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New Music Concert Listings
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5 Nov |
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11 Nov
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11 Nov
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Saturday, May 11, 2013 at 7.30pm Wozzeck English National Opera London Coliseum United Kingdom
Tickets: Various ENO
Wozzeck tells the story of a simple soldier, troubled by visions, who murders his unfaithful partner and dies, leaving behind an orphaned child. Berg’s early 20th-century masterpiece comes to ENO for the first time in 25 years.
This new production is by acclaimed director Carrie Cracknell. One of the most exciting young British directors of her generation, Carrie Cracknell is an Associate Director at the Young Vic, where her recent production of A Doll’s House was a critical success (‘If you ever see a production of the play, see this one’ Sunday Telegraph; ‘Carrie Cracknell ... set the Young Vic ablaze with her production over the summer ... Ibsen’s play reconsidered with fresh rabid emotion’ New York Times; ‘The best production of an Ibsen I’ve ever seen’ Kerry Shale, BBC Radio 4 Saturday Review).
Cracknell was previously co-Artistic Director at the Gate Theatre, London where her productions included Nick Payne’s version of Electra (co-production with Young Vic); Lucy Kirkwood’s adaptation of Hedda; I Am Falling (transferred to Sadler’s Wells); Mark Ravenhill’s Armageddon; and The Sexual Neuroses of our Parents by Lukas Barfuss.
Wozzeck is conducted by ENO’s award-winning Music Director Edward Gardner, whose conducting of Peter Grimes (2012) was described as having ‘breathtaking lyrical ferocity’ (The Guardian).
All performances:
Sat 11 May 2013 19:30
Mon 13 May 2013 19:30
Wed 15 May 2013 19:30
Sat 18 May 2013 18:30
Thu 23 May 2013 19:30
Sat 25 May 2013 19:30
Alban Berg : Wozzeck
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11 Nov
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Saturday, May 11, 2013 at 10am etc. Simon Bainbridge Study Day Wigmore Hall, London 36 Wigmore St, London W1 United Kingdom 02079352141 http://www.wigmore-hall.org.uk
Tickets: £3 concessions £2 Musicians From The Royal Northern College Of Music
Clark Rundell
conductor
Wigmore Hall and the Royal Northern College of Music are delighted to focus on the beguiling, beautiful and haunting music of Simon Bainbridge, one of the towering figures of British music.
Simon is a composer who has never stood still. The sheer variety in the sound worlds he creates provides ample testament to a truly extraordinary sonic and structural imagination.
In partnership with the Royal Northern College of Music.
Simon Bainbridge : Various
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12 Nov
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12 Nov
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Sunday, May 12, 2013 at 6pm Choral Evensong St Pancras Parish Church London United Kingdom
Tickets: not applicable Choir of St Pancras Church
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13 Nov |
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14 Nov
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Tuesday, May 14, 2013 at 7.30pm Elias String Quartet Wigmore Hall, London 36 Wigmore St, London W1 United Kingdom 02079352141 http://www.wigmore-hall.org.uk
Tickets: £15 £20 £25 £30 Elias String Quartet
Jonathan Biss
piano
As the 2012/13 season unfolds, Jonathan Biss is set to present over 30 concerts worldwide devoted to the music of Schumann and its multi-faceted nature.
Schumann: Under the Influence continues at Wigmore Hall carrying the American pianist’s desire to present the composer’s music ‘exactly as it is – deeply poetic, fragile, obsessive, evocative, whimsical, internal’. Pre- and post-echoes of the Schumannesque will also sound in each programme, creating concerts rich in fantasy, emotional contrasts and fleeting moods.
The Jonathan Biss Schumann Series is supported by Dunard Fund.
Henry Purcell : Fantasias (a selection) Robert Schumann : String Quartet in A minor Op. 41 No. 1 Timothy Andres : New work Robert Schumann : Piano Quartet in Eb Op. 47
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15 Nov |
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16 Nov |
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17 Nov
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Friday, May 17, 2013 at 7.30pm Jonathan Lloyd, Brahms and Tippett Barbican Hall, London Barbican, Silk Street, London EC2 United Kingdom 020 7638 8891 http://www.barbican.org.uk/eticketing
Tickets: £30 £25 £20 £15 £10 BBCSO
James Gaffigan conductor
Stephen Hough piano
This, the second of our concerts featuring Stephen Hough performing Brahms, opens with another new piece by Jonathan Lloyd, this time for the BBC SO winds. Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 2 is an epic, highly symphonic work, the longest written up to that time. Famous for the glorious cello melody that opens the slow movement as well as a corruscating and innovative Scherzo, this masterful concerto is hugely admired by Hough. Completing the cycle of Tippett symphonies we reach the first, a work conceived while Tippett was in prison as a conscientious objector and completed as war ended in 1945. Bursting with vitality and insistent rhythms, it has many of hallmarks of his later style, with a darkly Purcellian set of variations and a highly wrought double fugue to finish.
