February 12,
2006
Program Notes
Ivan Sokolov
Ivan Sokolov graduated from
the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory as pianist and composer
and worked as assistant professor of composition there in 1984-94.
Mr. Sokolov has appeared
in recitals and as a soloist with different orchestras in many European
countries and in the USA. Being an extraordinary and inspired performer
of baroque, classical and romantic music, Mr. Sokolov is one of
the major Russian artists committed to the contemporary music world.
His extensive contemporary music repertoire includes music by Prokofiev,
Schönberg, Shostakovich, Hindemith, Bartók, Stravinsky, Stockhausen,
Kagel, Crumb, Feldman, Cage, Boulez and other composers.
Mr. Sokolov is the most prominent
and recognized performer of piano and chamber music by the Soviet
and contemporary Russian composers. He premiered many works by S.
Gubaidulina, V. Silvestrov, E. Denisov, N. Korndorf, A. Raskatov,
V. Tarnopolski, F. Karayev, V. Ekimovsky, D. Smirnov, E. Firsova,
A. Rabinovitch, and other composers.
In 1995 he made a CD-recording
of all Galina Ustvolskaya's piano works. His other projects include
the recordings of compositions by the Russian-Canadian composer
Nikolai Korndorf, a recording of the Russian-German Composers' Quartet,
of which he is a member, and many other recordings. He collaborated
with such excellent musicians as the cellists Alexander Ivashkin
and Natalia Gutman, pianists Marta Argerich and Alexei Lubimov,
violinists Tatiana Grindenko and Kolya Blacher, conductors Gennady
Rozhdestvensky and Andrey Boreiko as well as with many distinguished
Russian and German orchestras.
Since 1979 Mr. Sokolov has
performed as a soloist in all major cities of the former Soviet
Union and Europe. Since 1986 he has regularly appeared in concerts
and festivals for contemporary music, including the Alternativa
Festival in Moscow (of which he is one of the founders), the Schleswig-Holstein
festival, Almeida Festival London, the Luzerner Festwochen, the
Copenhagen Culture festival, and others.
Sokolov made his debut in
Seattle with the Seattle Chamber Players at the Icebreaker: Contemporary
Russian Music Festival in February 2002, performing ten compositions
in three days, and was re-engaged by the ensemble for another appearance
in Seattle at the Shostakovich Uncovered festival with chamber music
of Shostakovich and his followers, to many of whom Sokolov is a
close friend and first and frequent performer of their compositions.
Mr. Sokolov's own works include
pieces for piano, violin, piano trio, orchestra, as well as a miniopera.
They have been performed in Moscow and in many other Russian and
European cities. In his music, Sokolov experiments with different
types of musical expression, including cryptophonic encodings, graphic
notational experiments, happenings as well as truly romantic stylistics.
Since 1995 Sokolov has divided
his time between Cologne (Germany) and Moscow and has toured all
over the world.
www.obst-music.com/artists/sokolov.htm
Tuesday, January 28, 2003
Chamber Players deftly mine Russian works
By R.M.
CAMPBELL
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER MUSIC CRITIC
Shostakovich was represented
by 13 of his piano preludes (Op. 34): tiny ideas, wildly different
from one another, fully expressed. Sokolov, born and trained in
Russia, played them with enormous speed, brio and variety. All sorts
of bravos rightly followed him on and off the stage.
http://www.musicalpointers.co.uk/reviews/liveevents/russian_music_discovery.html
Peter Grahame Woolf:
Ivan Sokolov as composer
was another welcome discovery for me and I had not previously seen
him perform live. I had selected his as the most recommendable recording
in a comparative review of
Ustvolskaya's piano sonatas; he joined Ivashkin for a cello
and piano recital which was dominated by Ustvolskaya's Grand
Duet (try to hear Rosptropovich's recording of it) and during
the day he turned out to be also an original composer with a very
personal sense of humour. That was demonstrated in a music-theatre
piece Rodina, which required violinist Daniel Hope to simulate
a fatal collapse on stage, as Kagel famously did conducting his
fiftieth birthday piece Finale, and in Sokolov's thirteen
acrobatic, and deceptively childlike, piano pieces - 'very often
their titles do not correspond with their meanings'; Russians
like to remain enigmatic.
