Miller Theatre Opens Its 20Th Composer Portraits Season With

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Miller Theatre Opens Its 20Th Composer Portraits Season With VIEW THIS EMAIL IN YOUR BROWSER FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PRESS CONTACTS August 20, 2019 Aleba Gartner, 212/206-1450 Tickets & Information: 212/854-7799 [email protected] millertheatre.com Lauren Bailey Cognetti, 212/854-1633 [email protected] "Miller Theatre’s Composer Portraits series has long been an invaluable new-music series, offering a carefully curated anthology of works by a single author that allows audiences to immerse themselves in one compositional voice." — The New York Times Miller Theatre at Columbia University School of the Arts opens the 20th season of its signature series Composer Portraits with a deep dive into the music of Anthony Braxton featuring Either/Or JACK Quartet Wednesday, September 25, 2019, 8:00 P.M. Miller Theatre (2960 Broadway at 116th Street) Tickets: starting at $20; Students with valid ID: starting at $7 This event is part of Braxton75 Anthony Braxton (Photo by Peter Gannushkin) Composer Portraits Wednesday, September 25, 2019, 8:00 P.M. Miller Theatre (2960 Broadway at 116th Street) Anthony Braxton (b. 1945) LISTEN The iconoclastic composer and multi-instrumentalist Anthony Braxton is one of the most important musicians, educators, and creative thinkers of our time. Drawing upon a range of influences, from John Coltrane to Karlheinz Stockhausen, his work examines core principles of improvisation and structural navigation, alongside innovation, spirituality, and intellectual investigation. Joining in a worldwide celebration of the polymath’s 75th birthday, the JACK Quartet and Either/Or perform a selection of his unparalleled body of works. PROGRAM: Composition No. 1 (1968) Composition No. 17 (1971) Composition No. 18 (1971) Composition No. 40(O) (1975) Composition No. 46 (1975) Composition No. 101 (1981) Composition No. 168 (1992) Composition No. 358 (2006) ARTISTS: Either/Or JACK Quartet Richard Carrick, conductor Read a Q&A about this Braxton Portrait with Miller's executive director Melissa Smey and writer Lara Pellegrinelli https://www.millertheatre.com/about/news/anthony-braxton-QA Composer Portraits at 20 For twenty years, Miller Theatre's flagship series has fostered the creation of new work, served as an incubator for emerging artists, and created a community of adventurous listeners. The series champions the works of today’s most inspiring composers, and both The New York Times and The New Yorker have called it an “indispensable” part of New York’s contemporary artistic landscape. These evening-length musical profiles explore the work of a single composer in depth, and this season Miller celebrates its two-decade legacy. Upcoming Portraits VIJAY IYER: Four premieres by the MacArthur "Genius" include a Miller commission; performers include The Knights and Jennifer Koh (10/24) ANNEA LOCKWOOD: Yarn/Wire performs a range of the New Zealand-born composer/sound artist's works, including a world premiere commission (11/14) BRIGHT SHENG: The Columbia alum & MacArthur Fellow performs as pianist and conductor leading Curtis 20/21 in a concert of his works (12/5) CAROLINE SHAW: Attacca Quartet and Sō Percussion perform the Pulitzer-winning star composer's chamber music from the last decade (2/6) OSCAR BETTISON: Alarm Will Sound returns to Miller to perform two of the British- American composer's recent chamber concertos (2/20) DAI FUJIKURA: Champions of Fujikura's music, ICE performs a high-octane program, including a world premiere Miller commission (3/5) Anthony Braxton tricentricfoundation.org Anthony Braxton (b. 1945), the Chicago-born composer and multi-instrumentalist, is recognized as one of the most important musicians, educators, and creative thinkers of the past 50 years. He is highly esteemed in the experimental music community for the revolutionary quality of his work and for the mentorship and inspiration he has provided to generations of younger musicians. Drawing upon a disparate mix of influences from John Coltrane to Karlheinz Stockhausen, Braxton has created a unique musical system that celebrates the concept of global creativity and our shared humanity. His work examines core principles of improvisation, structural navigation and ritual engagement-innovation, spirituality, and intellectual investigation. From his early work as a pioneering solo performer in the late 1960s through to his eclectic experiments on Arista Records in the 1970s, his landmark quartet of the 1980s, and more recent endeavors, such as his cycle of Trillium operas and the day-long, installation-based Sonic Genome Project, his vast body of work is unparalleled. His small ensembles of the 1970s through to the present day are considered among the most innovative groups of their respective eras, while his Creative Orchestra Music has brought together the varying streams of American jazz orchestras, marching bands, and experimental practices