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Miller Theatre at Columbia University 2014-15 | 26th Season Composer Portraits Missy Mazzoli ETHEL Mivos Quartet Marnie Breckenridge, soprano Jody Redhage, cello and voice Nathan Schram, viola Robert Simonds, violin Edward Poll, conductor Thursday, February 5, 8:00 p.m. From the Executive Director I’m excited to announce that last month Miller Theatre was honored with the ASCAPChamber Music America Award for Adventurous Programming. This is the fourth time the award has been given to Miller Theatre, and the second time during my tenure as Executive Director. It’s a great honor to be recognized by these two national organizations. The award recognizes Miller’s commitment to making contemporary music a vibrant part of life in New York City, so it’s apt that we’ll continue our winter programming tonight with a celebration of one of New York’s brightest young composers, Missy Mazzoli. The first Mazzoli piece I heard was an excerpt from her opera, Song from the Uproar, but I quickly discovered how versatile a composer she is. Tonight, you’ll hear an excerpt from her new opera, solo works, and string quartets—Death Valley Junction is a special favorite of mine. This repertoire paints a diverse picture, but it’s still only a slice of her rapidly growing body of work; I’m excited for what’s ahead. Our Portrait on February 19 features Italian composer Stefano Gervasoni, whose work I was introduced to by the ensemble Yarn/Wire. They made their Miller debut at a Pop-Up Concert season last year, the start of what is now an ongoing collaboration. Not only is Gervasoni’s work exciting, dynamic, and extremely difficult, but this Portrait presented the opportunity to collaborate with two other young New York ensembles. Like Yarn/Wire, Ekmeles and the Mivos Quartet made their Miller debuts at recent Pop-Up concerts. All three ensembles are well on their way to major careers, and I love that Miller can be a showcase for their talents. I hope there’s lots of new music in your plans for 2015 – we certainly have a great lineup to share with you at Miller Theatre! Melissa Smey Executive Director Please note that photography and the use of recording devices are not permitted. Remember to turn off all cellular phones and pagers before tonight’s performance begins. Miller Theatre is ADA accessible. Large print programs are available upon request. For more information or to arrange accommodations, please call 212-854-7799. Miller Theatre at Columbia University 2014-15 | 26th Season Composer Portraits Thursday, February 5, 8:00 p.m. Missy Mazzoli Missy Mazzoli (b. 1980) Death Valley Junction (2010) Dissolve, O my Heart (2010) Mivos Quartet Robert Simonds, violin A Thousand Tongues (2009) Jody Redhage, cello and voice Harp and Altar (2009) Mivos Quartet INTERMISSION Onstage discussion with Missy Mazzoli and Melissa Smey Tooth and Nail (2010) Nathan Schram, viola His Name is Jan (2013) Marnie Breckenridge, soprano; ETHEL; Edward Poll, conductor Quartet for Queen Mab (2015) world premiere Co-commissioned by Miller Theatre and ETHEL’s Foundation for the Arts ETHEL This program runs approximately one hour and forty-five minutes, including intermission. ETHEL’s commission of Quartet for Queen Mab was made possible with support from the New York State Council on the Arts. Major support for Composer Portraits is provided by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Francis Goelet Charitable Lead Trusts. About the Program Introduction by Paul Griffiths “I want people to find something out about themselves through my music, something that was inaccessible before, something that they were suppressing, something that they couldn’t really confront…. I really think of my motives, my melodies, my harmonies, as being these things that are very much alive. For example, what happens if this motive is in a spiral? What does that mean? What does that look like? How does that translate musically?” —Missy Mazzoli The typical Mazzoli piece is calm and edgy, slow and hyper-energetic, solemn and intense, hypnotic and wild. The typical Mazzoli piece dreams as it furiously dances. The typical Mazzoli piece is many things at once. The typical Mazzoli piece is made for audiences in concert halls and bars, opera theaters and art