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CONTACT:
Judy Moore at (847) 491-4819 or jkm229@northwestern.edu
FOR RELEASE: January 21, 2009
PDF version of this
release
Bienen School to Webcast Five Live
Winter 2009 Music Events
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Five live Henry and Leigh Bienen School of
Music-related webcasts can soon be viewed online free of charge.
They will include two performances by the Northwestern University
Symphony Orchestra, two master classes on the art of improvisation,
and “Mando Magnificat,” a concert featuring world-renowned
mandolin players Sam Bush, Mike Marshall and Caterina Lichtenberg.
Northwestern’s Bienen School of Music will stream the
winter 2009 webcasts from Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, Evanston
campus. The starting times of all the listed events are in Central
Standard Time (CST).
Links to the webcasts will be made available online approximately
10 minutes prior to the starting time of each event. Viewers
will need the latest version of the RealPlayer media player.
For links to the webcasts or more information on the webcasts,
as well as the technical requirements for viewing them, visit
http://www.pickstaiger.org/index.php/webcasts.
The Northwestern University Symphony Orchestra will present
a concert of “German Musical Art” at 7:30 p.m. (CST)
Saturday, Jan. 31. Victor Yampolsky and Bienen School of Music
graduate student David Cubek will conduct a program that includes
the “Coriolan” Overture by Ludwig Van Beethoven,
Symphony No. 3 in F Major by Johannes Brahms and “Ein Heldenleben” by
Richard Strauss.
Performer, composer, author and University of Michigan Professor
Edward Sarath will present “Improvisation, Creativity and
Consciousness: New Pedagogical Horizons in Music and Beyond” at
6 p.m. (CST) Wednesday, Feb. 11. The hourlong presentation is
the first in the Bienen School of Music’s four-part series, “Music
Education for the 21st Century: Exploring Improvisation,” a
program of master classes designed to spark discussion and thought
on new and innovative ways to move music education forward. The
2009 series will be held from February through May. The Feb.
11 hands-on master class will explore improvisation as both a
means for creativity and a lens into the creative process, or
consciousness. The session will be based in a trans-stylistic
approach to improvisation that serves as an introduction for
musicians with little or no background in improvisation, as well
as a method for expanding the horizons of experienced improvisers.
Sarath will guide participants through rhythmic exercises, movement
and meditation practices. Viewers are encouraged to follow along
with their instruments and put the concepts of the class into
practice.
Musician, author, computer artist and educator Stephen Nachmanovitch
will present the second hourlong master class in the “Music
Education for the 21st Century” series at 6 p.m. (CST)
Thursday, March 5. In “Free Play: The Art of Improvisation,” Nachmanovitch
will help participants to strengthen performance techniques through
improvisation, overcome fears, take advantage of mistakes and
accidents, create well-formed music without a plan and renew
the pleasure of playing. The class will devote special attention
to ideas for bringing these techniques into school music settings.
The Symphony Orchestra’s Student Showcase will be webcast
at 7:30 p.m. (CST) Friday, March 6. Victor Yampolsky, Yahui Cheng
and Bienen School of Music graduate students David Cubek and
Robert McConnell will conduct. Featured soloists will include
cellist Charlene Prescott and violinist Ari Vilhjalmsson, winners
of the Northwestern Concerto Competition, and bass clarinetist
David Halperin. The program will feature Symphony No. 38 in D
Major (“Prague”) by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Cello
Concerto No. 1 in E-flat Major by Dmitri Shostakovich; Violin
Concerto No. 2 in G Minor by Sergei Prokofiev, and the winning
Student Composition Competition work written by David Carter.
Several renowned mandolinists will perform during the “Mando
Magnificat” concert at 7:30 p.m. (CST) Saturday, March
7. This celebration of the enduring versatility of the mandolin
will feature guest artists Mike Marshall & The Big Trio,
Sam Bush, Caterina Lichtenberg, Don Stiernberg, and the Milwaukee
Mandolin Orchestra with guitarist Mirko Schrader, pianist Larry
Harris and bassist Jim Cox. Their eclectic program will include
classical, jazz, new acoustic, Americana, blues and orchestral
music. This is the first of nine concerts that are part of Pick-Staiger’s
2009 Spring Festival, “Collaboration Exultation: A Festival
of Musical Connections” that begins March 7 and runs through
April 11.
For more information or to purchase tickets to these events,
visit the Pick-Staiger Web site at www.pickstaiger.org or phone (847) 467-4000.
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