with the traditions of European concert music in a wholly individual compositional voice. His continuing and evolving current systems of the past 15 years, including Ghost Trance Music, Diamond Curtain Wall Music, Falling River Music, Echo Echo Mirror House Music, and ZIM Music, have served as the artistic incubators for some of the most exciting artists of the current generation. Braxton’s many awards include a 1981 Guggenheim Fellowship, a 1994 MacArthur Fellowship, a 2013 Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, a 2014 NEA Jazz Master Award, and honorary doctorates from Université de Liège (Belgium) and New England Conservatory (USA). Either/Or eitherormusic.org Praised by The New York Times as “an ensemble that plays by its own rules” and “a trustworthy purveyor of new sounds,” Either/Or has been at the forefront of New York’s contemporary music scene since 2004. Winner of the 2015 CMA/ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming, Either/Or focuses on new, recently composed, and rare works for various and often times unconventional instrumentations. Programmed by director Richard Carrick and guest curator Christopher McIntyre, the group’s projects are brought to life by its roster of 17 world-class musicians and special guests. Either/Or’s programming is aesthetically inclusive, ranging from the American Experimental tradition (Cage, Feldman, Lucier, Ashley) to the historical and contemporary European avant-garde, with a special emphasis on composers working outside the institutional mainstream. The group has premiered more than 200 works since its inception and has worked closely with many leaders in contemporary composition including George Lewis, Zeena Parkins, Beat Furrer, John Zorn, Miya Masaoka, Elliott Sharp, Helmut Lachenmann, Anthony Coleman, and Thomas Meadowcroft. Either/Or has performed throughout the Northeast at venues including Philadelphia Museum of Art, ICA Boston, Miller Theatre at Columbia University, The Kitchen, as well as California and Swedish tours, and frequent appearances at local experimental music venues such as The Stone, Roulette, and ISSUE Project Room. They have released ten full- length recordings of works commissioned or premiered by them on New World Records, Edition Moderne, Starkland, and Sterling labels. JACK Quartet jackquartet.com Hailed by The New York Times as the “nation’s most important quartet,” the JACK Quartet is one of the most acclaimed, renowned, and respected groups performing today. JACK has maintained an unwavering commitment to their mission of performing and commissioning new works, giving voice to underheard composers, and cultivating an ever-greater sense of openness toward contemporary classical music. In 2018, they were selected as Musical America’s “Ensemble of the Year,” named to WQXR’s “19 for 19 Artists to Watch,” and awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant. Additional awards include Lincoln Center’s Martin E. Segal Award, New Music USA’s Trailblazer Award, and the CMA/ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming. JACK has performed to critical acclaim at at leading venues and festivals around the world. Comprising violinists Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman, violist John Pickford Richards, and cellist Jay Campbell, JACK is focused on new work, collaborating with composers John Luther Adams, Chaya Czernowin, Simon Steen-Andersen, Caroline Shaw, Helmut Lachenmann, Steve Reich, Matthias Pintscher, and John Zorn. JACK recently announced their new Fulcrum Project, an all-access initiative to commission six artists each year, who will receive money, workshop time, mentorship, and resources to develop new work to be performed and recorded by the quartet. Operating as a nonprofit organization with a commitment to education, JACK is the Quartet in Residence at the Mannes School of Music, which will host JACK’s new Frontiers Festival, a multi-faceted festival of contemporary music for string quartet in fall 2019. JACK also has a long-standing relationship with University of Iowa String Quartet Residency Program, where they teach and collaborate with students. They also teach at New Music on the Point, a contemporary chamber music festival in Vermont for young performers and composers, the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, numerous universities including Columbia, Harvard, NYU, Princeton, and Stanford, as well as the Lucerne Festival Academy, of which the four members are all alumni. Miller Theatre millertheatre.com Now in its 31st season, Miller Theatre at Columbia University is the leading presenter of new music in New York City and one of the most vital forces nationwide for innovative programming. In partnership with Columbia University School of the Arts, Miller is dedicated to producing and presenting unique
Recommended publications
  • Columbia University Task Force on Climate: Report
    COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY TASK FORCE ON CLIMATE: REPORT Delivered to President Bollinger December 1, 2019 UNIVERSITY TASK FORCE ON CLIMATE FALL 2019 Contents Preface—University Task Force Process of Engagement ....................................................................................................................... 3 Executive Summary: Principles of a Climate School .............................................................................................................................. 4 Introduction: The Climate Challenge ..................................................................................................................................................... 6 The Columbia University Response ....................................................................................................................................................... 7 Columbia’s Strengths ........................................................................................................................................................................ 7 Columbia’s Limitations ...................................................................................................................................................................... 8 Why a School? ................................................................................................................................................................................... 9 A Columbia Climate School .................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Download on to Your Computer Or Device
    Underwood New Music Readings American Composers Orchestra PARTICIPATING COMPOSERS Andy Akiho Andy Akiho is a contemporary composer whose interests run from steel pan to traditional classical music. Recent engagements include commissioned premieres by the New York Philharmonic and Carnegie Hall’s Ensemble ACJW, a performance with the LA Philharmonic, and three shows at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC featuring original works. His rhythmic compositions continue to increase in recognition with recent awards including the 2014-15 Luciano Berio Rome Prize, a 2012 Chamber Music America Grant with Sybarite5, the 2011 Finale & ensemble eighth blackbird National Composition Competition Grand Prize, the 2012 Carlsbad Composer Competition Commission for Calder Quartet, the 2011 Woods Chandler Memorial Prize (Yale School of Music), a 2011 Music Alumni Award (YSM), the 2010 Horatio Parker Award (YSM), three ASCAP Plus Awards, an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composers Award, and a 2008 Brian M. Israel Prize. His compositions have been featured on PBS’s “News Hour with Jim Lehrer” and by organizations such as Bang on a Can, American Composers Forum, and The Society for New Music. A graduate of the University of South Carolina (BM, performance), the Manhattan School of Music (MM, contemporary performance), and the Yale School of Music (MM, composition), Akiho is currently pursuing a Ph.D. at Princeton University. In addition to attending the 2013 International Heidelberger Frühling, the 2011 Aspen Summer Music Festival, and the 2008 Bang on a Can Summer Festival as a composition fellow, Akiho was the composer in residence for the 2013 Chamber Music Northwest Festival and the 2012 Silicon Valley Music Festival.
    [Show full text]
  • Student Life the Arts
    Student Life The Arts University Art Collection the steps of Low Memorial Library; Three- “Classical Music Suite,” the “Essential Key- Way Piece: Points by Henry Moore, on board Series,” and the “Sonic Boom Festival.” Columbia maintains a large collection of Revson Plaza, near the Law School; Artists appearing at Miller Theatre have art, much of which is on view throughout Bellerophon Taming Pegasus by Jacques included the Juilliard, Guarneri, Shanghai, the campus in libraries, lounges, offices, Lipchitz, on the facade of the Law School; a Emerson, Australian, and St. Petersburg and outdoors. The collection includes a cast of Auguste Rodin’s Thinker, on the String Quartets; pianists Russell Sherman, variety of works, such as paintings, sculp- lawn of Philosophy Hall; The Great God Peter Serkin, Ursula Oppens, and Charles tures, prints, drawings, photographs, and Pan by George Grey Barnard, on the lawn Rosen; as well as musical artists Joel Krosnick decorative arts. The objects range in date of Lewisohn Hall; Thomas Jefferson, in front and Gilbert Kalish, Dawn Upshaw, Benita from the ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals of the Journalism Building, and Alexander Valente, Speculum Musicae, the Da Capo of the second millennium B.C.E. to con- Hamilton, in front of Hamilton Hall, both Chamber Players, Continuum, and the temporary prints and photographs. by William Ordway Partridge; and Clement New York New Music Ensemble. Also in the collection are numerous por- Meadmore’s Curl, in front of Uris Hall. The “Jazz! in Miller Theatre” series has help- traits of former faculty and other members ed to preserve one of America’s most important of the University community.