galleries. The typical Mazzoli piece uses electronic means—samples, especially—along with the voices of centuries-old instruments. The typical Mazzoli piece is designed for friends—she plays keyboards in the group Victoire and has close connections with other musicians, including those performing tonight—but there are also many typical Mazzoli pieces that are not. Born in a small town in Pennsylvania in 1980, Missy Mazzoli studied at Yale, at Boston University, and, on a Fulbright, in The Hague with Louis Andriessen and Martijn Padding. She then settled in New York, where she was executive director of the MATA Festival (2007-10) and now teaches at Mannes. Her career as a composer began in 2004-5 with pieces she wrote mostly for herself or for small groups. A first orchestral piece, These Worlds Within Us (2006), won an ASCAP Young Composers Award and was taken up by the Minnesota Orchestra after its Yale première. Her growing reputation led to commissions from eighth blackbird (Still Life with Avalanche, 2008), Carnegie Hall (The Sound of the Light, for five instruments, 2008) and the Kronos Quartet (Harp and Altar, 2009). She was also busy from this time writing scores for Victoire, whose debut album, Cathedral City, was released in 2010. Violent, Violent Sea, composed for the League of Composers Chamber Orchestra, was first performed here at Miller Theatre in June 2011, and was followed by works for the Albany Symphony (Holy Roller, 2012) and the Detroit Symphony (River Rouge Transfiguration, 2013). Through most of this time she was also at work on an opera, Song from the Uproar, which came out of her fascination with the life and writings of the Swiss explorer Isabelle Eberhardt and was presented at the Kitchen three years ago. Next month sees the release of her second album with Victoire, Vespers. Program Notes by Missy Mazzoli Death Valley Junction (2010) Death Valley Junction is a sonic depiction of the town of the same name, a strange and isolated place on the border of California and Nevada. The “town” is home to three people and consists of a café, a hotel, and a fully functional opera house. Death Valley Junction is dedicated to Marta Becket, the woman who resurrected and repaired the crumbling opera house in the late 1960s and performed one-woman shows there every week until her retirement in 2012 at age 87. The piece begins with a sparse, edgy texture – the harsh desert landscape – and collapses into a wild and buoyant dance. Marta Becket once compared herself to the single yellow flower that is able to, against all odds, flourish in the desert. This piece attempts to depict some of her exuberant energy and unstoppable optimism, and is dedicated to her. Dissolve, O my Heart (2010) Dissolve, O my Heart has its roots in a late-night conversation over Chinese food and cupcakes with violinist Jennifer Koh. She told me about her Bach & Beyond project, a program that combines Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas with newly commissioned works, and asked if I would write a piece that referenced Bach’s Partita in D minor. This request was, to put it mildly, utterly terrifying; the last movement of the Partita, the Chaconne, is undoubtably the most famous piece of solo violin literature in the world. It overwhelmed Brahms, has been subject to hundreds of transcriptions and arrangements over the past two centuries, and is dizzying in its contrapuntal complexity. But something about Jennifer’s enthusiasm was infectious, and I agreed to the project before I realized what I was getting myself into. Jennifer seemed to approach Bach through the lens of contemporary music, and I realized that this was what this new piece should do as well. About the Program Dissolve, O my Heart begins with the first chord of Bach’s Chaconne, a now-iconic D minor chord, and spins out from there into an off-kilter series of chords that doubles back on itself, collapses and ultimately dissolves in a torrent of fast passages. The only direct quote from the partita is that first chord, which anchors the entire piece even as it threatens to spiral out of control. The title comes from an aria in the St. John Passion, but has many potential interpretations. Dissolve, O my Heart was commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and was premiered