Colorado at Carnegie
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1a1kNo-0G0]
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They practiced, practiced, practiced. They got the nod from their faculty and peers.
And then they practiced some more.
For 14 College of Music graduate and undergraduate students and one recent gradāthatās how you get to Carnegie Hall.
On Monday evening, Nov. 7, music at ¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder will be well represented on the East Coast when the College of Music puts on a showcase concert at Carnegie Hallās Weill Recital Hall. Alumni, family, faculty and friends will converge on Midtown Manhattan for an unforgettable evening of inspiring new works and virtuosic classics.
āBy presenting our top students at Carnegie Hall, we're letting the world knowāfirst and foremostāthat they are ready for this,ā says College of Music Dean Robert Shay.
On the heels of Aprilās Boettcher Hall concert in Denver, the Weill Hall performance represents one of the key elements of the College of Music Advantage: providing professional-level experiences for students.
āOpportunities like this Carnegie performance exemplify the edge we want to give to all our students,ā Shay says. āWe expect to present many more concerts like this in the future, in New York and elsewhere, but it's highly fitting we start at Carnegie, given what a debut there has meant through the years to so many of the world's greatest musicians.ā
For the student musicians, the reality of playing in front of a New York crowd in one of the most enduring venues in the world is just starting to sink in.
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Andrew Giordano, violin; Joshua Ulrich, violin; Andrew Krimm, viola; Zachary Reaves, cello
āA performance like this is one that gives you a real sense of legitimacy forever,ā says Altius Quartet cellist Zachary Reaves.
Reaves and the other members of the Fischoff Competition silver medalist Altius headline the program. It wonāt be their first time at Carnegie: they sat in the audience as their mentors, the world-renowned TakĆ”cs Quartet, perform there.
āIt was before we came to ¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ to study with them,ā says Reaves. āIt was inspiring to see them in that setting.ā
Still, itāll be their first time taking that intimate stage, and the graduate quartet-in-residence will take this opportunity to make a splash in New York.
āItās one of the most famous concert halls for a reason. Adding your name to the list of artists who have performed there adds a unique sense of pressure. Weāre going to raise our game.ā
At Weill Hall, the Altius performs movements from Mendelssohnās A-minor string quartet and Shostakovichās String Quartet No. 9 in E-flat Major.
Theyāll also bring a relatively new piece to the stageāwritten by a ¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder alumnus.
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Composer describes his āthrough fogā as an energetic and hopeful pieceāperfect for introducing New York to the pioneering Colorado state of mind.
āThe title came to me last January, as I drove back to Boulder after winter break in dense fog,ā Merz explains. āThe long drive took on a tone of perseverance through tough and hazy times. And triumph over the same hazy, unclear texture comes out in the piece.ā
Merz currently lives in Minneapolis, where heās working with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestraās and securing commissions. The Altius premiered āThrough Fogā last spring on the Pendulum New Music series at ¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder.
āIt shows off the capabilities of the instruments and includes some unusual combinations,ā Merz adds.
Having just graduated in May, Merz says hearing one of his pieces performed in Carnegie Hall will be encouraging as he embarks on his career. āAs a student, youāre always searching for validation for your work. This feels like a really validating moment for me.ā
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Tenor Michael Hoffman brings Schubertās āAuf dem Stromā to the hallāa piece he says is perfect for the relative close quarters of Weill.
āIn a large space, you wouldnāt have the intimacy that this piece calls for,ā Hoffman explains. āItās meant to be performed in a much smaller setting, where you can get close to the audience.ā
Hoffman will be joined on stage by Benjamin Anderson, horn, and Emily Alley, piano. He says the story of loss and lonelinessāwritten by Schubert as a farewell to Beethovenāis told beautifully by the melancholy voice of the horn.
"A common theme in lieder is unrequited love. Schubert uses the subtle undertones of this as an ode to Beethoven's influence on his musical development,ā Hoffman explains. āThe horn is the voice of heroic death and memories of the narrator's love, the piano paints the landscape of the varying intensities of the river and I depict the narrator's journey down the river."
Hoffman has his eyes on a chamber music performance career, and he says performing on the Weill Hall stage represents a milestone in his musical life.
"Music is the one thing thatās always brought the different people in my life together, from small-town Minnesota hunters and fishermen to the people Iāve met all around the world. I know I am in the right profession when my greatest passions can bring together those I love the most."
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In contrast to the lyrical Schubert, clarinetist Kellan Toohey is set to thrill audiences with German composer Jƶrg Widmannās āFantasie.ā
āItās extremely virtuosic, kind of crazy, fun to play and exciting to listen to,ā Boulder native Toohey says.
A clarinetist himself, Widmann wrote āFantasieā early in his career; itās considered one of the most challenging and innovative works in the clarinet repertoire. Toohey couples the piece with two movements from Carl Maria von Weberās āGrand Duo Concertant,ā which he performs with pianist Cecilia Lo-Chien Kao. Widmann took cues from Weber when composing āFantasie,ā making them the perfect pairing of romantic and modern clarinet themes.
āI think itās a great variety of music and shows off a lot of different colors and contrasts,ā Toohey says about the pieces. āIāve wanted to play in Carnegie Hall since I was a kid, and I hope people leave the concert inspired.
āWe canāt thank the College of Music enough for organizing this opportunity for us.ā
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Jason Friedman, Jordan Miller, Maggie Rickard, Cort Roberts
¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulderās horn quartet performs a newer work as well: Western composer Kerry Turner wrote āFanfare for Barcsā in 1989 to commemorate the success of the American Horn Quartet at a competition in Barcs, Hungary.
The fanfare opens the concert, in a way commemorating Coloradoās introduction to the East Coastās most legendary venue.
āItās celebratory and exciting and a little bit loud,ā says Jordan Miller, a member of the horn quartet. āAnd the horn is the perfect voice to kick off the concert.ā
Miller says that in order to get the most mileage out of āBarcsā and to fully prepare for Weill Hall, Associate Professor of Horn Michael Thornton set up a coaching session for the group with a member of a different quartetāTakĆ”cs Quartet violinist Edward Dusinberre.
āIt was incredible to get a chance to work with him,ā Miller says. āHeās one of the best chamber musicians in the world and weāre lucky to have had that opportunity.ā
Every member of the horn quartet hails from Colorado.
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Rounding out the program, pianist gives life to one of Lisztās most artistically interesting and beloved etudes, the Transcendental Ćtude No. 11 in D-flat. Full of chromatic harmonies, broken chords and full octave jumps, itās also challenging.
āLisztās works are almost always characterized as virtuoso,ā Burns says, ābut this piece also shows off the side of him thatās so beautiful, and I wanted to do something more personal for this setting.ā
Burns isnāt the only member of her family putting on the show of a lifetime in New York this November: Just the day before she takes the stage at Weill, sheāll be on the sidelines at the New York Marathon.
āMy father in law is running the marathon, so I have several family members in town already. It was a happy coincidence,ā she says.
With their repertoire set and rehearsals taking place as often as possible, the performers say their goal as they prepare for Carnegie is to represent the diverse talent of the College of Music and leave the audience on Nov. 7 with a sense of just how special the music scene is in Boulder.
āWe want them to feel that they went on a musical journey with us through all the different ensembles,ā says Hoffman. āIf theyāre thinking, āBoy, that school really has some incredible musicians and we should seek them out,ā that would be the ultimate goal.ā
The University of Colorado Boulder College of Music Showcase is Monday, Nov. 7 at 8 p.m. in Weill Recital Hall. Tickets are $40.