    [Show full text]
  • LIVE from COLUMBIA Pop-Ups from Morningside Campus
    VIEW THIS EMAIL IN YOUR BROWSER FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PRESS CONTACTS August 17, 2021 Aleba Gartner, 212/206-1450 millertheatre.com [email protected] Lauren Bailey Cognetti, [email protected] "Those thirty minutes number among the most intense I’ve experienced as a listener... The close-up, multiple angle and high resolution shots of the performance gave a view not even accessible to an audience member sitting in the front row.” — Elizabeth Lyon in The Hudson Review Miller Theatre at Columbia University School of the Arts announces LIVE FROM COLUMBIA Pop-Ups from Morningside Campus Co-presented with Columbia School of the Arts Miller Theatre continues its popular Pop-Up Concerts series, offering audiences a virtual front-row seat to three performances filmed on Columbia University's Morningside campus. Virtual • Free as always Featuring performances by Arturo O'Farrill & the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra Filmed from the Miller Theatre stage Live Stream: Saturday, September 18 at 4pm Simone Dinnerstein, piano Filmed in Butler Library's famous reading room Video Premiere: Tuesday, October 12 at 7pm Yarn/Wire Filmed from the Miller Theatre stage Video Premiere: Tuesday. November 9 at 7pm Concerts in the Live from Columbia series are livestreamed or filmed live and premiered throughout the Fall 2021 season, with on-demand streaming available immediately after. millertheatre.com/live-from-columbia * Miller Theatre will announce its full 2021-22 season later this fall. From Melissa Smey, Executive Director Arts Initiative and Miller Theatre: "I am thrilled to continue our Live from Columbia series with the School of the Arts, welcoming a global audience to incredible, free performances.
    [Show full text]
  • Events at Columbia — Feb. 9 - 22, 2001
    6 C olumbia U niversity RECORD February 9, 2001 SUBMISSION INFORMATION E-mail: [email protected] Fax: 212-678-4817 All submissions must be received in writing by the deadline. Events are listed in this order: date, time, title, name/affiliation of speaker(s) or performer(s), title of series (if any), sponsor(s), fee and registration information (if any), phone number of contact, and loca- tion. All phone numbers are area code (212) unless otherwise noted. For deadlines & information, call Liz Griffith, Calendar Editor, 212-854-6546 or the RECORD, 212-854-3282. The Calendar is updated weekly on the Web at http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/calendar/. Events are listed on a first-come, first-served basis free of CALENDAR charge. All events are subject to change; call sponsors to confirm. EVENTS AT COLUMBIA — FEB. 9 - 22, 2001 4:10 P.M. Psychology Colloqui- TALKS um. Tim Wilson, UVA. 501 Managing an International Engineering Organization: Schermerhorn. 9TH, FRI. Award–Winner Michel Returns to Alma Mater with Business Tips 4:10 P.M. “The Human 12:30 P.M. “Lim(n)IT: Notes on Genome Project, Genome This Next Big Thing.” Wes Sequencing, and Disease Gene Jones, Jones Partners: Architec- On Thurs., Feb. 15, more than 50 years after Discovery.” James Russo, ture; with Cynthia Davidson, ANY graduating from Columbia, Henry L. Michel Columbia Genome Ctr. Biotech- magazine. ‘Net/Work/Space,’ will return to share his experience in engineer- nology seminar, biological sci- Buell Ctr for the Study of Ameri- ing in an event sponsored by the department of ences.