in 2011 as part of their Green Umbrella Series in Disney Hall. A Thousand Tongues (2009) A Thousand Tongues was commissioned by cellist and vocalist Jody Redhage. This piece is a short but intense response to the following text by Stephen Crane: Yes, I have a thousand tongues, And nine and ninety-nine lie. Though I strive to use the one, It will make no melody at my will, But is dead in my mouth. Harp and Altar (2009) Harp and Altar was commissioned by the Kronos Quartet. At its core, this piece is a love song to the Brooklyn Bridge. The title comes from a poem by Hart Crane, in which he describes the Brooklyn Bridge as “that harp and altar of the Fury fused.” The borough of Brooklyn is impossible to describe, but the Brooklyn Bridge seems to be an apt symbol for its vastness, its strength, and its history. Halfway through the work the vocalist Gabriel Kahane’s pre-recorded voice enters, singing fragments of the lines below from Crane’s poem, The Bridge. Through the bound cable strands, the arching path Upward, veering with light, the flight of strings, Taut miles of shuttling moonlight syncopate The whispered rush, telepathy of wires. Tooth and Nail (2010) Tooth and Nail was inspired by the extraordinary musical traditions of Uzbekistan, where jaw harp (also called Jew’s harp or mouth harp) plays a prominent role. The jaw harp player consistently plucks the instrument, creating overtones and melodies by changing the shape of his or her mouth, and the central Asian style takes this technique to wild and beautiful extremes. I have created my own version of this music, based on my memories of hearing Uzbek jaw harp players. The electronic part is made up almost entirely of viola samples, allowing the live viola to play in counterpoint with itself. His Name is Jan (2013) His Name is Jan is the opening aria from my opera-in-progress Breaking the Waves, a collaboration with librettist Royce Vavrek based on the film by Lars von Trier. Breaking the Waves was commissioned by Opera Philadelphia and Beth Morrison Projects and will premiere at Opera Philadelphia in September 2016. Set in the Scottish Highlands during the 1970s, Breaking the Waves tells the story of Bess McNeill, a naïve young woman who falls deeply in love with Jan, a hardened but compassionate oil rig worker. The two marry despite objections by local church leaders. When Jan is paralyzed in an accident, he insists that Bess seek new lovers, and in her guilt and despair Bess comes to believe that her promiscuity is healing Jan’s broken body. She finds herself caught precariously between her devotion to God and her fierce determination to keep her husband alive at any cost. In this opening aria Bess asks the church elders for permission to marry Jan. Quartet for Queen Mab (2015) Queen Mab is an elusive creature from folklore and literature, a tiny fairy who drives her chariot into the nose of sleeping people. She enters their brains, eliciting dreams of their heart’s desire. This quartet embraces the wildness of Queen Mab’s journey and the dreams that result; Baroque ornaments twist around long legato lines and melodies ricochet between players. The music follows a sort of intuitive dream logic but returns again and again to the opening material, resulting in a sort of insistent, insane ritornello. The work was commissioned by ETHEL, with support from ETHEL’s Foundation for the Arts, and by Miller Theatre. About the Program Texts and Translations His name is Jan libretto by Royce Vavrek His name is Jan You do not know him. He’s from the rig. His name is Jan. Jan, Jan, Jan… A funny name for a man. An outsider has wormed His way inside of me. Jan from the rig. His name is Jan. He wants to marry me. Holy matrimony: when two people are joined in God. I want to be his wife: Mrs. Jan from the rig. His name is Jan, And God will be witness To our covenant. The whole community Will know our love. Jan’s love of me. My love of Jan. Jan is my shaggy-faced man. Jan is my strange, beautiful music. His name is Jan. His name sounds like church bells, Jan, Jan, Jan… God has given me a man, You do not know him, A Norwegian man Jan, Jan, Jan… A man that I’m to love forever. With your permission. With your permission. About the Artists ETHEL Ralph Farris, viola Dorothy Lawson, cello Kip Jones, violin Corin