenta Festival have been acclaimed by critics and fans alike.

The festival opens with the world premiere of David Glaser’s String Quartet No. 5, written for Momenta in memory of Mario Davidovsky, alongside Beethoven’s groundbreaking “Serioso” quartet. Guest artists David Byrd-Marrow, horn and Nana Shi, piano join the quartet on June 15 for a whimsical work, In Memory of Perky Pat, and Brahms' monumental horn trio. A string quartet by the Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov is featured on June 16, paired with works by Americans Elizabeth Brown and Shawn Jaeger. A world premiere by Hilliard Greene highlights the final evening of the festival, celebrating Juneteenth and the release of Momenta Quartet's album of works by Alvin Singleton.

"We founded this festival in 2015 as an artistic outlet for each of our individual musical interests," says Momenta violist Stephanie Griffin. "I continue to be surprised to discover new pieces and composers that my Momenta colleagues introduce me to through this festival."

Admission to all concerts is free. Programs are subject to change.


Momenta Quartet's 2022 Momenta Festival

All concerts start at 7:30 pm (doors at 7 pm)
at the Broadway Presbyterian Church (601 W 114th St.) in Manhattan

Free admission, no tickets/reservations needed


JUNE 14: Visionary Sounds - curated by Emilie-Anne Gendron, violin

Momenta presents the world premiere of David Glaser’s String Quartet No. 5 (2022), written for Momenta in memory of Mario Davidovsky, alongside Davidovsky’s intricate Synchronisms No. 9 (1988) for violin and recorded electronic sounds. This exploratory evening also includes the late great Ursula Mamlok’s elegant “Two Bagatelles” (1961), rediscovered toward the end of the composer’s life in a hidden sketchbook; Mexican microtonal trailblazer Julián Carrillo’s final String Quartet No. 13 (1964); and Beethoven’s groundbreaking “Serioso” quartet.

Program:

Ursula Mamlok: Two Bagatelles (1961) for string quartet

Mario Davidovsky: Synchronisms No. 9 (1988) for violin and recorded electronic sounds

David Glaser: String Quartet No. 5, in memoriam Mario Davidovsky (2022)*

Julián Carrillo: String Quartet No. 13 (1964)

Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet No. 11 in f minor, Op. 95 “Serioso” (1810)

*world premiere, written for Momenta


JUNE 15: Horn Fifths - curated by Alex Shiozaki, violin

Guest artists: David Byrd-Marrow, horn and Nana Shi, piano

David Byrd-Marrow and Nana Shi join Momenta on this program exploring the horn and its harmonies. Having premiered Hirofumi Mogi’s In Memory of Perky Pat (2021) earlier this year, Momenta is reprising that whimsical piece for string quartet and french horn. With his Horn Trio, Johannes Brahms creates a sound world filled with overtones and consonance, and Grażyna Bacewicz turns that world upside down with quintal harmonies in the angular Piano Quintet No. 2 (1965).

Program:

Hirofumi Mogi: In Memory of Perky Pat (2021) for string quartet and horn

Johannes Brahms: Trio for Violin, Horn, and Piano in E-flat Major, Op. 40 (1865)

Grażyna Bacewicz: Piano Quintet No. 2 (1965)


JUNE 16: Distant Songs - curated by Michael Haas, cello

In the words of Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, “Music is, above all, a chant, a song the world sings about itself.” Momenta explores the influence of song and the human voice on this program featuring recent works by Silvestrov and American composers Elizabeth Brown and Shawn Jaeger.

Program:

Elizabeth Brown: Just Visible in the Distance (2013)

Valentin Silvestrov: String Quartet no. 3 (2011)

Shawn Jaeger: Thy Wondering Eyes (2010)


JUNE 17: A Juneteenth Celebration! - curated by Stephanie Griffin, viola

Guest artist: bassist/composer Hilliard Green

Momenta celebrates the release of its CD “Alvin Singleton: Four String Quartets” on New World Records with a performance of his String Quartet no. 1 (1967) and Be Natural (1974), alongside Yusef Lateef’s String Quartet no. 3 and a world premiere for bass and string quartet by jazz bassist Hilliard Greene

Program:

Yusef Lateef: String Quartet no. 3

Alvin Singleton: Be Natural

Hilliard Greene: New work for bass and string quartet*

Alvin Singleton: String Quartet no. 1

*world premiere, written for Momenta

Momenta Quartet

Emilie-Anne Gendron, violin
Alex Shiozaki, violin
Stephanie Griffin, viola
Michael Haas, cello

Momenta: the plural of momentum – four individuals in motion towards a common goal. This is the idea behind the Momenta Quartet, whose eclectic vision encompasses contemporary music of all aesthetic backgrounds alongside great music from the recent and distant past. The New York City-based quartet has premiered over 150 works, collaborated with over 200 living composers and was praised by The New York Times for its “diligence, curiosity and excellence.” In the words of The New Yorker’s Alex Ross, “few American players assume Haydn’s idiom with such ease.”

