Music/Words (www.musicwordsnyc.com), an interdisciplinary series founded and curated by NYC- based pianist Inna Faliks (www.innafaliks.com), continues its fourth season on April 23 and 30 on WFMT at 8pm CST. Faliks will play CPE Bach, Eric Satie, Schubert, Chopin. L.B. Thompson, Whiting Award winner, is the poet.

The series MUSIC/WORDS was recently praised by Lucid Culture as being “surreal, impactful, and relevant” and was described as “a throwback to the Paris salons of the late 1800s.” It celebrates links between poetry and music by presenting collaborations between exciting solo performers and acclaimed contemporary poets in the form of a live recital/reading.

Inna Faliks created the series in order to foster a chance for poets and musicians to work together and inspire each other, as well as to allow different audiences to come together for these musical-literary events. New published and unpublished works are read alongside performances of music old and new and connected by content, intuition, and inspiration.

According to Faliks, “I pair performers together based on their personalities and styles, and encourage them to choose the poems and music in varied ways that are strongly and intuitively connected.”

 

Chicago’s Chinese Fine Arts Society is pleased to announce the second of their 2012 Migratory Journeys Premiere Concerts which feature works by top Chinese composers alongside a selection of winning works from CFAS’s Third International Music Composition Competition where composers were invited to participate by creating original music inspired by the wandering, resettling, and emigration of Chinese diaspora population through the world.

Winning compositions were selected by a panel of esteemed judges comprised of composers Chen Yi and Huang Ruo as well as Fulcrum Point New Music Project Director Stephen Burns. Curated by CFAS Guest Music Director Yuan Qing Yu, assistant concertmaster to the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, this all-Chinese music concert will be performed by acclaimed Chicago professional musicians, including members of chamber music Civitas, and members of the CSOThis free concert will take place at the Chicago Cultural Center’s Preston Bradley Hall on April 29, 2012 at 3pm. The Chicago Cultural Center is located at 78 E. Washington, in Chicago.

 

Drawing upon the submission of original work by emerging as well as seasoned composers, the CFAS International Music Composition Competition seeks inspires creativity and innovation in the global music community.

“We’re very excited about this program.” says curator Yuan-Qing Yu. “We’re featuring a variety of compositions and instrumentations, from traditional Chinese to modern, including cross-cultural pieces that use western instruments to reproduce sound that resembles Chinese instruments.”

The Program is as follows:

·       Yearning by Chen Yao (COMPETITION WINNER)
·       Moon Lullaby by Tonia Ko (COMPETITION WINNER)
·       Book of the Forgotten by Huang Ruo (MIDWEST PREMIERE)
·       Seven Desires for Guitar by Tan Dun (MIDWEST PREMIERE)
·       The Willows are New by Chou Wen Chung
·       Taiping Drum by Zhou Long
·       A Journey into Desire by Lei Liang
·       Tibetan Dances by Bright Sheng

Musicians include: Yuan-Qing Yu* (Violin); Catherine Brubaker (Viola); Ken Olsen* (Cello); Daniel Armstrong (Double Bass); Kuang-Hao Huang (Piano); Scott Hostetler (Oboe); Lawrie Bloom* (Clarinet); Cynthia Yeh (Percussion); YuQi Deng (Zheng); You Wang (Guitar); (*denotes member of chamber ensemble Civitas)

 

Percussionist Lisa Pegher performs Kevin Puts’ Marimba Concerto with the Westmoreland Symphony Orchestra as part of  “Old and New Worlds” on Saturday, April 21, 2012 at the Palace Theatre, Greensburg, PA. Thomas Hong, guest conductor, will lead this performance of the WSO in a program that also includes Respighi’s Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite No. 1 and Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 4 in A Major, Op. 90 “Italian”.

Tickets can be purchased online or by calling (724) 837-1850.

Lisa Pegher is an American solo percussionist who has been described by the Boston Globe as “Forcefully Balletic” and by another critic as “a gifted passionate artist, with a rock-star aura.” She has been featured in Symphony Magazine as one of the top six performers of her generation and continues to carve a new path for percussion as a solo instrument. Prior to the launch of a full-time solo career, she performed as the Principal Timpanist of the Acadiana Symphony Orchestra and Section Percussionist with the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra.

The Flute on its Feet is a virtuoso tour de force that includes classics of the flute repertoire, new works by American composers, and pieces choreographed for flutist/dancer Zara Lawler by innovative choreographer C. Neil Parsons. The Flute on its Feet offers audiences a new and truly unique experience within the world of classical music: instrumental performance of the highest quality fully integrated with dance, theater and storytelling. The Flute on its Feet will be in residency in Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin, with public performances on April 17-24.

Zara Lawler has created a new genre of performance that defies definition, and never fails to engage and delight her audiences. Dance and story create new entry points into the music for the uninitiated; for the experienced concertgoer, they illuminate the music in a profound and moving way. At once groundbreaking and inviting to new audiences, Lawler offers a new performance standard for the 21st century.

SCHEDULE OF MIDWEST RESIDENCY:

April 17-19: Indiana University Arts Week Everywhere, Bloomington, IN

April 17-18: Reverse BUSking performances on IU Campus Buses, routes A & X at various times.

April 19, 8pm: The Flute on its Feet at Windfall Studio, Corner of 14th and Dunn; $10 general admission, $5 students, free with Reverse BUSking card (given out to the public as part of the Reverse BUSking performances) For more information visit the Arts Week web site.