Lee, violin Acclaimed as “unfailingly vital” (The New York Times), and “downtown’s reigning string quartet” (The New Yorker), ETHEL invigorates the contemporary music scene with exuberance, intensity, and exceptional artistry. ETHEL performs adventurous music by celebrated composers such as Philip Glass, Julia Wolfe, Phil Kline, Andy Akiho, David Lang, John King, John Zorn, Steve Reich, Anna Clyne, Kenji Bunch, JacobTV, Don Byron, Marcelo Zarvos, Evan Ziporyn, Judd Greenstein, Terry Riley, Kimo Williams and Mary Ellen Childs. ETHEL’s 2014-15 season celebrates the diversity of regional American music, anchored by tours of the multimedia work ETHEL’s Documerica, a collaboration with guitar virtuoso Kaki King, “Music of the Sun” concerts with Taos Pueblo flutist Robert Mirabal, and “Grace,” featuring music by Ennio Morricone and Jeff Buckley. ETHEL is Ensemble-in-Residence at the Grand Canyon Music Festival’s Native American Composers Apprenticeship Project and at Denison University, and is Resident Ensemble at The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Balcony Bar. Founded in 1998, ETHEL is comprised of Ralph Farris (viola), Dorothy Lawson (cello), Kip Jones (violin), and Corin Lee (violin). Mivos Quartet Olivia De Prato, violin Joshua Modney, violin Victor Lowrie, viola Mariel Roberts, cello The Mivos Quartet, “one of America’s most daring and ferocious new-music ensembles” (The Chicago Reader), is devoted to performing the works of contemporary composers, presenting new music to diverse audiences. Since the quartet’s beginnings in 2008 they have performed works by emerging and established international composers who represent varied aesthetics of contemporary composition. Mivos is invested in commissioning and premiering new music for string quartet, particularly in a context of close collaboration with composers over extended time-periods. Recent collaborations include works with Mark Barden (Wien Modern Commission), Dan Blake (Jerome Commission), Richard Carrick (Fromm Commission), Patrick Higgins (ZS), Sam Pluta (Lucerne Festival Commission), Kate Soper, Saul Williams, Scott Wollschleger, and Eric Wubbels (CMA commission). Mivos is committed to working with guest artists, exploring multi-media projects involving live video and electronics, creating original compositions and arrangements for the quartet, and performing improvised music. The quartet has appeared on concert series including Wien Modern (Austria), Transart (Italy), Music at the Phillips (Washington, DC), Lucerne Festival (Switzerland), HellHOT! New Music Festival (Hong Kong), Festival International Chihuahua (Mexico), Edgefest (Ann Arbor), Asphalt Festival (Germany), and Aldeburgh Music (UK). Learn more at www.mivosquartet.com. Soprano Marnie Breckenridge’s versatility of roles range from highly acclaimed performances of Lucia di Lammermoor to Emily in Rorem’s Our Town. Her excellent acting credits and musicianship have brought her into the worlds of television, voice-over and theatre where she recently composed the vocal lines for and sang the lead in Wake at the Connelly (NYC), directed by Mei Ann Teo and composed by Jon Bernstein. Recent modern opera roles include: Mother in David T. Little’s Dog Days with Montclair Peak Performances (and upcoming in 2015 at Ft. Worth Opera and Los Angeles Opera), Sierva Maria in Peter Eötvös’s Love And Other Demons at Glydebourne Festival Opera, La Princesse in Philip Glass’ Orphée and Margarita Xirgu in Golijov’s Ainadamar with Opera Parallele, her Berkeley Symphony debut in Chin’s Cantantrix Sopranica with Kent Nagano, and her Ravinia Festival debut in Jake Heggie’s To Hell And Back with Philharmonia Baroque, co-starring Patti LuPone. Breckenridge is a featured soloist on the 2012 New World Records album of Victor Herbert songs and recently made her European and Asian debuts as Cunegonde in Candide with the English National Opera, Prague State Opera, and on tour in Japan where she was reviewed as being “note perfect” (Prague Post) and “simply terrific” (Opera Magazine, UK). Jody Redhage, a passionate advocate of creative new music and chamber music, has been called “a new music dynamo” (MusicWorks). Redhage has premiered over 100 works, including almost 30 that she has commissioned for her voice, cello, and electronics