|

aco
homepage
concert
schedule
|
THE JUDITH CLURMAN CHORALE is a symphonic
chorus comprised of volunteer singers from New York and New Jersey
who have dedicated themselves to achieving the highest level of
choral performance. Many of the singers have previously performed
with Judith Clurman in various choral projects in New York, including
the New York Chamber Symphony, the Mostly Mozart Festival, the
Brooklyn Philharmonic, the Juilliard Evening Division Chorale, and
Lincoln Center Salutes the New York Philharmonic.
In the 1999-2000 season, the Chorale performs at St. Peter's Church
in Manhattan, in a program of music by Bach, Handel, and others. In
the spring, the chorus will join the American Composers Orchestra at
Carnegie Hall in a performance of Kurt Weill's The Lindbergh Flight,
and select members of the Chorale will perform with students from
the Juilliard School in their presentation of Weill's Der
Kuhhandel. The Judith Clurman Chorale will finish the season with
a performance on the 92nd Street Y's "Music of the Jewish
Spirit" series, where they will join the New York Concert
Singers and St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble in music by Philip Lasser and
Louis Lewandowski.
Judith Clurman is the founder and music director of the Judith
Clurman Chorale, a volunteer symphonic chorus performing with
orchestra in New York City, and of the acclaimed professional
ensemble, the New York Concert Singers. This season Ms. Clurman
prepares choruses for the New York Philharmonic, the American
Composers Orchestra, and the Orchestra of St. Luke's. Ms. Clurman is
artistic director of "Music of the Jewish Spirit" at the
92nd Street Y, and serves on the faculty of the Juilliard School.
American baritone LEON WILLIAMS is earning a
fine reputation on several continents for his warm, handsome voice
and uncommonly charismatic personality. A former Boys Choir of Harlem
member, he was won top prizes in the Naumburg, Joy-in-Singing, Lola
Wilson Hayes, and Leontyne Price Vocal Arts Competitions. Mr.
Williams holds a Master's Degree from the Juilliard School and
Bachelor's Degree from the Westminster Choir College of Rider
University. His engagements include principal roles in Carmen, Les
malheurs d'Orpheé, and Christopher Columbus at
Aspen Opera Theater and Mahler's Rückertlieder at Japan's
Sapporo Festival. Mr. Williams has performed as soloist in Mozart's
Requiem, Beethoven's Mass in C, and Vaughan-Williams' Fantasia on
Christmas Carols. Of particular distinction was an acclaimed
performance of Tobit in the New York premiere of Haydn's Il
Ritorno di Tobia. Passionately devoted to the art of the song,
Mr. Williams' recital invitations include Hartford, Princeton,
Pittsburgh, and throughout his native New York City. Recently he
enjoyed great success with an all-American recital at Japan's Tochigi
Music Festival, and made his Bard Festival debut this past summer
performing Mahler's Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen and
Schönberg's Gurrelieder.
Born in Waco, Texas, ROBERT WILSON was educated
at the University of Texas and Brooklyn's Pratt Institute. He studied
painting with George McNeil in Paris and later worked with the
architect Paolo Solari in Arizona. Mr. Wilson moved to New York City
in the mid-1960s, and joined with composer Philip Glass in writing
the 1976 landmark work Einstein on the Beach, which was
presented at the Festival d'Avignon and at New York's Metropolitan
opera House, and has since been revived in two world tours.
While known for creating highly acclaimed theatrical pieces, Wilson's
work is firmly rooted in the fine arts. His drawings, paintings and
sculptures have been presented around the world in hundreds of solo
and group showings. A recipient of two Rockefeller and two Guggenheim
fellowships, Mr. Wilson has been honored with numerous awards for
excellence, including the Premio Abbiati from the Italian Music
Critics Association, two Italian Premio Ubu awards, the Dorothy and
Lillian Gish Prize for lifetime achievement, the Harvard Excellence
in Design Awards, and a Pulitzer Prize in Drama.
