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  • Facts & Stories

    "The Role of Member States in Mediation"

    Italian Foreign Affairs Giulio Terzi di Sant’Agata met the press at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, after delivering his speech at the Informal High Level Meeting of the UN General Assembly on "The Role of Member States in Mediation."

    Terzi started his press conference with a memory of Justice Giovanni Falcone, killed by the mafia in Capaci (Sicily) exactlytwenty years ago. “Falcone was a key figure in the fight against organized crime and corruption,” the Minister stated, elaborating on the importance of commemorating him at the United Nations: “Today's discussion is very connected with it in terms of values,” Terzi commented.
     

    In his speech at the U.N. General Assembly, Terzi foused on Italy’s position on the role of UN member states in mediation processes. The Minister expressed the Italian government’s concern on viewing mediation as “a principle of volunteerism,” whereas the commitment to this pacified way of solving controversies “needs to be more deeply felt.”
     

    Terzi mentioned conflicts of jurisdiction on subjects such as the interpretation of the law of the sea and international waters, antipiracy and counterterrorism operations, as “issues that should be first of all addressed through mediation, but with honesty, clarity, and with concrete will to contribute to a solution.”
     

    The Minister’s remarks were pointed at the Italy-India controversy over the detainment of two Italian marines, Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone, charged by the Indian police with the murder of two Indian fishermen they allegedly mistook as pirates last February. The two were engaged in antipiracy operations in international waters, and should therefore be tried in Italy instead of being held prisoners in Kerala, India. “The Jamaica convention on the law of the sea is very clear,” Terzi stated, adding that the applicable jurisdiction in high waters is that of the nation to whi. “On this very unfortunate situation we expect that a quick solution will be facilitated by the Indian authorities, with which we are constantly in contact.”
     

    Italy has recently recalled its ambassador to India Giacomo Sanfelice for consultations: “There has been a very important meeting yesterday that I could not attend,” Terzi told the press, “we are examining aspects of the international law.”
     

    Terzi also auspicated that the international community will keep devoting energies in countering piracy: “This episode has already had a very negative effect on antipiracy efforts, and it should not constitute a blockage on peace and antipiracy operations.”
     

    Answering to the journalists’ questions, Terzi also described the Monti government’s position on the Syrian crisis saying that  Italy is “concentrating efforts on the Annan plan, that we accept without any mental or political reservation,” and adding that at the end of the 90 days period of time the plan comprises “we will have to discuss very seriously in the Security Council about the outcome of this engagement.” Whether there will be no satisfactory outcome, Terzi declared: “I guess the Security Council should give a pronouncement with stronger resolutions.”
     

    On the Eurozone’s condition, Terzi declared the Italian government has deemed the austerity measures “essential to address the present crisis ” since when the European Fiscal Compact was adopted, “but that from then on,” he added, “the focus should switch to growth measures.”

    “In Italy we are profoundly convinced that the agenda for growth is now the highest priority and we are confident that proposals will be on the table of the extraordinary European council tonight,” Terzi said.
     

    (F.G.)

  • Events: Reports

    PI-Philly Invites. The Legacy of Judge Falcone; 20 Years After his Death

    Italian Professionals in Philadelphia (PI-Philly) presents “The Fate of an Excellent Cadaver: The Legacy of Judge Falcone; 20 years after his death.” Columbia University’s Alexander Stille is giving his lecture celebrating the life and death of an iconic member of Italy’s Anti-Mafia pool, Giovanni Falcone. Philadelphia’s Italian Consul General, Luigi Scotto, is opening the lecture with an introduction.

    Falcone dedicated most of his career to prosecuting Mafia members in Palermo, Sicily. The height of Falcone’s successful was his presence in the famous Maxi Trials in the 1980s. These trials led to the conviction of many criminals involved in Mafia activity. The convictions were for hundreds of crimes including murder, drug trafficking, and extortion.

    Salvatore Riina, a power Sicilian mafioso, ordered Falcone’s assassination on May 23, 1992 by car bomb in retaliation for his conviction of multiple mobsters. His wife and two bodyguards were also taken in the blast. Falcone’s funeral was broadcast live on telvision while regular programming was suspended and the day was declared a national day of mourning.

    Borsellino was also a member of the Anti-Mafia Pool and a judge who convicted many criminals during the Maxi Trials. He dedicated most of his work to researching the political and economic powers in both Sicily and Italy and the Mafia’s influence on them. Riina had Borsellino assasinated by car bomb just months after Falcone.

    Stille is an established  journalist, author, and professor of International Journalism at Columbia. His studies and publications focus on Italian culture but emphasizes Italian politics and the Mafia. Stille has been published in several periodicals such as The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The New Yorker.

    Several books Stille has written include,  Benevolence and Betrayal: Five Italian Jewish Families Under Fascism, for which he won the Los Angeles Times Book Award, and Excellent Cadavers: The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic, investigating the Sicilian Mafia. It was dedicated to both Falcone and Borsellino for their prominence  in the anti-Mafia movement.
    -
    PI-Philly is an organization of entrepreneurs, researchers, and other professionals in the Greater Philadelphia area who promote social and professional interactions, organize cultural events, and foster the Italian heritage.  PI-Philly encourages Italian Americans in the Greater Philadelphia, as well as anyone interested in Italian culture, the Mafia, and the valiant efforts to fight the Mafia’s influence in Italy, to attend this event.

    The event is in University of Pennsylvania’s Class of ‘49 Auditorium, Houston Hall on Wednesday. Houston Hall is located at 34th and Spruce Streets and will begin promptly at 6 p.m. Refreshments will follow.

  •  
    Life & People

    ANNUAL CONFERENCE Reimagining White Ethnicity: Expressivity, Identity, Race

    This conference seeks to reclaim white ethnicity as a complex and historically-situated site thatinvites reflections on those heterogeneous and hybridic identities that often challenge hegemonic narratives and histories. It situates European-American ethnicities in relation to recent scholarship on whiteness, transnationalism, and diaspora.

    It positions collectives such as Greek America, Irish America, Italian America, Polish America and others as historically distinct yet interrelated cultural fields, whose complexities have not been sufficiently recognized by scholarship. Conference participants investigate historical trends and recent developments in the cultural expression of these ethnicities, including revitalization of heritage, institution-building, transnational exchanges, hybridities, and progressive cultural politics that emerge in the wake of globalization and multiculturalism.

  • Events: Reports

    Contest "Pino Daniele in New York" An image, a story, or a video for Coffee Time


    Nel nuovo CD di Pino Daniele "La Grande Madre" c'è un bellissimo brano intitolato "Coffee Time". Utilizzate il modulo online per inviarci una vostra immagine originale, un breve racconto (max 600 parole) o un video (non più di un minuto) ispirato a questo brano: una vostra interpretazione originale!

    I due primi premi consistono ciascuno in un ingresso omaggio per due persone al concerto di Pino del 7 giugno all'Apollo Theatre di New York (253 West 125th Street New York, NY).
    Ci sono poi altri 5 premi in palio che consistono in una copia omaggio del nuovo CD "La Grande Madre"!

     
    Il concorso si chiude il 31 maggio.
    I premi saranno consegnati durante l'incontro con Pino Daniele organizzato da i-Italy alla Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò della NYU il 6 giugno, a cui siete tutti invitati! (I partecipanti devono leggere e accettare il Regolamento del concorso)

     


     


    The new CD by Pino Daniele "La Grande Madre" contains a beautiful track entitled "Coffee Time".

     
    Use the online form to send us an image (picture or illustration), or a short story (max 600 words), or even a short video (max 1 minute) based on that track: your own original interpretation of Pino!
     
