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Women in New Music Festival: Inner Voices

February 6, 2007 :: No. 124

What:

Department of Music at Cal State Fullerton

When: March 1 – 4, 2007
Where:

Performing Arts Center, California State University, Fullerton
800 N. State College Blvd. (Nutwood and State College Blvd.) Fullerton

Program:

International Alliance for Women in Music Annual Concert
         8 p.m. Thursday, March 1, 2007
         Recital Hall
Zeitgeist: Two Percussion, Piano, Clarinet and Electronics
        
Friday, March 2, 2007
         7 p.m. pre-concert lecture
         8 p.m. concert
         Meng Concert Hall
International Women’s Electroacoustic Listening Room Project
        
9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Saturday, March 3, 2007
         Redfield Room (Performing Arts -170)
Viv Corringham, voice/electronics: ShadowWalks Lecture/Performance
        
3 p.m. Saturday, March 3, 2007
         Redfield Room (Performing Arts 170)
Lecture, Panel and Discussion
        
4 p.m. Saturday, March 3, 2007
         Redfield Room (Performing Arts 170)
Meredith Monk
        
8 p.m. Saturday, March 3, 2007
         Meng Concert Hall
University Symphony Orchestra
with the St. Petersburg String Quartet and University Singers
         Preconcert lecture with Tania León, composer
         Sunday, March 4, 2007
         3 p.m. pre-concert lecture
         4 p.m. concert
         Meng Concert Hall

Background:

INNER VOICES: The 6th Annual Women in New Music Festival is a celebration of women’s voices in new music.  Under the artistic direction of Pamela Madsen, the festival brings together artists from across the globe in a four-day gathering of performers, composers, academia and audience members.

Pamela Madsen
Pamela Madsen, director

“Each year the Women in New Music Festival has featured a different theme relating to the concept of voices in music,” explains director Pamela Madsen. “Last year the theme was ‘Voices on the Edge,’ a celebration of women composers from all over the world. From the festival, the Listening Room Project traveled extensively visiting festivals and centers for new music in San Francisco, New York, Miami, Minnesota, Amsterdam, Montreal and New Mexico and received invitations in Beijing, Shanghai, Japan and Greece.” “This year’s theme,” she continues  “was brought about from the careful listening in my travels last year, and hearing women composers focusing on inner landscapes, inner dialogues, reflections on life, sound and images—all brought to fruition through their music.  So this year, I chose to focus on this concept of "inner voices." 

Featured artists this year include Meredith Monk, chosen for her pioneering work in extended vocal techniques, combined with movement and media. Also participating is contemporary chamber ensemble Zeitgeist, Cuban composer Tania León and fellow composers Linda Dusman, Ann Millikan and Viv Corringham.

International Alliance for Women in Music—Annual Concert features IAWM-member performers and composers selected through an annual international call for works.  Performers include flutist/composer Jane Rigler, trombonist/composer Monique Buzzarte and the Cal State Fullerton New Music Ensemble performing works by Tania León and others. The concert is free.

Zeitgeist ensemble (two percussion, piano, clarinet and electronics) is dedicated to contemporary music that absorbs, stimulates and heartens by emerging and established composers of our time. Their program offers two premieres, Ann Millikan’s “Cantando Para A Onça,” and Madsen’s new multi-media electroacoustic work “Sedna,” based on the transformative Inuit myth of the Artic Sea Goddess, which features video projections by multimedia artists Snezana Petrovic and Andrea Polli, and arctic photographer Camille Seaman. Also on the program is Linda Dusman’s “O Star Spangled Stripes I.”

Zeitgeist Ensemble
Zeigeist Ensemble

“Zeitgeist lives in a world of colors scarcely to be matched by symphony orchestras. It lives onstage surrounded by instruments that look like the icons of a sonic religion…”—The Philadelphia Inquirer. Concert tickets are $20 ($12 with advance Titan discount) and the preconcert lecture is free.

International Women’s Electroacoustic Listening Room Project features a nonstop playback of works electroacoustic by women composers throughout the globe, including Kristine Burns, Anne Laberge and Pamela Z. The Listening Room strives to present a diverse sampling of different approaches to electronic music by women composers and serves as a space for collective reflection. This is a free event.

Viv Corringham
, voice and electronics presents “ShadowWalks,” a lecture/performance. Corringham blends improvisation, listening and soundscapes in her works. Born in England and based in Minnesota since 2004, she has performed and recorded internationally for 25 years. Her current project — ShadowWalk — reflects other people’s special walks, repeated and sung by her. ShadowWalks was created at Cal State Fullerton as part of her commissioned work from the American Composers Forum and the McKnight Foundation. This is a free event.

Lecture, Panel and Discussion offers the opportunity to pose questions and discuss numerous musical topics with a variety of guest composers, including Tania León, Linda Dusman, Ann Millikan, Viv Corringham, Pamela Madsen and others. This is a free event.

Meredith Monk composer, singer, filmmaker and director/choreographer, is a pioneer in what is now called “extended vocal technique” and “interdisciplinary performance.” Monk is the fourth generation singer in her family. Since graduating from Sarah Lawrence College in 1964, she has created more than 80 music/theater/dance and film works. Awards have included the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship, two Guggenheim Fellowships, a Brandeis Creative Arts Award, three Obies (including an award for Sustained Achievement), two Villager Awards, a Bessie for Sustained Creative Achievement, the 1986 National Music Theater Award, 16 ASCAP Awards for Musical Composition and the 1992 Dance Magazine Award. “When the time comes, perhaps a hundred years from now, to tally up achievements in the performing arts during the last third of the present century, one name that seems sure to loom large is that of Meredith Monk. In originality, in scope, in depth, there are few to rival her.” —The Washington Post. Concert tickets are $20 ($12 with advance Titan discount).

Meredith Monk
Meredith Monk

University Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Kimo Furumoto, offers a program entitled “Soundscapes,” melding sounds from around the world.  Joining the orchestra is the acclaimed St. Petersburg String Quartet performing Schoenberg’s Concerto for String Quartet (freely adapted from Handel’s Concerto Grosso Op. 6, No. 7). In addition, they also will perform two movements from Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 8. Also on the program is guest composer León’s “Batá” and Copland’s “Buckaroo Holiday.” Rounding out the concert, Fullerton’s renowned University Singers, led by Robert Istad, join the orchestra in John Corigliano’s “Fern Hill” and “Make Our Garden Grow” from Bernstein’s “Candide.” Concert tickets are $35 ($20 with advance Titan discount), and the preconcert lecture with León is free.

Box Office:

Tickets available at the Performing Arts Center box office 657-278-3371.  Hours: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Mondays-Fridays and one hour prior to performance.  Or online at: www.tickets.com

Internet Site:

http://www.arts.fullerton.edu

Media Contacts:

Elizabeth Champion, College of the Arts at 657-278-2434
Pamela Madsen, director, at 657-278-2152


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