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CONTACT: Ellen Schantz at (847) 491-5726 / eschantz@northwestern.edu
Outstanding Northwestern Music Students to Perform
at Kennedy
Center
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OF THIS PERFORMANCE
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performances from 2005, 2006, and 2007.
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EVANSTON, Ill. --- Five Northwestern University School of Music
students will perform at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.,
on May 21, as part of the John F. Kennedy for the Performing
Arts 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.
During the May 2007 cycle of performances, in addition to Northwestern,
students from the San Francisco Conservatory, Oberlin Conservatory,
Berklee College of Music, Eastman School of Music at the University
of Rochester, Indiana University Jacobs School of Music,
and Shepherd School of Music at Rice University will perform.
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 21:
Kristin
Figard, viola
Kristin Figard is a senior, majoring
in both Viola Performance and Harpsichord Maintenance and
Studies. She studies viola
with Professors Almita and Roland Vamos and harpsichord with
Professor Stephen Alltop. Initially focused on violin and
piano, she was one of only four Americans participating in the
semi-final round of the 1997 International Tchaikovsky Piano
Competition for Young Musicians. As a violist, Figard has
won First Prizes in the Collins Award of the American Opera Society
of Chicago, the Musicians Club of Women Scholarship Competition,
and the 18th Annual Kingsville International Young Performers
Competition. She has performed on the Dame Myra Hess Memorial
Concert Series and the “Live from Studio One” Series,
both broadcast live on WFMT, and has served as Principal Violist
of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the training orchestra of
the Chicago Symphony.
Michael
Martin, trumpet
Michael Martin, is a senior and studies with Professors Barbara
Butler and Charles Geyer. Martin has performed with many
noted orchestras, including the Atlanta Symphony, the New World
Symphony, and the Grand Tetons Music Festival Orchestra. This
past summer he was a trumpet fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center,
where he received the Roger Voisin Trumpet Award. Other awards
for Martin include First Prize in the National Trumpet Competition
in Washington, D.C. and winning the Northwestern University Concerto
Competition. In addition to his studies at Northwestern, Martin
is a member of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, the training orchestra
of the Chicago Symphony.
Micaela
Oeste, soprano
Micaela Oeste is pursuing a master’s degree in vocal performance
and studies with Professor Karen Brunssen. The 2006 winner of
the American Friends of Austria Music Award Competition for Singers,
she was a Young Artist with the Chicago Opera Theatre the same
year, singing the role of Giunone in Monteverdi’s Il
Ritorno D’Ulisse in Patria. She also participated
in the Young Artist Program at Wildwood Park for the Performing
Arts and was featured there as Gretel in Humperdinck’s Hansel
und Gretel . At Northwestern, Oeste has been heard
as Blanche in Poulenc’s Dialogues of the Carmelites,
as La Cecchina in Piccini’s La Buona Figliola, and
as Pieta in the a concert presentation of Eric Whitacre’s
opera-electonica Paradise Lost. Oeste holds a Bachelor
of Music degree in Vocal Performance from the University of Central
Arkansas.
Sian
Ricketts, oboe
Sian Ricketts is a senior and studies with Professor Grover
Schiltz. Among her awards are First Places in the winds/brass
division of the 2003 Schubert Club Competition and in the winds
division of the Thursday Musical Competition. She received
Second Prize in the 2000 Midwest Double Reed competition, and
is the recipient of both the John R. Galvin Scholarship and the
Virginia C. Shaffer Scholarship at Northwestern. Ricketts has
participated in the Brevard Music Center and in Quebec’s
Domaine Forget International Music Festival.
Johnny
Carlos Salinas, saxophone
Johnny Carlos Salinas is a doctoral student, studying with Professor
Frederick Hemke. Salinas has performed as a soloist with
orchestras throughout the Chicagoland area, and is also a member
of the Hyacinth and Osomo Saxophone Quartets. Both ensembles
have won the Chesapeake Bay Chamber Music Competition and have
been finalists at the Fischoff National and Coleman Chamber Music
Competitions. Salinas’ awards include first Prizes
in the International Frank Huntington Beebe Fund, the Hellam
Young Artist Competition, and the Andreas Makris Woodwind Competition. He
received both a bachelor’s and a master’s degree
from Northwestern University.
Pianist Kay Kim will accompany all five students.
______________________
Northwestern University at the Kennedy
Center
May 21, 2007, at 6:00 p.m.
Incantation, Thrène, et Danse (Alfred
Desenclos [1912–])
Michael Martin, trumpet
Kay Kim, piano
Sonata for Oboe and Piano (Paul
Hindemith [1895-1963])
Munter
Sehr langsam–Lebhaft–Sehr langsam-
Wieder
lebhaft
Sian Ricketts, oboe
Kay Kim, piano
Suite for Viola and Piano (Ernest
Bloch [1880–1959])
IV.
Molto vivo
Kristin
Figard, viola
Kay Kim, piano
Fantasie sur un thème original (Jules
Demersseman [1833–1866])
“Im Abendrot” from Four Last Songs (Richard
Strauss [1864–1949])
Johnny Carlos Salinas, saxophone
Kay Kim, piano
“O luce di quest anima” (Gaetano
Donizetti [1797–1848])f
from Linda
di Chamounix
“Mein Herr Marquis” (Johann
Strauss [1866–1939])
from Die
Fledermaus
Micaela Oeste, soprano
Kay Kim, piano
Visit the Kennedy Center's web page about the Northwestern School of Music,
including links to video of the 2005 and 2006 Conservatory Project performances.
ALUMNI: Attend the champagne reception immediately following
the concert!
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