LSM Newswire

Friday, January 1, 2010

Zygmunt Krauze and the Polish Perspective

January 10-13, 2010

Glenn Gould Studio, Gallery 345, Music Gallery and U of T

NEW MUSIC CONCERTS’ 39th Season

New musical inventions that provoke, awaken and inspire

For Immediate Release – Toronto, December 21, 2009: Poland has long enjoyed the reputation of spawning some of the world’s most successful and controversial composers. New Music Concerts enters 2010 with a four-day Polish festival beginning on January 10 with Zygmunt Krauze and the Polish Perspective. Distinguished pianist/composer Zygmunt Krauze has curated a program of Canadian premieres by challenging young Polish composers and including Pawel Szymanski, who has proved himself one of the most uncompromising composers of our times. As part of the mini-Polish festival, Zygmunt Krauze offers a special benefit recital for New Music Concerts (January 11, non-subscription event) in which he improvises on the music Chopin and Lutosławski, as well as a Free Public Lecture at the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto on January 12. The Polish celebration ends on a high note as Poland’s electrifying performer Agata Zubel, a versatile musician who enjoys a rising double career as composer and soprano, performs music for solo voice with piano and electroacoustic accompaniment, on January 13.

Famed Polish composer and pianist Zygmunt Krauze was born in 1938. He studied composition and piano at the Frederic Chopin Academy of Music in Warsaw and with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. He is known as a composer of unistic music, based on the theory of unistic art adopted from the painting of Wladyslaw Strzeminski (1893-1952). Unistic music lacks contrasts, tension and climaxes in the traditional sense and its form is as homogenous as possible. Krauze has written operas, film music, symphonic and chamber works. Together with architects he also composed spatial music, which was presented in Poland, Austria and France. His music has been performed throughout the world. A sought-after teacher and lecturer, Krauze is a true music pioneer. He has received countless awards and honours, and is very active as a pianist performing mostly 20th century music.

Born in Wroclaw in 1978, Agata Zubel leads a busy double career as a singer and composer. She has won several international competitions for both voice and composition. As a vocalist she has participated in many prestigious musical events. Modern music occupies a special place in her repertoire, and she has premiered and recorded numerous works by contemporary composers. She established the ElettroVoce Duo together with composer and pianist Cezary Duchnowski. On January 10, she performs Cascando for voice, flute, clarinet, violin and cello, based on the 1936 poem by Samuel Beckett (not his later radio play of the same name). “With Cascando, it seems, Agata Zubel has crossed another threshold. She has submitted the almost unlimited technical abilities of her voice, and her temperament as a composer and singer, to the ascetic text, perfectly conveying the psychological truth of Beckett’s reductionism, the chilling logic of his world and the suppressed emotions and despair that underlie that chill”, writes Joanna Grotkowska in the liner notes of the CD, also entitled Cascando.

Agata Zubel

January Polish festival events sponsored by the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Toronto:

Sunday January 10, 2010

Zygmunt Krauze and the Polish Perspective

New Music Concerts Ensemble; Zygmunt Krauze, piano and direction; Agata Zubel, soprano

Pawel Mykietyn (Poland, 1971) – 3 for 13 (1994)

Agata Zubel (Poland, 1978) – Cascando (2007) for soprano, flute, clarinet, violin and cello

Zygmunt Krauze (Poland, 1938) – Piano Quintet (1993)

Zygmunt Krauze – Polychromie (1968) for clarinet, trombone, piano and cello

Pawel Szymanski (Poland, 1954) – Concerto à 4 (2004) for clarinet, trombone, piano and cello

Wojciech Błażejczyk (Poland, 1981) – *M.A.D. (2007) for 12 players

*Mutually Assured Destruction

Glenn Gould Studio: 250 Front St. West

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert

Monday January 11, 2010 at 7:00 PM

Special (non-subscription) Fundraising Event: Zygmunt Krauze, piano

Frédéric Chopin (Poland, 1810-1849) – Mazurka in A minor op. 67, no. 4 (1846) with improvisations

Witold Lutosławski (Poland, 1913-1994) – Mélodies populaires (1945) with improvisations

