"Brightwork New Music" program

Page 1

Brightwork New Music

Part of the 23rd Annual New Music Series

February 22, 2024

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FULLERTON CSUF SCHOOL OF MUSIC

SYLVIA A. ALVA

President, California State University, Fullerton

AMIR H. DABIRIAN

Provost and VP for Academic Affairs (Interim)

ARNOLD HOLLAND, EDD Dean, College of the Arts

DR. RANDALL GOLDBERG Director, School of Music

KIMO FURUMOTO

Assistant Director, School of Music

BONGSHIN KO

Assistant Director, School of Music

SCHOOL OF MUSIC FULL-TIME FACULTY AND STAFF

Faculty

Conducting

Kimo Furumoto – instrumental

Dr. Robert Istad – choral

Dr. Dustin Barr – instrumental

Jazz and Commercial Music

Bill Cunliffe* – jazz piano; arranging; Fullerton Jazz Orchestra, Fullerton Big Band and combo director

Rodolfo Zuñiga – jazz studies, jazz percussion, and music techology; Fullerton Chamber Jazz Ensemble director

Piano, Organ, Piano Pedagogy

Ning An – piano

Bill Cunliffe – jazz piano

Alison Edwards* – piano, piano pedagogy, class piano

Myong-Joo Lee – piano

Dr. Robert Watson – piano

Music Education, Teacher Training, and Teaching Credential

Dr. Christopher Peterson – choral

Dr. Gregory X. Whitmore* – instrumental

Music in General Education

Dr. John Koegel*

Dr. Katherine Reed

Music History and LIterature

Dr. Vivianne Asturizaga – musicology

Dr. John Koegel* – musicology

Dr. Katherine Powers – musicology

Dr. Katherine Reed – musicology

Strings

Kimo Furumoto – Director of Orchestra Studies and University Symphony Orchestra conductor

Bongshin Ko – cello

Dr. Ernest Salem* – violin

Theory and Composition

Dr. Pamela Madsen – composition, theory

Dr. Ken Walicki* – composition, theory

Vocal, Choral, and Opera

Dr. Robert Istad – Director of Choral Studies and University Singers conductor

Dr. Kerry Jennings* – Director of Opera

Dr. Christopher Peterson – CSUF Concert Choir and Singing Titans conductor

Dr. Joni Y. Prado voice, academic voice courses

Woodwinds, Brass, and Percussion

Dr. Dustin Barr – Director of Wind Band Studies, University Wind Symphony, University Band

Jean Ferrandis – flute

Sycil Mathai* – trumpet

Dr. Gregory X. Whitmore

University Symphonic Winds conductor

Staff

Michael August – Production Manager

Eric Dries – Music Librarian

William Lemley – Audio Technician

Jeff Lewis – Audio Engineer

Chris Searight – Music Instrumental Services

Paul Shirts – Administrative Assistant

Elizabeth Williams – Business Manager

* denotes Area Coordinator

facebook.com/CSUFMusic instagram.com/CSUFMusic soundcloud.com/csufmusic music.fullerton.edu

Welcome to the Spring 2024 Performing Arts Season at Cal State Fullerton’s College of the Arts. Whether you are a first-time or long-time patron, a friend, or parent to one of our exceptional students, thank you for joining us. Your support makes all the difference to their success.

I am pleased to present another semester of programming powered by the incredible gifts of our Art, Dance, Music, and Theatre students. This spring, the School of Music starts the season with a trio of concerts February 16–18 by artists-in-residence Talich Quartet; faculty artist Damon Zick and his Quarteto Nuevo featuring fellow faculty artist Bill Cunliffe; and University Symphony Orchestra. In May, University Symphony Orchestra and Symphonic Chorus will close the concert season with a performance of Mozart’s emotionally charged “Requiem.” Begovich Gallery presents the Begovich Visual Arts Lecture Series with visiting artists’ talks throughout the semester, including multidisciplinary artist Hings Lim on February 22, whose work will also be exhibited at Grand Central Art Center. The Department of Theatre and Dance begins their season in March with “Marisol,” a darkly comedic fantasy where the title character must find hope in a post-apocalyptic Brooklyn where angels are taking up arms and coffee is extinct. Hilarious, multiple Tony award-winning modern musical send-up “Urinetown” closes the theatre season just as CSUF’s dancers and choreographers take to the stage for “Spring Dance Theatre.”