    [Show full text]
  • THE BLUE and WHITE Vol
    THE UNDERGRADUATE MAGAZINE OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY , EST . 1 8 9 0 THE BLUE AND WHITE Vol. XVII No. II November 2010 SPEAKING IN TONGUES Not all languages are created—nor taught as—equal. WELCOME TO THE CLUB The Columbia sailing team tests the varsity waters THE BLUE & WHITE VISITS PELHAM BAY, STOPS BY MILLER THEATRE, AND TELLS YOU A SUPER SAD TRUE STORY JON HILL, CC ’11, Editor-in-Chief MISHAAL F. KHAN, BC ’13, Publisher MARIELA QUINTANA, CC ’11, Managing Editor ELIZA SHAPIRO, CC ’12, Bwog Editor ANISH BRAMHANDKAR, SEAS ’11, Bwog Co-editor LIZ NAIDEN, CC ’12, Features Editor ANNA KELNER, CC ’12, Literary Editor BRIAN PHILLIPS DONAHOE, CC ’12, Culture Editor MARK HAY, CC ’12, Senior Editor ADAM KUERBITZ, CC ’12, Senior Editor HANNAH LEPOW, CC ’11, Senior Editor CLAIRE SABEL, CC ’12, Senior Editor SAM SCHUBE, CC ’12, Senior Editor STEPHEN DAVAN, CC ’12, Graphics Editor CINDY PAN, CC ’12, Senior Illustrator SEAN V. ZIMMERMANN, SEAS ’12, Layout Editor HANS E. HYTTINEN, SEAS ’12, Online Editor Contributors Artists CHRISTOPHER BRENNAN, CC ’13 HANNAH FORD, CC ’13 SARAH CAMISCOLI, CC ’12 MADDY KLOSS, CC ’12 GRANTLAND D’AVINO, CC ’13 ELIZABETH LEE, CC ’12 CAMILLE HUTT, CC ’11 WENDAN LI, CC ’12 LIZ JACOB, CC ’13 LOUISE MCCUNE, CC ’13 PETER KRAWCZYK, CC ’13 ALICE MOTTOLA, BC ’11 MEGAN MCGREGOR, CC ’13 ELOISE OWENS, BC ’12 NINA PEDRAD, CC ’11 NORA RODRIGUEZ, CC ’11 CAROLYN RUVKUN, CC ’13 ADELA YAWITZ, CC ’12 CONOR SKELDING, CC ’14 MAHRAH TAUFIQUE, CC ’13 Copy Editors HELEN BAO, CC ’13 ELAINE BAYNHAM, CC ’13 ALLIE CURRY, CC ’13 HANNAH FORD, CC ’13 THE BLUE & WHITE Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • It's Happening At
    It’s happening at Columbia in April Monday, April 1-Sunday, June 30 Tuesday, April 9 Saturday, April 13 Sunday, April 21 Exhibition: The Quatercentenary of the Music at St. Paul’s: Timothy Smith Music at St. Paul’s: Karine Volcanoes and Vents: A Hidden House of Romanov 6:00 p.m. Poghosyan World Beneath the Sea Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Butler Library, St. Paul’s Chapel, Morningside campus 6:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. Morningside campus The University organist recites masterpieces, from St. Paul’s Chapel, Morningside campus Monell Auditorium, Lamont-Doherty Earth For more info, call (212) 854-7309 or visit https:// Johann Sebastian Bach to Charles-Marie Widor. For Pianist Karine Poghosyan. For more info, call (212) Observatory, Palisades, NY alumni-friends.library.columbia.edu/news.html. more info, call (212) 854-1487 or visit 854-1487 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/earl/music Speaker: Emily M. Klein, Duke University. For more www.columbia.edu/cu/earl/music.html. .html. info, call (845) 365-8998 or email Thursday, April 4 Looking Down on Modernity: Aerial Corporations Are People Too: The [email protected]. Converse: Memory and Reality Photography and the Science of Social Strange History of Corporations and Monday, April 22 6:30 p.m. Space the 14th Amendment Wood Auditorium, 100 Avery, Morningside campus 6:15 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Café Columbia: Health Reform: What Speakers: Wang Shu and Mark Wigley, Graduate Common Room, Heyman Center, Morningside campus 523 Butler Library, Morningside campus Happened and What Happens Next School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, 6:00 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Keeril Makan Either/Or