from some of today’s most talented composers. An active composer herself, she writes for the band Rose & the Nightingale, a group of improvising multi-instrumentalists. Equally experienced and comfortable as a player of classical, new music, jazz, rock, pop, improvised music, and recording session work, Redhage is a mainstay within several active and groundbreaking New York scenes, contributing to the everincreasing 21st century blur of musical boundary lines. Redhage is a member of Best New Artist Grammy-winner Esperanza Spalding’s Chamber Music Society band, traveling to five continents to support the release of Spalding’s third record, featuring a jazz trio, string trio (violin, viola, cello), and backup vocalists. Redhage often works as a recording session player, and has performed and recorded for a vast array of artists including My Brightest Diamond, Fall Out Boy, Sufjan Stevens, Esperanza Spalding, Neil Diamond, Sara Bareilles, Jay-Z, Beyoncé, and Chromeo. Redhage was a presenter on Audience and Community Engagement for the 2015 Chamber Music America Annual Conference, and has received grants from the NYC Dept. of Cultural Affairs, NY State Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, and the Hertz Foundation. Her critically-acclaimed solo album of music for voice, cello, and electronics, Of Minutiae and Memory, was released on New Amsterdam Records. Please visit www.jodyredhage.com for more information. Hailed by The New York Times as an “elegant soloist” with a sound “devotional with its liquid intensity,” Nathan Schram is the violist of the Bryant Park Quartet as well as a member of the Carnegie Hall trained ensemble Decoda. Working with many of today’s great composers he has premiered music by Steve Reich, Becca Stevens, Nico Muhly, Timo Andres, Gabriel Kahane, David Bruce, Brooks Frederickson, Elliot Cole, and Brad Balliet. He is also a founding member of the string trio Speed Bump, an ensemble devoted to improvisation and performing their own compositions. Nathan explores other musical interests by playing with an array of adventurous ensembles such as Alarm Will Sound, ACME, New York Baroque Incorporated, Le Train Bleu, and the Wordless Orchestra. Apart from performing, Nathan is the Founding Director of Musicambia, a New York based initiative establishing a network of music conservatories within prisons and jails in the United States. He is an Alumnus of Carnegie Hall and Juilliard’s Ensemble ACJW, and a prizewinner of the 2007 Primrose International Viola competition, the 2006 Corpus Christi Concerto Competition, and a First Prize winner of the 2008 ASTA National Solo Competition. He studied at Indiana University with Alan de Veritch and at the Escuela Superior de Música Reina Sofia in Madrid, Spain with Diemut Poppen and Yuval Gotlibovich. About the Artists Nathan has performed chamber music alongside Itzhak Perlman, Colin Carr, Gil Kalish, Phil Setzer, Atar Arad, Joshua Bell, Ron Leonard, and Jonathan Carney. Nathan has performed chamber music alongside Itzhak Perlman, Colin Carr, Gil Kalish, Phil Setzer, Atar Arad, Joshua Bell, Ron Leonard, and Jonathan Carney. Robert Simonds is the Principal Second Violin of the Louisville Orchestra and a member of the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music in Santa Cruz, CA. In addition to performing the music of leading contemporary composers, Rob is also dedicated to working across genres and has produced and performed in small ensemble partnerships with indie-folk artists Joe Pug, Ben Sollee, Tobie Milford, and The Low Anthem. Rob began his professional orchestral career with the Richmond Symphony Orchestra, which was followed by a longtime position in The Phoenix Symphony. He regularly returns to Arizona to play with the Downtown Chamber Series, as well as the recently opened Musical Instrument Museum. His work in Arizona also includes performances with the Arizona Music Fest Orchestra. As a substitute musician, he has worked with the orchestras of Minnesota, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Columbus, and Virginia. For several summers he was a member of the Colorado Music Festival in Boulder. Edward Poll, from Bryn Mawr, Pa., is a Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow at the Curtis Institute of Music, where he works