When our students demonstrate their talents on stage and in the studio, their creative energy is undeniable, but the sacrifice and struggle it took to get there is often less perceptible. We can’t see the hours spent creating, the days of rehearsals, and the years of practice. For many students, the sparks of innovation and artistry that drove them to pursue the arts are often diminished by the high cost of an education. The Dean’s Fund for Excellence provides support for students in need through scholarships, artist residencies, and other financial assistance, ensuring them the opportunity to thrive in the arts. If you believe in their sparks of brilliance, please consider a donation of any amount to the Dean’s Fund for Excellence.

Thank you again for joining us this season and for championing the arts in higher education. I hope to see you at one of the college’s many performances and events this spring.

Sincerely,

SCAN THIS QR DONATE TODAY TO THE DEAN’S FUND FOR EXCELLENCE

The Garden Song (2023) .......................................................... Jonathon Grasse

I Mary, Mary By Herself for piano, cello, and voice (2024) ........ Pamela Madsen

The Illusion of Permanence (2020, arr. 2023) ...................... Rajna Swaminathan ***** Intermission *****

Scorpio (2016) .............................................................................. Adam Borecki

A Prayer For My Daughter (2022) ............................................. Pamela Madsen for piano, strings, and voice)

The Glam Seduction (2001) ................................................................. D.J. Sparr

VIEW PROGRAM NOTES: music.fullerton.edu/programnotes
PROGRAM

Stacey Fraser, soprano

Nick Terry, percussion

Aron Kallay, piano

Maggie Parkins, cello

Shalini Vijayan, violin

Brian Walsh, clarinet

Sarah Andon, flute

Brightwork Ensemble is a classical new music septet based in Los Angeles, California. A flexible and fearless group of world-class musicians, Brightwork consists of piano, violin, soprano, cello, flute, clarinet, and percussion (an instrumentation which is often called “Pierrot + percussion,” and which is to modern chamber music what the string quartet was to earlier centuries), and champions the best of the music that’s being written today, while continuing to play the classics of “new” music from the last hundred years.

We play the music we love, whether this is one of our favorite masterworks of the 20th century, or the latest dazzling score from a composer whose music we just discovered. What the listener can expect at a Brightwork concert–at the very least–is exciting, emotionally engaging music presented in state-ofthe-art performances. Brightwork seeks to draw the audience into the creative process.

BRIGHTWORK NEWMUSIC

ABOUT THE COMPOSERS

Adam Borecki

In his music, Adam seeks to compose with a balance of theoretical processes and intuitive musicality. His works frequently utilize electronics, and his music is stylistically diverse from a wide array of influences.

Awards include the Gluck Foundation Fellowship (USC), Conservatory of Music Award & Summa Cum Laude (Chapman University), Second Place in the Boston GuitarFest Composition competition, and a commission for the Third Angle New Music Ensemble in Portland, Oregon.

Adam’s music has been performed in southern California, across the United States, in Italy (at the Cortona Sessions) and in Paris (European American Musical Alliance).

As a guitarist, he regularly performs at private events & receptions in Los Angeles & Orange County. He has performed for figures such as Elie Wiesel (Nobel Laureate), George Argyros (U.S. Ambassador to Spain), and at the home of the President of Chapman University. He continues to study guitar at USC and regularly performs outreach concerts at hospitals & senior homes across Los Angeles.

Adam graduated from Chapman University with top honors, studying both music composition and guitar performance. His primary composition teachers include Vera Ivanova, Jeffrey Holmes, Sean Heim, Sean Friar, & Stephen Hartke, and he is currently studying with Donald Crockett.

Adam also teaches composition at the Sunset Chamber Music Festival and works as a recording engineer for LA new music groups (Tuesdays@MONK Space, People Inside Electronics) & at the Aspen Music Festival.