Zygmunt Krauze (Poland, 1938) – Six folk melodies (1957); Refrain (1993); Nightmare Tango (1987); Stone Music (1972); Gloves Music (1972)

The $50 admission includes a wine and cheese reception and a charitable receipt will be issued for the portion allowable under Canada Revenue Agency guidelines. Reservations: (416) 961-9594

Gallery 345: 345 Sorauren Avenue

Tuesday January 12 at 7:00 PM

Public Lecture by Zygmunt Krauze

Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, Edward Johnson Building Room 216

Free Admission

Wednesday January 13, 2010

Contemporary Vocal Recital with Agata Zubel, soprano; Peter Tiefenbach, piano

Karol Szymanowski (Poland, 1882-1937) – (3) Kurpian Songs (1929) voice and piano

Alban Berg (Austria, 1885-1935) – (3) Frühe Lieder (1907) voice and piano

Pawel Szymanski (Poland, 1954) – Drei Lieder nach Trakl (2002) voice and piano

Luciano Berio (Italy 1925-2003) – Sequenza III (1966) for solo voice

Cezary Duchnowski (Poland, 1971) – Dishevelled Grasses (2002) for voice and soundfiles

Agata Zubel – Parlando (2000) for voice and sound files

Alejandro Viñao (Argentina/UK, 1951) – Chant d'Ailleurs (1991) for voice and sound files

Music Gallery at St. George the Martyr: 197 John St.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with Agata Zubel / 8PM Concert

Individual Tickets for all concerts (except for January 11 event):

Tickets: $30 (regular)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)

Box office: (416) 961-9594

New Music Concerts

157 Carlton Street, Suite 203 Toronto ON M5A 2K3

416.961.9594 / fax 416.961.9508

nmc@interlog.com / www.NewMusicConcerts.com

New Music Concerts gratefully acknowledges the support of The Canada Council for the Arts; Toronto Arts Council; The Department of Heritage through Arts Presentation Canada; The Province of Ontario through the Ontario Arts Council & the Ontario Arts Foundation Endowment Fund; The Goethe Institut; The Julie-Jiggs Foundation; The Koerner Foundation; The McLean Foundation; Roger D. Moore; The SOCAN Foundation; The Imperial Tobacco Canada Foundation; The Amphion Foundation Inc.; The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc.; Edward Epstein and Gallery 345; The Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Toronto

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Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Music, Math and Birthday Cake...

NEW MUSIC CONCERTS’ 39th Season
New musical inventions that provoke, awaken and inspire

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, UDO!
Honouring Estonian-Canadian composer Udo Kasemets
Sunday, December 13 at the Betty Oliphant Theatre, in Toronto

Toronto, November 10, 2009: New Music Concerts celebrates Udo Kasemets’ 90th birthday - and more than half a century of dedication to Toronto’s contemporary music scene - by presenting Happy Birthday, Udo! The evening features the Canadian premiere of fraCtal fibONaCciERTO. This astonishing, extended work for piano and mixed ensemble demonstrates a number of distinct aspects of Kasemets’ approach to composition. Dedicatee Stephen Clarke, who first performed this work with the S.E.M. Ensemble in New York, shares the stage with the NMC Ensemble, conducted by NMC artistic director Robert Aitken at the Betty Oliphant Theatre on Sunday, December 13 at 8PM.

Udo Kasemets was born November 16, 1919 in Tallinn, Estonia. He immigrated to Canada in 1951 and has been a mover and shaker in Canadian contemporary arts ever since. An accomplished conductor, pianist, teacher, lecturer and writer, Kasemets is better known as a composer. He began writing in conventional styles, first strictly tonally, then using more dissonant attitudes and finally adopting the dodecaphonic system, working within it throughout the 1950's. Around 1960 he totally abandoned these concepts and moved toward open forms, special notations, mixed media, audio-visual interactions, sound texts and electroacoustics.

For Kasemets, the most significant influences came from diverse sources which include composers, writers, thinkers, inventors and visual artists, such as Erik Satie, Marcel Duchamp, James Joyce, John Cage, James Tenney, Morton Feldman, Merce Cunningham and Buckminster Fuller. The I Ching (ancient Chinese classic text), fractal geometry and other mathematical phenomena are also major influences, especially in his recent works.