    The first two winners will get 2 free tickets each for Pino Daniele's concert on June 7 at the Apollo Theatre in New York.
     
    Other 5 contestants will win 1 free copy of Pino Daniele'a latest CD "La Grande Madre".
     
    The competion will end on May 31.
    Prizes will be awarded during a public conversation with Pino Daniele that will be held at New York University's Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò on June 6, which is free and open to the public. (To be eligible for the contest you need to read and accept the Official Rules.)


  • Events: Reports

    World Premiere, and Works by Giacinto Scelsi


    The Italian Academy at Columbia University presents

    AMP NEW MUSIC

    Gregory Cornelius and Adam Mirza, Co-Directors


    EKMELES VOCAL ENSEMBLE

    Jeffrey Gavett, Director


    May 9, 2012 at 8 PM


    Hô (excerpts) - 1960 - Giacinto Scelsi (1905-1988)

    Silvie Jensen, mezzo-soprano


    Maknongan - 1976 - Giacinto Scelsi

    Michael Ibrahim, saxophone


    Pwyll - 1954 - Giacinto Scelsi

    Ashley Addington, flute


    Friction (Premiere) - 2012 - Gregory Cornelius (b. 1977)

    Carl Bettendorf, conductor

    Ashley Addington, flute

    Leah Asher, violin

    Laura Barger, piano

    Michael Ibrahim, saxophone

    Mariel Roberts, cello

    Fred Trumpy, percussion

    Gregory Cornelius, sound engineer


    Quando stanno morendo, diario polacco n.2 (US Premiere) - 1982 - Luigi Nono

    (1924-1990)

     Ekmeles Vocal Ensemble:

    Jeffrey Gavett, conductor

    Megan Schubert, soprano

    Christie Finn, soprano

    Amirtha Kidambi, mezzo-soprano

    Silvie Jensen, mezzo-soprano

    Ashley Addington, flute

    Mariel Roberts, cello

    Gregory Cornelius, sound engineer


    In collaboration with the Ekmeles Vocal Ensemble, Harvestworks Digital Media

    Arts Center and the Fondazione Archivio Luigi Nono, Venice.


    PROGRAM NOTES


    In 1959, Luigi Nono delivered a polemical lecture to his colleagues at the

    Darmstadt Summer Courses for New Music, the epicenter of European post-war

    musical modernism. In the lecture titled “Historical Presence in the Music

    of Today”, Nono claimed that his fellow composers of the avant-garde were

    succumming to an ultimately nihilistic temptation in their newfound

    fascination for the instancy of the now. He saw this as a blind rejection of

    the critical role of history and dismissed the “evangelical talk” of “those

    who thought themselves able to to begin a new era ex abrupto, where are all

    would be programmatically ‘new’, those who would like to give themselves the

    convenient possibility of being both principle and end.” The “Darmstadt

    School” (an affirmative label originally coined by Nono) was turning into an

    aesthetic free-for-all.


    In retrospect it is not surprising that the high-mindedness of the early

    Darmstadt years would eventually come down to Earth. However one interprets

    the post-war modernist aesthetic, Nono’s invocation of history as the

    necessary awareness through which the avant-garde project must face its

    cultural reality was a prescient insight into the demands of the modern

    situation.


    First: sounds have histories. Sounds are not simply acoustic phenomena but

    are products or results of actions, natural or human, in various contexts

    and always for the sake of something important in those contexts. Sounds

    carry with them the history of their production as the trace of the

    performance through which they arise. Second, the organic relationship

    between process and result (history and presence) becomes an issue in

    modernity due to the technology question: is modern technology the source or

    cure to modern alienation? (Does Facebook™ connect us or ‘make us lonely’?).

    In the audio realm, recording technology dissociates the ‘acoustic’ sound

    from its production, but it also draws our attention to the immediacy of

    sound, its inner-life and fluid variability.


    The three composers on tonight’s concert have sought new means to musical

    sound via a personal engagement with its production. This engagement is

    physical, between the composer and the instrument, as well as collaborative,

    between composer and performer.


    All three make various uses of technology to access the immediacy of

    improvisational action and to develop spaces of interaction and tradition.

    In these ways, they attempt to develop through modernism the possibilities

    of local empowerment.


    THE COMPOSERS AND THEIR WORKS


    There are not too many details about the life of Italian composer Giacinto

    Scelsi (1905-1988). He came from a family of southern Italian nobility which

    afforded him financial independence throughout his life. In the 1930’s and

    40s he traveled around Europe and became close with surealist and symbolist

    artists in Paris. After a personal crisis and psychological breakdown in

    1948 that placed him in a mental institution for several years, Scelsi

    returned to composition under the guidance of a confluence of spiritual

    philosophies. Working closely with a small circle of performers, he devised

    methods of recording and transcribing improvisations that allowed him to

    hone in on nuances in timbre and microtonal melody. His music only came to

    broader attention a few years before his death when his works were performed

    at the Darmstadt Festival in 1982 (the same year, incidentally, as the

    premiere of Nono’s Quando stanno morendo).


    About his piece, Amp co-director Gregory Cornelius (b. 1977) writes:


    "Friction is only present when two surfaces touch.

    The greater the friction between surfaces, which correlates directly to the

    material nature of the surfaces, the more movement is inhibited and the more

    force is required to move one surface against the other. When movement does

    occur, sound waves radiate with the mechanical forces involved in their

    creation encoded within. Thus, while unseen, friction is easily felt.


    Last spring, while glued simultaneously to the television and my laptop, I

    sat stunned by the emotional scenes broadcast from the Middle East and North

    Africa. The energy and emotion emanating from both the crowds and the

    individual voices was captivating, and the friction between the oppressors

    and those seeking freedom intense. I wanted to react, but instead of writing

    a piece on a subject of which my only experience was as a remote observer, I

    ended up writing a more personal piece. I began with a series of recording

    sessions where I explored the interaction of surfaces. Not only was the

    amount of friction present between the surfaces frozen in the recordings,

    but also the physical exertion (often my own) involved in the gestures.

    Through these experiments and reflecting on the resulting sonic artifacts,

    the intimate and constrained sonic space of the work bloomed."


    Following his critique of the new directions at Darmstadt, Italian composer

    Luigi Nono (1924-1990) became active in anti-fascist and anti-imperialist

    liberation movements around the world, and during the 1960s he sought ways

    to explicitly integrate his dual commitments to artistic abstraction and

    political engagement. Later in life, Nono turned inward to face the elusive

    and fragmentary moments of experience. The featured composition on our

    program, Quando stanno morendo: diario polacco n. 2, is a reflective work

    from this final period. Like many of these works, the composition involved a

    process of ‘hands-on’ experimentation with musicians and technicians at one

    of Europe’s leading music-technology laboratories, the Experimental Studio

    in Freiburg, Germany. This collaborative working process became itself so

    woven into the fabric of the resulting works that their scores retain the

    living fluidity of an oral tradition.


    In Quando, the central dimension is vocal: four singers share a sober

    monody, a quiet lament parsed into its component outbursts, tremors and

    hesitations. The voices interweave and their ramifications are projected by

    an elaborate interactive electroacoustic setup into a multi-dimensional

    acoustic space. Singers and instrumentalists use microphones and live

    electronic processing techniques to shape and color each other’s sounds.

    Here, repercussions and reverberations acquire their own density, sonically

    materializing the frustrated political roar behind the composition.


