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By PHILIP E. REHARD Reporter Contributor
The distinguished American Brass Quintet will conclude this season of
the Department of Music’s Slee/Visiting Artist Series with a
performance at 8 p.m. April 4 in Lippes Concert Hall in Slee Hall, North
Campus.
 |  In addition to
performing the final concert in this seasons Slee/Visiting Artist
Series, the American Brass Quintet will conduct a composer
workshop.
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The concert is sponsored by the Robert G. and Carol L. Morris Center
for 21st Century Music. While at UB, the quintet also will present a
composer workshop session at 4 p.m. April 3 in Lippes Concert Hall.
The program to be performed by the quintet was designed to feature
pieces that display true virtuosic brass writing and performance. Many
of the pieces, such as “The Three Tenses,” “Little Suite of Miniatures,”
“Copperwave” and “Quinteto Concertante,” were written specifically for
the American Brass Quintet. Osvaldo Lacerda’s piece,
“Quinteto Concertante,” for example, was created after the quintet
premiered another Lacerda piece, “Fantasia e Rondó,” at the
Inter-American Music Festival in 1980. “I decided to
compose another brass quintet,” Lacerda said. “Suddenly, I
had an inspiration: why not a concertante one with few counterpoints,
but with beautiful solo melodies, accompanied by good rhythms and
harmonies? Thus, this work was born.” Critic Steven Sacco
describes “Little Suite of Miniatures” as “a serious introspection
punctuated by wit, whimsy, and sparkle.” “Copperwave” is a
distinctive piece that demonstrates brass instruments that create a
weighty and heavy motion and feeling that travels in waves and circles
throughout the piece. The American Brass Quintet has created an
incomparable legacy within the brass world. Hailed as “positively
breathtaking” by The New York Times and “the most
distinguished” of all the brass quintets by the American Record
Guide, the ABQ clearly has defined itself among the elite chamber
music ensembles of our time. The quintet has a vision dedicated to a
diverse musical repertoire, extensive recordings and education.
The American Brass Quintet has a discography of more than 50
recordings and has premiered more than 100 contemporary brass works in
its numerous live performances. This season, the ABQ will premiere and
tour a new work for brass quintet and piano by Grammy-winning
composer-pianist Billy Childs, which was commissioned for the quintet by
a grant from the New York State Music Fund. The members of the
quintet—Raymond Mase, trumpet; Kevin Cobb, trumpet; David
Wakefield, horn; Michael Powell, trombone; and John D. Rojak,
bass trombone—joined the ABQ at various times, starting as early
as 1973 and as late as 1998. All have been featured individually on
radio, television and even soundtracks and jingles. Mase is a
co-principal trumpeter of the New York City Ballet Orchestra, American
Composers Orchestra and the Westchester Philharmonic. Cobb leads a
diverse career and is active with many of New York’s top musical
organizations. Wakefield was one of the first American brass players
invited since the Cultural Revolution to teach and perform in the
People's Republic of China. Powell has taught master classes in trombone
and chamber music all over the world. Rojak is an original member of the
orchestra for the Broadway production of “Les
Miserables.” Advance tickets are $12 for general admission;
$9 for UB faculty/staff/alumni, WNED members with card and senior
citizens; and $5 for students. Tickets at the door are $20, $15 and
$8.
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