Jonathan Grasse

Composer/ethnomusicologist Jonathon Grasse received his Ph.D. from UCLA in music composition with the cognate in ethnomusicology, where he taught in the music and ethnomusicology departments from 1999-2005. His 2012 composition “Triptych” for string trio won the 2012 American Composers Forum - LA Chapter competition. His 2017 album Six Compositions (CD Baby) is available on all major streaming services. Jonathon produces CSUDH’s Festival of New and Improvised Music, featuring festival residency of the LA New Music ensemble Brightwork. His compositions have been performed throughout California, and in New York, Europe, China, and Mexico. He has received grants from the American Composers Forum. In 2011, Centaur Records released his CD Chamber Music.

Jonathon’s ethnomusicological work on Minas Gerais, Brazil focuses on regional identity, Afro-mineiro traditions, and the Clube da Esquina popular music movement. His forthcoming book Hearing Brazil: Music in Minas Gerais will be published by University Press of Mississippi in 2020. Jonathon is also authoring the forthcoming book The Corner Club by Milton Nascimento and Lô Borges, part of Bloomsbury publishing’s series 33 1/3 Brazil. His recent journal articles on Brazilian music include: “Vissungo’s Chant of the Earth,” forthcoming in Columbia University’s Current Musicology (Winter, 2019); “Musical Spaces and Deep Regionalism in Minas Gerais, Brazil” Musicology Research/UK (Summer, 2018); “Calundu’s Winds of Divination: Music and Black Religiosity in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais Brazil,”

ABOUT THE COMPOSERS

Yale Journal of Music and Religion (Fall, 2017). Further publications include articles and reviews on Brazilian music topics, and a book chapter on American composer Lou Harrison’s works for Indonesian-inspired gamelan. An electric guitarist specializing in solo and group improvisation, he has performed and recorded with, and composed for, several Los Angeles area ensembles, including his group the Native Plant Society. https://www.csudh.edu/music/faculty/grasse-jonathon

Pamela Madsen

Pamela Madsen is a composer, sound artist, performer, and curator of new music. From her massive landscape inspired projects and intimate chamber music creations to her multi-media collaborations, and organization of new music events she has created a body of work with a profound breadth of vision. With a Ph.D. in Composition from UCSD, doctoral studies in Music Theory at Yale University, post-doctoral studies in Music Technology at IRCAM in Paris, and Deep Listening with Pauline Oliveros, her work encompasses a vast sphere of interest. Her multi-media operas/music dramas and site-specific environmental works have been commissioned and premiered by such new music performers and ensembles as: soundSCAPE, Zeitgeist, Ethel, Tony Arnold, Aiyun Huang, Jane Rigler, Trio Solisti, Verdehr Trio, ICE flutist Claire Chase, New York New Music Ensemble, California Ear Unit, JACK and Arditti String Quartet, multi-media collaborations with IMAX filmmaker Greg MacGillivray, TED Fellow photographer Camille Seaman, video artist Quintan Ana Wikswo and visual artist Judy Chicago. Selected as an Alpert Award Panelist for 2010, she is a frequent guest lecturer, performer and invited scholar at festivals and universities world-wide. Currently, she is curator of the Annual New Music Festival, World Electro-Acoustic Listening Room Project, and Film as Collaborative Art Series at Cal State Fullerton where she is Professor of Music Composition.

D.J. Sparr

Composer & Electric guitarist D. J. Sparr, who Gramophone recently hailed as “exemplary,” is one of America’s preeminent composer-performers. He has caught the attention of critics with his eclectic style, described as “pop-Romantic…iridescent and wondrous” (The Mercury News) and “suits the boundary erasing spirit of today’s new-music world” (The New York Times). The Los Angeles Times praises him as “an excellent soloist,” and the Santa Cruz Sentinel says that he “wowed an enthusiastic audience…Sparr’s guitar sang in a near-human voice.”

He was the electric guitar concerto soloist on the 2018 GRAMMY-Award winning album with JoAnn Falletta and the London Symphony Orchestra. In 2011, Sparr was named one of NPR listener’s favorite 100 composers under the age 40. He has composed for and performed with renowned ensembles such as the Houston Grand Opera, Cabrillo Festival, New World Symphony, Washington National Opera, and Eighth Blackbird. His music has received awards from BMI, New Music USA, and the League of Composers/ISCM. Sparr is a faculty member at the famed Walden School’s Creative Musicians Retreat in Dublin, New Hampshire. His works and guitar performances appear

ABOUT THE COMPOSERS

on Naxos, Innova Recordings, & Centaur Records.