In 1962-63 Kasemets organized Toronto's first new music series: ‘Men, Minds and Music’. He also established the Isaacs Gallery Mixed Media Concerts. Kasemets planned and directed the first Toronto Festival of Arts and Technology entitled SightSoundSystems. He founded and edited a new music publication series, Canavangard, while travelling, performing and lecturing in Canada and the United States. In 1971, Kasemets joined the Faculty of the Department of Experimental Art at the Ontario College of Art where he taught until retiring in 1987. Tirelessly, he continued to organize such celebrations and festivals as John Cage's 65th and 75th birthday, Marcel Duchamp's centennial as well as Counterbomb Renga, a continent-wide chain of poetry and music writing against nuclear weaponry.

fraCtal fibONaCciERTO is an extended work which demonstrates a number of distinct aspects of Kasemets’ approach to composition. It is in five interlocked sections, each based on a specific mathematical concept:

KOCH curve; CANTOR’s devil’s staircase; FIBONACCI series; MANDELBROT set; and FEIGENBAUM cascades. While the piano is the featured solo instrument, all players participate in the “concerto” aspect of the piece, not just by playing solo passages, but also making creative preparations for the realization of the score. The pianist makes choices about playing modes and dynamics; the percussionists must select appropriate arrays of instruments, the strings are involved in an interactive invention/imitation process and all the players participate in a programmed improvisation in the FIBONACCI cadenza.


Fibonacci series

Stephen Clarke has performed in festivals in Europe, Canada and the U.S., among these the Donaueschinger Musiktage and the Berliner Festwochen. He has appeared as a soloist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra of the S.E.M. Ensemble and the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. He also plays in a duo with violinist Marc Sabat, is the pianist of Arraymusic and has worked with a number of other ensembles. Solo recordings include works by Giacinto Scelsi (Mode Records) and Udo Kasemets (hatHut), and James Tenney’s Music for Violin and Piano with Marc Sabat (hatHut). Mr. Clarke studied composition at the University of Toronto and has written works for various ensembles.

Happy Birthday, Udo!
Sunday December 13, 2009
7:15 PM Illuminating Introduction; 8:00 PM performance with birthday cake reception to follow.
Betty Oliphant Theatre: 404 Jarvis Street, Toronto
Stephen Clarke; New Music Concerts Ensemble; Robert Aitken;
Udo Kasemets (Estonia/Canada, 1919) – fraCtal fibONaCciERTO (1996) for piano and mixed ensemble


TICKET INFORMATION
Individual Tickets: - $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box Office: 416 961-9594

New Music Concerts
157 Carlton Street, Suite 203 Toronto ON M5A 2K3
416.961.9594 / fax 416.961.9508
nmc@interlog.com / www.NewMusicConcerts.com

New Music Concerts gratefully acknowledges the support of The Canada Council for the Arts; Toronto Arts Council; The Department of Heritage through Arts Presentation Canada; The Province of Ontario through the Ontario Arts Council & the Ontario Arts Foundation Endowment Fund; The Goethe Institut; The Julie-Jiggs Foundation; The Koerner Foundation; The McLean Foundation; Roger D. Moore; The SOCAN Foundation; The Imperial Tobacco Canada Foundation; The Amphion Foundation Inc.; The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc.; Edward Epstein and Gallery 345; The Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Toronto

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

New Challenges, New Pieces: New Music Concerts 2009-2010

NEW challenges of playing NEW pieces by old friends and NEW composers

NEW MUSIC CONCERTS' 39th Season
New musical inventions that provoke, awaken and inspire

Toronto: "NEW challenges of playing NEW pieces by old friends and composers who are NEW to us. This is NEW MUSIC CONCERTS", proudly declares Robert Aitken, renowned flutist and founding artistic director of NMC. The venerable Toronto organization, entering its 39th season, once again offers a series of varied programs with music from across Canada and around the world. "Every year is different and we are excited to discover what is before us", adds Aitken.

As always, NMC looks forward to a colourful variety of challenges in a quest for outstanding performances. The 2009-2010 season is particularly rich and varied, beginning on October 17 with My 20th Century by Montreal composer & guitar virtuoso Tim Brady. The continuous 80 minute multi-media work pays tribute to iconic figures of the 20th century such as Dmitri Shostakovich and John Lennon. With Bradyworks and videographers Martin Messier and Oana Suteu.

