Postminimalism and Folk Ballads Fuel a Composer
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SFCMP Announces Its Season-Opening Concert Featuring A
Contact: Sheryl Lynn Thomas [email protected] (415) 633-8802 Press kits SAN FRANCISCO (September 18, 2018) - San Francisco Contemporary Music Players (SFCMP) announces its season-opening concert featuring a celebration of the music of Elliott CARTER on Saturday, October 20, 2018 at the Taube Atrium Theater in San Francisco. The on STAGE Series features large-ensemble contemporary works of the most influential and innovative composers of the 20th and 21st centuries. Carter was the grandest of the grand American composers from the 20th century, who lived beyond his 100th birthday and yet wrote music that was fresh, inventive, and forward-looking to the very end of life. SFCMP welcomes its newly arrived artistic director, Eric DUDLEY, with a program featuring three of Carter’s works, including the rhythmically energetic and emotionally powerful Penthode for twenty players. Complementing Carter’s enduring voice will be a wry work by the young American composer, Asher Tobin CHODOS, written for an instrumentation uniquely drawn from Carter’s Penthode, plus Canadian composer Sabrina SCHROEDER’s Bone Games/Shy Garden, an essay in the sensuality of noises. The series will begin with our popular How Music is Made Composer Talk and Open Rehearsal with composer Tobin Chodos. Audiences can expect to see a number of compositional voices brought into the mix that have never been a part of the ensemble’s lexicon. This season-opening performance will begin with Asher Tobin Chodos, a young California-based composer who will showcase his world premiere of Big Show, an Elliot Carter-inspired piece commissioned by SFCMP. In his piece Big Show, Chodos exhibits a fresh take on aspects of Carter’s work: “Carter’s endlessly stimulating polyphonic writing has been seen by many as a sort of musical version of an idealized democracy: a harmony that emerges from many dissenting voices. -
Kronos Quartet Prelude to a Black Hole Beyond Zero: 1914-1918 Aleksandra Vrebalov, Composer Bill Morrison, Filmmaker
KRONOS QUARTET PRELUDE TO A BLACK HOLE BeyOND ZERO: 1914-1918 ALeksANDRA VREBALOV, COMPOSER BILL MORRISon, FILMMAKER Thu, Feb 12, 2015 • 7:30pm WWI Centenary ProJECT “KRONOs CONTINUEs With unDIMINISHED FEROCity to make unPRECEDENTED sTRING QUARtet hisTORY.” – Los Angeles Times 22 carolinaperformingarts.org // #CPA10 thu, feb 12 • 7:30pm KRONOS QUARTET David Harrington, violin Hank Dutt, viola John Sherba, violin Sunny Yang, cello PROGRAM Prelude to a Black Hole Eternal Memory to the Virtuous+ ....................................................................................Byzantine Chant arr. Aleksandra Vrebalov Three Pieces for String Quartet ...................................................................................... Igor Stravinsky Dance – Eccentric – Canticle (1882-1971) Last Kind Words+ .............................................................................................................Geeshie Wiley (ca. 1906-1939) arr. Jacob Garchik Evic Taksim+ ............................................................................................................. Tanburi Cemil Bey (1873-1916) arr. Stephen Prutsman Trois beaux oiseaux du Paradis+ ........................................................................................Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) arr. JJ Hollingsworth Smyrneiko Minore+ ............................................................................................................... Traditional arr. Jacob Garchik Six Bagatelles, Op. 9 ..................................................................................................... -
2015 ANNUAL REPORT Pictured (Top to Bottom, L-R)
