Conor Hanick | APNM Recital
Recital of pieces by members of APNM, presented at St. John’s in the Village.
Recital of pieces by members of APNM, presented at St. John’s in the Village.
Timeless melodies and transformative storytelling converge in Chamber Music City’s most ambitious concert yet. Tabla virtuoso Sandeep Das and violinist Christina McGann ignite Reena Esmail’s BLAZE, fusing Indian and Western sounds in a fiery rhythmic dialogue. Harpist Bridget Kibbey and McGann shine in Saint-Saëns’ FANTAISIE before Christopher Cerrone’s NEW ADDRESSES transports listeners to a haunting sonic landscape. The evening culminates with soprano Ariadne Greif bringing new life to Luciano Berio’s rarely performed FOLK SONGS cycle, a visionary blend of American, Asian, and European folk traditions with contemporary textures. Featuring nine world-class musicians, Folk Songs & Fantasy invites you to witness global traditions reimagined in virtuosic splendor. Don’t miss this intimate celebration of passion, wonder, and the unifying power of music!
Blaze
Reena ESMAIL
Fantasy for violin and harp
Camille SAINT-SAËNS
New Addresses
Christopher CERRONE
Folk Songs
Luciano BERIO
Christina McGann, violin
Sandeep Das, tabla
Bridget Kibbey, harp
Ariadne Greif, soprano
Molly Barth, flute
Mariam Adam, clarinet
Max Geissler, cello
Ji Hye Jung, percussion
W. Lee Vinson, percussion
$50 General Admission
$10 Student Admission
SUNDAY, MAY 4, 3:00 p.m., BAILEY HALL at Cornell University
Tyson Gholston Davis, guest composer
Ariadne Greif, soprano
Juan José Navarro Hernández, rehearsal clinician
inner flame . . . deep and blue - Tyson Gholston Davis (premiere)
Las Provincias (pasodoble) - Arturo & Vicente Terol Gandía
Intermedio de Las Bodas de Luis Alonso (zarzuela) - Gerónimo Giménez
Duende - Luis Serrano Alarcón
Spain - Chick Corea, arr. Paul Murtha
BROOKLYN RIDER ALMANAC Selections from Book II
ARNOLD SCHOENBERG Quartet No. 2 in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 10
COLIN JACOBSEN Chalk and Soot
Listening is the foundation of Raven Chacon’s (b. 1977) wide-ranging artistic practice. “I am a listener,” he simply declares, but the attention he gives to sound is complex and vast, encompassing far more than what is immediately audible. From his earliest works, Chacon has been dedicated to amplifying the unheard, calling attention to what is absent or unknown. Although Chacon classifies the compositions on this recording as chamber music, all three of these works “zigzag” through his noise studies and sound installations by integrating electronic sounds, extended instrumental techniques, evocations of sociopolitical themes, and, in the case of Voiceless Mass, the condition of site-specificity.
Derived from the Navajo word for “song,” Biyán (2011) [flute, clarinet, violin, cello, and percussion] denotes Chacon’s reflection on the function of singing in Navajo ceremonies, where repetition can continue throughout the night. The work’s three movements, played without pause, are organized in a block structure of repeating patterns, allowing listeners time to dwell in the mesmerizing soundscape and focus on the constantly changing micro-acoustic details.
Owl Song (2021), for sinfonietta and voice, “is an acknowledgment of the nocturnal hunting bird, considered by some to have the ability of shapeshifting,” Chacon writes. “Owl Song asks its instrumentalists to cycle through a variety of timbres on their instruments, often with individual speeds to traverse the composition. They are sometimes guided by a voice, her distance unmeasurable from themselves, and must call out not to locate her position, but to see if she is still with them.”
