FACULTY and GUEST ARTIST RECITAL Schubertiad KATHLEEN

FACULTY and GUEST ARTIST RECITAL Schubertiad KATHLEEN

FACULTY AND GUEST ARTIST RECITAL ”Schubertiad” KATHLEEN WINKLER, Violin JAMES DUNHAM, Viola BRINTON AVERIL SMITH, Cello BENJAMIN STOEHR, Cello (student) SAMI MYERSON, Cello (student) KRISTOPHER KHANG, Cello (guest) TIMOTHY PITTS, Double bass EVELYN CHEN, Piano (guest) Monday, October 27, 2014 8:00 p.m. Lillian H. Duncan Recital Hall PROGRAM Marcia in G Minor, D. 818 Franz Schubert (1797-1828) Marche Militaire in D Major, D. 733 arranged Dešpalj deranged Smith Benjamin Stoehr, cello Sami Myerson, cello Kristopher Khang, cello Brinton Smith, cello Fantasie in F Minor, D. 940 arr. Kevin Dvorak Allegro molto moderato Largo Scherzo. Allegro vivace Finale. Allegro molto moderato Introduction, Theme and Variations, D. 603 arr. Piatigorsky Brinton Averil Smith, cello Evelyn Chen, piano PAUSE Quintet for Piano and Strings in A Major, D.667 “Trout” Allegro vivace Andante Scherzo: Presto Andantino – Allegretto Allegro giusto Kathleen Winkler, violin James Dunham, viola Brinton Smith, cello Timothy Pitts, double bass Evelyn Chen, piano The reverberative acoustics of Duncan Recital Hall magnify the slightest sound made by the audience. Your care and courtesy will be appreciated. The taking of photographs and use of recording equipment are prohibited. BIOGRAPHIES The New York Times hailed EVELYN CHEN as “a pianist to watch,” praising her “brilliant technique, warm, clear tone, and exacting musical intelligence.” Ms. Chen’s recent engagements have included performances on five continents at venues including Avery Fisher Hall and Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center, Carnegie’s Weill Recital Hall, the Dorothy Chan- dler Pavilion, Wolf Trap, the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the National Concert Hall in Taipei, the Central Conservatory Concert Hall in Beijing, the Cul- tural Center of Hong Kong, and the Tchaikovsky Hall in Moscow. A Steinway Artist, Ms. Chen has performed with numerous orchestras including the New York Philharmonic, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the National Symphony Orchestra, the Philharmonia Orchestra of London, the New Zealand Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan, the State Symphony Orchestra of Mexico, and the San Diego Symphony, and has collaborated with renowned conductors including Riccardo Muti, Leon- ard Slatkin, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski, Zdeněk Mácal, Joseph Silverstein, Henry Mazer, Alberto Bolet, Enrique Bátiz, and JoAnn Falletta. Ms. Chen’s recent recordings have received critical acclaim inter- nationally, and her recording of Rachmaninoff’s piano concertos with Leonard Slatkin and the Philharmonia Orchestra of London on BMG was among the top ten best-selling classical recordings in England. Ms. Chen has been featured on the CBS Evening News, and her performances have been broadcast by numerous National Public Radio affiliates. Ms. Chen has performed before prominent dignitaries including the Princess of Thailand and the Prime Minister of Malaysia. Ms. Chen has been a winner of several international competitions, including First Prize in the 1981 Bach International Competition in Wash- ington, D.C. Ms. Chen is the recipient of the 1994 Petschek Award at the Juilliard School, where she received the Doctor of Musical Arts degree. Having received a Bachelor of Arts degree in composition from Harvard University, Ms. Chen is currently currently Associate Professor of Piano at Teachers College, Columbia University. Violist JAMES DUNHAM is active as a recitalist, guest artist and teacher. He has collaborated with such renowned artists as Emanuel Ax, Joshua Bell, Lynn Harrell, Cho-Liang Lin and members of the American, Cassatt, Guarne- ri, Juilliard, Takács, Tokyo and Ying Quartets. An advocate of new music, he recently premiered and recorded two works by Libby Larsen: her Viola Sona- ta (2001) and “Sifting Through the Ruins” (2005) for viola, mezzo-soprano (Susanne Mentzer) and piano, due for release by Naxos. Summers are spent at festivals including Sarasota, Amelia Island (FL), Aspen and le Domaine Forget (Quebec), with past participation in the La Jolla Chamber Music Fes- tival, Festival der Zukunft (Ernen, Switzerland), the San Diego Mainly Mozart Festival and three summers at the Marlboro Music Festival. This season features concerts and classes throughout the U.S. with a special appearance at the Lübeck Hochschule für Musik in Germany and the Smithsonian Institute performing quartets on a set of Nicolò Amati in- struments. Highlights of recent seasons included a pair of concerts with the Takács Quartet in Carnegie Hall, concerts in Reykjavik, Iceland, returns to San Diego, San Francisco, New York, and Vermont and regular engagements with Houston Friends of Chamber Music and Da Camera Society of Houston. Other recording projects have included Glyph by Judith Shatin for solo viola with string quartet and piano, the Bach Sonatas for Viola da Gamba with harpsichordist John Gibbons and the 2008 Grammy nominated Telarc record- ing of Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir de Florence with the Ying Quartet and cellist Paul Katz. Violist of the 1996 Grammy Award winning Cleveland Quartet for eight years, he