Jonathan Lloyd : new balls Johannes Brahms : Piano Concerto No. 2 in B flat major Michael Tippett : Symphony No.1
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17 Nov
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Friday, May 17, 2013 at 8:00pm BMOP Ends Season w/ Gen X Composers 5/17 Jordan Hall, Boston 30 Gainsborough Street United States 617-585-1260 http://www.newenglandconservatory.edu
Tickets: $20-$50. Students $10. Boston Modern Orchestra Project (BMOP)
The Boston Modern Orchestra Project (BMOP), the nation’s premier orchestra dedicated exclusively to commissioning, performing, and recording new orchestral music, celebrates Generation X by featuring works by young and emerging composers including: the world premiere of Play (2013) commissioned by BMOP and written by 33-year-old Andrew Norman; the New England premiere of Sea-Blue Circuitry (2011) by 35-year-old Mason Bates; and the New England premiere of Path of Echoes: Symphony No. 1 (2006) by 36-year-old Huang Ruo.
Andrew Norman : Play Mason Bates : Sea-Blue Circuitry Huang Ruo : Path of Echoes: Symphony No.1
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18 Nov
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18 Nov
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18 Nov
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18 Nov
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Saturday, May 18, 2013 at 7.30pm Illuminating Britten CBSO Centre, Birmingham Berkley Street, Birmingham, B1 2LF United Kingdom 0121 767 4050 http://www.bcmg.org.uk info@bcmg.org.uk
Tickets: In advance: £14 full price / £8 concession / £5 under 16s // On the door: £16 full price / £10 conc Birmingham Contemporary Music Group
Oboe: Melinda Maxwell
Clarinet: Joanna Patton
Piano: Malcolm Wilson
Violin: Alexandra Wood
Viola: Christopher Yates
Cello: Ulrich Heinen
Introduced by BCMG Artist-in-Association John Woolrich
BCMG celebrates Britten’s centenary with a programme of early works, framing them with similarly small-scale pieces from composers with close connections to him.
Elegy for solo viola is an affecting, technically assured work, composed in a single day by the 17 year-old Britten. Crafted a year later, Going downhill on a bicycle is an experimental, almost Schoenbergian piece for violin and piano. Throughout his life Britten enjoyed writing for specific performers and composed his Phantasy Quartet, when just 19, for the leading English oboist of the day, Leon Goossens.
One the fascinating things about these early Britten works is that although beautifully crafted, they show Britten at a crossroads, before he knew what direction his music would take. His Suite, for violin and piano from 1935, is more characteristically Britten, showing that at 21 the young composer had started to find his voice.
No composer mattered more to young Britten than Alban Berg, whose Four Pieces for Clarinet and Piano are the composer’s only true miniatures. Oliver Knussen met and was encouraged by Britten when young, and Henze’s Olly on the Shore pictures BCMG’s Artist-in-Association standing on the same stretch of Suffolk shoreline that Britten called home. Copland’s smoky, blues-inspired Nocturne and ukulele pastiche Serenade date back to before he first met Britten at his home in Snape.
Alban Berg : Four Pieces for Clarinet and Piano Benjamin Britten : Elegy Aaron Copland : Nocturne and Ukelele Serenade Benjamin Britten : Going downhill on a bicycle Oliver Knussen : Cantata Hans Werner Henze : Olly on the shore Alban Berg : Adagio Benjamin Britten : Suite Benjamin Britten : Phantasy Quartet
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18 Nov
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Saturday, May 18, 2013 at 14:15 NEW WORK OF ADRIAANSZ AND BOULEZ ARRANGED BY BOSGRAAF Concertgebouw, Amsterdam Het Concertgebouw, Concertgebouwplein 2-7, 1071 LN Amsterdam Netherlands http://www.concertgebouw.nl
Radio Kamer Filharmonie
Clark Rundell - dirigent
Erik Bosgraaf - blokfluit
An unforgettable evening out
The Concertgebouw is one of the best concert halls in the world, famous for its exceptional acoustics and varied programme. It serves as the home base of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, and features performances by the world’s best orchestras, conductors and soloists. Bernard Haitink once praised the Concertgebouw as the best instrument in the orchestra that it houses. The wide-ranging programme offers an excellent selection of classical, pop and jazz music. Attend a concert and have an evening you will never forget. Come experience inspiring music in the beautiful surroundings of the Main Hall or the more intimate Recital Hall.