Solnechnaya Sonata for Violin and Piano was written in August
2005. The first movement, a sonata form, Allegro moderato
in E minor, is in a lyric-epic atmosphere and filled with impressions
from the beauty of Russian nature. Working on it, I was listening
to a lot of Russian music and Alexander Glazunov's Karelian Legend
in particular (op. 99, 1916), which might be a better piece
than any of his symphonies. The second movement Andante is
in a pastoral, contemplative mood close to that of the symphonic
music by Vassily Kalinnikov. It brings reminiscences of a rest in
the open air. In the middle section there appears an image of a
certain wide river, smoothly bearing its waters. In the recapitulation
you can hear bird singing. This bird singing is getting closer to
us in the third movement, Scherzo, and we look at it as if
through an ear microscope. The finale, Allegro vivace, is
the dramaturgical center of the Sonata, in a rondo form.
It has only one theme, but some images from the previous movements
are reflected and reach their conclusions in this finale. After
some quite lyrical development, the music gradually becomes brighter
and ends with a coda which reminds of a burst of sunlight in E major.
The entire piece is named by this coda -- the Solnechnaya
(Sunlight) Sonata.
I am really grateful to wonderful violinist Karen Bentley Pollick
for her request to write this music and for agreeing to perform
it.
--Ivan Sokolov
CHARLES NORMAN MASON
Charles Norman Mason has
received many awards for his compositions. This year he was awarded
the 2005 Rome Prize (Samuel Barber Rome Prize Fellowship) and as
a result is living and composing in Rome until August, 2006. Other
awards he has received include: second prize in the
International Society of Bassists 2004, 1998 Premi Internacional
de Composició Musical Ciutat de Tarragona Orchestra Music prize,
a 1994 National Endowment of the Arts Individual Artist Award, 2002
First Prize in the Atlanta Clarinet Association Composition Competition,
a 1998 Plymouth Music Orchestra Reading fellow, a 1995 Delius
Prize, a 1996 Dale Warland Singers Commission Prize, 1989
honorable mention in the International Bourges Electro-Acoustic
Composition Competition, and commissions from the Alabama Symphony
Orchestra (2003), Dale Warland Singers (1996) , the Corona Guitar
Kvartet (Denmark) (2004) Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra, (1996), the
Lithium Quartet (2002), West Wind (France) (2002), ONIX (Mexico)
(2004), Luna Nova (2004), cellist Craig Hultgren (1993), the Music
Teachers National Association (2000), Steinway Artist William DeVan
(2000), bassist Robert Black (2004), violinist Karen Bentley Pollick,
and the New York Golliard Ensemble (2003).
His music has been performed
throughout the world. Recent performances include the FORO INTERNACIONAL
DE MUSICA NUEVA in Mexico City (2005), Aspen Summer Music Festival
(2003), Nuova Musica Consonante in Romania (2004), Spoleto Festival
(SC) (1995), the Florida State New Music Festival (2003), and Merkin
Hall (Washington Square Contemporary Music Ensemble) (2004). He
was composer-in-residence with the Golliard Ensemble for 2004-2005.
Mason was a composer in residence
at the International Centre for Composers in Visby, Sweden in 2005,
a resident composer at the Hambidge Center (1994), the University
of Alaska in Fairbanks (1996), the pianissimo New Music Festival
in Bulgaria (2001), and was sponsored by the Seaside Institute as
an "Escape To Create" composer-in-residence at Seaside, Florida
(1995).
His music is available
on ten different compact disc recordings including a 2003 release
of The Onix Ensemble from Mexico with flutist Alejandro Escuer on
the Quindecim Recordings label. His music is published by
Living Artist Publishing.
