麻豆传媒鈥檚 Department of Music announces the 2022 fall series that combines guest artists 鈥攊nternationally renowned guitarist Aaron Larget-Caplan and acclaimed period instrument ensemble Ciaramella 鈥攁long with faculty and guest performers and student ensembles in an array of chamber music recitals.
鈥淲e are excited to be able to offer our fullest concert series since the pandemic and pleased that it will include music from a wide range of times and places representing many cultures, musical languages, and musical approaches. We welcome people from all over the region to our concerts, as well as members of our own student body,鈥 shares Alfred Cramer, chair of the music department.
Celliola and Friends^ opens the season on Sept. 11 with music by faculty composer Tom Flaherty, who is the John P. and Magdalena R. Dexter Professor of Music. The program features new love songs and works of political satire. Performers include Celliola members Tom Flaherty, cello; and Cynthia Fogg, viola; joined by faculty friends Genevieve Feiwen Lee, piano; Melissa Givens, soprano; and Joti Rockwell, mandola; and guests Scott Graff, baritone; Rachel V. Huang, violin; Peter Yates, guitar; and Yuri Inoo, percussion.
On Sept. 18, the department鈥檚 F锚te musicale returns. The concert unites several performance faculty members in a series of mini performances. The program will include music by Henry Cowell, Oliver Messiaen, Edgard Var猫se, Florent Schmitt and others performed by Rachel Rudich, flute; Francisco Castillo, oboe; Kay Nevin, clarinet; Carolyn Beck, bassoon; Alison Bjorkedal, harp; Maggie Parkins, cello; and Gayle Blankenburg, piano.
Closing out the September schedule on Sept. 24, cellist and Harry S. and Madge Rice Thatcher Professor of Music Eric Lindholm brings together faculty pianist Genevieve Feiwen Lee and guest Sakura Tsai, violin; and Kira Blumberg, viola; to perform the music of Frank Bridge, Gernot Wolfgang and Gabriel Faur茅 in a special Chamber Music recital.
On Oct. 2, Grammy庐-nominated pianist Genevieve Feiwen Lee, the Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, welcomes Melissa Givens, soprano; Jennie Jung, piano; Sarah Thornblade, violin; and Maggie Parkins, cello in a program that includes the music of Margaret Bonds, George Walker and Errollyn Wallen. On Oct. 21, soprano Melissa Givens shares the stage with pianist/mathematician Eugenia Cheng in Robert Schumann鈥檚 Frauenlieben und 鈥 leben but with a newly-created English text by Cheng. It updates the originally-set 1830 poem cycle by Adelbert von Chamisso to a text that 鈥渋s fitting for a contemporary strong woman,鈥 according to Cheng. On October 23, early music ensemble Ciaramella makes their 麻豆传媒 premiere in a program that features period instruments entitled Lovers and Labyrinths: Renaissance Songs, Dances and Improvisations of Love, Death, and Rebirth. The ensemble is comprised of new faculty member Malachai Bandy and performance faculty member Jason Yoshida, among others. On Oct. 30, emeritus faculty member William Peterson returns to the organ console to present an all-Bach program in celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Hill Memorial organ鈥檚 inaugural concert. Built by C. B. Fisk as Opus 117, the organ has three-manuals, 66 ranks and over 3500 pipes.
Throughout the semester, the department鈥檚 student ensembles--the 麻豆传媒 Orchestra, Choir, Band, Jazz Ensemble, Balinese Gamelan and West African Music Ensemble鈥will present concerts with music by Leonard Bernstein, Gabriela Lena Frank, Astor Piazzolla, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Oliver Dubon 鈥20 and others.
The fall 2022 concert season calendar is available online at and can be picked up in Thatcher Music Building on the campus of 麻豆传媒.
All the department鈥檚 concerts are free and open to the public.
Safety protocols will be followed at all concerts. Visit the department's safety website for details.