Peter Adriaansz : Rising & Falling Pierre Boulez : Dialogue de l'ombre double Louis Andriessen : Suite uit ROSA, the Death of a Composer (bew. L. Andriessen/Rundell)
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18 Nov
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19 Nov |
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20 Nov |
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21 Nov
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22 Nov
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Wednesday, May 22, 2013 at 7:45PM In Portrait: Luke Bedford Purcell Room, Southbank Centre SE1 8XX United Kingdom 0844 875 0073 http://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/
Tickets: £15 Presented by the London Sinfonietta.
Sian Edwards conductor
Luke Bedford has fast become one of the most important composers of his generation, in part on the evidence of past work for the London Sinfonietta. This new ensemble composition is a major 25-minute work, which will be performed for a second time after the interval to give the rare instant second chance for an audience to get to know this brand-new composition. The programme also includes an ensemble arrangement of the 2011 double-soloist and string ensemble composition Wonderful Two-Headed Nightingale, and music by Gérard Grisey, whose music holds a fascination for Bedford.
Luke Bedford's new work is commisioned by the London Sinfonietta with the generous support of Michael and Patricia McLaren-Turner.
Luke Bedford : Wonderful No-Headed Nightingale (UK premiere of ensemble version) Gérard Grisey : Périodes from Les Espaces Acoustiques Luke Bedford : Renewal
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22 Nov
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Wednesday, May 22, 2013 at 7:30pm Organist Gail Archer Wraps Up NYC Tour 5/22 St. Paul the Apostle Church 405 West 59th Street United States 212-262-9239 http://www.stpaulapostlechurch.org
Tickets: Free Organist Gail Archer
Internationally renowned star concert organist Gail Archer celebrates the distinctive voice of organ music in The Muses Voice: A Celebration of International Women Composers – a five-concert series touring the churches and synagogues of New York City. Performing a colorful collection of organ music spanning 19th – 21st century female composers, Archer is slated to premiere two works: the New York premiere of The Everlasting Crown by Judith Bingham; and the world premiere of And the Greatest of These is Love by Alla Borzova. Hailed for championing contemporary organ music by female composers, Archer will also feature works by Nadia Boulanger, Jeanne Demessieux, Sofia Gubaidulina, Judith Bingham and Jennifer Higdon, to name a few. Several of these works are being recorded for Archer’s next album to be released in Spring 2013.
Eleanor Daley : Trinitas, I. “And the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” Genesis 1:2, II. “To the thirsty I will give water without price from the fountain of life” Revelation 21:6, III. And I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh” Acts 2:17 Nancy Van de Vate : Prelude for Organ Karen P. Thomas : Dar eltehab-e jazbe-ye’ yeganeggy...burning with ecstatic harmony...” Anna Paolo Santillan Alcocer : Hope of Dawn Jennifer Higdon : Ceremonies Suite, Meditation, Prayer Song, Celebration
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23 Nov
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Thursday, May 23, 2013 at 7.30pm Helen Grime New work Bridgewater Hall, Manchester Lower Mosley Road United Kingdom 44 (0) 161 907 9000 http://www.halle.co.uk/publishedSite/aidsdayconcert.asp box@bridgewater-hall.co.uk
Tickets: £36-£10 £3 student tickets available The Hallé
Sir Mark Elder conductor | Paul Lewis piano
Paul Lewis is internationally recognised as one of the leading pianists of his generation. An acclaimed interpreter of the classical repertoire, here he performs Mozart’s exquisite A major concerto. Although clouds occasionally darken the Mozartian sky, the work is largely a sunny affair, particularly its ebullient finale.
The concert begins with a new piece by the Hallé’s Associate Composer Helen Grime, while after the interval Sir Mark conducts Mahler’s First Symphony. This remarkable work begins with bird-calls and distant military fanfares before proceeding via a wonderfully rustic Ländler and an evocation of a Jewish funeral to its inspirational, life-affirming conclusion.
Helen Grime : New work Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart : Piano Concerto No.23, K488 Gustav Mahler : Symphony No.1
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24 Nov
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24 Nov
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Friday, May 24, 2013 at 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm Multitude Turner Hall Ballroom Milwaukee, WI United States
Tickets: Tickets are general seating by section. Best: $35 Good: $25 Bargain: $15 Present Music Ensemble with guest performers Leah Coloff, Ted Hearne and the band Something to Do.
Join Present Music, Milwaukee’s own cutting-edge new music ensemble, for an evening of dance, art and music magnified to the extreme at our Season Finale party, Multitude!