Dr. Mason is professor
of composition at Birmingham-Southern College and director of the
Birmingham-Southern College Electroacoustic Music Studios. Birmingham-Southern
offers a Bachelor of Music in Composition and a Master's of Music
in Composition. His website is
http://panther.bsc.edu/~cmason.
Incantesimi: Ommagio a Scelsi e Berio for Violin and Piano (2005)
I composed this piece while a Rome Prize Fellow at the American
Academy in Rome. I was extremely fortunate to be there in
2005 as there were two amazing events occurring simultaneously:
a month-long Berio celebration and a four month Scelsi festival.
I literally attended three concerts a week and still was not able
to attend everything. I felt a strong influence from those
two giants of Italian music and noticed that influence sneaking
into my composition. Rather than attempt to block it out,
I decided to embrace it as an homage to Berio and Scelsi. The piece itself also continues my work in the style of Hyper-Connectivisim. The term refers to the idea of disparate parts working together
towards a common goal at such a frenetic pace that they reach the
border just before chaos, but also the point at which great things
can happen. For those who like to know the inner workings
of a piece, I offer this: The motives, chords, pitch centers, and
form all result from the following pitches: A Bb B C Eb E F#
which come from the following three names BErio (Bb E) SCElSi
(Eb C E Eb) MASon (F# A Eb) CHArlES (C B A E Eb). This does
not mean these are the only pitches used in the piece, just that
each section focuses on one of those pitches, the dominant notes
in the original harmonies come from those pitches, etc. The
careful listener may notice that there was a bit of tongue in
cheek used in determining the pitches for the Scelsi and Berio
sections (the Scelsi section focuses on the Berio pitches
and vice-versa).
Trenchantor
(a trenchant person, incisive, terse, and vigorous). This
composition for solo piano was composed in 2005 and is another example
of my Hyper-Connectivism pieces.
--Charles Norman Mason
Dorothy Hindman
Dr. Dorothy Hindman's
(b. 1966) work is performed extensively in the U.S., and throughout
Eastern and Western Europe. Critics have called her music ‘intense,
gripping, and frenetic', ‘sonorous and affirmative' and ‘music of
terrific romantic gesture'. Awards and recognition include 2005
Almquist Choral Composition Award, 2004 Nancy Van de Vate International
Composition Prize for Opera, 2004 Winner of the International Society
of Bassists Solo Composition Competition, a 2002 Alabama Music Teachers
Association/MTNA Commission, the Atlanta Prize in the 2001 Hultgren
Biennial Solo Cello Works Competition, an Alabama State Council
on the Arts Individual Artist Fellowship, the NACUSA Young Composers
Competition, the Abraham Frost Composition Competition, the ASCA/National
Symphony Orchestra Commission Competition, the G. Schirmer Young
Americans Choral Competition, and the Percussive Arts Society's
International Solo Marimba Composition Competition. Recent commissions
include Lost in Translation for saxophonist Carey Valente,
Drift for the Lithium Saxophone Quartet, Taut for
the Corona Guitar Kvartet, Louise: The Story of a Magdalen,
a full-length opera for Alabama Operaworks, and Time Management
for bassist Robert Black. A native of Miami, Florida, Hindman
has taught music theory and composition at Birmingham-Southern College
since 1994. This year, she is residing in Rome, Italy, as a Visiting
Artist at the American Academy in Rome.
http://panther.bsc.edu/~dhindman/
Centro
for Violin and Piano (2005)
In Rome, history is present
to a tangible degree; everywhere, one is bombarded by insistent
whispers of past presences (or present pasts?), relentless reminders
of one's own mortality. Anyone who has stood at Piazza Barberini,
or any of the numerous other piazzas in the Centro will understand.
This is a multilayered temporal experience: ancient, medieval, renaissance,
contemporary. The paradox of human time and life's fleeting nature
is juxtaposed against man's monuments, built to exist forever. In
this work, the avant-garde coexists with the post-modern; each is
informed by the other, juxtaposed, treated to hyper-imitation and
timbrally bent toward or away from the other until the influences
overwhelm and subsume the individual identities within the work.