    Seven texts by five poets were selected and edited by Nono’s friend and

    fellow Venetian, Massimo Cacciari. The poems were arranged into two groups

    of three that surround a single text by Russian Futurist, Velemir

    Chlebnikov. The outer movements meditate past despair and future hope, while

    Chlebnikov’s central text, which accuses Moscow of having lost its way,

    becomes a protest against the authoritarian eastern bloc regime that imposed

    martial law in Poland on the 13th of December, 1981, just months after Nono

    had been invited to compose a new piece for a festival in Warsaw. The title

    of the composition was taken from the final lines of a poem by Chlebnikov

    which concludes the piece: “quando stanno morendo, gli uomini cantano...”

    (when they are dying, men sing...).


    EKMELES VOCAL ENSEMBLE

    Megan Schubert (soprano)

    Megan Schubert, soprano, is a devoted ambassador of new and experimental

    music of the 20th and 21st centuries. She recently created the role of Saint

    Francis in a world premiere of Sasha Zamler-Carhart’s opera I Fioretti at La

    Mama E.T.C., the role of Scientist/Athena in Likeness to Lily’s COMMAND

    VOICE at TPAC, sang in the New York Premiere of Robert Ashley’s That Morning

    Thing at The Kitchen, in Denman Maroney's new opera Claudius Smith at Dixon

    Place, and performed and produced the NY premiere of Georges Aperghis's

    Sextuor: L'origine des espèces with Avant Media, and again at Joria

    Productions.  Upcoming performances include Jason Cady’s opera, Happiness is

    the Problem (5/10/12) at Roulette, and a program of all premieres at

    Symphony Space produced by Inhyun Kim's Ear to Mind (6/16/12).  Schubert

    co-curates Avant Media's annual Avant Music Festival with Randy Gibson at

    Wild Project.


    Schubert has performed music by Stockhausen for an audience under umbrellas

    in a torrential downpour for Make Music New York; world premieres at

    Carnegie Hall; with robots while locked inside a Van de Graaff Generator at

    Boston’s Museum of Science; on a bike flying by the audience in an

    installation piece at McCarren Park Pool, Brooklyn; in a giant potato sack

    while video was projected onto her frontside at Webster Hall; for inmates at

    a maximum security prison in Ossining, NY; with puppets at E 4th Street Fab!

    Fest; for Elliot Carter at a celebration of his 100th birthday; and with

    many ensembles championing art music and experimental jazz of today.

    Schubert holds degrees from Bennington College and Manhattan School of

    Music.


    Christie Finn (soprano)

    A two-time winner of an interpretation prize at the International

    Stockhausen Concerts and Courses (Kürten, Germany), Christie Finn, soprano,

    performed the role of Soprano II in the New York premiere of Georges

    Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’origine des Espèces. In the past year, Finn has sung

    with VocaalLAB (Amsterdam, Netherlands), Haarlem Opera Theater

    (Netherlands), the Hezarfen Ensemble (Istanbul, Turkey), and several

    ensembles in New York City.  Finn is a founder and member of the

    experimental music duo NOISE-BRIDGE, collaborating with clarinetist Felix

    Behringer.  She has been an active member of ekmeles since the group’s

    founding concert in September 2010. Finn made her recording debut with the

    release of the album The Year Begins To Be Ripe (Sonic Arts Editions) in

    works of John Cage and Stuart Saunders Smith.  Upcoming performances include

    Unsuk Chin’s Cantatrix Sopranica (Apeldoorn, Netherlands), the premiere of a

    new opera by Koka Nikoladze (Stuttgart, Germany), and Sofia Gubaidulina’s

    Hommage à T. S. Eliot with the Asko-Schoenberg Ensemble (Amsterdam,

    Netherlands). She holds graduate degrees in performance from Manhattan

    School of Music (Contemporary Performance Program) and Southern Methodist

    University.


    In addition to her career as a professional singer, Finn is also an active

    poet.  Composer Matt Aelmore has set her poetry to music, and current

    projects include a libretto for a new opera by Brooklyn-based composer Jason

    Cady and a collaboration with Chicago-based composer Christopher

    Fisher-Lochhead.  More information about her performance and poetry can be

    found on <http://christiefinn.com/>   <http://christiefinn.com/> http

    <http://christiefinn.com/> :// <http://christiefinn.com/> christiefinn

    <http://christiefinn.com/> . <http://christiefinn.com/> com.


    Amirtha Kidambi (mezzo-soprano)

    Amirtha Kidambi is invested in the performance and promotion of new and

    innovative music across a diverse array of styles and genres. As a

    performer, songwriter, educator, and curator, she strives to draw

    connections between seemingly disparate musical areas and communities. As a

    soloist and ensemble member in projects such as the The Sweat Lodge, the

    early music inspired band Seaven Teares and the Ekmeles contemporary vocal

    ensemble, Amirtha has performed in a variety of venues from DIY spaces to

    concert halls in Brooklyn and Manhattan including Le Poisson Rouge, ISSUE

    Project Room, Roulette, St. Mark’s Church, Death by Audio, Silent Barn,

    Galapagos Art Space and The Kitchen.  Recent performances include a November

    premiere of Robert Ashley’s WWW III (Just the Highlights), a premiere of

    Charlie Looker’s song cycle “Eve’s Prayer” with the Brooklyn Philharmonic

    String Quartet, Robert Ashley’s 1969 opera That Morning Thing at The

    Kitchen, and the New York premiere of George Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’Origine

    des Especes.


    Amirtha serves on the advisory board for Performers Forum, a monthly series

    at Exapno that connects performers, composers and music makers of any kind

    to engage in non-threatening discussion and dialogue. She also acts as an

    organizer and performer for The Sweat Lodge, the concert series arm of the

    forum that allows musicians a free range of expression in a casual and

    inviting atmosphere.  In January 2012, Amirtha joined the staff at ISSUE

    Project Room in Brooklyn as the Operations and House Manager.



    Silvie Jensen (mezzo-soprano)

    A vocalist of great versatility, hailed by the New York Times as

    "marvelous," Silvie Jensen enjoys a wide-ranging career, which includes

    early and contemporary music, opera and musical theater, and ethnic,

    improvised, and experimental music. She has performed at London’s Barbican

    Centre with Ornette Coleman, Teatro Comunale Ferarra with Meredith Monk,

    Carnegie Hall with Philip Glass, and Brooklyn Academy of Music. She sang in

    the New York premiere of Georges Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’origine des Espèces.

    Ms. Jensen has also appeared at Lyric Opera of Chicago, Ash Lawn Opera,

    Stonington Opera House, Riverside Opera, American Chamber Opera, One World

    Symphony, Miller Theater, Sacred Music in a Sacred Space, Voices of

    Ascension, Bang on a Can Marathon, Clarion Society, in Handel’s Messiah at

    Trinity Wall Street, and with the Broadway Bach Ensemble singing Mahler’s

    4th symphony and Canteloube’s Songs of the Auvergne.


    Her performance in Hildegard von Bingen's chant opera Ordo Virtutum, as well

    many of her performances as a vocal soloist with the Christopher Caines

    Dance Company, have been critically acclaimed by the New York Times. She has

    commissioned and premiered works created for her, and has presented solo

    recitals at Weill Hall, Steinway Hall, Symphony Space, Americas Society,

    Liederkranz Club, the Stone, Bonhams, Nicholas Roerich Museum, and the Cell

    Theater.  She has recorded for ECM, London, Koch, Helicon, MSR Classics, and

    Soundbrush Records labels.