Voiceless Mass (2021), for pipe organ and large ensemble, was commissioned by WI Conference of the United Church of Christ, Plymouth Church UCC, and Present Music, and composed specifically for the Nichols & Simpson organ at The Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The commission offered Chacon a valuable opportunity to address critical issues concerning the legacy of the Catholic Church and the atrocities committed against Indigenous peoples—particularly the residential schools, forced assimilation, and abuse of Indigenous youth—and Chacon was eager to evoke this history directly within the walls of the sanctified institution. “This work,” he writes, “considers the spaces in which we gather, the history of access of these spaces, and the land upon which these buildings sit.” Though the title refers to a “Mass,” the liturgical rite and choral genre common to many Christian denominations, there are no vocal parts and no audible singing. “In exploiting the architecture of the cathedral,” Chacon explains, “Voiceless Mass considers the futility of giving voice to the voiceless, when ceding space is never an option for those in power.”
The Reser Presents: Chalk and Soot
Pricing: $35 – $55
Brooklyn Rider & Ariadne Greif (soprano)
Celebrating two decades together, this is Brooklyn Rider’s homage to their namesake, “Der Blaue Reiter,” a pioneering pre-WWI artistic collective that counted among its members Arnold Schoenberg and Wassily Kandinsky. Colin Jacobsen’s song cycle, Chalk and Soot, built upon Kandinsky’s Dada-inspired text, is paired with Schoenberg’s daring Second String Quartet, both featuring the mesmerizing American singer, Ariadne Greif. And in a second installment of 2014’s highly celebrated Brooklyn Rider Almanac, four newly commissioned works complete the experience: Clarice Assad, Gabriel Kahane, Giovanni Solima and Tyshawn Sorey.
With their gripping performance style and unquenchable appetite for musical adventure, Brooklyn Rider has carved a singular space in the world of string quartets over their fifteen-year history. Defining the string quartet as a medium with deep historic roots and endless possibility for invention, they find equal inspiration in musical languages ranging from late Beethoven to Persian classical music to American roots music to the endlessly varied voices of living composers.
“Evocation” – Music for Chamber Music and Voice
6:30 PM 8:00 PM
Bulgarian Consulate General in New York
Performers
Stanichka Dimitrova, violin with musicians from PhiloSonia Chamber Music Program, Ariadne Greif, soprano, Adrian Daurov, cello, Nathaniel LaNasa, piano
This program aims to create a journey from the intimate to the almost orchestral grandeur of two pieces exploring literal and emotional darkness.
F. SCHUBERT (1797-1928) – Notturno for Piano trio
M. BONIS (1858-1937) “Soir, Matin” for Piano trio
D. SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975) – “Seven Romances on Poems by Alexander Blok” Op. 127 for Soprano, Violin, Cello and Piano
Chalk and Soot , Colin Jacobsen
Schoenberg String Quartet No. 2
Three new pieces
“[Their] down-to-earth demeanor…demystifies contemporary classical music and invites everyone into the tent” – Time Out New York
Inspired by the energy of the eponymous borough, string quartet Brooklyn Rider expand the classical canon with unparalleled skill, creativity, and unexpected collaborations. With set-lists drawn of composers from Beethoven to Björk, every performance is a musically omnivorous adventure that coaxes new energy out of classical pieces and pushes the string quartet form into new territories of Americana, jazz, and global music. The foursome’s swaggering and accessible performance style are perennial favorites at NPR, which has frequently included their albums in the station’s yearly “Best Albums” lists. Hear Giovanni Sollima’s Four Quartets, plus works by Clarice Assad, Tyshawn Sorey, and Gabriel Kahane from the Brooklyn Rider Almanac, Book II, and more. Operatic soprano Ariadne Greif adds her “luminous, expressive voice” (New York Times) to this concert event at Sixth & I.
The Brick presents
THE ALL-FATHER / HYPNAGOGIA
by Paul Pinto and Nick Brooke
at The Brick Theater — 579 Metropolitan Ave
February 12, 2025, at 8PM
Running Time: 75 Minutes with a short intermission
Sampled and sourced from Wagner’s herculean oeuvre, THE ALL-FATHER – Side One: Rheingold (part one) is the opening eighth of Paul Pinto’s ambitious new theatre ritual, a radical reimagining of The Ring Cycle where masculinity and fatherhood is gesungen by a chorus of beefy Wotans. Sung in German… kind of.