With its abrupt shifts and constant recasting of the same material
into different connotations, Centro also might suggest the inner,
continuous centering of the self in relation to one's surroundings,
physical and metaphysical. Centro, the second
piece in the Monumenti series,
was written in December, 2005 at the American Academy in Rome for
Karen Bentley Pollick and Ivan Sokolov. It exploits their prodigious
talents.
--Dorothy Hindman
Jorge Sosa
Born in Mexico City in 1976,
Jorge Sosa began his studies in composition and music theory at
the Centro de Investigacion y Estudios de la Musica (C.I.E.M). Jorge
received his Masters of Music in Composition from Mannes College
of Music, and is studying for his Doctorate of Music at the prestigious
conservatory at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. Jorge's
works have been performed in Mexico, the United States and Europe.
Jorge's opera Loveless was recently premiered in New York
City, and he premiered his sax quartet, Funeral March at
the 4th Annual Ibero-American Festival, also in New York City. His
orchestral work Prelude to the Cross was read by the Mannes
Orchestra, and his guitar
trio Cajon, commissioned for the New York City Guitar Society,
was premiered in 2004. His Concerto for Violin and String Orchestra
enjoyed successful performances in Mexico City and Tlaxcala for
an audience of more than 3,000 people over a three day period. Jorge
has also written pieces for the stage and radio, including King
Lear, performed in the Santa Catarina Theater in Mexico City.
Most recently his Romance de la Luna was premiered in Barcelona
by the Percussions of Barcelona and is also scheduled to be performed
in NY at Mannes College of Music. In 2005 the orchestra of the National
Polytechnic Institute commissioned the piece Metaforas Sobre
la Relatividad which was premiered in Mexico City in December
2005.
Please visit Jorge's
website, www.jorgesosa.com.
Capricho para violin solo is based on three contrasted “sound
images". It tries to place the listener in three different places
and situations that have to do with the Mexican culture. The first
movement is based on a traditional type of music called “Huapango".
This style is from an ancient origin and is still practiced today
in the Sierra Huasteca in the little indigenous towns and in the
cantinas. The piece does not try to copy the style but rather reflect
the experience of being in the small, obscure cantina and through
its dissonances place the listener in this peculiar setting.
The second movement is based
on a religious image, a contrapuntal setting that seeks to place
the listener in a church or cathedral where the vast spaces relate
to the long lines that interact creating a peaceful mood that is
broken by the interior struggle within oneself.
The third movement evokes
the Fandango in Veracruz. The fandango is a popular party where
traditional musicians from Mexico will jam and improvise with their
guitar like instruments and with the dancers. The jam session will
go on all night and through the constant repetition of the musical
patterns the listeners enter a state of trance achieved by the communion
of music and dance.
The piece relies on
these images as a source of inspiration but the overall result is
an original musical style that is independent from the images and
the folk material from where its inspiration is taken, distorting
them as if the experience was seen through a broken glass. Capricho
para Violin Solo was premiered at the Manhattan School of Music
in 2002 and has enjoyed successful performances at the Hughes Gallery
in Dublin as well as the Tlaxcala Cathedral and the National Polytechnic
Institute in Mexico. The Irish Times described the piece as "very
passionate", and the East Hampton Star called it "evocative of the
atmosphere and culture of the Iberian Peninsula, even of the Mariachi
music of Mexico".
--Jorge Sosa
Patrick Stoyanovich
Pianist and composer Patrick
Stoyanovich brings a rich musical experience to contemporary culture.
Educated from age nine as a pianist and horn player, Mr. Stoyanovich
was honored numerous times as outstanding soloist while still a
teenager and began to perform as a professional pianist by age fourteen.
His formal education began at The University of Michigan School
of Music graduating with a Bachelor's of Arts specializing in Piano
Performance. He was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
in Jazz studying with noted New York City jazz pianist Richard Beirach.