    Miller Theatre at Columbia University 2014-15 | 26th Season Composer Portraits Keeril Makan Either/Or Friday, December 5, 8:00 p.m. From the Executive Director It’s hard to believe that it’s December, and time for the final performances of 2014! These past few months have been an amazing time at Miller Theatre. We started the season strong with a sold-out Opening Night featuring eighth blackbird, where we were joined by more than 275 student audience members—many experiencing their first new-music performance. Next, we welcomed over 375 community members to Miller for a week of lantern- making workshops during the third annual Morningside Lights, and over 1,000 people joined us for the illuminated procession through Morningside Park. Morningside Lights has fast become a beloved neighborhood tradition, and it’s just one of the ways that Miller is committed to sharing the arts with our community. Last year, almost 700 people joined us for free Pop-Up Concerts, enjoying new music and complimentary drinks. This spring, Pop-Up Concerts are back, with four new performances just announced today! Tonight, you’ll hear the world premiere performance of Keeril Makan’s newest work, one of more than 40 world premieres that Miller Theatre has presented in the last five seasons. We make it a priority to expand the contemporary repertoire by commissioning new works as often as we can. During my tenure, it’s been an honor to commission 11 composers and two visual artists: nine for Composer Portraits, two for the Early Music series, and two site-specific murals for the Miller Theatre lobby.
    [Show full text]
  • Desire WORLD PREMIERE
    Desire WORLD PREMIERE MUSIC BY Hannah Lash LIBRETTO BY Hannah Lash, with Cori Ellison Commissioned by Miller Theatre at Columbia University © 2018 Schott Helicon Music Corporation Wednesday, October 16, 8 p.m. | Thursday, October 17, 8 p.m. Click on a section to learn more OVERVIEW SYNOPSIS NOTES CREATIVE TEAM CAST OVERVIEW Desire Wednesday, October 16, 8 p.m. | Thursday, October 17, 8 p.m The performance runs approximately 65 minutes with no intermission. A flowering garden sets the scene for the world premiere of award-winning composer Hannah Lash’s newest chamber opera. Written for a cast of three singers and string quartet, Desire grapples with the human, personal struggle of trusting oneself in the midst of doubt. The score paints a lush sonic landscape, performed by the adventurous JACK Quartet, and transports audiences to this metaphoric garden of creativity. Major support for Desire is provided by Francis Goelet Charitable Lead Trusts. Additional support is provided by the Howard Gilman Foundation. Desire SYNOPSIS Present day. Set in a bedroom without definitive boundaries. A man and a woman lie in bed. The man sleeps, while she lies awake. The woman quietly climbs out of bed slowly, careful not to wake the man. The woman moves to the outer parts of the bedroom where it is dark. A warm, cavernous environment emerges. She calls out and is surprised to hear an echo. She continues to call out, the echo responds. Is it another person? She discovers curiosities around her and wonders if they may be hiding other secrets. She then discovers a figure who seems to belong to this mysterious space.