D. J. lives in Baton Rouge, Louisiana with his wife Kimberly, son Harris, Nannette the hound dog, and Bundini the boxer. D. J. Sparr’s music is published by Bill Holab Music.

Rajna Swamintathan

Rajna Swaminathan is an acclaimed mrudangam artist, composer, and scholar. Rajna has been described as “a vital new voice” (Pop Matters), creating “music of gravity and rigor… yet its overall effect is accessible and uplifting” (Wall Street Journal). In her music and research, she explores the undercurrents of rhythmic experience and emergent textures in collective improvisation.

One of only a few women who play the mrudangam professionally, Rajna received her creative foundation on the instrument from her father, P.K. Swaminathan, and mrudangam legend Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman. Through extensive experience performing in the Karnatik music and bharatanatyam scenes, an affinity for various streams of South Asian film/popular music, and deep collaborative work in New York’s jazz and creative music scene, Rajna developed experimental approaches to improvising on the mrudangam, piano, and voice.

Rajna’s orientation as an improviser-composer blossomed through a search for resonance and fluidity among musical forms and aesthetic worlds. Her ensemble RAJAS has been a prominent medium for her expansive compositions, which involve a lattice of rhythmic, textural, and modal approaches. The ensemble’s sound has been described as “unlike any other on the scene” (New York Times), and their debut album, Of Agency and Abstraction (Biophilia Records, 2019), received much critical acclaim. A new record with RAJAS is forthcoming, titled Apertures (Ropeadope, 2023).

Rajna’s scholarly work also intersects with her musical study and informs her creative curiosities. She was recently appointed as Assistant Professor of Music (Integrated Composition, Improvisation, and Technology) at UC Irvine’s Claire Trevor School of the Arts. She holds a PhD in Music (Creative Practice and Critical Inquiry) from Harvard University, and degrees in Anthropology and French from the University of Maryland, College Park. Her dissertation, titled Time, Virtuosity, and Ethics Otherwise: Queer Resonances for Diasporic Play, catalyzes a creative dialogue between artistic and academic engagements with uncertainty and openness in geography, archive, and embodiment.

In addition to her work with RAJAS, Rajna has composed for JACK Quartet, Del Sol Quartet, violinists Jennifer Koh and Lucia Lin, among others. Recent commissions include the Los Angeles Philharmonic, National Sawdust, Chamber Music America New Jazz Works, and fellowships with the Gabriela Lena Frank Creative Academy of Music. Rajna performs extensively in ensembles led by Ganavya Doraiswamy, Amir ElSaffar, Vijay Iyer, and Aakash Mittal. Her interdisciplinary work has included collaborations with playwright Anu Yadav, visual artist Zahyr Lauren, the Ragamala Dance Company, dancer/choreographer Mythili Prakash, and poets Mahogany L. Browne, Sarah Kay, and Jon Sands.

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Very special care has been given to the preparation of this donor listing. Please contact Ann Steichen at (657) 278-7124 with questions or concerns.

**Gifts received from
1, 2023 *
July 1, 2022 through November
deceased

ONTIVEROS SOCIETY

The Ontiveros Society includes individuals who have provided a gift for Cal State Fullerton through their estate plan. We extend our deep appreciation to the following Ontiveros Society members, whose gifts will benefit the students and mission of the College of the Arts:

ANONYMOUS

JOHN ALEXANDER

LEE & DR. NICHOLAS A.* BEGOVICH

GAIL & MICHAEL COCHRAN

MARC R. DICKEY

JOANN DRIGGERS

BETTY EVERETT

CAROL J. GEISBAUER & JOHN* GEISBAUER

SOPHIA & CHARLES GRAY

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GRETCHEN KANNE

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ANNE L. KRUZIC*

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LYNN & ROBERT MYERS

DWIGHT RICHARD ODLE*

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DR. JUNE POLLAK & MR. GEORGE POLLAK*

DR. STEPHEN M. ROCHFORD

MARY K. & WILLIAM SAMPSON

LORENA SIKORSKI

DOUGLAS G. STEWART

ANDREA J. & JEFFREY E. SWARD

RICHARD J. TAYLOR

VERNE WAGNER

RICHARD WULFF

DR. JAMES D. & DOTTIE YOUNG*

*deceased

The College of the Arts Proudly Recognizes the 300+ Members of Our VOLUNTEER SUPPORT GROUPS