under the mentorship of Yannick NézetSéguin. Mr. Poll was assistant conductor at the 2014 Glimmerglass Festival, and recently made his debut with the Buffalo Philharmonic at the invitation of JoAnn Falletta. He has conducted workshops of new compositions for Opera Philadelphia and Washington National Opera. Also a composer, Mr. Poll is the winner of an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award and two Singing City prizes, His first opera, based on Lorca’s play, Yerma, was premiered in New York at the NOMADS Festival. His second opera, in process, is set to religious texts by Auden and Yeats. His works have been performed by NonSequitur and pianist Beth Levin, among others. He was a summer fellow at the European American Musical Alliance in Paris from 2006 to 2008, and studied composition at the Freie Universität in Berlin in 2010 and 2011. Mr. Poll received a bachelor’s degree in composition from Columbia University, where he studied with Fabien Lévy and Fred Lerdahl. He holds a master’s degree in orchestral conducting from Mannes College, where he studied with David Hayes and Joseph Colaneri. About Miller Theatre Miller Theatre at Columbia University is the leading presenter of new music in New York City and one of the most vital forces nationwide for innovative programming. In partnership with Columbia University School of the Arts, Miller is dedicated to producing and presenting unique events, with a focus on contemporary and early music, jazz, and multimedia. Founded in 1988, Miller has helped launch the careers of myriad composers and ensembles, serving as an incubator for emerging artists and a champion of those not yet well known in the U.S. A fourtime recipient of the ASCAP/Chamber Music America Award for Adventurous Programming, Miller continues to meet the high expectations set forth by its founders—to present innovative programs, support new work, and connect creative artists with adventurous audiences. Advisory Committee Paul D. Carter Mary Sharp Cronson* Stephanie French* Marcella Tarozzi Goldsmith Karen Hagberg Margo Viscusi* Mr. and Mrs. George Votis* Cecille Wasserman* Elke Weber I. Peter Wolff* Mark Jackson Eric Johnson Philip Mindlin Linda Nochlin Peter Pohly * Miller Theatre Advisory Board member Columbia University Trustees Jonathan D. Schiller, Chair A’Lelia Bundles, Vice Chair Mark E. Kingdon, Vice Chair Esta Stecher, Vice Chair Rolando T. Acosta Armen A. Avanessians Andrew F. Barth Lee C. Bollinger, President of the University William V. Campbell, Chair Emeritus Lisa Carnoy Kenneth Forde Noam Gottesman Joseph A. Greenaway, Jr. James Harden Marc Holliday Columbia University School of the Arts Carol Becker Dean of Faculty Benjamin Horowitz Ann F. Kaplan Jonathan Lavine Charles Li Paul J. Maddon Vikram Pandit Michael B. Rothfeld Claire Shipman Kyriakos Tsakopoulos Jana Hart Wright Dean of Academic Administration Miller Theatre Staff Melissa Smey Executive Director Brenna St. George Jones Director of Production Nora Sørena Casey Marketing & Communications Associate Katherine Bergstrom Artistic Administrator Rhiannon McClintock Executive Assistant Aleba & Co. Public Relations The Heads of State Graphic Design Charlotte Levitt Director of Marketing & Outreach James Hirschfeld Business Manager Megan Harrold Audience Services Manager Taylor Riccio Production Coordinator Thanks to Our Donors Miller Theatre acknowledges with deep appreciation and gratitude the following organizations, individuals, and government agencies whose extraordinary support makes our programming possible. $25,000 and above Francis Goelet Charitable Lead Trusts National Endowment for the Arts $10,000 - $24,999 William V. Campbell The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Mary Sharp Cronson Dow Jones Foundation H. F. (Gerry) Lenfest Fritz Reiner Center for Contemporary Music at Columbia University The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation New York State Council on the Arts The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation The Evelyn Sharp Foundation Margo and Anthony Viscusi CLC Kramer Foundation Craig Silverstein Carol Avery Haber / Haber Family Charitable Fund Karen Hagberg and Mark Jackson Donella and David Held Roger Lehecka Philip Mindlin Linda Nochlin Jeanine and Roland Plottel Jessie and