On December 13, New Music Concerts honours Estonian/Canadian composer Udo Kasemets with Happy Birthday, Udo! The evening features the Canadian premiere of fraCtal fibONaCciERTO. This extended work for piano and mixed ensemble demonstrates a number of distinct aspects of Kasemets' approach to composition, and spotlights pianist Stephen Clarke with the NMC Ensemble.

Poland has long enjoyed the reputation of spawning some of the world's most successful and controversial composers. NMC enters 2010 with a four-day Polish festival beginning on January 10 with Zygmunt Krauze and the Polish Perspective. Distinguished pianist/composer Zygmunt Krauze has curated a program of Canadian premieres by challenging young Polish composers and including Pawel Szymanski, who has proved himself one of the most uncompromising composers of our times. On January 11, Zygmunt Krauze gives a special benefit recital for New Music Concerts (non-subscription event) which will include his own improvisations on the music Chopin and Lutoslawski. NMC also offers a Free Public Lecture by Zygmunt Krauze at the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto on January 12. And on January 13, Poland's versatile musician Agata Zubel, who is enjoying a rising double career as composer and soprano, performs music for solo voice with piano and electroacoustic accompaniment.

On February 14, New Music Concerts celebrates Valentine's Day and the Lunar New Year with premieres by Chinese-Canadian husband and wife Chan Ka-Nin and Alice Ping Yee Ho. The evening features Chinese dancer William Lau, and percussionist Beverley Johnston with the New Music Concerts Ensemble and Robert Aitken, flute & direction.

March 12 is dedicated to the music of Jonathan Harvey, one of Britain's most exciting composers today. Bird Concerto with Pianosong, a work involving multiple keyboards, live electronics and large ensemble forms the centrepiece of the concert. Harvey's colleague Geoffrey Palmer has created a new work for solo flute and ensemble especially for this occasion. The concert is presented in conjunction with the University of Toronto Faculty of Music, where Harvey is the Michael and Sonja Koerner Distinguished Visitor in Composition.

This season, organizations across the country are paying tribute to iconic Québec composer Gilles Tremblay. On April 10, NMC welcomes Victoria's Aventa Ensemble (William Linwood, director) to present two of Tremblay's most distinctive works, alongside commissioned works by British Columbia-based composers. The concert also features baritone Vincent Ranallo and contralto Noa Frenkel.

Brian Current's inspiring success as a composer and conductor has put him in touch with many of today's uniquely talented young composers. On May 28, New Music Concerts presents Brian's Picks. For the occasion, the young Canadian composer has created a provocative program of contemporary activity from across Canada, Germany and France. He conducts the New Music Ensemble performing works by Nicole Lizée, Oliver Schneller, Fabien Levy, Enno Poppe, Analia Llugdar and of course, Current!


New Music Concerts
2009-2010

Saturday October 17, 2009
Concert honouring the 35th anniversary of the founding of the Toronto Arts Council
Isabel Bader Theatre, 93 Charles St. West
Tim Brady – My 20th Century
Bradyworks: Tim Brady, guitar; André Leroux, saxophone; Catherine Meunier, percussion;
Pamela Reimer, piano; David Cronkite, sampler
Tim Brady (Canada, 1956) – My 20th Century (2003-2006):
Strumming (Hommage à John Lennon) - guitar + tape
Traces (hommage à Charlie Christian) - guitar, saxophone, percussion, piano, sampler
Hommage à Rosa Luxemburg (Casino Adagio) - guitar, tape, virtual strings
Double Quartet (hommage à Shostakovich) - guitar, saxophone, percussion, piano, sampler

Tim Brady's continuous 80 minute multi-media work pays tribute to iconic figures of the 20th century, with video artists Martin Messier and Oana Suteu.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composer / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Sunday December 13, 2009
Betty Oliphant Theatre, 404 Jarvis St.
Happy Birthday Udo!
Stephen Clarke; New Music Concerts Ensemble; Robert Aitken;
Udo Kasemets (Estonia/Canada, 1919) – fraCtal fibONaCciERTO (1997) for piano and mixed ensemble