April 22: Wisconsin Flute Festival, Lawrence University Conservatory of Music, Appleton, WI; 3-3:50pm, The Flute on its Feet performance/workshop; Venue: Chapel Hall, Conservatory of Music, Shattuck Hall of Music, Lawrence University, 711 E. Boldt Way, Appleton, WI. Prices (Early Bird Rates): $20 Adult, $15 College Students and Seniors, $10 High/Middle School Students, $5 Non-flutists (parent, accompanist, etc)

April 23-24, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL

April 23, 7:30pm The Flute on its Feet performance, Doudna Fine Arts Center Recital Hall, 1860 7th Street, Charleston IL

April 24, 3pm: The Flute on its Feet workshop, location TBA

Both events are free and open to the public, supported by a Redden Grant

 

Founders of “Music for Farms” Emmanuel Vukovich (violin) and John McDowell (piano, percussion, composition), as well as special guest, young violinist Nicholas Frei, will perform a benefit concert  at Green Meadow Waldorf School’s new auditorium, Rose Hall in Chestnut Ridge, NY. The program for this concert, to be held May 4th at 8pm, will include Johann Sebastian Bach’s Concerto for 2 Violins in D featuring Nicholas Frei, and the Solo violin Partita No. 1 in b, BWV 1002; Sonata No. 3, Op. 27 – Ballade, by Eugene Ysaye; Chant by Ana Sokolovic; Carmen Fantasy, Op. 25, by Pablo de Sarasate; and an original work by John McDowell.

Rose Hall is located at 307 Hungry Hollow Rd., Chestnut Ridge, NY. Advance tickets are $20 for general admission; $15 for college Students & Seniors; and $10 for students Grade 1-12 Tickets will be available for purchase online or in person at the Hungry Hollow Co-op, 841 Chestnut Ridge Rd, Chestnut Ridge. Day of show tickets at the door will be $5 extra per ticket. This event is sponsored by Threefold Educational Foundation. Proceeds will go to the Green Meadow Waldorf School, the Rockland Farm Alliance, and the Pfeiffer Center.

The Green Meadow Waldorf School is an independent day school, nursery through grade 12, located 30 miles from New York City in Chestnut Ridge, NY. Founded in 1950, Green Meadow is one of America’s oldest and largest Waldorf schools. From the young child’s imaginative experiences of discovery and play in their Early Childhood program to the intellectual challenges presented in their High School, Green Meadow students approach their education with interest and joy. The school also opened an Early Childhood Center in Tarrytown, NY in July 2011.

Rockland Farm Alliance is a community coalition that was founded to facilitate local sustainable agriculture in Rockland County, NY, and to provide educational resources to the community to promote awareness of the need for local food resources. RFA has been called “cutting edge” by state farming authorities in its innovative approach to preserve and revive farming in the lower Hudson Valley and greater NY metro area. Through hands-on learning programs and new community-supported small farms, RFA is striving to raise awareness around local food issues while increasing access to organic, locally grown produce.

The mission of the Pfeiffer Center, located in Chestnut Ridge, NY, is to practice, teach and spread awareness of the biodynamic method of agriculture and land care. This work takes the form of educational programs for adults and children, agricultural production, work with draft horses, beekeeping, and research.

Canadian Violinist Emmanuel Vukovich has played for audiences around the globe with artists such as Ida Haendel, Anton Kuerti, and Matt Haimowitz. Recipient of McGill University’s Schulich School of Music Golden Violin Award and The Canada Council for the Arts Orford String Quartet Scholarship, he was a member of the Lloyd Carr-Harris String Quartet, winner at the Fischoff International Chamber Music Competition. Emmanuel began playing the violin with Danuta Ciring and left his native Calgary at sixteen to pursue studies with Masao Kawasaki and Dorothy Delay at the Juilliard School in New York City. He completed his undergraduate degree with Denise Lupien and André Roy at McGill University. During this time he also pursued studies in Environment, subsequently devoting four years to work in organic agriculture. Having returned to music in 2011, Emmanuel is currently completing a graduate performance degree and teaching at McGill University, and has founded an international chamber music collective called The Parcival Project. He plays a violin made in Montreal by Denis Cormier.

Musician and film composer John McDowell achieved worldwide recognition with his soundtrack to the Academy Award winning documentary Born Into Brothels. Winner of Best Musical Score at the Bend Film Festival, the score blends Western and Indian music in a mesmerizing mix. Known for much more than just his film scores, McDowell is also a highly gifted pianist, percussionist, producer, commissioned composer and conductor. His work over the past 25 years draws on classical, jazz, pop, and world music. McDowell served as founder, artistic director and leader of several musical projects including The Born Into Brothels Ensemble and the world music band Mamma Tongue. He has toured and recorded with Rusted Root and Krishna Das and has produced several albums including his solo CD Speaking the Mamma Tongue. McDowell’s formal education and subsequent informal global training has made him a largely self-taught ethnomusicologist of widely-ranging scale. John is co-founder of Music for Farms.

Nicholas Frei, a 2011 graduate of Green Meadow Waldorf School in Chestnut Ridge, NY, began his violin studies with Anna Teigen, then continued with Bernard Zeller and Laura Seaton. During high school, Nicholas played with the New York Youth Symphony, several string quartets and chamber groups, and studied with Ann Setzer of Mannes and Juilliard. His senior year, he attended Mannes-Prep and was a Rockland County Morning Music Club Scholarship Finalist. Nicholas has spent his last three summers at the Meadowmount School of Music, founded by Ivan Galamian and has played in chamber master classes for musicians such as: Joel Krosnick, Paul Neubauer and Kazuhido Isomura. He is currently in a string quartet coached by Matt Haimovitz and studies with Emmanuel Vukovich at the Schulich School of Music of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec.

For further information contact Katie Ketchum at [email protected]