performed throughout North America, Europe, the Far East and the Soviet Union. Founding violist of the Naumburg Award winning Sequoia String Quartet, Mr. Dunham formerly taught at California Institute of the Arts, the Eastman School of Music and the New England Conservatory, where he also chaired the String Department and received the Louis & Adrienne Krasner Teaching Excel- lence Award. Mr. Dunham is Professor of Viola and Chamber Music at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music where he directs the Master of Music in String Quartet program. His recordings can be found on labels including Te- larc, Nonesuch, Delos, Naxos and Crystal. Mr. Dunham performs on a Gaspar da Salo viola, ca. 1585. Consummate YouTuber and couch potato, KRIS KHANG holds both Master of Music (under Brinton Smith and Lynn Harrell) and Master of Business Ad- ministration degrees from Rice University. As a performing cellist, Kris served as Assistant Principal Cellist of the Santa Barbara Symphony and substitute cel- list for the Houston, San Diego and San Antonio symphonies. While performing, Kris also served as Lynn Harrell’s teaching assistant at Rice. Kris’ post music hobbies have included commodities trading risk-management at CNA Metals Ltd., and crude and oil accounting at Shell Trading Co. Currently Kris works in equity research at Raymond James and Associates covering stocks in the oil and gas industry. SAMI MYERSON began playing the cello shortly before her fifth birthday. She has performed in many important venues, including Carnegie Hall, Boston’s Symphony Hall, Jordan Hall, The Royal Concertgebouw, The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, L.A. County Museum of Art’s Bing Theatre, Colburn School’s Zipper Hall, and Royce Hall at UCLA. A member of the American Youth Symphony and the New York String Orchestra, she also served as a substitute cellist in the San Diego Symphony and the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra. Ms. Myerson received her Bachelor of Music degree from the New England Conservatory in 2014. Her past teachers include Richard Naill, Lynn Harrell, and Natasha Brof- sky. She is currently pursuing a Master’s of Music Degree at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music with Brinton Smith. TIMOTHY PITTS has distinguished himself as one of the most versatile double bassists of his generation. As a soloist, chamber and orchestral mu- sician, he has been heard in many of the world’s greatest concert halls. Mr. Pitts’ orchestral career began as a member of the Cleveland Orches- tra after which he was appointed principal bass of the Houston Symphony, a position he held for seventeen years. Mr. Pitts also served as principal double bass of Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society and the Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra under the direction of John Williams. An active chamber musician, Mr. Pitts has appeared as a guest artist with Bay Chamber Concerts, the Mainly Mozart Festival, Boston Musica Viva, the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan, and the Skaneateles Festival in New York as well as with the Los Angeles Piano Quartet and the St. Law- rence, Jupiter, and Vermeer Quartets. He has collaborated with such art- ists as Menahem Pressler, Arnold Steinhardt, Christoph Eschenbach, Heinz Holliger, Robert McDuffie, and Roberto Díaz. As a member of the Houston Symphony Chamber Players, Mr. Pitts toured Germany and Japan, and appeared at Chicago’s Ravinia Festival. A dedicated educator, Mr. Pitts’ students can be found among the ranks of the world’s finest ensembles. Formerly on the faculty of the Oberlin Conservatory, he is currently a Professor of Double Bass at The Shep- herd School of Music. During the summer, he is on the artist faculty of the Beijing International Music Festival and Academy at the Beijing Central Conservatory of Music. Mr. Pitts lives in Houston with his wife, violinist Kathleen Winkler, and two daughters, Nina and Kiri, both aspiring cellists. Hailed by New York Newsday for “extraordinary musicianship,” cellist BRINTON AVERIL SMITH’s continues to win praise for virtuosic performances with musical ideals rooted in the golden age of string play- ing. Smith’s debut recording of Miklós Rózsa’s Cello Concerto with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra on Koch Classics received worldwide critical acclaim, with the Gramophone Awards Issue praising Smith as a “hugely eloquent, impassioned soloist,” while the American Record Guide praised his performance with Gil Shaham on Shaham’s Fauré Album as “Stunningly beautiful,” concluding “I cannot imagine a better stylistic match for Sha- ham.” Mr. Smith has appeared regularly as a soloist with the Houston Sympho- ny since joining the orchestra as principal cellist in 2005. Prior to this, he was the first musician chosen by Lorin Maazel to join the New York Philhar- monic and the principal cellist of the San Diego and Fort Worth Symphony Orchestras. Mr. Smith’s North American engagements have included perfor- mances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and with orchestras throughout the country, while his broadcast performances include CBS’s Sunday Morn- ing and NPR’s Performance Today and Symphonycast.

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