OUR 2015 ANNUAL REPORT Pictured (top to bottom, l-r): Shawn Patterson and vocalist Sammy Allen at the 2015 ASCAP Film & TV Music Awards Latin Heritage Award honorees La Original Banda el Limón at the 2015 ASCAP Latin Music Awards ASCAP Golden Note Award honoree Lauryn Hill at the 2015 R&S Awards Lady Antebellum at the 2015 ASCAP Country Music Awards Dave Grohl congrat- ulates Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley on their ASCAP Found- ers Award at the 2015 ASCAP Pop Awards Cast members from Invisible Thread with Richard Rodgers New Horizons Award winners Matt Gould (at piano) & Griffin Matthews (far right) at the 2015 ASCAP Foundation Awards The American Con- temporary Music En- semble (ACME) at the 2015 ASCAP Concert Music Awards Annual Report design by Mike Vella 2015 Annual Report Contents 4 16 OUR MISSION Our ASCAP Our Success We are the world leader in performance 6 18 royalties, advocacy and service for Our Growth Our Celebration songwriters, composers and music publishers. Our mission is to ensure that 8 20 Our Board Our Licensing our music creator members can thrive Partners alongside the businesses who use our 10 music, so that together, we can touch Our Advocacy 22 Our Commitment the lives of billions. 12 Our Innovation 24 Our Communication 14 Our Membership 25 Financial Overview 3 OUR ASCAP USIC IS AN ART. AND MUSIC IS A BUSINESS. The beauty of ASCAP, as conceived by our visionary founders over 100 years ago, is that it serves to foster both music and commerce so that each partner in this relationship can flourish. -
Festival of New Music
Feb rua ry 29 ESTIVA , F L O 20 F 12 , t N h e E L A W B M U S I C M A R C H Je 1 w i - sh 2 C -3 om , 2 mu 0 ni 12 ty Cen ter o f San Francisco 1 MUSICAL ADVENTURE CHARLESTON,TOUR SC MAY 31 - JUNE 4, 2012 PHILIP GLASS JOHN CAGE SPOLETO GUO WENJING Experience the Spoleto USA Festival with Other Minds in a musical adventure tour from May 31-June 4 in Charleston, SC. Attend in prime seating American premiere performances of two operas, Feng Yi Ting by Guo OTHER MINDS Wenjing and Kepler by Philip Glass, and a concert Orchestra Uncaged, featur- ing Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood and a US premiere of John Cage’s orches- tral trilogy, Twenty-Six, Twenty-Eight, and Twenty-Nine. The tour also includes: artist talks with Other Minds Artistic Director Charles Amirkhanian, Spoleto Festival USA conductor John Kennedy, & Festival Director Nigel Redden special appearance of Philip Glass discussing his work exclusive receptions at the festival day tours to Fort Sumter and an historic local plantation Tour partiticpants will stay in luxurious time to explore charming neighborhood homes & shopping boutiques accommodations at the Renaissance throughout Charleston Hotel in the heart of downtown Charleston, within walking distance to shops and JUNE 1 JUNE 3 restaurants. FENG YI TING ORCHESTRA UNCAGED American premiere John Kennedy, conductor CHARLESTON, SC Composed by Guo Wenjing Spoleto Festival USA Orchestra Directed by Atom Egoyan The Spoleto Festival USA Orchestra, led An empire at stake; two powerful men in by Resident Conductor John Kennedy, love with the same exquisite, inscrutable presents a special program of music of woman; and a plot that will change the our time. -
The Annenberg Center Appoints Marc Baylin As Artistic Advisor and Programming Consultant
NEWS FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 8, 2021 The Annenberg Center Appoints Marc Baylin as Artistic Advisor and Programming Consultant (Philadelphia – April 8, 2021) — Marc Baylin, a longtime leader in the national performing arts landscape, has been appointed Artistic Advisor and Programming Consultant at the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Pennsylvania. “We are excited to welcome Marc in his capacity as Artistic Advisor and Programming Consultant, as we continue to expand our programming, and plan for our return to in-person events and the Annenberg Center’s upcoming 50th anniversary,” said Annenberg Center Executive and Artistic Director Christopher Gruits. “Marc's tremendous experience in the performing arts combined with his established Philadelphia connections makes him incredibly well-suited to working with our team to shape dynamic, contemporary, and truly inclusive performance programming.” “I am beyond thrilled to join the excellent team at the Annenberg Center,” said Baylin. “Helping to shape their 50th anniversary season is a terrific opportunity.” Marc Baylin, a resident of Doylestown, PA, has over thirty years of experience as an arts entrepreneur, project developer, and artist manager, with extensive expertise in touring, presenting, and special event management. As founder and President of Baylin Artists Management, he oversees a professional staff and guides the curation of the roster while leading the marketing efforts and business operations. In February 2020, he announced that Baylin Artists Management would sunset in 2021, after 28 years in operation. He spent the better part of 2020 navigating the pandemic and assisting the artists with new management. In a new collaboration with Alliance Artist Management, six companies move to that roster beginning with the 21-22 season. -