This extended work demonstrates distinct aspects of Kasemets' approach to composition. Dedicatee Stephen Clarke first performed this work with the S.E.M. Ensemble in New York.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composer / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594

January Polish festival events sponsored by the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Toronto:

Sunday January 10, 2010
Glenn Gould Studio, 250 Front St. West
Zygmunt Krauze and the Polish Perspective
New Music Concerts Ensemble; Zygmunt Krauze, piano and direction; Agata Zubel, soprano
Pawel Mykietyn (Poland, 1971) – 3 for 13 (1994)
Agata Zubel (Poland, 1978) – Cascando (2004) for soprano, flute, clarinet, violin and cello
Zygmunt Krauze (Poland, 1938) – Piano Quintet (1993)
Zygmunt Krauze – Polychromie (1968) for clarinet, trombone, piano and cello
Pawel Szymanski (Poland, 1954) – Concerto à 4 (2004)
Wojtek Blazejczyk (Poland, 1981) – *M.A.D. (2007) for 12 players
*Mutually Assured Destruction

Poland has long enjoyed the reputation of spawning some of the world's most successful and controversial composers. Pianist/composer Zygmunt Krauze has curated a program of Canadian premieres by challenging young Polish composers and including Pawel Szymanski, who has proved himself one of the most uncompromising composers of our times.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Monday January 11, 2010 at 7:00 PM
Special (non-subscription) Fundraising Event
Zygmunt Krauze, piano
Gallery 345, 345 Sorauren Ave.
Frédéric Chopin (Poland, 1810-1849) – Mazurka in A minor op. 67, no. 4 (1846) with improvisations
Witold Lutosławski (Poland, 1913-1994) – Mélodies populaires (1945) with improvisations
Zygmunt Krauze (Poland, 1938) – Six folk melodies (1957); Refrain (1993); Nightmare Tango (1987); Stone Music (1972); Gloves Music (1972)

Zygmunt Krauze gives a special benefit recital for new Music Concerts which will include his own improvisations on the music Chopin and Lutoslawski. The $50 admission includes a wine and cheese reception and a charitable receipt will be issued for the portion allowable under Canada Revenue Agency guidelines. Reservations: (416) 961-9594


Affiliated event:
Tuesday January 12 at 7:00 PM
Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, Edward Johnson Building Room 216
Free Public Lecture by Zygmunt Krauze



Wednesday January 13, 2010
Music Gallery at St. George the Martyr, 197 John St.
Contemporary Vocal Recital with Agata Zubel, soprano
Karol Szymanowski (Poland, 1882-1937) – (3) Kurpian Songs (1929) voice and piano
Alban Berg (Austria, 1885-1935) – (3) Frühe Lieder (1907) voice and piano
Pawel Szymanski (Poland, 1954) – Drei Lieder nach Trakl (2002) voice and piano
Luciano Berio (Italy 1925-2003) – Sequenza III (1966) for solo voice
Cezary Duchnowski (Poland, 1971) – Disheveled Grasses (2002) for voice and soundfiles
Agata Zubel – Parlando (2000) for voice and sound files
Alejandro Viñao (Argentina/UK, 1951) – Chant d'Ailleurs (1991) for voice and sound files

Agata Zubel, who is enjoying a rising double career as composer and soprano, performs music for solo voice with piano and electroacoustic accompaniment.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Chinese New Year/Valentine's Day
Sunday February 14, 2010
Betty Oliphant Theatre, 404 Jarvis St.
William Lau, Chinese dancer; Beverley Johnston, percussion; New Music Concerts Ensemble; Robert Aitken, flute & direction
Christos Hatzis (Greece/Canada, 1953) – In the Fire of Conflict (2009) for marimba and sound files
Chinary Ung (Cambodia, 1942) Cinnabar Heart (2009) for marimba
Chan Ka Nin (Hong Kong/Canada, 1949) – The Consequential Web of Life (2009) for mixed ensemble (world premiere, NMC Canada Council commission)
Alice Ping Yee Ho – Dance Concerto (2008) for flute, strings and percussion and Chinese Dancer (Toronto premiere)