Momenta has appeared at such prestigious venues as the Library of Congress, National Gallery of Art, the Smithsonian's Freer Gallery, Rubin Museum, Miller Theatre at Columbia University, the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study, Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Washington University in St. Louis, Ostrava Days in the Czech Republic, and at the internationally renowned Cervantino Festival in Mexico. Momenta has recorded for Centaur Records, Furious Artisans, PARMA, New World Records, and Albany Records; and has been broadcast on WQXR, Q2 Music, Austria's Oe1, and Vermont Public Radio.

The Momenta Quartet’s 2021-2022 season is made possible through the generous support of the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, the Amphion Foundation, the Alice M. Ditson Fund, New Music USA, Chamber Music America, the Sparkplug Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. The 2022 Momenta Festival is supported by The Adele and John Gray Endowment Fund and through the generosity of many individual donors.

June 3: Florence Price piano works from Josh Tatsuo Cullen

New! Pianist Josh Tatsuo Cullen performs music by Florence Price 

“Scenes in Tin Can Alley” released
June 3, 2022 on Blue Griffin Records

“Cullen performed with an astounding mixture of coolness and intensity… with an unfailing sense of rhythm and drive” — Stuttgarter Zeitung

The music of Florence Price (1887 – 1953) is enjoying a renaissance. The 2009 discovery of a trove of manuscripts in the African-American composer’s abandoned summer home generated a lot of excitement and renewed interest in her life and work. The pianist Josh Tatsuo Cullen has recorded an entire album of her evocatively-titled music for solo piano, all specifically from that 2009 discovery. "Scenes in Tin Can Alley: Piano Music of Florence Price" (Blue Griffin BGR615) is released on June 3, 2022. The album includes the first commercial recording of several of these compositions, including Scenes in Tin Can Alley, Thumbnail Sketches of a Day in the Life of a Washerwoman, Village Scenes, and Cotton Dance.

In the liner notes, Cullen writes: 

I chose these works not only because they deserve to be heard, but because they spoke to me as an artist. As a person of mixed Japanese and European descent, I feel a strong connection to Price’s desire to honor and elevate the marginalized people of her own mixed-race heritage personified in Scenes in Tin Can Alley, Thumbnail Sketches of a Day in the Life of a Washerwoman, and Three Miniature Portraits of Uncle Ned.

The composer Florence Price (1887–1953) is the first African-American woman to have an orchestral piece played by a major American orchestra: the Chicago Symphony Orchestra performed her Symphony in E Minor in 1933. Born in Little Rock, Ark., and educated at the New England Conservatory, her career blossomed after she moved to Chicago in 1927. Her music received widespread recognition beginning in the 1930s. Price wrote over 300 works, and her arrangements of spirituals were often performed by Marian Anderson, Leontyne Price and other singers.

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

Scenes in Tin Can Alley

Piano Music of Florence Price

Blue Griffin Records (BGR615)
Release Date: June 3, 2022

Tracks

Scenes in a Tin Can Alley (1928)
[01] The Huckster   1:44
[02] Children at Play   3:06
[03] Night   6:23

Thumbnail Sketches of a Day in the Life of a Washerwoman (1938-1942)
[04] Morning   1:24
[05] Dreaming at the Washtub   1:52
[06] A Gay Moment   0:37
[07] Evening Shadows   2:21

[08] Clouds (circa 1940’s) 5:47

 Village Scenes (1942)
[09] Church Spires in Moonlight  5:34
[10] A Shaded Lane  2:14
[11] The Park  1:47 

Preludes (1926-1932)
[12] No. 1 Allegro moderato  1:49
[13] No. 2 Andantino cantabile 2:33
[14] No. 3 Allegro molto   1:08
[15] No. 4 Wistful. Allegretto con tenerezza 2:58
[16] No. 5 Allegro 1:40         