A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts And
THE DECAY OF MEMORY AND MATTER: MATERIAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE NEW ARTISTIC ARCHIVE A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Communication, Culture & Technology By Graham L. Eng-Wilmot, B.A. Washington, DC April 24, 2008 THE DECAY OF MEMORY AND MATTER: MATERIAL TRANSFORMATION IN THE NEW ARTISTIC ARCHIVE Graham Eng-Wilmot, B.A. Thesis Advisor: Martin Irvine, Ph.D. ABSTRACT This project emerges from questions about how American society approaches film archiving and preservation, particularly in relation to the materiality of the image objects such an activity is predicated on. In the current moment, traditional film archives engage in a paradoxical endeavor: preservation. In an ideal sense, institutional archives strive to protect as many of their film holdings in the most original, pristine condition as possible. Yet such a mission is intensely problematic given a host of contemporary complications such as the natural instability of material film objects, changing concepts of how memorial processes operate, the rise of a digital remix culture, and the ever-increasing glut of moving images to be archived and preserved. Given this confluence of contextual concerns that traditional archives are confronted with, this project repositions the postmodern techniques of montage, collage and sampling as new, alternative archival forms. These strategies, which draw directly on the preexisting detritus of culture for source material, yield illuminative recombinations of the past – and present. In contrast to the traditional modes, these approaches do not attempt to ward off decay but instead embrace the gradual transformation of its source materials as both an aesthetic and perhaps more importantly, as a necessary stage in the cycle of cultural creation. -
Bang on a Can Announces Onebeat Marathon #2 Live Online! Sunday, May 2, 2021 from 12PM - 4PM EDT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Press contact: Maggie Stapleton, Jensen Artists 646.536.7864 x2, [email protected] Bang on a Can Announces OneBeat Marathon #2 Live Online! Sunday, May 2, 2021 from 12PM - 4PM EDT A Global Music Celebration curated and hosted by Found Sound Nation. Four Hours of LIVE Music at live.bangonacan.org Note: An embed code for the OneBeat Marathon livestream will be available to press upon request, to allow for hosting the livestream on your site. The OneBeat Virtual Marathon is back! OneBeat, a singular global music exchange led by our Found Sound Nation team, employs collaborative original music as a potent new form of cultural diplomacy. We are thrilled to present this second virtual event, showcasing creative musicians who come together to make music, not war. The OneBeat Marathon brings together disparate musical communities, offering virtuosic creators a space to share their work. These spectacular musicians join us from across the globe, from a wide range of musical traditions. They illuminate our world, open our ears, and break through the barriers that keep us apart. - Julia Wolfe, Bang on a Can co-founder and co-artistic director Brooklyn, NY — Bang on a Can is excited to present the second OneBeat Marathon – Live Online – on Sunday, May 2, 2021 from 12PM - 4PM ET, curated by Found Sound Nation, its social practice and global collaboration wing. Over four hours the OneBeat Marathon will share the power of music and tap into the most urgent and essential sounds of our time. From the Kyrgyz three-stringed komuz played on the high steppe, to the tranceful marimba de chonta of Colombia's pacific shore, to the Algerian Amazigh highlands and to the trippy organic beats of Bombay’s underground scene – OneBeat finds a unifying possibility of sound that ties us all together. -
Hour by Hour, Celebrating an Eclectic Festival Bang on a Can Marathon at Winter Garden
