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Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home


Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra New
Music Readings
Wed.,
Feb. 9, 2011 at 7pm
Admission is Free.
Kleinhans
Music Hall
3 Symphony Circle
Buffalo, NY
read the submission guidelines
earshot home

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Four
Emerging Composers in Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra's New Music Readings
February 8-10, 2011 Feb. 9 at 7pm: Free & Open to the Public. Kleinhans Music Hall, Buffalo, NY

February 8 -
10, 2011, EarShot,
the National Orchestral
Composition Discovery Network, and Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra (BPO) will
present the Buffalo
Philharmonic New Music Readings. Four composers, selected
from a national call for scores, will hear their works read by the BPO
under
the baton of associate conductor Matthew Kraemer, and will receive
feedback
from mentor composers David
Felder, Steven
Stucky, and Robert
Beaser, and the conductor and BPO principal musicians. The
four composers
selected are Michael-Thomas
Foumai, Austin Jaquith, Nathan
Kelly, and Carl Schimmel. The public is
invited to a free reading
session on Wednesday, February 9, 2011, no ticket is necessary.
Over the decades,
the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
has matured in stature under the leadership of William Steinberg, Josef
Krips,
Lukas Foss, Michael Tilson Thomas, Julius Rudel, Semyon Bychkov,
Maximiano
Valdes, and now Music Director, Maestro Falletta. Since 1940, the
Orchestra's
permanent home has been Kleinhans Music Hall, a National Historic Site
with an
international reputation as one of the finest concert halls in the
United
States. The BPO presents more than 120 Classics, Pops and Youth
Concerts during
a 37-week season and its award-winning education programs reach over
35,000
students per year. During the tenure of Maestro Falletta, the orchestra
has
rekindled a distinguished history of broadcasts and recordings,
including the
release of 15 CDs of a highly diverse repertoire on the NAXOS and Beau
Fleuve
labels. The BPO's recording of composer John Corigliano's Mr.
Tambourine
Man: Seven Poems of Bob Dylan, featuring soprano Hila
Plitmann, on the
NAXOS label, won Grammys in two categories. Its concerts are heard
regularly in
over 200 cities across the U.S. on American Public Radio's Performance
Today.
As Buffalo's cultural ambassador, the BPO has toured widely across the
United
States and Canada including a recent tour to Florida, the first
multi-city tour
since the 1988 European tour and the first outside of the region since
Maestro
Falletta led the ensemble at Carnegie Hall in 2004, its 22nd appearance
there.
The Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra's New Music Readings
are a part of EarShot, the nationwide network of new music readings and
related
composer-development programs. The goals of the program are to create
the
nation's first ongoing systematic program for identifying emerging
orchestral
composers, to provide professional-level working experience with
orchestras
from every region of the country, and to increase awareness of these
composers
and access to their music throughout the industry. EarShot is a
partnership
among American Composers Orchestra, American Composers Forum, American
Music
Center, the League of American Orchestras, and Meet The Composer.
Through EarShot,
24 composers so far have been selected for programs with the New York
Youth
Symphony, the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, and the Colorado Symphony
Orchestra,
the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, and the Pioneer Valley Symphony (MA).
Michael-Thomas Foumai: The Light Bringer
Michael-Thomas
Foumai (b. 1987, Honolulu, HI)
earned a bachelor in music composition from the University of Hawaii
and
currently studies at the University Michigan. His music has been
performed in
the US, China, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand. His mentors
include
Robert Beaser, Tristan Murail, Michael Gordon, Xu Shuya, Jia Daqun,
Neil McKay
and Jon Magnussen. He has studied with Bright Sheng, Michael Daugherty,
Peter
Askim, Byron Yasui, Donald Reid Womack, Takeo Kudo and Thomas Osborne.
Recent
performances of his music have been presented at the Osaka College of
Music,
Shanghai Conservatory of Music, Yogyakarta Contemporary Music Festival,
Thailand International Composition Festival, MidWest Composers
Symposium,
Fresno New Music Festival and the Calarts Theatre at Disney Hall. This
performance of the Light-Bringer
marks the first time Mr. Foumai's work has been performed by a
professional
orchestra.
The
Light-Bringer
symphony is inspired by the biblical fall of Lucifer and the title of
the work
is taken from the translation of Lucifer’s Latin name meaning, bringer
of light
or bearer of light. The work is based on manipulations of the infamous
“number
of the beast,” six hundred and sixty six and so the number six is
embedded
within the structure of the work. This can be heard on a small level
with
musical motives and sonorities being repeated six times, melodic and
harmonic
intervals of 6ths, a melody or harmony of six pitches and a progression
of six
chords. On a larger level, the work is built on six major sections with
the
main climax occurring roughly 666 seconds (11 min and 6 seconds) into
the work.