    [Show full text]
  • Very Young Composers of the New York Philharmonic: the Continuum
    Contact: Katherine E. Johnson (212) 875-5718; [email protected] National Press Representative: Julia Kirchhausen (917) 453-8386; [email protected] MAY 31, 2014, AT MERKIN CONCERT HALL: VERY YOUNG COMPOSERS OF THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC: THE CONTINUUM NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC MUSICIANS To Perform Works By Very Young Composers of the New York Philharmonic As part of the NY PHIL BIENNIAL, the New York Philharmonic will present Very Young Composers of the New York Philharmonic: The Continuum, a program that highlights the youngest composers of tomorrow through a performance of chamber works written by participants in the Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers (VYC) and Composer’s Bridge programs performed by the Orchestra’s musicians, May 31, 2014, at Merkin Concert Hall. Conducted by Michael Adelson, featuring soprano Lucy Shelton, and co-hosted by Young Composers Advocate Jon Deak and New York Philharmonic Vice President, Education, Theodore Wiprud, the concert will showcase the breadth and depth of music created by these New York City–area elementary and middle school students. The concert presents music by elementary, middle school, high school, and Teaching Artist composers participating in the Philharmonic’s extensive education programs. The program will include works by middle-school student Milo Poniewozik (United States, b. 2001), who was featured on NPR for his composition The Globetrotter, which the New York Philharmonic performed at a School Day Concert in May 2012; Daniel Acosta (Venezuela, b. 2003), a member of the Jóvenes Compositores de Venezuela, a VYC-inspired program associated with Venezuela’s El Sistema youth orchestra network; Farah Taslima (Bangladesh, b.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to Producing Events at Columbia 1
    Guide to Producing Events at Columbia 1. Introduction............................................................................ 2 2. People to Know ....................................................................... 3 A. Alphabet Soup: Translating Common Abbreviations ......................3 B. Your Adviser ........................................................................... 3 C. Your Governing Board Representative......................................... 4 D. Martha Phelps-Walker - SDA Financial Services............................ 4 E. Bill Sheehan - University Event Management Tech Services (aka Lerner Tech) .................................................................................. 4 F. Carol Arnold - UEM Reservation Coordinator ................................ 4 G. David Milch - SDA Manager of Media, Performing Arts, and Publication Production ..................................................................... 4 H. Maria Pasquali - Barnard SGA Bookkeeper .................................. 5 I. Michael Abamont - Barnard Theatre Coordinator ........................... 5 J. Rudy Scala - Ticket and Information Center Manager ....................5 K. Chad Miller - Arts Initiative Events and Outreach Coordinator ........5 3. Procuring Space ...................................................................... 5 A. Define Your Needs ................................................................... 5 B. What Spaces are Available?....................................................... 6 C. How to Reserve Space.............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • [email protected] Website
    TAYLOR BROOK 505 West 148th Street, Apt. 4A, New York, NY 10031 USA mobile: 347-559-3314 email: [email protected] website: www.taylorbrookmusic.com Taylor Brook is a composer based in New York. He writes music for the concert stage, electronic music, music for robotic instruments, as well as music for video, theater, and dance. Described as “gripping” and “engrossing” by the New York Times, Brook’s compositions have been performed around the world by ensembles and soloists such as the Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, Quatuor Bozzini, JACK Quartet, Mivos Quartet, Talea Ensemble, Ensemble Ascolta, and others. He has won numerous SOCAN Young Composers awards, including two first-place prizes and the grand prize in 2016 for Song, for solo cello. Brook studied composition with Brian Cherney in Montreal, Luc Brewaeys in Brussels, and George Lewis and Georg Haas in New York. In 2008, he studied Hindustani music and performance with Pandit Debashish Bhattacharya in Kolkata. His music is often concerned with finely tuned microtonal sonorities, combining his interest in exploring the perceptual qualities of sound with a unique sense of beauty and form. Brook holds a master’s degree in music composition from McGill University. He currently lives in New York, where he recently completed a DMA in music composition at Columbia University May 2018, with Fred Lerdahl. Brook is currently on faculty at Columbia University as a Core Lecturer. Brook is the technical director of TAK ensemble. Education_______________________________________________________________ Columbia University, New York, NY D.M.A. Composition, awarded May 2018 studied with: George Lewis, Richard Carrick, Georg Frederic Haas, Fred Lerdahl Thesis Piece: Lush, for large ensemble and electronics Thesis Paper: Synergy of Form, Rhythm, and Orchestration in three microtonal Compositions Advisor: Prof.
    [Show full text]