    Jeffrey Gavett (conductor)

    Jeffrey Gavett, baritone, is dedicated to the creation and presentation of

    new music as composer, performer and improviser. He has performed with a

    broad range of collaborators, from the indie rock group Clogs to new music

    groups Ensemble de Sade, ICE, New Juilliard Ensemble, SEM Ensemble, Signal,

    Talea Ensemble, and Wet Ink Ensemble. His own mixed ensemble loadbang has

    premiered more than 40 new works in the past three years. In 2010 he founded

    the contemporary vocal ensemble Ekmeles, lauded by Alex Ross as

    “virtuosically adventurous”. He has worked with composers such as Nick

    Didkovsky, Reiko Füting, Liza Lim, Somei Satoh, Steven Takasugi, David Lang,

    and Terry Riley, performing the music of the latter two at the 2008 Bang on

    a Can Summer festival, where he was a fellow.


    Mr. Gavett has sung many premieres, including Somei Satoh's The Passion and

    Matt Marks's The Adventures of Albert Fish; US premieres of Liza Lim's

    Chang-O, Philip Maintz's Fluchtlinie, and Steven Takasugi's Strange Autumn;

    and works by Nils Vigeland and Susan Botti in a performance at Zankel Hall.

    He has performed at Merkin Hall with Signal, under the direction of Brad

    Lubman. In this performance he sang the US premiere of Harrison Birwistle's

    scena The Corridor and the premiere of Nico Muhly's Stabat Mater, and was

    praised for his "attractive" voice by the New York Times.


    Mr. Gavett holds degrees from Westminster Choir College and Manhattan School

    of Music’s Contemporary Performance Program, where he studied with Lucy

    Shelton.



    PERFORMER BIOS

    Ashley Addington (flute)

    A versatile and engaging performer, flutist Ashley Addington performs

    regularly with ensembles throughout the Boston area, most recently with Cape

    Cod Symphony, The Orchestra of Indian Hill,  the contemporary sinfonietta

    Sound Icon, and as a Guest Artist on Composer’s Concerts at Tufts

    University.  Ashley holds a Master of Music degree in Flute Performance and

    a Bachelor of Music in Music Education from Butler School of Music at The

    University of Texas at Austin. Her primary teachers are Marianne Gedigian

    and Robert Willoughby.


    Exhilarated by the challenge of learning new repertoire, Ashley enjoys

    performing contemporary music and the process of working with composers. She

    has participated as a fellow in the Summer Institute for Contemporary

    Performance Practice (SICPP) at New England Conservatory and in MusicX

    Festival in Blonay, Switzerland with eighth blackbird. Working to expand the

    repertoire for flute and cello, Ashley performs with cellist Rachel Arnold

    premiering commissioned works from  emerging composers. Other new music

    projects include performances with Callithumpian Consort, Vortex Ensemble

    for New and Improvised Music, Composers Concert at the Church of the Advent

    on Beacon Hill, Boston New Music Initiative, Amp New Music (NYC), Boston

    CyberArts Festival, and New Music Hartford. For upcoming performances, visit

    <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/>   <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/> www

    <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/> . <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/>

    ashleyaddington <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/> .

    <http://www.ashleyaddington.com/> com.



    Leah Asher (violin)

    Violinist and visual artist Leah Asher is an avid performer of contemporary

    music and creator of new artistic works. As a recipient of the Jacob K.

    Javits fellowship, she is currently studying with Curtis Macomber in the

    Contemporary Performance program at Manhattan School of Music.  Leah has

    performed with the Grammy award-winning ensemble, eighth blackbird, soloed

    with Oberlin Conservatory’s Contemporary Music Ensemble, and participated in

    the Lucerne Festival Academy under the direction of Pierre Boulez.  She has

    premiered chamber works by such composers as Frederic Rzewski, Rebecca

    Saunders, and Lewis Nielson. Leah bridges her two artistic worlds as a

    member of the interdisciplinary ensemble SoundPlay, and is sought out as a

    collaborator in other cross-genre work.



    Laura Barger (piano)

    New York-based pianist Laura Barger is increasingly sought after for her

    dedication to contemporary music and for her energetic and committed

    performances. She has performed internationally both as a soloist and

    chamber musician at The Lucerne Festival (Switzerland), The National Gallery

    of Ireland, Västerås Konserthus (Sweden), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

    (San Francisco), and the Darmstadt International Summer Festival for New

    Music (Germany). Active in New York's new music scene, she can be heard

    performing everywhere from John Zorn's downtown experimental mecca The Stone

    to the Kaufmann Center's Merkin Hall. Laura is also one of the founding

    member of Yarn/Wire, a piano and percussion quartet committed to exploring

    and expanding the body of works for that instrumentation since Bartok.



    Carl Christian Bettendorf (conductor)

    Carl Christian Bettendorf is a New York-based composer and conductor.  Born

    in Hamburg, Germany, he studied composition with Hans-Jürgen von Bose and

    Wolfgang Rihm in Munich and Karlsruhe before moving to New York, where he

    received his doctorate from Columbia University under Tristan Murail.  His

    works have been played at many prestigious venues and festivals on four

    continents, and he has received numerous awards, among them a six-month

    residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris and a Fromm

    Foundation commission.


    As a conductor, Mr. Bettendorf has worked with new-music ensembles in

    Germany and New York and served as assistant conductor for the Columbia

    University and American Composers orchestras, Miller Theatre, and the Munich

    Biennale.  He has recorded for Albany and Carrier Records, ArtVoice, Cybele,

    and Tzadik and his music was broadcast on German, Swiss, Canadian, U.S. and

    Australian radio.



    Gregory Cornelius (composer, sound engineer)

    Gregory Cornelius is an emerging composer who is fascinated by the nature in

    which technology can expand and transform musical expression. Whether using

    software he has developed to aid in performance and composition or using a

    mixture of microphones, loudspeakers, and audio editors to listen into the

    sound, Gregory strives for clarity of idea and a sense of vitality in his

    creative work. His works often incorporate aspects of both acoustic and

    electroacoustic music.


    Some of the recognition that Gregory has received for his works include a

    residency prize in the 34e Concours Internationaux de Bourges in 2007 and an

    honorable mention in the 2008 ASCAP/SEAMUS Student Commission Competition,

    which were both received for his electroacoustic composition Earth and Green

    (available on Volume 18 of the Music of SEAMUS CD series). In 2007, he also

    was invited to participate in the Composers Conference at Wellesley College,

    which included the premiere Handwoven for fourteen players.



    Michael Ibrahim (saxophone)

    Michael Ibrahim is a Canadian saxophonist based in West Virginia and New

    York City. His performances of concertos, recital repertoire, and new music

    have attracted much attention in North America and Europe. Noted for his

    "sheer virtuosity and musical intensity" (Calgary Herald), he has performed

    throughout North America, Austria, England, France, Germany, Holland, Italy,

    and Russia. In praise of his solo Bach recording, Saxophone Journal wrote,

    "The listener is in for an exciting musical ride."


    As a freelance performer at the center of New York City's contemporary

    classical scene, Ibrahim has worked with Amp Music, Either/Or, Fireworks

    Ensemble, International Contemporary Ensemble, Manhattan Sinfonietta, PRISM

    Quartet, Red Light New Music, SEM Ensemble, and Wet Ink. His solo and

    chamber music performances have taken place in venues such as Carnegie Hall,

    Lincoln Center, Merkin Hall, Miller Theater, Symphony Space, and the

    Kitchen. In New York, Ibrahim gave the US Premiere of solo pieces such as

    Stockhausen's Edentia, Boulez's Dialogue de l'ombre double, and Robin

    Hoffmann's Birkhahn-Studie for black grouse hunting call.