During this time, Mr. Stoyanovich also won the international competition:
John W. Work III Prize for Composition. Mr. Stoyanovich continued
his education at Yale University School of Music as a student of
Jacob Druckman and was awarded the Irving Gilmore Fellowship for
the Outstanding Composition Student and the John Day Jackson Prize
for Chamber Music. He graduated from Yale with the graduate degree
of Master's of Composition with High Honors. For post-graduate work,
Mr. Stoyanovich studied at Le Academie des Americaines Conservatoire
de Musique in Fontainebleau, France on a composition scholarship.
There, he had the honor of studying in a select composition seminar
lead by noted American musician Leonard Bernstein. Mr. Stoyanovich's
composition teachers include three Pulitzer Prize winners: William
Bolcom, Jacob Druckman and Leslie Basset as well as other noted
American musicians such as Gunther Schuller. Early in his career,
Mr. Stoyanovich was named Composer-in-Residence for the Champlain
Valley Symphony Orchestra (NY) and served as adjunct professor of
music at Burlington College in Vermont and The State University
of New York: Plattsburgh. In the early 1990's, his music was published
by Margun Music (now G. Schirmer) when Gunther Schuller took note
of Mr. Stoyanovich's works. Currently his compositions are published
by his own business, METRO CITY MUSIC.
The orchestral compositions
of Stoyanovich have been performed by a number of orchestras including
the Pacific Symphony Orchestra (CA), Florida Orchestra (FL), Spokane
Symphony Orchestra (WA), Fresno Philharmonic Orchestra (CA), Northwest
Chamber Orchestra (WA), Bremerton Symphony Association (WA), Champlain
Valley Symphony Orchestra (NY), Helena Symphony Orchestra (MT) and
Butte Symphony Association (MT). His chamber and solo works have
been performed in Canterbury, England's English Double Reed Society
International Festival, on the Hungarian National Radio, at Carnegie
Mellon University and on numerous recitals around the United States
from New Haven, CT to Los Angeles, CA. He was honored with the prestigous
Al Smith Composition Fellow by the State of Kentucky and worked
closely with arts groups in that area including the Central Kentucky
Youth Orchestra and the Lexington Ballet Company. Due to his interest
in young musicians, numerous youth and honor's orchestras have performed
and commissioned him including the Cincinnati Symphony Youth Orchestra,
Southern California Honors Orchestra and the Wisconsin State Honors
Orchestra. Patrick is active as a performer frequently appearing
in solo recitals and for arts organizations such as the Jazz Bakery
in Los Angeles, the Northwest Piano Series and Steinway Recital
Series at Sherman Clay in Seattle. He has appeared as jazz piano
soloist at several jazz festivals including Detroit-Montreaux, Bright
Moments (MA), Vermont Jazz and the Banff Jazz Festival in Canada.
As a concert pianist, he has appeared as soloist with the Spokane
Symphony Orchestra, Pacific Symphony Orchestra, Bremerton Symphony
Association and with his own ensembles. As a jazz pianist, he continues
to perform around the area as well as with noted performers such
as former “Tonight Show" bassist Robert Hurst. As an educator, Mr.
Stoyanovich served as adjunct professor of music theory, jazz history,
keyboard harmony and jazz theory at California State University:
Fullerton and at the University of California: Los Angeles, while
also teaching privately for a number of years. Patrick lives on
Bainbridge Island, WA with his wife, Elizabeth (who is a conductor
and advocate of his works) and their two daughters: Antonia Barbara
and Sophia Isabelle.
www.metrocitymusic.com
Molto Loco for Solo Violin was first composed in 1989, with
the full orchestral version following in 1990 premiered in New York.
The work is dedicated to Leonard Bernstein with whom I had the opportunity
to work with at the composition seminar at the American Conservatory
in Fontainebleau, France. The work employs both rhythmic
and harmonic processes that aid in generating the form and metrical
changes in the piece. The larger overall form is quite simple however,
and makes the blues evident in a few places. It is a very rhythmic
composition, almost percussive in nature. The language is that of
my own jazz improvisation, which I consider my compositional language
as well.
--Patrick Stoyanovich
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