New Music Concerts celebrates Valentine's Day and the Lunar New Year with premieres by Chinese-Canadian husband and wife Chan Ka-Nin and Alice Ping Yee Ho.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Friday March 12, 2010
Betty Oliphant Theatre, 404 Jarvis St.
Jonathan Harvey
Hidéki Nagano, piano; New Music Concerts Ensemble; Robert Aitken, flute and direction;
Jonathan Harvey (England, 1939) – The Riot (1993) for flute/piccolo; bass clarinet; piano
Jonathan Harvey – Varja (1972-2009) for chamber ensemble (World premiere, Michael and Sonja Koerner Distinguished Visiting Composer at the University of Toronto commission)
Geoffrey Palmer (England, 1951) – Flute Concerto - 55 Cancri (2009) for solo flute and chamber ensemble (World premiere NMC commission)
Jonathan Harvey – Bird Concerto with Pianosong (2001) for solo piano/sampling keyboard, chamber ensemble and live electronics

A work involving multiple keyboards, live electronics and large ensemble forms the centrepiece of a concert featuring Jonathan Harvey, one of Britain's most exciting composers today. Harvey's former student Geoffrey Palmer has created a new work for solo flute and ensemble especially for this occasion. The concert is presented in conjunction with the University of Toronto Faculty of Music, where Harvey is the Michael and Sonja Koerner Distinguished Visitor in Composition.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Affiliated Events:
Tuesday March 9, 2010 at 7:00 PM
Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, Edward Johnson Building, Room 330
Composers' Forum with Jonathan Harvey (Free Public Lecture by the Michael and Sonja Koerner Distinguished Visitor in Composition)

Saturday March 13, 2010 at 8:00 PM
St. Anne's Anglican Church, 270 Gladstone Ave.
Soundstreams Canada presents "A Now of Magnificent Sound – e. e. cummings" with choral music by Jonathan Harvey (www.soundstreams.ca)


Saturday April 10, 2010
A Tribute to Gilles Tremblay
Aventa Ensemble; Vincent Ranallo, baritone; Noa Frenkel, contralto; William Linwood, director
Betty Oliphant Theatre, 404 Jarvis St.
Gilles Tremblay (Canada, 1932) – Solstices
Dániel Péter Biró (Hungary/USA, 1969) – Mishpatim Part 3 (2009) for contralto and ensemble
Wolf Edwards (Canada, 1972) – Altus (2009)
Gilles Tremblay – À quelle heure commence le temps? (1999) for baritone and ensemble

This season organizations across the country are paying tribute to iconic Québec composer Gilles Tremblay. Victoria's Aventa Ensemble presents two of his most distinctive works, alongside commissioned works by British Columbia-based composers.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594


Friday May 28, 2010
Music Gallery at St. George the Martyr, 197 John St.
Brian's Picks
New Music Concerts Ensemble; Brian Current, direction
Nicole Lizée (Canada, b.1973) – Television (2001) for 2 percussion
Oliver Schneller (Germany, b.1969) – Trio (1998-1999) accordion, cello and piano
Brian Current (Canada, b.1972) – Faster Still (2004) violin, piano and string quartet
Fabien Levy (France, b.1968) – I. Querwüchsig (2006, rev 2009) for 11 players
Enno Poppe (Germany, b.1969) – Salz (2005) for 9 players
Analia Llugdar (Canada, b.1972) – Todos los recuerdos presentes envolvían ese sonido y algo me miró (2007) for 15 players

Brian Current's inspiring success as a composer and conductor has put him in touch with many of today's uniquely talented young composers. He has created a provocative program of contemporary activity from across Canada, Germany and France.

7:15 Illuminating Introduction with the composers / 8PM Concert
Tickets: $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)
Box office: (416) 961-9594

TICKET INFORMATION
Full season subscription: $150 regular | $100 senior/arts worker | $40 student
Pick 3 or more (per event): $25 reg | $15 snr/arts | $7.50 studen
Individual Tickets: - $30 (reg)/$20 (seniors/arts workers)/$10 (students)

New Music Concerts
157 Carlton Street, Suite 203 Toronto ON M5A 2K3
416.961.9594 / fax 416.961.9508
nmc@interlog.com / www.NewMusicConcerts.com

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