    Mariel Roberts (cello)

    New York-based cellist Mariel Roberts is quickly gaining recognition as a

    deeply dedicated interpreter and performer of contemporary music. She holds

    degrees from both the Eastman School and the Manhattan School of Music,

    where she specialized in contemporary performance practice while studying

    with Alan Harris and Fred Sherry. Mariel has performed with a variety of

    ensembles in venues around the world as a champion of living composers,

    including TACTUS ensemble, SIGNAL ensemble, Wet Ink, the Eastman Broadband,

    and NouveauClassical. Furthermore, she has been a participant in the Bang on

    a Can Festival, the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble, and the Lucerne Summer

    Festival led by Pierre Boulez. This spring Mariel just recorded her first

    solo album, a record of all new pieces for solo cello which she commissioned

    from some of New York's most promising young composers, which will be

    released in June of 2012.



    Fred Trumpy (percussion)

    Fred Trumpy attended the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College

    where he earned Bachelors of Music in Percussion performance, graduating

    Magna Cum Laude. He has performed with groups such as Talujon Percussion

    Quartet, Time Table Percussion, Iktus Percussion, LoadBang, Ursula Oppens,

    Lucy Shelton, Marcy Rosen, Antonio Hart, Michael Mossman, David Berkman,

    Face the Music, One World Symphony, Merrick Symphony, Merrick Choral,

    Astoria Symphony, Creative Ministry Performing Art Center, the Airport

    Playhouse, and has performed on the award winning film score Body/Antibody.

    Fred is a member of the Indy bands The Marine Electric and Living Room, and

    New York’s Most Dangerous Big Band.



    COLLABORATING PARTNERS


    Amp New Music is a new music group based in New York City that focuses on

    the experimental and avant-garde in the context of musical modernism.

    Without fixed ensemble, we draw from the rich new music scene in New York to

    organically develop a few concerts each year, each usually featuring a

    particular composer or nexus of compositions. Amp is directed by Adam Mirza

    and Gregory Cornelius.

  • Events: Reports

    A Luigi Nono U.S. premiere, a Gregory Cornelius world premiere, and works by Giacinto Scelsi


    The Italian Academy at Columbia University presents

    AMP NEW MUSIC

    Gregory Cornelius and Adam Mirza, Co-Directors


    EKMELES VOCAL ENSEMBLE

    Jeffrey Gavett, Director


    May 9, 2012 at 8 PM


    Hô (excerpts) - 1960 - Giacinto Scelsi (1905-1988)

    Silvie Jensen, mezzo-soprano


    Maknongan - 1976 - Giacinto Scelsi

    Michael Ibrahim, saxophone


    Pwyll - 1954 - Giacinto Scelsi

    Ashley Addington, flute


    Friction (Premiere) - 2012 - Gregory Cornelius (b. 1977)

    Carl Bettendorf, conductor

    Ashley Addington, flute

    Leah Asher, violin

    Laura Barger, piano

    Michael Ibrahim, saxophone

    Mariel Roberts, cello

    Fred Trumpy, percussion

    Gregory Cornelius, sound engineer


    Quando stanno morendo, diario polacco n.2 (US Premiere) - 1982 - Luigi Nono

    (1924-1990)

     Ekmeles Vocal Ensemble:

    Jeffrey Gavett, conductor

    Megan Schubert, soprano

    Christie Finn, soprano

    Amirtha Kidambi, mezzo-soprano

    Silvie Jensen, mezzo-soprano

    Ashley Addington, flute

    Mariel Roberts, cello

    Gregory Cornelius, sound engineer


    In collaboration with the Ekmeles Vocal Ensemble, Harvestworks Digital Media

    Arts Center and the Fondazione Archivio Luigi Nono, Venice.


    PROGRAM NOTES


    In 1959, Luigi Nono delivered a polemical lecture to his colleagues at the

    Darmstadt Summer Courses for New Music, the epicenter of European post-war

    musical modernism. In the lecture titled “Historical Presence in the Music

    of Today”, Nono claimed that his fellow composers of the avant-garde were

    succumming to an ultimately nihilistic temptation in their newfound

    fascination for the instancy of the now. He saw this as a blind rejection of

    the critical role of history and dismissed the “evangelical talk” of “those

    who thought themselves able to to begin a new era ex abrupto, where are all

    would be programmatically ‘new’, those who would like to give themselves the

    convenient possibility of being both principle and end.” The “Darmstadt

    School” (an affirmative label originally coined by Nono) was turning into an

    aesthetic free-for-all.


    In retrospect it is not surprising that the high-mindedness of the early

    Darmstadt years would eventually come down to Earth. However one interprets

    the post-war modernist aesthetic, Nono’s invocation of history as the

    necessary awareness through which the avant-garde project must face its

    cultural reality was a prescient insight into the demands of the modern

    situation.


    First: sounds have histories. Sounds are not simply acoustic phenomena but

    are products or results of actions, natural or human, in various contexts

    and always for the sake of something important in those contexts. Sounds

    carry with them the history of their production as the trace of the

    performance through which they arise. Second, the organic relationship

    between process and result (history and presence) becomes an issue in

    modernity due to the technology question: is modern technology the source or

    cure to modern alienation? (Does Facebook™ connect us or ‘make us lonely’?).

    In the audio realm, recording technology dissociates the ‘acoustic’ sound

    from its production, but it also draws our attention to the immediacy of

    sound, its inner-life and fluid variability.


    The three composers on tonight’s concert have sought new means to musical

    sound via a personal engagement with its production. This engagement is

    physical, between the composer and the instrument, as well as collaborative,

    between composer and performer.


    All three make various uses of technology to access the immediacy of

    improvisational action and to develop spaces of interaction and tradition.

    In these ways, they attempt to develop through modernism the possibilities

    of local empowerment.


    THE COMPOSERS AND THEIR WORKS


    There are not too many details about the life of Italian composer Giacinto

    Scelsi (1905-1988). He came from a family of southern Italian nobility which

    afforded him financial independence throughout his life. In the 1930’s and

    40s he traveled around Europe and became close with surealist and symbolist

    artists in Paris. After a personal crisis and psychological breakdown in

    1948 that placed him in a mental institution for several years, Scelsi

    returned to composition under the guidance of a confluence of spiritual

    philosophies. Working closely with a small circle of performers, he devised

    methods of recording and transcribing improvisations that allowed him to

    hone in on nuances in timbre and microtonal melody. His music only came to

    broader attention a few years before his death when his works were performed

    at the Darmstadt Festival in 1982 (the same year, incidentally, as the

    premiere of Nono’s Quando stanno morendo).


    About his piece, Amp co-director Gregory Cornelius (b. 1977) writes:


    "Friction is only present when two surfaces touch.

    The greater the friction between surfaces, which correlates directly to the

    material nature of the surfaces, the more movement is inhibited and the more

    force is required to move one surface against the other. When movement does

    occur, sound waves radiate with the mechanical forces involved in their

    creation encoded within. Thus, while unseen, friction is easily felt.


    Last spring, while glued simultaneously to the television and my laptop, I

    sat stunned by the emotional scenes broadcast from the Middle East and North

    Africa. The energy and emotion emanating from both the crowds and the

    individual voices was captivating, and the friction between the oppressors

    and those seeking freedom intense. I wanted to react, but instead of writing

    a piece on a subject of which my only experience was as a remote observer, I

    ended up writing a more personal piece. I began with a series of recording

    sessions where I explored the interaction of surfaces. Not only was the

    amount of friction present between the surfaces frozen in the recordings,

    but also the physical exertion (often my own) involved in the gestures.

    Through these experiments and reflecting on the resulting sonic artifacts,

    the intimate and constrained sonic space of the work bloomed."


