Saturday, June 17, 2023

Pre-Professional Musicians Summer Festival

Villa Maria Community Center
New Castle/Lawrence County, Pennsylvania
June 1-17, 2023

Cafe Soiree
Friday, June 16, 2023, at 7:30 pm
The Confluence, New Castle, PA

Program included:

String Quintet in C Major, D. 956 ... F. Schubert
Allegro ma non troppo

Gracie Hayes, violin
Ilana Thacker, violin
Qahtan Ahmed, viola
Jesus Calderon, cello
Gavin Nist, cello

Jesus Caldron, cellist



Sunday, June 4, 2023

New Music on the Bayou 2023 Summer Festival

 Saturday, June 3, 2023 at 7:00 PM
Emy-Lou Biedenharn Recital Hall
University of Louisiana Monroe
Monroe, LA 71209

PROGRAM

Brompton and Braeswood ... Timothy Roy (2021 Commissioned Work)

In the House of the Glass King ... João Pedro Oliveira
Kathryn Irwin, Gregory Lyons, Oliver Molina, percussion
Gustavo Miranda, vibraphone, Joe W. Moore III, marimba

Di(a)sociaciónes ... Iván-Manuel Tapia Bruno
Lea Baumert-Patterson, flute – Trevor Davis, clarinet – Lisa Withers, piano

grain vi | fogging ... James May
Richard Seiler, piano

Groove for Plarinet and Ciano ... Paul Berlinsky
Scot Humes, clarinet – Tania Tachkova, piano

The History of Anonymity (texts) ... Oswald Huỳnh (2022 Commissioned Work)
Elizabeth McNutt, flute – Trevor Davis, clarinet – Martha Muehleisen, violin
Paul Christopher, cello – Megan Ihnen, mezzo-soprano
Tim O’Brien, conductor

Program Notes

The History of Anonymity
I first discovered Jennifer Chang’s poetry shortly after the world shut down in 2020 and approached her about setting her poems to song in 2021. Due to many delays and cancellations, the work never came to be. Like many people during lockdown, I found myself doing a fair amount of soul searching and questioning my own values. At the time, I felt like there was this tectonic social shift happening. Fast forward to 2023, I finally have an opportunity to set this poem, but I feel ambivalent about how much has changed, both myself and the world. Using nature as a locus, Chang’s book The History of Anonymity explores identity and authenticity, while blurring the line between the internal and external self. The title piece of this collection, the poem that I am setting, tackles the vastness and mystery of the ocean. The interaction of these seaside landscapes and the speaker’s identity are often ambiguous and lead to more questions than answers. Sprawling across ten pages, I have divided the text into eight sections to create a song cycle from a single poem. Revisiting Chang’s poems after two years has given me a newfound perspective on her words, and they resonate even more heavily than they did when I first read them.