The second half features excerpts from Nick Brooke’s works PSYCHIC DRIVING and TRANSCENDENTAL ETUDES, which seamlessly mixes musical samples with live performers. The intricate works meditate on sleep, opera, and torture, based on the CIA’s Psychic Driving experiments with hallucinogens and transitional states of wakefulness.
CREDITS
THE ALL-FATHER
Created by Paul Pinto (after Richard Wagner)
Performed by Paul Chwe MinChul An, Michael Chinworth, Alex Gibson, Brian McCorkle, Paul Pinto, and Dax Valdes
THE ALL-FATHER is made possible with support from thingNY
HYPNAGOGIA, PSYCHIC DRIVING and TRANSCENDENTAL ETUDES
Created by Nick Brooke
Performed by Maho Agawa, Michael Chinworth, Ariadne Greif, Annie MingHao Wang, Akane Little, Paul Pinto, Dax Valdes, and Susannah Wilson
Find them: pfpinto.com, nbrooke.com
Presented in collaboration with New Latin Wave
The New Latin Wave brings their popular Latine Composers Showcase to the Atrium for four nights only with some of New York’s most unique Latine voices. Composer-performer Pauchi Sasaki presents another installment of her opera ARTEMIS, a multi-year project inspired by NASA’s program to bring the first woman to the Moon’s surface in 2026. Known for her interdisciplinary approach, integrating musical composition with multimedia performance, new technologies, and self-designed instruments, Pauchi explores the relationship and tensions between the female body, metal, technology, futurism and power. ARTEMIS aims to celebrate and bring light to this milestone in women's history in our pursuit of knowledge and new discoveries. This opera is envisioned as a transcultural coven, a rite of passage where the voices of women from all cultures and times resonate and are amplified.
This concert will present two world premieres: “ARTEMIS: Recitative” commissioned by HELLERAU – Europäisches Zentrum der Künste, Dresdner Musikfestspiele und Stiftung Kunst und Musik für Dresden; and “k’uKu”, commissioned by Americas Society.
December 6-7, 2024
American Composers Orchestra
Link: BAM | Journey LIVE
Austin Wintory, Composer & Conductor
Ode to Joy, Executive Producer
Journey LIVE
BAM teams up with composer/conductor Austin Wintory and the American Composers Orchestra to present an original, interactive live performance of his Grammy-nominated score for Journey, “the most beautiful game of its time" (IGN).
In an alchemical collision of mediums, live musicians respond to the real-time actions of on-stage gamers as they explore the gorgeous universe within the hit video game. Never the same each time it is played, JourneyLIVE is an interactive parable, marking an unprecedented formal exploration in which live musicians respond to the actions of video game players as they traverse miles of sprawling desert, rolling sand dunes, age-old ruins, caves, and howling winds.
December 6-7, 2024
American Composers Orchestra
Link: BAM | Journey LIVE
Austin Wintory, Composer & Conductor
Ode to Joy, Executive Producer
Journey LIVE
BAM teams up with composer/conductor Austin Wintory and the American Composers Orchestra to present an original, interactive live performance of his Grammy-nominated score for Journey, “the most beautiful game of its time" (IGN).
In an alchemical collision of mediums, live musicians respond to the real-time actions of on-stage gamers as they explore the gorgeous universe within the hit video game. Never the same each time it is played, JourneyLIVE is an interactive parable, marking an unprecedented formal exploration in which live musicians respond to the actions of video game players as they traverse miles of sprawling desert, rolling sand dunes, age-old ruins, caves, and howling winds.
Ariadne sings with The Knights in an intimate salon concert with snacks, drinks, and an after party!
