Kenan Institute for the Arts LINKS Commissions to be Performed in 2010 Season

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE               

News media contact   
Scott Carpenter
336.722.9660 or scott@capturevalue.com

 

KENAN INSTITUTE FOR THE ARTS LINKS COMMISSIONS
TO BE PERFORMED IN 2010 SEASON


WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (December 29, 2009) – The Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts established the LINKS Commissioning Awards in Music to connect professional faculty members from the University of North Carolina School of the Arts (UNCSA) with other professional artists across the country and to enhance the reputation of the school as a vibrant center for artistic creativity.  

Four LINKS Commissions in Music were awarded. Wave Hill, composed by Laura Kaminsky and commissioned by violinist Kevin Lawrence, chair of the string department at UNCSA, premiered on November 7, 2009 at UNCSA. The remaining three will be performed during 2010. Two concerts will take place in January:

The Daedalus String Quartet, winners of the Guarneri String Quartet Award from Chamber Music America, commissioned Lawrence Dillon’s String Quartet No. 4: The Infinite Sphere and will premiere it at Wolf Trap on January 15, 2010. The latest in Dillon’s Invisible Cities String Quartet Cycle, the fourth quartet takes its inspiration from Pascal’s reference to an “infinite sphere, whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.”  The piece taps the potentials of Classical circular forms and techniques to create an exuberant, wheels-within-wheels showcase for a virtuosic ensemble.  A performance of this piece is scheduled for January 16, 2010 at UNCSA in Watson Hall and a subsequent performance is planned for the Howland Chamber Music Circle.  Dillon is the Composer in Residence at UNCSA.  To purchase tickets for the Watson Hall performance, call (336) 721-1945 or visit www.uncsa.edu/performances.

The CanAm Piano Duo, which is comprised of Christopher Hahn, Assistant Professor of Piano at the University of Montana and Karen Beres, keyboard instructor at UNCSA, commissioned composer David Maslanka to write a piece for two pianos and two percussionists, which will be premiered on January 12, 2010 at 7:30 p.m. in Watson Hall at UNCSA. To purchase tickets for this event call (336) 721-1945 or visit www.uncsa.edu/performances.

Ransom Wilson, internationally acclaimed flutist, Director of the UNCSA Symphony Orchestra and artist teacher of conducting at UNCSA and beatbox flutist Greg Pattillo commissioned Randall Woolf to compose a concerto for beatbox flute and orchestra called Native Tongues, blending Hiphop rhythms, Jazz and Classical traditions. Soloist Pattillo will perform his magic (seen by millions on YouTube) on beatbox flute while the string orchestra echoes the sounds of turntables and rap vocals.  The premiere will take place in the Stevens Center in downtown Winston-Salem, North Carolina on May 21, 2010 at 7:30 p.m. To purchase tickets for this event call (336) 721-1945 or visit www.uncsa.edu/performances.

“We are thrilled with anticipation as we come to the realization of these collaborations between musicians and composers,” said Dr. Margaret S. Mertz, Executive Director of the Kenan Institute for the Arts.  “UNCSA faculty musicians and composers are working in close partnership with nationally recognized artists across the country.  The resulting music will uplift our hearts, challenge our minds, and energize our senses. “

The Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts (www.kenanarts.org) is a privately funded program of the University of North Carolina School of the Arts that incubates projects that sustain artists at every point in their creative development through strategic partnerships that capitalize on visionary thinking in the arts. 

The University of North Carolina School of the Arts (www.uncsa.edu) is the University of North Carolina’s conservatory for the arts, dedicated entirely to the professional training of students possessing exceptional talents in the performing, visual and moving image arts. UNCSA offers students focused, intense, professional training at the high school, baccalaureate, and masters levels in its schools of Dance, Design and Production, Drama, Filmmaking and Music.


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