    Following his critique of the new directions at Darmstadt, Italian composer

    Luigi Nono (1924-1990) became active in anti-fascist and anti-imperialist

    liberation movements around the world, and during the 1960s he sought ways

    to explicitly integrate his dual commitments to artistic abstraction and

    political engagement. Later in life, Nono turned inward to face the elusive

    and fragmentary moments of experience. The featured composition on our

    program, Quando stanno morendo: diario polacco n. 2, is a reflective work

    from this final period. Like many of these works, the composition involved a

    process of ‘hands-on’ experimentation with musicians and technicians at one

    of Europe’s leading music-technology laboratories, the Experimental Studio

    in Freiburg, Germany. This collaborative working process became itself so

    woven into the fabric of the resulting works that their scores retain the

    living fluidity of an oral tradition.


    In Quando, the central dimension is vocal: four singers share a sober

    monody, a quiet lament parsed into its component outbursts, tremors and

    hesitations. The voices interweave and their ramifications are projected by

    an elaborate interactive electroacoustic setup into a multi-dimensional

    acoustic space. Singers and instrumentalists use microphones and live

    electronic processing techniques to shape and color each other’s sounds.

    Here, repercussions and reverberations acquire their own density, sonically

    materializing the frustrated political roar behind the composition.


    Seven texts by five poets were selected and edited by Nono’s friend and

    fellow Venetian, Massimo Cacciari. The poems were arranged into two groups

    of three that surround a single text by Russian Futurist, Velemir

    Chlebnikov. The outer movements meditate past despair and future hope, while

    Chlebnikov’s central text, which accuses Moscow of having lost its way,

    becomes a protest against the authoritarian eastern bloc regime that imposed

    martial law in Poland on the 13th of December, 1981, just months after Nono

    had been invited to compose a new piece for a festival in Warsaw. The title

    of the composition was taken from the final lines of a poem by Chlebnikov

    which concludes the piece: “quando stanno morendo, gli uomini cantano...”

    (when they are dying, men sing...).


    EKMELES VOCAL ENSEMBLE

    Megan Schubert (soprano)

    Megan Schubert, soprano, is a devoted ambassador of new and experimental

    music of the 20th and 21st centuries. She recently created the role of Saint

    Francis in a world premiere of Sasha Zamler-Carhart’s opera I Fioretti at La

    Mama E.T.C., the role of Scientist/Athena in Likeness to Lily’s COMMAND

    VOICE at TPAC, sang in the New York Premiere of Robert Ashley’s That Morning

    Thing at The Kitchen, in Denman Maroney's new opera Claudius Smith at Dixon

    Place, and performed and produced the NY premiere of Georges Aperghis's

    Sextuor: L'origine des espèces with Avant Media, and again at Joria

    Productions.  Upcoming performances include Jason Cady’s opera, Happiness is

    the Problem (5/10/12) at Roulette, and a program of all premieres at

    Symphony Space produced by Inhyun Kim's Ear to Mind (6/16/12).  Schubert

    co-curates Avant Media's annual Avant Music Festival with Randy Gibson at

    Wild Project.


    Schubert has performed music by Stockhausen for an audience under umbrellas

    in a torrential downpour for Make Music New York; world premieres at

    Carnegie Hall; with robots while locked inside a Van de Graaff Generator at

    Boston’s Museum of Science; on a bike flying by the audience in an

    installation piece at McCarren Park Pool, Brooklyn; in a giant potato sack

    while video was projected onto her frontside at Webster Hall; for inmates at

    a maximum security prison in Ossining, NY; with puppets at E 4th Street Fab!

    Fest; for Elliot Carter at a celebration of his 100th birthday; and with

    many ensembles championing art music and experimental jazz of today.

    Schubert holds degrees from Bennington College and Manhattan School of

    Music.


    Christie Finn (soprano)

    A two-time winner of an interpretation prize at the International

    Stockhausen Concerts and Courses (Kürten, Germany), Christie Finn, soprano,

    performed the role of Soprano II in the New York premiere of Georges

    Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’origine des Espèces. In the past year, Finn has sung

    with VocaalLAB (Amsterdam, Netherlands), Haarlem Opera Theater

    (Netherlands), the Hezarfen Ensemble (Istanbul, Turkey), and several

    ensembles in New York City.  Finn is a founder and member of the

    experimental music duo NOISE-BRIDGE, collaborating with clarinetist Felix

    Behringer.  She has been an active member of ekmeles since the group’s

    founding concert in September 2010. Finn made her recording debut with the

    release of the album The Year Begins To Be Ripe (Sonic Arts Editions) in

    works of John Cage and Stuart Saunders Smith.  Upcoming performances include

    Unsuk Chin’s Cantatrix Sopranica (Apeldoorn, Netherlands), the premiere of a

    new opera by Koka Nikoladze (Stuttgart, Germany), and Sofia Gubaidulina’s

    Hommage à T. S. Eliot with the Asko-Schoenberg Ensemble (Amsterdam,

    Netherlands). She holds graduate degrees in performance from Manhattan

    School of Music (Contemporary Performance Program) and Southern Methodist

    University.


    In addition to her career as a professional singer, Finn is also an active

    poet.  Composer Matt Aelmore has set her poetry to music, and current

    projects include a libretto for a new opera by Brooklyn-based composer Jason

    Cady and a collaboration with Chicago-based composer Christopher

    Fisher-Lochhead.  More information about her performance and poetry can be

    found on <http://christiefinn.com/>   <http://christiefinn.com/> http

    <http://christiefinn.com/> :// <http://christiefinn.com/> christiefinn

    <http://christiefinn.com/> . <http://christiefinn.com/> com.


    Amirtha Kidambi (mezzo-soprano)

    Amirtha Kidambi is invested in the performance and promotion of new and

    innovative music across a diverse array of styles and genres. As a

    performer, songwriter, educator, and curator, she strives to draw

    connections between seemingly disparate musical areas and communities. As a

    soloist and ensemble member in projects such as the The Sweat Lodge, the

    early music inspired band Seaven Teares and the Ekmeles contemporary vocal

    ensemble, Amirtha has performed in a variety of venues from DIY spaces to

    concert halls in Brooklyn and Manhattan including Le Poisson Rouge, ISSUE

    Project Room, Roulette, St. Mark’s Church, Death by Audio, Silent Barn,

    Galapagos Art Space and The Kitchen.  Recent performances include a November

    premiere of Robert Ashley’s WWW III (Just the Highlights), a premiere of

    Charlie Looker’s song cycle “Eve’s Prayer” with the Brooklyn Philharmonic

    String Quartet, Robert Ashley’s 1969 opera That Morning Thing at The

    Kitchen, and the New York premiere of George Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’Origine

    des Especes.


    Amirtha serves on the advisory board for Performers Forum, a monthly series

    at Exapno that connects performers, composers and music makers of any kind

    to engage in non-threatening discussion and dialogue. She also acts as an

    organizer and performer for The Sweat Lodge, the concert series arm of the

    forum that allows musicians a free range of expression in a casual and

    inviting atmosphere.  In January 2012, Amirtha joined the staff at ISSUE

    Project Room in Brooklyn as the Operations and House Manager.



    Silvie Jensen (mezzo-soprano)

    A vocalist of great versatility, hailed by the New York Times as

    "marvelous," Silvie Jensen enjoys a wide-ranging career, which includes

    early and contemporary music, opera and musical theater, and ethnic,

    improvised, and experimental music. She has performed at London’s Barbican

    Centre with Ornette Coleman, Teatro Comunale Ferarra with Meredith Monk,

    Carnegie Hall with Philip Glass, and Brooklyn Academy of Music. She sang in

    the New York premiere of Georges Aperghis’ Sextuor: L’origine des Espèces.