Program will include:
Mozart Sinfonia Concertante (violin, viola and piano)
Massenet's Elegie for voice, viola and piano
Rachmaninoff Oh Cease Thy Singing Maiden Fair (voice, violin and piano)
Performed by an amazing group of musicians from The Knights:
Ariadne Greif, soprano (special guest)
Colin Jacobsen, violin
Nicholas Cords, viola
Jeewon Park, piano
The schedule for the evening will be:
doors open at 6:30pm with snacks and welcome drinks
music performance will start at 7:00pm
around 8pm we will have an afterparty with sight reading and more social time
Ariadne Greif Sopran
Brooklyn Rider
Johnny Gandelsman Violine
Colin Jacobsen Violine
Nicholas Cords Viola
Michael Nicolas Violoncello
The Brooklyn Rider Almanac Vier kurze Stücke für Streichquartett von Clarice Assad, Gabriel Kahane, Giovanni Sollima und Tyshawn Sorey
Arnold Schönberg Streichquartett Nr. 2 fis-Moll op. 10
PauseColin Jacobsen «Chalk and Soot» für Streichquartett und Sopran
Preise CHF 85 / 55 / 30
Als «eines der Wunder der zeitgenössischen Musik» wurde das New Yorker Streichquartett Brooklyn Rider in der «Los Angeles Times» gerühmt. Denn es spielt nicht nur bestehende Werke – wie hier Arnold Schönbergs op. 10 –, sondern schafft sich mit Kompositionsaufträgen ein eigenes, stilistisch überaus vielfältiges Repertoire, das weit in jazzige oder rockige Gefilde reicht. Viele dieser Aufträge haben einen Bezug zu den grossen Themen der Gegenwart: zu verschiedenen politischen Konflikten etwa, oder zur Klimaerwärmung. Nun bringen sie vier neue Stücke aus ihrer Sammlung nach Zürich. Mit dabei ist auch die Sopranistin Ariadne Greif: Sie singt «Chalk and Soot» des Brooklyn-Rider-Geigers Colin Jacobsen.
November 15, the world - The release of Wet Ink's studio recording of The Romance of the Rose on New Focus Recordings! Pre-order now!
Johnny Gandelsman, Violin
Colin Jacobsen, Violin
Nicholas Cords, Viola
Michael Nicolas, Cello
Ariadne Greif, Soprano
Brooklyn Rider has carved a singular space in the world of string quartets over the last fifteen-plus years, with repertoire ranging from late-Beethoven to Persian classical music to American roots music to the endlessly varied voices of living composers.
They will present four brand new string quartets inspired by "Der Blaue Reiter", a pre-WW1 era collective led by Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, Schoenberg's tonality-shattering String Quartet No. 2 with the mesmerizing American soprano Ariadne Greif, as well as a new song cycle written by Colin Jacobsen, the violinist of quartet and The Knights ensemble.
“They are four classical musicians performing with the energy of young rock stars jamming on their guitars, a Beethoven-goes-indie foray into making classical music accessible but also celebrating why it was good in the first place.”
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"I don't believe I've ever experienced the radical emotional range of Op. 132's long, slow movement — with its liberating, dancing interjections — more intensely than when listening to the entirety of Healing Modes.”
—The New York Times
With their gripping performance style and unquenchable appetite for musical adventure, Brooklyn Rider has carved a singular space in the world of string quartets over their fifteen-plus year history. Defining the string quartet as a medium with deep historic roots and endless possibility for invention, they find equal inspiration in musical languages ranging from late Beethoven to Persian classical music to American roots music to the endlessly varied voices of living composers. Claiming no allegiance to either end of the historical spectrum, Brooklyn Rider most comfortably operates within the long arc of the tradition, seeking to illuminate works of the past with fresh insight while coaxing the malleable genre into the future through an inclusive programming vision, deep-rooted collaborations with a wide range of global tradition bearers, and the creation of thoughtful and relevant frames for commissioning projects.
A concert curated by Ginevra Petrucci at the Casa Italiana Zerilli—Marimò at NYU at New York University.
An evening of ecstatic chamber music and dada operatic comedy
with Ariadne Greif, soprano, Paul Pinto, baritone, Mary Birnbaum, stage direction,
Nadia Sirota and Jonah Sirota, violas, Benjamin Larsen, cello, Hyungjin Choi, piano,
Katherine Fortunato, percussion and the Momenta String Quartet
Robert Sirota’s broken places, a healing meditation on brokenness…. hearts, dreams, worlds. Composed for flutist Martha Cargo and cellist Benjamin Larsen.