STEPHEN MORSCHECK, bass, has appeared
recently with such organizations as the Bonn Opera, Pittsburgh Opera,
Florida Grand Opera, Dallas Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago,
Glimmerglass Opera, and New York City Opera. Mr. Morscheck has
performed roles including Britten's Nick Shadow in The Rakes
Progress, Wagner's The Night Watchman in Die Meistersinger, Donizetti's
Raimondo in Lucia di Lammermoor, and Puccini's Colline in La
Boheme.
Mr. Morscheck has also been active in recitals and oratorios. Among
Mr. Morscheck's frequent appearances with orchestra have been
Mozart's Requiem, Bach's St. Matthew Passion, Rossini's Stabat Mater,
Handel's Messiah, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and in Philip Glass' The
Civil Wars. Mr. Morscheck graduated from Wheaton College and
received advanced degrees from the University of Michigan.
Soprano SUZAN HANSON imbues her characters with
a wealth of dramatic and musical gifts that enable her to sing
everything from the most classic operatic repertoire to the works of
Philip Glass and standard musical theatre. In the upcoming season she
will debut at San Diego Light Opera as Hanna Glawari in The Merry
Widow, at Connecticut Opera in the title role in Floyd's Susannah, at
Arizona Opera as Tatiana in Eugene Onegin, and at Opera
Hamilton. Following her recent success as Laurie in Aaron Copland's The
Tender Land at Virginia Opera, she joined 3rd Angle New Music
Ensemble to record the role for CD release by Koch International. A
favorite of Philip Glass, Ms. Hanson created the role of Raven 1 for
the Lisbon World Expo '98 world premiere of The White Raven. In
addition, Ms. Hanson has created the roles of Madeline in Fall of
the House of Usher and Soprano 1 in Hydrogen Jukebox. Ms.
Hanson toured extensively in the National Company of Terence
McNally's Tony award winning Master Class.
Tenor JOHN DUYKERS made his professional
operatic debut with Seattle Opera in 1966. Since then he has appeared
with leading opera companies of the world, including The Lyric Opera
of Chicago, San Francisco opera, Houston Grand Opera, Netherlands
Opera, the Grand Theatre of Geneva, Frankfurt Opera, Opera de
Marseille, Canadian Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Los Angeles Opera, and the
Opera Company of Philadelphia.
Mr. Duykers has sung in 56 contemporary operas, including 31 world
premieres. Among these, he created the role of Mao Tse Tung in John
Adams' Nixon in China. Mr. Duykers performs frequently in
recital and with symphony orchestras. In addition to the National
Symphony, he has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Kansas
City Symphony, Sacramento Symphony, and the San Jose Symphony. A
noted interpreter of contemporary music, Mr. Duykers, has received
critical acclaim in numerous productions of George Coates Performance
Works, the Paul Dresher Ensemble, and the A.Ga.Pe Performance Group
which have been seen on many of the world's most important
contemporary music and theater stages.
MARIA JONAS, mezzo-soprano began her musical
career as an oboe student at the Musikhochschule Köln. After an
extended stay in Venezuela she studied with Montserrat Figueras in
Barcelona and Rene Jacobs at the Schola Cantorum in Basle and with
Jessica Cashin London.
Ms. Jonas is a highly sought after concert-soloist, having made
European tours with the Europe Baroque Orchestra under Roy Goodman,
the Hilliard Ensemble and the English Baroque Soloists under John
Eliot Gardner. Known in Germany for her solo recitals as well as for
performances with her groups Monteverdi Ensemble Köln, Diphona
and LaRisa, Ms. Jonas has also worked and recorded with Jordi Savall,
Sequentia, Alte Musik Dresden, La Sfera Armiosa. In recent years Ms.
Jonas has spent an increasing amount of time in opera and
contemporary music. In 1998 she was invited to the International
Festival of Contemporary Music in Cuba and to Lisbon and Madrid,
where she performed the title role in The White Raven, the
latest opera by Philip Glass, directed by Robert Wilson. This season
Ms. Jonas performs with Condanza and Sequentia, and premieres a new
dance-music-theatre piece Barbaro/o, about the Venetian composer
Barbara Strozzi, at the Adelaide Festival in Australia, and later
performs this piece throughout Europe. |