Charles Price Peter Pohly Christopher Rothko Cecille Wasserman Janet C. Waterhouse Elke Weber and Eric Johnson Anonymous Stephanie French Claude Ghez Mary and Gordon Gould James P. Hanbury John Kander Mark Kempson and Janet Greenberg Paul J. Maddon Marian M. Warden Fund of the Foundation for Enhancing Communities Katharina Pistor James Sharp J. P. Sullivan Cia Toscanini Kathryn Yatrakis June O. Goldberg Richard Gray Barbara Harris Bernard Hoffer Alan Houston and Lisa DeLange Frank Immler and Andrew Tunick Sandra and Malcolm Jones William Josephson Rebecca Kennison L. Wilson Kidd, Jr. Sandra Kincaid Barbara and Kenneth Leish Arthur S. Leonard Richard H. Levy and Lorraine Gallard Peter C. Lincoln Patricia Lowy and Daniel Frank Caroline and Anthony Lukaszewski Marghretta McBean Gerald McGee Susan Narucki Mary and Andrew Pinkowitz Edmée B. Reit Monique Rinere in honor of James F. Rinere Carol Robbins Esther Rosenberg and Michael Ostroff William Ryall Mariam Said Eliisa Salmi-Saslaw James Schamus and Nancy Kricorian Elliot Schwartz Anita Shapolsky Timothy C. Shepard and Andra Georges Gilbert Spitzer and Janet Glaser Spitzer Peter Strauss Jim Strawhorn Larry Wehr Seymour Weingarten Ila and Dennis Weiss Elizabeth Wheeler Anonymous $5,000 - $9,999 The Amphion Foundation Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation $1,000 - $4,999 Rima Ayas Barbara Batcheler Susan Boynton Paul D. Carter Hester Diamond R. H. Rackstraw Downes Marcella Tarozzi Goldsmith Christine and Thomas Griesa $500 - $999 Oliver Allen Regula Aregger Mercedes Armillas ASCAP Elaine S. Bernstein Cedomir Crnkovic / Cavali Foundation Kristine and Joseph Delfausse $100 - $499 Gail and James Addiss Edward Albee Roger Bagnall Sandra and Marc Bernstein Andrew Birsh Jim Boorstein Alexandra Bowie and Daniel Richman Elizabeth and Ralph Brown Caplan Family Foundation Richard Carrick and Nomi Levy-Carrick Rashmy Chatterjee Ginger Chinn and Reggie Spooner Gregory Cokorinos Merry Conway Norma Cote David Demnitz Vishakha Desai and Robert Oxnam Rosamund Else-Mitchell Peter and Joan Faber Ruth Gallo Marc Gilman as of January 20, 2015 This Spring at Miller Composer Portraits Thursday, February 19 Stefano Gervasoni (b. 1962) “Something identifiably Italianate has persisted in Stefano Gervasoni’s music,” claims The Guardian’s Andrew Clements, “whether in its moments of playful allusion or expansive lyricism, its disorienting changes of direction or its Sciarrino-like scurries.” Thursday, March 5 Augusta Read Thomas (b. 1964) Augusta Read Thomas returns with a program including Resounding Earth, a percussion tour-de-force that brings together bells from around the world to create a “transfixing shimmer” (New York Times). Bach, Revisited Series season tickets still available! Thursday, March 12 Michael Gordon + Bach Michael Gordon blends “the fury of punk rock, the nervous brilliance of free jazz and the intransigence of classical modernism” (New York Times), and this inquisitiveness draws him to Bach, a harmonic and structural innovator. Thursday, April 9 Helmut Lachenmann + Bach An eye-opening dialogue between two composers who redefined the role of solo strings, this program features Bach and Lachenmann works for solo violin and cello, an early Lachenmann trio, plus a contemporary companion to Bach’s Two-Part Invention. Friday, May 8 Sofia Gubaidulina + Bach Sofia Gubaidulina shares a special affinity with Bach: both artists’ music is influenced by their faith, and they share a unique blend of emotional transcendence and compositional rigor. Upcoming Events Tuesday, February 10 doors at 5:30 p.m., music at 6:00 p.m. POP-UP CONCERTS Curtis 20/21 featuring the Curtis Guitar Studio Thursday, February 19, 8:00 p.m. COMPOSER PORTRAITS Stefano Gervasoni Yarn/Wire Mivos Quartet Ekmeles Tuesday, February 24 doors at 5:30 p.m., music at 6:00 p.m. POP-UP CONCERTS JACK Quartet Saturday, February 28, 8:00 p.m. Church of St. Mary the Virgin E A R LY M U S I C From The Imperial Court Stile Antico S TAY T U N E D I N Want to learn about new concerts, special announcements, and more? Join our mailing list at millertheatre.com or scan the QR code below. www.millertheatre.com • 212-854-7799 www.facebook.com/millertheatre • @millertheatre on Twitter 2960 Broadway at 116th Street, MC 1801, New York, NY 10027