Saturday, March 29, 2008
Jay Hamilton: Casserole
Casserole: Another musical with a tale - a new work by Seattle composer Jay Hamilton, with guitarist Maurice Colasurdo and saxophonist Darryl Estes. A couple of guys sitting on a porch playing some music, telling a story about a man who is down and out. Someone Jay met while sitting in the Portland train station waiting to come home. It's a love story, and a gentle tragedy, told mostly in song.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Seattle Composers' Salon
8:00 PM, $5-$15 suggested donation at the door.
The Seattle Composers' Salon is a bi-monthly, informal presentation of new music by Seattle composers. The salon features finished works, previews and works-in-progress, and brings together composers, performers and audience members in a casual setting that allows for discussion and experimentation. This month's composers: Keith Eisenbrey, Robert Blatt, Carson Farley, Peter Freeman.
The Seattle Composers' Salon is a bi-monthly, informal presentation of new music by Seattle composers. The salon features finished works, previews and works-in-progress, and brings together composers, performers and audience members in a casual setting that allows for discussion and experimentation. This month's composers: Keith Eisenbrey, Robert Blatt, Carson Farley, Peter Freeman.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Transport Series: Michael Lim & Cristina Valdes
Presented by Washington Composers Forum and Jack Straw Productions. Violinist Michael Jinsoo Lim and pianist Cristina Valdés perform Bird as Prophet by Martin Bresnick, Sonata for Violin and Piano by John Corigliano, Music in Fifths by Philip Glass, Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano by George Antheil, and Three Epigrams by Bruce Bennett.
Friday, March 14, 2008
SEXO presents HUNGER
The Seattle EXperimental Opera presents the world premiere of HUNGER: The Journey of Tamsen Donner, a new chamber opera by Seattle composer Tom Baker, on a text by poet Ruth Whitman. With Maria Mannisto, soprano; Jesse Canterbury, clarinet; Greg Campbell, percussion and horn; Brian Cobb, bass; Tom Baker, guitar; Production Design by Alissa Rupp; Choreography by Beth Graczyk; Lighting Design by Reed Nakayam. HUNGER tells the tragic tale of the Donner Party through the eyes of Tamsen Donner, the matriarch of that ill-fated group of pioneers who experienced unimaginable suffering on their westward journey.
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Jim Knodle & the New Brass Trio
Local trumpeter-about-town Jim Knodle and the The New Brass Trio (Los Angeles trombonist Michael Vlatkovich and Seattle French hornist/percussionist Greg Campbell) present their second Seattle concert, featuring music expressly written to take advantage of the wonderful resonance of the Chapel. Brass ensembles are known for rich "organ-style" triadic harmony. This will be somewhat different; possibly astringent sounds and formats ranging from scalar matrices to an arrangement of Monk's Mood.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Amy Rubin & Friends in Motion
Nonsequitur presents pianist, composer, and photographer Amy Rubin & Friends in Motion, featuring Matthew Weiss, violin; Jacques Willis, vibes and percussion; and Alex Sprout Guy, viola. VJ Hugo Solis joins the ensemble in the premiere of Rubin's new work The Hidden Life of Flowers, in which he uses a computer to manipulate and transform Amy's photographs in real time. The rest of the evening is devoted to music by the late, great Argentine composer Astor Piazzolla, who almost single-handedly reinvented the tango with his bold mixture of jazz and classical elements.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Slide Show Secret
Presented by Washington Composers Forum as part of the Transport series. The Slide Show Secret was established in 2004 by German accordionist Eva Zollner and Icelandic double bassist Kristjan Orri Sigurleifsson and is now situated in Copenhagen, Denmark. Both have a special interest and experience in contemporary music and are attracted by the many unexplored sound possibilities of this unique combination of instruments. For this concert they will play recent works and music chosen from a call for scores. The program includes new music by Icelandic and Danish composers: Ingi Gardar Erlendsson (b. 1980) Molar (2005); Úlfar Ingi Haraldsson (b. 1966) Secret Psalms; Haukur Tómasson (b. 1960) Reaction (2007) (US-premier); Bent Sørensen (b. 1958) Looking on Darkness (2000); Ivo Nilsson (b. 1966) Doppelzimmer (US-premier); Steingrímur Rohloff (b. 1971) Archetyp (2005). The Interval series presents video by filmmaker Jessica Aceti accompanying music by Greg Pliska.
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Subtext: Steve McCaffery + Interrupture
Presented by Subtext Reading Series. Steve McCaffery is a poet, performance/intermedia artist and critic. A founding member of Toronto Research Group and sound-text ensemble the Four Horsemen, his most recent poetry collections are The Basho Variations and Paradigm of the Tinctures. A substantial collection, Slightly Left of Thinking, is forthcoming. He is David Gray Professor of Poetry and Letters, University at Buffalo. Interrupture, a game for two or more poets, is a composition-game structure by Bryant Mason, a founding member of Seattle’s Subtext Collective.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Frederic Rzewski
Nonsequitur presents composer Frederic Rzewski in a rare US appearance. Living in Belgium for the past 30 years, Frederic Rzewski is one of America's great maverick composers and a virtuoso pianist whose music freely combines elements of minimalism, atonality, improvisation, folk songs, and political texts. Rzewski was a co-founder, with Alvin Curran and Richard Teitelbaum, of MEV (Musica Elettronica Viva), a group known for its pioneering work in live electronics and improvisation. Program: War Songs (2008 - first performance), Johnny Has Gone for a Soldier (2003), Mayn Yingele (1988), and Four Pieces (1977).Seattle Times article here.
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