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MEDIA CONTACT: Judy Moore at (847)
491-4819 or jkm229@northwestern.edu
PDF version of this press release
Read The Washington Post Review
Watch
an archived version of the performance (Scroll down to May
23)
Read a recap of the event and the alumni reception that followed
Outstanding Northwestern Music Students to Perform at Kennedy
Center
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Four Northwestern University School of Music
students -- including one from Evanston and another from Lake
Bluff -- will perform at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.,
on May 23, as part of the John F. Kennedy for the Performing
Arts year-old Conservatory Project for developing and presenting
young talent.
Twice a year,the nation’s leading music schools are invited
to send students to the Kennedy Center's Terrace Theatre to introduce
top new talent to the public. Project participants have the opportunity
to be critiqued by world-renown musicians, such as conductor
Leonard Slatkin and tenor and opera administrator Plácido
Domingo.
"The Conservatory Project creates an ongoing showcase for
our nation's exceptional young musical artists and is a wonderful
opportunity for them to be heard on a national stage," said
Michael M. Kaiser, president of the Kennedy Center.
During the May 2005 cycle of performances students from the
Juilliard School, Eastman School of Music, Curtis Institute,
San Francisco Conservatory, Berklee College of Music, Shepherd
School of Music and Peabody Conservatory will be featured, in
addition to the students from Northwestern.
The Conservatory Project is part of the Kennedy Center's "Performing
Arts for Everyone" initiative, which provides free daily
performances at 6 p.m.
The following Northwestern music students will perform at the
Kennedy Center May 23:
- Cellist Anna Burden, 20, a junior who studies with Professor
Hans Jorgen Jensen, will perform Gregor Piatigorsky’s "Variations
on a Theme of Paganini." The winner of more than 15
prizes, Burden has served as principal cellist for the Midwest
Young Artists Orchestra, the Viva Vivaldi Orchestra, and
is principal cellist of the Northwestern University Symphony
Orchestra. She is a resident of Lake Bluff, Ill.
- Trumpeter Ethan Bensdorf, 20,
a sophomore who studies with Northwestern Professors Barbara
Butler and Charles Geyer, will perform Oskar Böhme's
Concerto for Trumpet in F Minor, Op. 18. Bensdorf is a
member of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the training
orchestra for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and an active
freelancer in the area, performing with such groups as
the Lira Ensemble and the Chicago Chamber Orchestra. Bensdorf
is a resident of Evanston, Ill.
Pianist Yoko Yamada-Selvaggio will accompany Burden and
Bensdorf.
- Marimbist Owen Clayton Condon, 27, is pursing
a doctor of music degree at Northwestern where he studies with
Professor Michael Burritt Condon will perform Northwestern
alumnus Joseph Schwantner’s
1990 work "Velocities." Condon has performed with
the Tucson Symphony and the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and
as a guest artist with the contemporary ensemble eighth blackbird.
Condon is a resident of Louisville, Ky.
- Canadian-born pianist Winston Choi, 27,
is a doctoral student at Northwestern studying with Professor
Ursula Oppens. Choi will perform Olivier Messiaen’s
Prelude No. 5 ("Les sons
impalpables du rêve") and Alexander Scriabin's Piano
Sonata No. 5, Op. 53. Choi has been the recipient of numerous
prizes and honors, including First Prize in the 2002 Orléans
Concours International in France for Twentieth Century
Music and Second Laureate in the 2003 Honens International
Piano Competition in Calgary, Canada. He has been a featured
guest artist in orchestras around the world, including
France's l'Orchestre Symphonique d'Orleans, Canada's Calgary
Symphony Orchestra, Colombia's La Orquesta Sinfonica, and
the Boston-based Kalistos Chamber Orchestra. Highlights
of his 2004-05 season include appearances at the Festival
Agora and Festival de Messiaen in France, the Warsaw Autumn
Festival in Poland, and the Samtida Music Festival in Sweden.
Choi is a resident of Toronto.
"I
am very pleased that the School of Music has been selected
for this prestigious program," said Dean Toni-Marie Montgomery. "The
Conservatory Project will introduce new audiences to the wonderful
talent here at Northwestern."
More
information about The Conservatory Project
Note to media: For more information about
Northwestern University’s
participation in the Conservatory Project, contact Ellen Schantz
at 847-491-5726 or eschantz@northwestern.edu.
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