The nine movements of A Sinner’s Diary comprise a surreal liturgy about the pull and tug between our inner demons and the angels of our better nature. For flute, 2 violas, cello, percussion and piano.
Sheree Clement’s Table Manners, originally for two sopranos and 40 pounds of silverware – is a comedic vocal duet about friendship, competition, and greed. Live premiere starring Ariadne Greif and Paul Pinto.
Mermaid Songs, three vivid, funny and forthright songs about not giving up your dream to be a mermaid, friendship, champagne cocktail parties and chemotherapy. For soprano and string quartet. Premiere performance, with Ariadne Greif directed by Mary Birnbaum.
Spread out a blanket and soak in one of Moab’s favorite events! It’s the Festival’s 32nd annual free Community Concert. This wide-ranging program includes music from the American Songbook, duos for flute and marimba, a work by Diné composer and pianist Connor Chee about his musical heritage, and a special performance by artists from the Hopi Nation, who bring their own dancing and music to the festivities. The young stars of BAILEN round out the program with fresh, original tunes.
Event Description: Moab’s Old City Park has beautiful shade trees, plenty of room to spread out on the lawn, and free parking! The festival provides some seating at this family-friendly, free, afternoon program and concert-goers are encouraged to bring blankets or camp chairs. Picnics are welcome.
Flutist and program curator Catherine Gregory, percussionist Ian Rosenbaum, and soprano Ariadne Greif, explore the relationship of sound, breath, and life through a collection of newly written miniatures by a diverse array of composers. The human voice and percussion join the flute to fashion a trio of the world’s oldest instruments in this theatrically conceived program, Just Breath(e).
Works by Timo Andres, Clarice Assad, Kinan Azmeh, Juhi Bansal, Viet Cuong, Ellis Ludwig-Leone, Diane Monroe and Matthew Evan Taylor are intertwined with specially arranged works by Raven Chacon, Chris Cerrone, and Kevin Puts that play on the same theme.
About the venue: A guided scenic hike at a private ranch leads concert-goers to enjoy music chosen to fit the setting. Among our most popular events, these scenic hikes offer unparalleled musical intimacy and engagement with festival artists. Click the Important Details tab above for more information.
This season the Moab Music Festival turns its attention to our greatest local resource—the mighty Colorado River. Join us as we explore a range of perspectives of living artists, with the hope to inspire ongoing stewardship of this precious resource.
The banks of the Colorado are the perfect setting to hear two world premieres by up-and-coming composers Maya Miro Johnson and Roydon Tse. Sponsored by the festival’s Commissioning Club and a matching grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Johnson and Tse’s new commissions are inspired by the river. The program also includes a work by Salt Lake City composer John Costa, original music by Diné composer/pianist Connor Chee, a presentation by the Hopi Nation, and literary readings from Utah authors.
About the venue: Perched on the Colorado River and set against towering red rock walls, Red Cliffs Lodge is a spectacular location for an outdoor evening concert. The stage is set on an expansive lawn adjacent to the Colorado; bring a chair, spread your blanket on the lawn or find your spot in the provided seating area and enjoy the music as the sun sets on this beautiful venue.
Pre-Concert Panel: Just before the Colorado Currents performance, attend a free panel discussion at the Red Cliffs Lodge Colorado Room from 5:30-6:30 pm. Discussion will include the Moab Music Festival’s two world premieres, stewardship of the Colorado River, and the importance of water in the Hopi culture. Panelists include:
Moderator, Serah Mead
John Weisheit, Co-Founder at Living Rivers and the Colorado Riverkeeper,
Howard Dennis, Native American flutist and Hopi Elder, and
Moab Music Festival commissioned composers Connor Chee, Maya Miro Johnson, and Roydon Tse.
Accommodation: Make the concert venue your accommodation in Moab and save 30% on your stay. When you book a room at Red Cliffs Lodge between August 30 and Sept 2, save 30% with the discount code MMF2024. Important: Enter the code on the page where you select your dates.