ART ALLIANCE: Art Alliance promotes excellence and enjoyment in the visual arts, and their fundraising efforts contribute to student scholarship, gallery exhibitions, opening receptions and sculpture acquisition on campus.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Fay Colmar

John DeLoof

Joann Driggers & Steve Collier

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ALLIANCE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS: The Alliance for the Performing Arts (formerly MAMM) benefits performing arts students through underwriting visiting artists; special theatre, dance, and music performances; and other unique experiences for members.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Judy Atwell

Drs. Voiza & Joe Arnold

Dr. Margaret Faulwell Gordon

Susan Hallman

Norma Morris

Richard Odle Estate

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Jeanie Stockwell

Verne Wagner

MUSIC ASSOCIATES: Music Associates maintains a tradition of active involvement and community support, and raises scholarship funds for School of Music students through annual fundraising events and membership dues.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Marilyn Carlson

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John Van Wey

There are many ways to support the College of the Arts, the School of Music, Department of Theatre and Dance, and Department of Visual Arts
Haley Sanford • 657-278-2663
MORE INFORMATION:
GET INVOLVED GIVING.FULLERTON.EDU

Talich Quartet

February 16 • Meng Concert Hall

Quarteto Nuevo

February 17 • Meng Concert Hall

University Symphony Orchestra with Talich Quartet

February 18 • Meng Concert Hall

Brightwork Newmusic

February 22 • Meng Concert Hall

University Symphony Orchestra feat. Joseph Loi, flute

February 25 • Meng Concert Hall

loadbang*

February 27 • Meng Concert Hall

Advanced Vocal Workshop feat. Michael Schütze, piano

February 29 • Recital Hall

Fabian Ziegler, percussion

March 6 • Meng Concert Hall

Enrico Elisi, piano

March 7 • Meng Concert Hall

Marisol

March 8– 23 • Little Theatre

Fullerton Jazz Orchestra & Fullerton Jazz Chamber Ensemble

March 8 • Meng Concert Hall

Füreya Ünal, piano

March 9 • Meng Concert Hall

Enrico Elisi & Mengyang Pan, duo piano

March 10 • Meng Concert Hall

Alumni Piano Recital

March 14 • Meng Concert Hall

17th Annual Collage Concert

March 16 • Meng Concert Hall

Accidentally on Purpose

March 22– April 13 • Hallberg Theatre

University Singers & Concert Choir

March 24 • Meng Concert Hall

Brightwork Newmusic*

March 26 • Meng Concert Hall

Minsoo Sohn, piano

March 27 • Meng Concert Hall

Ernest Salem & Hasse Borup,violins

March 28 • Meng Concert Hall

Nicholas Isherwood, bass/baritone*

April 9 • Meng Concert Hall

Gabriel Bianco, guitar

April 10 • Meng Concert Hall

Urinetown the Musical

April 12– 27 • Young Theatre

High School Honor Band & CSUF Wind Chamber Ensembles

April 13 • Meng Concert Hall

CSUF New Music Ensemble & Contemporary Chamber Ensemble

April 17 • Meng Concert Hall

Monteverdi’s The Coronation of Poppea

April 18–21 • Recital Hall

CSUF Symphonic Winds

April 21 • Meng Concert Hall

Fullerton Jazz Chamber Ensemble & Fullerton Latin Ensemble

April 23 • Meng Concert Hall

University Band

May 1 • Meng Concert Hall

Spring Dance Theatre

May 2–11 • Little Theatre

Fullerton Jazz Orchestra

May 3 • Meng Concert Hall

University Wind Symphony

May 4 • Meng Concert Hall

Jazz Singers

May 6 • Meng Concert Hall

Titan Voices & Singing Titans

May 8 • Meng Concert Hall

Symphony Orchestra & Symphonic Chorus Mozart’s “Requiem”

May 11 • Meng Concert Hall

COLLEGE OF THE ARTS • SELECT EVENTS | SPRING 2024 For Studio Series productions, free events, and complete information, visit/call (657) 278-3371 • arts.fullerton.edu/calendar • artstickets.fullerton.edu
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