On a visual and performance level, tempo markings are all multiples of
six.
Austin
Jaquith: Blaze of Autumn
Austin Jaquith,
a native Californian, began
studying composition in High School with Jack Perla in Oakland, CA. In 1999 he enrolled at the
Cleveland Institute
of Music, studying with Margaret Brouwer and graduated in 2003 with a
Bachelor
of Music in composition. From 2003 to 2005 he attended the Moores
School of
Music at the University of Houston, where he studied with Robert Smith
and
graduated with a Master of Music in composition.
While at the Moores School he received the Seraphim
composition
prize, for his String Quartet No. 2,
and participated in SCI’s region VI conference in San Antonio. In the fall of 2005, he
began doctoral
studies at Indiana University where he studied with David Dzubay,
Chinary Ung,
Richard Wernick, Claude Baker, and P.Q. Phan.
Upon graduation, Dr. Jaquith was hired as an
Assistant Professor of
Theory and Composition at Cedarville University in Ohio, where he
continues to
teach and compose. Blaze of Autumn is the first of Mr.
Jaquith's works to be performed
by a professional orchestra. Recent performances include Shades
of Red, performed at the ITG 2010 Conference in Sydney,
Australia, Kinesis by the El Paso
Youth Symphony Youth Orchestra, Andy Moran Conductor, and Quintet for Brass by the Mirari Brass
Quintet on their southwest
tour.
Blaze
of Autumn
(Five Images from Fall) was inspired by fall in the Midwest. After spending my
formative years as a
native Californian, I was very impressed with the beautiful fall colors
found
in Ohio, where I moved for college.
This work seeks to capture the magnificence found in
autumn as green
explodes into radiant reds, oranges, and yellows.
There are five brief movements, each an image of a
fall scene. I.
Dawn's Revelation, II. Breath of Frost, III. Indian Summer, IV. Frost’s
Bite,
V. Blaze of Autumn.
Nathan Kelly: Legend of
Pecos Bill
Nathan Kelly is
a film and concert composer and
professional orchestrator. Working in Broadway, television
and film, some
of his orchestrating credits include The Tony Awards, Curtains, Dionne
Warwick,
Sir André Previn, Nickelodeon Television, Sarah Brightman, The Kennedy
Center,
Walt Disney Music Studios, Radio City Music Hall, Lea Salonga, Stephen
Schwartz's
Opera and Andrea Bocelli. He studied at The University of Texas, North
Texas,
The Juilliard School, The University of Southern California and
privately with
the orchestrators of Stephen Sondheim and Alan Menken. He has
composed
two symphonies, a violin concerto, a harp concerto, a mass, and works
for
vocalists. He has received several commissions from orchestras around
the
world. The Legend of Pecos Bill is
Mr. Kelly’s first work to be performed by a professional
orchestra.
While a
composer-in-residence in Wyoming, I wanted to
capture the landscape of the open prairies and quiet nights that seemed
to inspire
memories of my favorite American tall-tales that I heard when I was a
kid
growing up in Texas, the Legend of Pecos
Bill was one of them. After abandoning the idea of using a
narrator, I
decided to approach this idealized, highly energetic, and
larger-than-life hero
by depicting some of his tall-tales through the suggestive use of
orchestrating
and harmonizing a singular short theme which could be continually
altered
throughout the set of 5 attaca movements
which feature the main
characters and dramatic elements of the stories: I. Pecos Bill Shows
Off, II, The
Appearance of Slue-Foot Sue, III. Lightning,
The Horse, IV. The West, and V. Finale (which is a coda that is
reminiscent of
the beginning, and serves to bookend the piece).
Carl Schimmel: rite.
apotheosis.
Winner
of Columbia
University’s Joseph Bearns Prize and the 2010 Lee Ettelson Award, Carl
Schimmel has received honors and awards from many organizations,
including
the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Copland House, the Seoul International
Composition
Competition, the National Federation of Music Clubs, the New York Youth
Symphony First Music Awards, NACWPI, SCI, and ASCAP. His
works have been performed in Carnegie Hall’s Weill Hall,
Merkin Hall in New York, Severance Hall in Cleveland, the National Arts
Centre
in Ottawa, St. Martin-in-the-Fields in London, Orchestra Hall in
Minneapolis,
and at other venues throughout North America, Europe, and Asia. He has received
performances and commissions
from the California EAR Unit, the Left Coast Chamber Ensemble, the
Minnesota
Orchestra, North/South Consonance, saxophonist Taimur Sullivan, bass
clarinetist Henri Bok, Line C3 Percussion Ensemble, Cross Sound Music
Festival,
the Da Capo Chamber Players, Lucy Shelton, the Mexico City Woodwind
Quintet,
Flexible Music, counter)induction, and many others.