The Multitude concert will feature a myriad of brand new compositions, mesmerizing dance and captivating art installations. A world premiere by Sean Friar titled Breaking Point, centers around the electric guitar’s unique sounds and techniques that inspirethe ensemble. Vivid art installations, featuring an entire wall of cupcakes created by Brooke Thiele and Lilly Coyle, and Emily Sheider’s Life Among the Ruins, will take your mind on a radiant visual journey. Provocative music and dance highlights include performances by spellbinding singer/cellist Leah Coloff, composer/vocalist Ted Hearne and dancer/choreographer Mauriah Kraker. The party concludes with Wisconsin’s own high energy, horn-driven rock/ska band, Something to Do. Celebrate with Present Music in a concert packed with fun and adventurous performances at Multitude!
Ted Hearne : 359 Ted Hearne : Last Man Standing Hannah Lash : Hush Sean Friar : Breaking Point Leah Coloff : tbd
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25 Nov
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Saturday, May 25, 2013 at 7.30 Wolfgang Rihm, Mahler and Shostakovich Barbican Hall, London Barbican, Silk Street, London EC2 United Kingdom 020 7638 8891 http://www.barbican.org.uk/eticketing
Tickets: £30 £25 £20 £15 £10 BBCSO
Ingo Metzmacher conductor
Johan Reuter baritone
High, gleaming sonorities and a sense of enchantment link Wolfgang Rihm’s new piece with Mahler’s beguiling songs from the magical folktae collection, Des Knaben Wunderhorn, sung by the much sought-after Danish baritone Johan Reuter. Songs of a very different kind permeate Shostakovich’s dramatic 11th symphony, an almost cinematic evocation of the 1905 Revolution. The composer wove nine popular revolutionary songs into his dramatic portrayal, with its ominous, icy opening and terrifying Bloody Sunday massacre during which 1,000 workers were gunned down. Shostakovich chose the dark-toned violas for his poignant lament for the dead, before a tumultuous finale that whips up an urgent fervour for justice.
Wolfgang Rihm : Nähe-fern-1 Gustav Mahler : Songs from “Des Knaben Wunderhorn” Dmitri Shostakovich : Symphony No. 11
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25 Nov
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Saturday, May 25, 2013 at 14:15 STRAVINSKY AND PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION BY MOESORGSKI, DUTILLEUX Concertgebouw, Amsterdam Het Concertgebouw, Concertgebouwplein 2-7, 1071 LN Amsterdam Netherlands http://www.concertgebouw.nl
Radio Filharmonisch Orkest
Susanna Mälkki - dirigent
Leila Josefowicz - viool
An unforgettable evening out
The Concertgebouw is one of the best concert halls in the world, famous for its exceptional acoustics and varied programme. It serves as the home base of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, and features performances by the world’s best orchestras, conductors and soloists. Bernard Haitink once praised the Concertgebouw as the best instrument in the orchestra that it houses. The wide-ranging programme offers an excellent selection of classical, pop and jazz music. Attend a concert and have an evening you will never forget. Come experience inspiring music in the beautiful surroundings of the Main Hall or the more intimate Recital Hall.
Henri Dutilleux : Timbres, espace, mouvement Igor Stravinsky : Vioolconcert in D Modest Mussorgsky : Pictures at an Exhibition
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26 Nov |
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27 Nov |
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28 Nov
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Tuesday, May 28, 2013 at 7.30pm CBSO A BOY WAS BORN: NELSONS CONDUCTS BRITTEN’S WAR REQUIEM Symphony Hall, Birmingham Broad Street,
Birmingham,
West Midlands,
B1 2EA
United Kingdom 0121 200 2000 symphonyhall@necgroup.co.uk http://boxoffice.necgroup.co.uk/iccsym.asp
Tickets: £10 - £55 ndris Nelsons conductor
Kristine Opolais soprano
Mark Padmore tenor
Hanno Müller-Brachmann baritone
CBSO Chorus, CBSO Youth Chorus and CBSO Children’s Chorus
“My subject is War, and the pity of War.” Benjamin Britten composed his War Requiem for the new Coventry Cathedral, but it’s become one of the defining achievements of modern music, a timeless and profoundly moving exploration of man’s inhumanity to man. The CBSO gave its world premiere: this music is in our blood, and every performance is special to us. Be there as Andris Nelsons and an international team of soloists bring this deeply personal masterpiece to Symphony Hall before taking the work on tour.
6.15pm Pre-concert talk: Britten: War Requiem – CBSO Chorus Director Simon Halsey shares his experience of Britten’s choral masterpiece.
