Music announces March concerts
Performance by prize-winning Arditti String Quartet to be among highlights of schedule
By SUE
WUETCHER
Reporter Editor
The prize-winning
Arditti String Quartet, known internationally as celebrated interpreters
of contemporary and 20th century music, will perform at UB on March
20 as part of the concert program to be presented during March by the
Department of Music.
| |
 |
| |
The
performance by the Arditti String Quartet, the fourth concert in
the Slee/Visiting Artist Series, will be held at 8 p.m. March 20
in Slee Concert Hall, North Campus. |
| |
|
The
concert schedule also will feature faculty recitals by pianists Stephen
and Frieda Manes, and the Bugallo/Golove/Nelson Trio, as well as a production
by the UB Opera Workshop of Henry Purcell's "Dido and Aeneas."
The performance
by the Arditti String Quartet, the fourth concert in the Slee/Visiting
Artist Series, will be held at 8 p.m. March 20 in Slee Concert Hall,
North Campus.
Tickets
are $12 for the general public, $9 for UB faculty, staff, alumni and
senior citizens, and $5 for students.
Founded
in 1974 by first violinist Irvine Arditti, quartet members believe that
close collaboration with composers is essential to the interpretation
of modern music, and they attempt to work with every composer whose
music they play. The quartet's repertoire features a wide range of workincluding
world premieresfrom such composers as Cage, Glass, Nancarrow and
Stockhausen. The UB concert will include the piece "Third Face," composed
in 1987 by UB faculty member David Felder for the quartet and the North
American New Music Festival.
The concert
schedule for the month will begin with a performance at 8 p.m. March
9 in Slee by Stephen Manes, professor and chair of the Department of
Music, and his wife and longtime collaborator, Frieda, of a program
featuring piano music for four handsone piano, as well as two
pianos.
The Maneses
have been performing piano, four-hand music together for almost 40 years,
in addition to their separate performance and teaching careers. Their
repertoire encompasses the entire spectrum of the four-hand literaturefrom
the sonatas of Mozart to works of George Crumbas well as music
for two pianos, which will be the highlight of the March concert.
Tickets
for the concert are $5.
A second
faculty recital, featuring the Bugallo/Golove/Nelson Trio, will be held
at 8 p.m. March 11 in Slee.
Each member
of the trio is a strong proponent of new music. Pianist Helena Bugallo,
a former UB student and faculty member, performs frequently in Europe
and the Americas, and has premiered more than 50 works at internationally
renowned music festivals in recent years. Trumpeter Jon Nelson, assistant
professor of music and director of the Genkin Philharmonic and the UB
Concert Band, is a founding member of the Meridian Arts Ensemble, for
which he was instrumental in commissioning more than 30 new works, often
venturing into jazz, rock and experimental idioms. Cellist Jonathan
Golove, visiting assistant professor of music, maintains an active career
as a performer, composer and teacher. In addition to founding and co-directing
chamber ensembles dedicated to the performance of new music, he is active
in the field of improvised music, and made his debut as an electric
cellist last year.
Tickets
for the recital are $5.
The UB
Opera Workshop will put on the rarely performed opera "Dido and Aeneas"
at 8 p.m. March 8 and 2:30 p.m. March 9 in the Drama Theatre in the
Center for the Arts, North Campus.
The fully
staged production, featuring a cast of student performers and a professional
chamber orchestra, will be directed by Dora Ohrenstein, visiting assistant
professor of music, and conducted by Roland E. Martin, a lecturer in
the Department of Music.
The first
opera in English, "Dido and Aeneas" is the tale of disappointed love
between Dido, queen of Carthage, and Aeneas, hero of the Trojan wars.
In the Opera Workshop's production, the story is updated to contemporary
times: Dido is a movie queen and the chorus is a group of paparazzi
who relentlessly invade her privacy.
Ohrenstein
will use this approach to underscore one of the work's major themesthe
conflict between public and private duty. This theme is present in the
work's original setting in ancient Greece, and is presented in this
production through an equivalent modern-day situation.
The
concept will be supported with a live video camera on stage, which will
shoot selected scenes that then will be projected from video monitors
placed around the theater. (For more about Ohrenstein and the opera,
go to Bringing rarely performed opera to UB.)
Tickets
are $5.
The March
concert schedule also will feature a performance by the UB Symphony
Orchestra and the UB Concert Band at 8 p.m. March 13 in Slee.
The
orchestra, conducted by Magnus Märtensson, assistant professor
of music, will perform Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in its entirety before
turning the stage over to the concert band, conducted by Jon Nelson.
The concert
will be free of charge and open to the public.
Finally,
two opera pedagogues each will offer a master class focused on the Bel
Canto period of the Italian repertoire. The classes, which will be free
of charge and open to the public, will be of interest to vocal students,
as well as opera enthusiasts.
Joan Patenaude-Yarnell,
who began her teaching career almost 15 years ago after a successful
operatic and concert career with the New York City Opera and the San
Francisco Opera, will present her master class, entitled "Traditions
of Bel Canto," from 2-5 p.m. March 13 on the Slee stage.
The New
York City-based Yarnell in 1993 established Centro Studi Italian, a
summer course for young American singers in Urbania, Italy, that brings
in coaches from the famed Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro, Italy, as
well as a distinguished American voice and coaching faculty, to prepare
the Italian operatic and song literature.
Ubaldo
Fabbri, a member of the coaching staff at the Rossini Opera Festival,
will teach from noon-2 p.m. March 14 on the Slee stage.
In addition
to his post at the Rossini festival, Fabbri heads the coaching faculty
at the Accademia Rossiniana and the Centro Studi Italiani.
During
his class, he will present a short talk on the history of Bel Canto,
focusing on its development and influence on the operatic literature
of the late 19th and 20th centuries. He will work through the pronunciation
of the Italian language in all aspects of the Italian operatic literature
and on the principles of the Bel Canto vocal techniques.
Tickets
to music department events may be obtained at the Slee Hall box office
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, from the Center for the
Arts box office from noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and at all
Ticketmaster outlets.