A graduate of Duke University (Ph.D. Music
Composition) and the
Yale School of Music (M.M. Music Composition), he is currently
Assistant
Professor of Music Theory and Composition at Illinois State University
in
Normal, IL. Please
visit http://www.carlschimmel.com.
rite.
apotheosis.
is an experiment in (melo-?) drama.
The
frenetic and exaggerated gestures in the work are typical of my recent
music,
and some have termed me an “expressionist.”
I frequently dabble in humor, but this work seems to
have little of it –
although the sparse “cha-cha-cha” sections are light and tiptoed; maybe
they
will make some in the audience smile.
The musical material is drawn from and moves across
a special set of
seven-note scales (major, harmonic minor, melodic minor, and
quasi-octatonic). But
my building materials
are less relevant than the emotional import of the music. There is no plot to this
music per se, but the title
reflects the
general narrative progression and shift of mood that takes place.
Matthew Kraemer, associate conductor
Recognized for
his “musical sensitivity” and “energized
sense of interpretation”, conductor Matthew Kraemer enters his second
season as
associate conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra in September
2010. In this role
he appears regularly
on each of the orchestra’s major series, including subscription weeks, Pops, Family,
and summer concerts.
He plays a vital role in the BPO’s award-winning
education and community
engagement programs, in addition to assisting Music Director JoAnn
Falletta
during recording sessions and on tour.
Upcoming season highlights include performances of
Miguel del Aguila’s The Fall of Cuzco,
a fully-staged
production of Prokofiev’s Romeo and
Juliet, and tour performances with Idina Menzel in Atlanta,
Indianapolis,
Long Island, Miami, Orange County, St. Louis, and West Palm Beach. Kraemer additionally
appears this season as
guest conductor with the Atlanta, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, and
Virginia
symphony orchestras.
Recipient of
the distinguished Herbert von Karajan
Conducting Fellowship and the Bruno Walter Career Development Grant,
Mr.
Kraemer served a residency with the Vienna Philharmonic at the Salzburg
Music
Festival during the summer of 2006.
His
conducting engagements include appearances with the symphony orchestras
of
Akron, Asheville, Baltimore, Canton, Jacksonville, and Richmond (IN),
the Reno
Chamber Orchestra, and in Europe with the Vidin Philharmonic and the
Orquesta
de Cadaqués. Equally
at home in the
ballet pit, he has led fully-staged productions with Virginia Ballet
Theatre,
Ohio Ballet, Neglia Ballet Artists, and Todd Rosenlieb Dance. Mr. Kraemer has
collaborated with many
leading artists, including Awadagin Pratt, the Los Angeles Guitar
Quartet,
Philippe Quint, Jennifer Koh, Ben Folds, Chris Botti, Idina Menzel, and
Richard
Stolzman, among others.
Prior
to his appointment in Buffalo, Mr. Kraemer
completed a highly successful, three-year tenure as associate conductor
of the
Virginia Symphony Orchestra. He
has
held positions with the Akron Symphony and the Akron Youth Symphony
orchestras,
leading the AYS into its 50th anniversary season
with a performance
in Carnegie Hall. Increasingly
recognized for his passionate advocacy for music education and his
devotion to
audience development, he has created numerous arts education programs
and
continues his work with young musicians as conductor, clinician and
lecturer at
many music festivals and in public schools.
An
Indiana native, Mr. Kraemer studied conducting in
Vienna, Austria with Salvador Mas Conde and was twice a fellowship
conductor at
the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen.
He has additionally participated in the National
Arts Center Conductor’s
Program in Ottawa, Canada. His
conducting teachers include David Zinman, Robert Spano, Stanley
DeRusha, and
Jorma Panula. Mr.
Kraemer is a graduate
of Butler University and the University of Nevada, Reno, where he
assisted
former Cincinnati Symphony concertmaster Phillip Ruder. An accomplished
violinist in his own right, he was a member of the Nightingale String
Quartet. Fluent in
German and French,
his principal violin teachers include Phillip Ruder, Herbert Greenberg,
and
Larry Shapiro. When
he is not
performing, Mr. Kraemer enjoys cooking, running, and reading. He and his wife Megan
reside in Buffalo, NY.
Admissions
& Info
The second day
of the Readings, February 9, 2011, are free
and open to the public. Tickets are not required. The Readings will be
held in
the Kleinhans Music Hall, 3 Symphony Circle, in Buffalo.
EarShot
is made possible with the support of the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation, the Aaron Copland Fund for Music and with public funds from
the New York State Council on the Arts.
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