Benjamin Britten : War Requiem
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28 Nov
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29 Nov
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Wednesday, May 29, 2013 at 9pm The Pyre IRCAM/Centre Pompidou-Grande salle-Paris
France
Tickets: 10 Euros Conception, Direction, Choreography and Scenography Gisèle Vienne
Musical Creation, Performance, and Live Broadcasting KTL [Stephen O'Malley et Peter Rehberg]
Text Dennis Cooper
Lighting Patrick Riou
Costumes José Enrique Ona Selfa
Video Creation Robin Kobrynski
Set Design/Leds Designgroup Professional GmbH, LED Lightdesign
Other Set Design Espace et cie
Created in collaboration with and perormed by Anja Röttgerkamp alternating with Rose Mousselet, Lounès Pezet, Léon Rubbens and Kamiel Van Looy
Artistic Collaboration Anne Mousselet
Technical Collaboration carried out by the team from the Opéra de Lille
IRCAM Computer Music Design Manuel Poletti, Thomas Goepfer
Conception of 3D Plans Rémi Brabis
Scenography Assistance Marc Le Hingrat
Gisèle Vienne - choreographer, artist, and puppeteer - has created a world marked by terror and trouble, the lively mixed with inertia, and perception trapped by hyperrealism. Her new creation, The Pyre condenses abstract, figurative, and narrative writing and pushes the intense relationship between Gisèle Vienne and the text by Dennis Cooper to its limits. Vienne and Cooper have worked together since 2004. A dancer and a boy, totally mute, evolve in a luminous installation reminiscent of contemporary urban lighting - the city, the club.
Gisèle Vienne : The Pyre
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29 Nov
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Wednesday, May 29, 2013 at 7:30pm & 10pm Chantier 2014-2018 IRCAM/Centre Pompidou-Grande salle-Paris
France
Tickets: 10 Euros Stage Design, Director François Verret
Graham F. Valentine actor-singer
Jean-Pierre Drouet percussions and voice
Martin Schütz electric cello
Charline Grand, Jean-Christophe Paré actors-dancers
Video Claire Roygnan
Lighting Raphael de Rosa
IRCAM Computer Music Design Grégory Beller
François Verret will begin his vast 5-year project "Chantier 2014-2018" at IRCAM, passing through Paris, Grenoble, and Edinburgh. Chantier 2014-2018 combines sound fragments and vocal trenches, acoustic and optical landscapes, visual haikus, and the utterances of a ventriloquist. An on-the-fly assembly of tableaux vivants inspired by the hallucinations of those who come back from the battlefield, haunted by the ghosts of History; time is sometimes paused to show us the true nature of a still life. Chantier 2014-2018 is written like an improvised and premeditated journal, intermittent and collective. A crucial movement or the unique way the space has been arranged undermines the masterful authority of speech, of fiction, or of a date.
How does one expose an event, be it trivial or historical, sifting through uncertain, fading, outrageous memories? In his "pre-posthumous works", Robert Musil describes the agony of a fly caught in Tanglefoot, the threat of a flying arrow, a buzzing of iron in the southern Tyrol sky above the lines of combat. A horrifying feeling of foreboding mixed with an unexpected happiness.
Constantly on the lookout for these moments of shock, François Verret, as a playwright, engages a group of close artists-actors, dancers, musicians, and video artists-simultaneously in his research lab.
Where to start? In the very environment of the front lines.
François Verret : Chantier
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30 Nov
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Thursday, May 30, 2013 at 8:00pm Richard + Mika Stoltzman Salute Chick Corea at Carnegie 5/30 Carnegie Hall New York United States
Tickets: $50 Marimba - Mika Stoltzman
Clarinet - Richard Stoltzman
Harlem String Quartet
and more....
World renowned artists Mika and Richard Stoltzman return to Carnegie Hall for their much anticipated New Genre! Part 2 concert featuring eight world premiere works written and/or arranged specifically for them. Attracted by the multifarious, genre-busting artistry of premier jazz marimbist Mika Stoltzman, today’s most revered composers and performers gather for this special one-night only occasion. Program highlights include: the world premieres of The Nymphs for Solo Marimba by John Zorn and Burning Bright by William Thomas McKinley; works by Steve Reich and Bill Douglas; special guest artists including the Harlem String Quartet and vocalist Gayle Moran Corea, to name a few; and a robust dedication to Chick Corea featuring six of his pieces including his 2013 Grammy award-winning work Mozart Goes Dancing.
Chick Corea : six pieces... William Thomas McKinley : Burning Bright Steve Reich : Duet John Zorn : The Nymphs for Solo Marimba Bill Douglas : Marimba Concerto
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