    Ms. Jensen has also appeared at Lyric Opera of Chicago, Ash Lawn Opera,

    Stonington Opera House, Riverside Opera, American Chamber Opera, One World

    Symphony, Miller Theater, Sacred Music in a Sacred Space, Voices of

    Ascension, Bang on a Can Marathon, Clarion Society, in Handel’s Messiah at

    Trinity Wall Street, and with the Broadway Bach Ensemble singing Mahler’s

    4th symphony and Canteloube’s Songs of the Auvergne.


    Her performance in Hildegard von Bingen's chant opera Ordo Virtutum, as well

    many of her performances as a vocal soloist with the Christopher Caines

    Dance Company, have been critically acclaimed by the New York Times. She has

    commissioned and premiered works created for her, and has presented solo

    recitals at Weill Hall, Steinway Hall, Symphony Space, Americas Society,

    Liederkranz Club, the Stone, Bonhams, Nicholas Roerich Museum, and the Cell

    Theater.  She has recorded for ECM, London, Koch, Helicon, MSR Classics, and

    Soundbrush Records labels.



    Jeffrey Gavett (conductor)

    Jeffrey Gavett, baritone, is dedicated to the creation and presentation of

    new music as composer, performer and improviser. He has performed with a

    broad range of collaborators, from the indie rock group Clogs to new music

    groups Ensemble de Sade, ICE, New Juilliard Ensemble, SEM Ensemble, Signal,

    Talea Ensemble, and Wet Ink Ensemble. His own mixed ensemble loadbang has

    premiered more than 40 new works in the past three years. In 2010 he founded

    the contemporary vocal ensemble Ekmeles, lauded by Alex Ross as

    “virtuosically adventurous”. He has worked with composers such as Nick

    Didkovsky, Reiko Füting, Liza Lim, Somei Satoh, Steven Takasugi, David Lang,

    and Terry Riley, performing the music of the latter two at the 2008 Bang on

    a Can Summer festival, where he was a fellow.


    Mr. Gavett has sung many premieres, including Somei Satoh's The Passion and

    Matt Marks's The Adventures of Albert Fish; US premieres of Liza Lim's

    Chang-O, Philip Maintz's Fluchtlinie, and Steven Takasugi's Strange Autumn;

    and works by Nils Vigeland and Susan Botti in a performance at Zankel Hall.

    He has performed at Merkin Hall with Signal, under the direction of Brad

    Lubman. In this performance he sang the US premiere of Harrison Birwistle's

    scena The Corridor and the premiere of Nico Muhly's Stabat Mater, and was

    praised for his "attractive" voice by the New York Times.


    Mr. Gavett holds degrees from Westminster Choir College and Manhattan School

    of Music’s Contemporary Performance Program, where he studied with Lucy

    Shelton.



    PERFORMER BIOS

    Ashley Addington (flute)

    A versatile and engaging performer, flutist Ashley Addington performs

    regularly with ensembles throughout the Boston area, most recently with Cape

    Cod Symphony, The Orchestra of Indian Hill,  the contemporary sinfonietta

    Sound Icon, and as a Guest Artist on Composer’s Concerts at Tufts

    University.  Ashley holds a Master of Music degree in Flute Performance and

    a Bachelor of Music in Music Education from Butler School of Music at The

    University of Texas at Austin. Her primary teachers are Marianne Gedigian

    and Robert Willoughby.



    Leah Asher (violin)

    Violinist and visual artist Leah Asher is an avid performer of contemporary

    music and creator of new artistic works. As a recipient of the Jacob K.

    Javits fellowship, she is currently studying with Curtis Macomber in the

    Contemporary Performance program at Manhattan School of Music.  Leah has

    performed with the Grammy award-winning ensemble, eighth blackbird, soloed

    with Oberlin Conservatory’s Contemporary Music Ensemble, and participated in

    the Lucerne Festival Academy under the direction of Pierre Boulez.  She has

    premiered chamber works by such composers as Frederic Rzewski, Rebecca

    Saunders, and Lewis Nielson. Leah bridges her two artistic worlds as a

    member of the interdisciplinary ensemble SoundPlay, and is sought out as a

    collaborator in other cross-genre work.



    Laura Barger (piano)

    New York-based pianist Laura Barger is increasingly sought after for her

    dedication to contemporary music and for her energetic and committed

    performances. She has performed internationally both as a soloist and

    chamber musician at The Lucerne Festival (Switzerland), The National Gallery

    of Ireland, Västerås Konserthus (Sweden), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

    (San Francisco), and the Darmstadt International Summer Festival for New

    Music (Germany). Active in New York's new music scene, she can be heard

    performing everywhere from John Zorn's downtown experimental mecca The Stone

    to the Kaufmann Center's Merkin Hall. Laura is also one of the founding

    member of Yarn/Wire, a piano and percussion quartet committed to exploring

    and expanding the body of works for that instrumentation since Bartok.



    Carl Christian Bettendorf (conductor)

    Carl Christian Bettendorf is a New York-based composer and conductor.  Born

    in Hamburg, Germany, he studied composition with Hans-Jürgen von Bose and

    Wolfgang Rihm in Munich and Karlsruhe before moving to New York, where he

    received his doctorate from Columbia University under Tristan Murail.  His

    works have been played at many prestigious venues and festivals on four

    continents, and he has received numerous awards, among them a six-month

    residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris and a Fromm

    Foundation commission.


    As a conductor, Mr. Bettendorf has worked with new-music ensembles in

    Germany and New York and served as assistant conductor for the Columbia

    University and American Composers orchestras, Miller Theatre, and the Munich

    Biennale.  He has recorded for Albany and Carrier Records, ArtVoice, Cybele,

    and Tzadik and his music was broadcast on German, Swiss, Canadian, U.S. and

    Australian radio.



    Gregory Cornelius (composer, sound engineer)

    Gregory Cornelius is an emerging composer who is fascinated by the nature in

    which technology can expand and transform musical expression. Whether using

    software he has developed to aid in performance and composition or using a

    mixture of microphones, loudspeakers, and audio editors to listen into the

    sound, Gregory strives for clarity of idea and a sense of vitality in his

    creative work. His works often incorporate aspects of both acoustic and

    electroacoustic music.


    Some of the recognition that Gregory has received for his works include a

    residency prize in the 34e Concours Internationaux de Bourges in 2007 and an

    honorable mention in the 2008 ASCAP/SEAMUS Student Commission Competition,

    which were both received for his electroacoustic composition Earth and Green

    (available on Volume 18 of the Music of SEAMUS CD series). In 2007, he also

    was invited to participate in the Composers Conference at Wellesley College,

    which included the premiere Handwoven for fourteen players.



    Michael Ibrahim (saxophone)

    Michael Ibrahim is a Canadian saxophonist based in West Virginia and New

    York City. His performances of concertos, recital repertoire, and new music

    have attracted much attention in North America and Europe. Noted for his

    "sheer virtuosity and musical intensity" (Calgary Herald), he has performed

    throughout North America, Austria, England, France, Germany, Holland, Italy,

    and Russia. In praise of his solo Bach recording, Saxophone Journal wrote,

    "The listener is in for an exciting musical ride."


    As a freelance performer at the center of New York City's contemporary

    classical scene, Ibrahim has worked with Amp Music, Either/Or, Fireworks

    Ensemble, International Contemporary Ensemble, Manhattan Sinfonietta, PRISM

    Quartet, Red Light New Music, SEM Ensemble, and Wet Ink. His solo and

    chamber music performances have taken place in venues such as Carnegie Hall,

    Lincoln Center, Merkin Hall, Miller Theater, Symphony Space, and the

    Kitchen. In New York, Ibrahim gave the US Premiere of solo pieces such as

    Stockhausen's Edentia, Boulez's Dialogue de l'ombre double, and Robin

    Hoffmann's Birkhahn-Studie for black grouse hunting call.