Hour by Hour, Celebrating an Eclectic Festival Bang on a Can Marathon at Winter Garden June 18, 2012 By Steve Smith However quixotic the notion of mounting a 12-hour concert is, and however impractical it can be to attend one in its entirety, I feel guilty when I am unable to be at the annual Bang on a Can Marathon from start to finish. I feel obliged to meet a challenge on its own terms, as I did when Bang on a Can celebrated its 20th anniversary with a 27-hour event in 2007. That said, practicalities do sometimes get in the way. And happily, there are ample thrills to be had by the more casual attendee, a category that presumably included most of the audience that filled the Winter Garden at the World Financial Center in Lower Manhattan on Sunday. According to numbers provided by Arts Brookfield, which helped to present the marathon, along with the River to River Festival, an estimated 10,000 attended the free event. I most regretted missing Lois V Vierk’s elemental “Go Guitars,” played by Dither at noon, and Gérard Grisey’s “Noir de l’Étoile,” performed by the percussion ensemble Talujon as midnight approached. But the nearly six hours I took in, from around 4 to 10 p.m., aptly demonstrated the expansive, inclusive approach to modern-music programming characteristic of Bang on a Can’s directors, the composers Michael Gordon, David Lang and Julia Wolfe. That breadth seemed even more impressive, given that this year’s marathon, the final New York event of Bang on a Can’s 25th-anniversary season, felt less rangy than its immediate predecessors. -
Volume I (Final) Proofread
UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Influence of Pop Music in the Works of Three Contemporary American Composers: Steven Mackey, Julia Wolfe and Nico Muhly Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5h4626dd Author Lee, Hyunjong Publication Date 2014 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles The Influence of Pop Music in the Works of Three Contemporary American Composers: Steven Mackey, Julia Wolfe and Nico Muhly A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctoral of Philosophy in Music by Hyunjong Lee 2014 © copyright by Hyunjong Lee 2014 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION The Influence of Pop Music in the Works of Three Contemporary American Composers: Steven Mackey, Julia Wolfe and Nico Muhly by Hyunjong Lee Doctor of Philosophy in Music University of California, Los Angeles, 2014 Professor Ian Krouse, Chair There are two volumes in this dissertation: the first is a monograph, and the second a musical composition, both of which are described below. Volume I These days, labels such as classical, rock and pop mean less and less since young musicians frequently blur boundaries between genres. These young musicians have built an alternative musical universe. I construct five different categories to explore this universe. They are 1) circuits of alternate concert venues, 2) cross-genre collaborations, 3) alternative modes of musical groups, 4) new compositional trends in classical chamber music, and 5) new ensembles and record labels. ii In this dissertation, I aim to explore these five categories, connecting them to recent cultural trends in New York. -
Getting Over the Shock of the New
GETTING OVER THE SHOCK OF THE NEW CONTEMPORARY IS SYMPHONIC MUSIC Thomas Dausgaard conducts the Seattle Symphony GETTING OVER THE SHOCK OF THE NEW AGE COMING OF BY GREG CAHILL here is a creepy bloodlust to orchestra will premiere the rest of the it,” he says. “That alertness to what the com- the doom-mongering of clas- works in future seasons. poser actually wrote, rather than what might sical music, as though an Indeed, a look at major orchestras around have become standard practice, is an inspira- “T autopsy were being con- the United States shows that contemporary tion for me when working on music by dead ducted on a still-breathing body,” William symphonic works are slowly, but surely, mak- composers we can no longer ask questions of. Robin wrote in the New Yorker in a 2014 ing inroads into program schedules. For So much of what we perform is written by article about perpetual reports of the example, subscribers to the Chicago Sym- people long gone; it can be frustrating never genre’s death. “What if each commentator phony Orchestra’s 2020–21 