Cotton Dance (circa 1940’s)
[17] Presto 3:16

Three Miniature Portraits of Uncle Ned (1932-1941)
[18] At Age 17   1:03
[19] At Age 27   1:16
[20] At Age 70   1:51 

Total time: 50:35

About the Artist

The pianist Josh Tatsuo Cullen is acclaimed for his “astounding mixture of coolness and intensity” (Stuttgarter Zeitung) and has been praised for his “delicious” collaboration by The New York Times. He has performed as solo and collaborative pianist at venues throughout the world.

His recordings include Beethoven’s Piano Concertos Nos. 1, 2 and 3, and Mozart’s Concerto for Two Pianos in E-flat major with his mentor, Paul Badura-Skoda, all with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra led by Paul Freeman. At age nine he performed Mozart’s Piano Concerto in A major, K. 488 with the Moscow Philharmonic at Tchaikovsky Hall in Moscow, recording the work in studio the same week.

Cullen holds a master’s degree in piano from The Juilliard School, and a master’s degree in collaborative piano from New York University. He earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan at age 16.

Born in Hawaii and raised outside of Detroit, Josh Cullen proudly served in the United States Army for over a decade as an interpreter and interrogator.

Violinist Sarah Plum in concert and live-streamed, May 29

Violinist Sarah Plum performs at Constellation in Chicago

May 29 concert will be live-streamed worldwide

"I can't think of a better flag bearer than Sarah Plum who is quite brilliant" — The Whole Note

The ever-adventurous violinist Sarah Plum has long been a champion of contemporary music. Her May 29 recital at Constellation in Chicago celebrates the forthcoming release of her new recording, Personal Noise (Blue Griffin Records, released June 2022).

The concert is streamed worldwide on Youtube and Facebook at 9:30 pm EDT (8:30 pm CDT), for a suggested admission of $5. Tickets to view the live-stream, or to attend in person, are available here.

The program focuses on music for violin and electronics, most of which was written especially for Ms. Plum, including works by Kyong Mee Choi, Osnat Netzer, Mari Kimura, Mari Takano, Charles Nichols, and Jeff Herriott. The highlight of the program is the world premiere of the deeds by the multi-media sound artist Laurie Schwartz. The work is for video (taken from Suffragette), spoken word sound files and improvised processed violin. Violinist Charlene Kluegel joins Ms. Plum for Mari Kimura's Sarahal.

Calendar Listing

May 29, 2022
at 8:30 pm CDT (9:30 pm EDT)

Sarah Plum, violin and viola
with Charlene Kluegel, violin and Laurie Schwartz, electronics

Constellation
3111 N Western Ave
Chicago, IL

PROGRAM

Osnat Netzer (arr. Sarah Plum): Olive Cotton for solo viola
Charles Nichols: Il Prete Rosso for violin, live electronics, and motion sensor
Jeff Herriott: after time, a resolution for violin and live electronics
Mari Takano: Full Moon
Laurie Schwartz: the deeds
Kyong Mee Choi: Flowering Dandelion
Mari Kimura: Sarahal

$15 (and $5 live-stream) tickets available here

Biography

The "adventurous indie violinist" (New York Music Daily) Sarah Plum’s career centers around championing new music, commissioning composers and bringing contemporary music to a wider audience. Her "consistently stunning” playing (Third Coast Digest) has been featured at festivals and venues worldwide, from Ankunft:Neue Musik Festival at the Berlin Hauptbahnhof to the Cube at Virginia Tech’s Institute for Creativity, and many in between.

Plum’s discography includes her 2022 release, Personal Noise, an album of works for violin and electronics written for her by Kyong Mee Choi, Eric Lyon, Jeff Herriot, Charles Nichols, Mari Takano, Eric Moe and Mari Kimura. Album releases in 2011 and 2015 feature music by Bartok, Sidney Corbett and Christopher Adler.

Sarah Plum is on the faculty at both the Music Institute of Chicago and their elite Academy program and teaches at the Zodiac Music Academy and Festival and University of Oklahoma Summer String Academy. She was Professor of Violin and Viola at Drake University from 2007-2018. Plum earned a DMA at SUNY Stony Brook, after graduate and undergraduate studies at Juilliard.

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.