    Mariel Roberts (cello)

    New York-based cellist Mariel Roberts is quickly gaining recognition as a

    deeply dedicated interpreter and performer of contemporary music. She holds

    degrees from both the Eastman School and the Manhattan School of Music,

    where she specialized in contemporary performance practice while studying

    with Alan Harris and Fred Sherry. Mariel has performed with a variety of

    ensembles in venues around the world as a champion of living composers,

    including TACTUS ensemble, SIGNAL ensemble, Wet Ink, the Eastman Broadband,

    and NouveauClassical. Furthermore, she has been a participant in the Bang on

    a Can Festival, the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble, and the Lucerne Summer

    Festival led by Pierre Boulez. This spring Mariel just recorded her first

    solo album, a record of all new pieces for solo cello which she commissioned

    from some of New York's most promising young composers, which will be

    released in June of 2012.



    Fred Trumpy (percussion)

    Fred Trumpy attended the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College

    where he earned Bachelors of Music in Percussion performance, graduating

    Magna Cum Laude. He has performed with groups such as Talujon Percussion

    Quartet, Time Table Percussion, Iktus Percussion, LoadBang, Ursula Oppens,

    Lucy Shelton, Marcy Rosen, Antonio Hart, Michael Mossman, David Berkman,

    Face the Music, One World Symphony, Merrick Symphony, Merrick Choral,

    Astoria Symphony, Creative Ministry Performing Art Center, the Airport

    Playhouse, and has performed on the award winning film score Body/Antibody.

    Fred is a member of the Indy bands The Marine Electric and Living Room, and

    New York’s Most Dangerous Big Band.



    COLLABORATING PARTNERS


    Amp New Music is a new music group based in New York City that focuses on

    the experimental and avant-garde in the context of musical modernism.

    Without fixed ensemble, we draw from the rich new music scene in New York to

    organically develop a few concerts each year, each usually featuring a

    particular composer or nexus of compositions. Amp is directed by Adam Mirza

    and Gregory Cornelius.

  • Facts & Stories

    EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY AT THE CONSULATE GENERAL OF ITALY IN NEW YORK

    AVVISO DI ASSUNZIONE DI IMPIEGATO A CONTRATTO
     

    Il Consolato Generale d’Italia in New York ha indetto una procedura di selezione per l’assunzione di un impiegato a contratto da adibire ai servizi di Autista/commesso/centralinista.

    L’avviso di assunzione ed il facsimile della domanda di ammissione alle prove selettive sono disponibili sul sito web del Consolato Generale: www.consnewyork.esteri.it.

    Le domande di ammissione alle prove per l’assunzione, da redigersi secondo il suddetto facsimile, dovranno essere presentate entro le ore 24:00 del giorno 8 maggio 2012

    EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY NOTICE

    The Consulate General of Italy in New York is selecting a contract worker to be hired as clerk, driver and receptionist.

    The job notice and a facsimile application to the selections are available on the Consulate’s website: www.consnewyork.esteri.it

    The application, to be filled in as the facsimile illustrates, must be submitted within midnight on May 8, 2012.

  • Facts & Stories

    ProPublica's Sebastian Rotella Wins 2012 Urbino Press Award

    Sebastian Rotella from ProPublica, the two times Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalism website, is the recipient of the 7th Annual Urbino Press Award, the Italian journalistic prize awarded each year to an American reporter who distinguished himself for his “ability to describe a world in change.”
    Senior Reporter at ProPublica, Rotella worked at the Los Angeles Times for 23 years before joining the investigative journalism online platform in 2012.

    A recipient of many journalistic awards for investigative reporting, Rotella is the author of the documentary film “A Perfect Terrorist,” aired by PBS in November 2011, which shed a light on the secret services’ blunders that led to the Mumbai terroristic attack in 2008.

    “I am honored to receive such a prize, conferred in the past to some of American journalism’s best reporters,” Rotella said yesterday night at the Italian Embassy in Washington, DC, where Ambassador Claudio Bisogniero announced him as the winner of the prize.

    Present at the ceremony were the main representatives of the American media, administration and Congress, and over 200 guests.

    “I am also happy to share this emotion with my parents, whom arrived in the US during the 1950s.” Rotella’s father, Salvatore Giuseppe Rotella, emigrated to the United States from Barcellona Pozzo di Gotto, Sicily in 1950. “In my house the American dream is not a cliché,” Rotella added.

    In his introductory speech, Ambassador Bisogniero stated that: “Tonight’s ceremony is not only intended to celebrate journalistic excellence, it is also an occasion to discuss on the state of information, living a delicate phase of transition characterized by the multiplication of the informational platforms.”

    ProPublica embodies all of the positive consequences of the transitional phase that contemporary journalism is living. Led by former Managing Editor of The Wall Street Journal Paul Steiger, the website is a non-profit and independent news source supported by the Sandler Foundation.

    In 2010 the website was the first online news organization to win a Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting, followed in 2011 by a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, the first such prize awarded to articles not published in print.  

    Rotella will receive the prize in Urbino on June 23, in a ceremony that will be held in the magnificent Ducal Palace of the city.

    Giovanni Lani, President of the Urbino Press Award, commented: “Five centuries ago Urbino’s Ducal Palace welcomed intellectuals from all over Europe. We are keeping that tradition alive by inviting great journalists and pundits in the hometown of Raffaello Sanzio and Piero Della Francesca.”

    Past winners of the award include Helene Cooper of the New York Times, David Ignatius of the Washington Post, Thomas L. Friedman of the New York Times, Martha Raddatz of ABC news, and Michael Weisskopf of Time magazine.

  • Events: Reports

    International Conference "Beyond Italy and New Spain"


    This conference aims to open new dialogues on Iberian art and architecture from the decade that saw the Aragonese conquest of Southern Italy (1443) and the establishment of the first Portuguese trading station on the African island of Arguim (1449) to that of the separation of the Portuguese and the Spanish crowns (1640).


    The two organizers — Michael Cole and Alessandra Russo — focus on different geographical areas and were motivated to undertake this project by a shared awareness of the fragmentation that currently characterizes a major field of art history — the study of sixteenth-century Iberian art and architecture. One of us started from a perspective on what is now the country of Italy, but which in the sixteenth-century belonged largely to Spain: the entire south, divided between the Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, was ruled by Spanish viceroys; the Duchy of Milan had governors appointed by Spain; territories from the Republic of Genoa to the city-states of the northeast were essentially Spanish dependences. The other confronted the anachronistically national point of view that often guides the study of "Mexican," "Peruvian," "Brazilian" or "Indian" art history, when in fact these territories were under the Spanish and the Portuguese crowns. Referring to these territories as "colonial" possessions is equally unhelpful for conceiving them in a larger and more dynamic frame — what we call the "Iberian" atlas, which encompassed not only large parts of America, Africa and Asia, but also broad regions within Europe itself.


    The participants in the conference will discuss artistic dynamics in or between at least two zones of the Iberian atlas (Portugal, Brazil, Flanders, Spain, Goa, Macao, Milan, Naples, Peru, the Philippines, Sicily, Sierra Leone, etc.). Themes will include the movement, reinstallation, and reinterpretation of images and objects; the materials of art making and their changing (or unchanging) meaning; printed and other reproductions and their relationship to new originals; the reinterpretation of architectural models in response to differing landscapes, labor conditions, technologies, and functional requirements; the travel of artists, patrons, and viewers; competing religious, political, intellectual, or patronage networks (Jesuits vs Franciscans, traders vs missionaries, Portuguese vs Dutch, etc.); the literature of art and its forms across space.

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