season can to be able to ask them, never to see how their decided, instead, to Google ‘young com- expect a generous serving of Brahms, Cho- faces light up when they hear their music poser’ or ‘new chamber ensemble’ and write pin, Schubert, Schumann, Debussy, Ravel, coming to life. a compelling profile of a discovery?” and Scriabin. But the orchestra also will per- “So what a joy it is as performer and audi- That’s good advice, especially since form two world premieres of CSO-commis- ence to be around living composers and young composers are providing an infusion sioned works by American composer Gabriela enrich the experience of hearing and per- of new blood into the modern orchestra. -
Anthracite Fields Bay Area Premiere Performed by Bang on a Can All-Stars and Cappella Sf Sunday, February 26
CONTACT: Louisa Spier Jeanette Peach Cal Performances Cal Performances (510) 643-6714 (510) 642-9121 [email protected] [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 17, 2017 Press Room Images of Julia Wolfe and Bang on a Can All-Stars available in the press room. CAL PERFORMANCES AT UC BERKELEY PRESENTS JULIA WOLFE’S PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING ORATORIO, ANTHRACITE FIELDS BAY AREA PREMIERE PERFORMED BY BANG ON A CAN ALL-STARS AND CAPPELLA SF SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Berkeley, January 17, 2017—Cal Performances welcomes new music champions Bang on a Can All-Stars to Zellerbach Hall for the Bay Area Premiere of Julia Wolfe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning oratorio, Anthracite Fields, on Sunday, February 26, at 7pm. Wolfe’s concert-length work, scored for electric sextet and choir, is inspired by the stories of coal-mining families in Pennsylvania at the turn of the 20th century. For the performance, Bang on a Can is joined by Bay Area esteemed new music choir, Cappella SF, directed by Ragnar Bohlin. The Los Angeles Times wrote, Anthracite Fields “captures not only the sadness of hard lives lost...but also the sweetness and passion of a way Cal Performances / Julia Wolfe: Anthracite Fields, page 2 of daily life now also lost. The music compels without overstatement. This is a major, profound work.” Named after the technical term for the purest form of coal, anthracite, Anthracite Fields was developed through Wolfe’s extensive research about the coal-mining industry in an area very near where she grew up in Pennsylvania. Wolfe’s music is often distinguished by an intense physicality and rhythmic drive, and she freely crosses the boundaries between classical, jazz, rock, world, and experimental music in her acclaimed works. -
Field Recordings
Photo by Stephanie Berger Bang on a Can All-Stars Field Recordings PROGRAM Sun, Oct 25 at 7pm Bang on a Can All-Stars Royce Hall Ashley Bathgate Cello Robert Black Bass Vicky Chow Piano and keyboard David Cossin Percussion Mark Stewart Electric guitar Ken Thomson Clarinets Andrew Cotton Sound engineer RUNNING TIME FIELD RECORDINGS Approximately 90 minutes; no intermission Julia Wolfe Reeling Florent Ghys An Open Cage Michael Gordon Gene Takes a Drink (with film by Bill Morrison) Christian Marclay Fade to Slide (with film) David Lang unused swan Tyondai Braxton Casino Trem Jóhann Jóhannsson Hz (with film) Todd Reynolds Seven Sundays Steve Reich The Cave of Machpelah (excerpt from The Cave) MEDIA SPONSOR: (arr. Michael Gordon) Bryce Dessner Maximus to Gloucester, Letter 27 [withheld] (with film) Anna Clyne A Wonderful Day PROGRAM NOTES MESSAGE FROM THE CENTER: For 135 years recorded sound has permeated every corner of our For almost 25 years, the phrase Bang On A Can All-Stars lives, changing music along with everything else. Bartok and Kodaly has been synonymous with innovation in the world of took recording devices into the hills of central Europe and modern contemporary music. While the performer lineup may music was never the same; rock and roll’s lineage comes from change periodically, the symbiotic relationship between artists revealed to the world by the Lomaxes, the Seegers, and other musicians and modern composers remains staunchly and archivists. Hip-hop culture democratized sampling: popular music illuminatingly in place. today is a form of musique concrète, the voices & rhythms of the past mixing with the sound of machinery and electronics.