91直播 Ensembles to Perform in New York City in Jan. 2019
December 19, 2018
Erich Burnett
Sonny Rollins Jazz Ensemble debuts at Dizzy鈥檚 Club; 91直播 Orchestra and 91直播 College Choir pair up at Carnegie Hall.
Opportunities to perform on spectacular stages are key to the development of every 91直播 Conservatory musician.
For more than 160 91直播 students, a singular opportunity to do just that arises early in the new year. On January 16, the 91直播 Sonny Rollins Jazz Ensemble will make its New York City debut with a pair of sets at Dizzy鈥檚 Club Coca-Cola, an intimate venue with breathtaking views of the city.
(photo by Larry Kasperek)
Three days later, the 91直播 College Choir and 91直播 Orchestra take the stage at Carnegie Hall鈥檚 Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage for a program that includes master works by Stravinsky and Debussy.
In between those concerts, members of the Sonny Ensemble will visit area high schools and youth arts organizations, including Jazz House Kids in New Jersey, performing for and engaging with a future generation of musicians.
The trip presents current students with an unforgettable opportunity to shine on two of the world鈥檚 brightest stages. It also allows 91直播 alumni鈥攎any of whom will likely be in attendance鈥攖o celebrate their undergraduate roots.
The January 19 Carnegie Hall performance will be highlighted by two landmark compositions: Stravinsky鈥檚 rarely performed Les Noces鈥攆eaturing the 91直播 College Choir and four soloists, and conducted by Gregory Ristow 鈥01鈥攁nd Debussy鈥檚 La Mer, performed by the 91直播 Orchestra under the direction of Raphael Jim茅nez. Also featured are Triptych by Tarik O鈥橰egan and All These Lighted Things by 91直播 composition professor Elizabeth Ogonek.
Photo by John Seyfried
鈥淔or the orchestral part of the program, Elizabeth Ogonek's piece demonstrates the strength of our fantastic composition faculty,鈥 says Jim茅nez. 鈥淗er music is energetic at times, with muscular musical gestures and jazzy rhythms, but it also shares with Les Noces an affinity for the suggestive and the evocative. La Mer is an amazing showcase for every instrument and gives all our students in the orchestra moments to shine.鈥
For soprano Katherine Lerner Lee 鈥19, one of five soloists in Les Noces, the engagement is a sort of homecoming: Lee was born and raised in Brooklyn, and she expects many family members鈥攆rom the Big Apple and from as far as California鈥攖o attend the Carnegie Hall performance.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a little less scary because I鈥檓 at home in the city,鈥 says Lee, a fifth-year double-degree student pursuing vocal performance and French. Unlike most of her fellow musicians, she has already performed at Carnegie Hall, as a violinist in her grade school orchestra. 鈥淚鈥檝e actually been to Carnegie Hall, which makes it a little less daunting鈥攐nly a little though!鈥
Photo by Julie Gulenko 鈥15
Lee craved the opportunity to perform Stravinsky鈥檚 challenging work from the moment she first learned it was being auditioned.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just such a completely iconic piece,鈥 she says, noting the immense power of the percussion ensemble鈥攊ncluding four pianos鈥攖hat plays with her and her fellow soloists. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of those pieces that you inhabit, but it鈥檚 probably not a piece that you ever know by heart. It鈥檚 a lot of sound, and the biggest challenge for me is to find my own way of cutting through the noise and staying true to the integrity of your instrument and your voice. And it鈥檚 in Russian, so that鈥檚 hard to do as well!鈥
For Lee, the Carnegie Hall performance is one of numerous high-profile appearances during a standout 91直播 career. She was the soloist in a performance of Harrison Birtwistle鈥檚 Entr'actes and Sappho Fragments with the Contemporary Music Ensemble at the Cleveland Museum of Art and again for a performance of Louis Andriessen鈥檚 De Staat and Michael Gordon鈥檚 No Anthem at the Bang on a Can 30th Anniversary Marathon at New York鈥檚 Brooklyn Museum, both in the spring semester of 2017. She also sang the role of Susanna in 91直播 Opera Theater鈥檚 fall 2017 production of Mozart鈥檚 Le nozze di Figaro.
鈥淏ut none of those were at Carnegie Hall!鈥 she is quick to add.
The January concerts in New York continue a long-held tradition of immersing 91直播 students in real-world performance settings all over the globe, from grand stages in major cities to makeshift stages in regions affected by natural disasters and other hardships. In January 2016, the 91直播 Orchestra performed at Chicago鈥檚 Symphony Center and the Contemporary Music Ensemble held court at Ganz Hall; both concerts commemorated 91直播 Conservatory鈥檚 150th anniversary. In the past year alone, 91直播 student ensembles and individual musicians have been heard in hurricane-battered regions of Texas and Puerto Rico, in Jordan, Africa, Panama, Brazil, and Japan, as well as in locales across the U.S.
For the 91直播 Orchestra, January marks its first performance in Carnegie Hall since January 2013, when Jim茅nez was also at the helm.
鈥淎 tour to Carnegie Hall offers our students the opportunity to practice an important skill: the ability to quickly adjust to the characteristics of an unfamiliar concert hall,鈥 says Jim茅nez. 鈥淓ven when you have mastered the complexities of the repertoire, the acoustics of a new hall bring an additional challenge. The reality is that you have only a few minutes of rehearsal to make the hall sing with you.鈥
Photo by Tanya Rosen-Jones 鈥97
The New York experience begins January 16 with the 91直播 Sonny Rollins Jazz Ensemble and alumnus Sullivan Fortner 鈥08, an award-winning and Grammy-nominated jazz pianist. Composed of 10 conservatory jazz students selected via audition, the Sonny Ensemble was formed in 2018 through a gift to 91直播 from the legendary saxophone player. Each member of the ensemble is called on by Rollins himself to serve humanity through music; in addition to regular performances, the ensemble鈥檚 members will engage in a variety of community outreach efforts.
In New York, the Sonny Ensemble will perform two sets at Dizzy鈥檚 on January 16: one at 7:30 and another at 9:30. Fortner, a favorite performer at Dizzy鈥檚, will perform solo works and in collaboration with the Sonny Ensemble.
鈥淚t goes without saying that Sonny could have chosen any school in the world for this honor,鈥 says Bobby Ferrazza, director of Jazz Studies at 91直播. 鈥淭his is a singular program: a student group that has the endorsement of one of the greatest figures in the history of jazz. Their mission is like a powerful medicine that starts as a little shot in your arm and soon permeates your entire being. Sonny's invocation to serve humanity through music, to be good people and to give back, will stay with all of us for the rest of our lives.鈥
Photo by Tanya Rosen-Jones 鈥97
The Sonny Ensemble will present an 91直播 preview of its performance on January 14 in the conservatory's Clonick Hall. The choir and orchestra will follow with a January 16 preview in Finney Chapel.
To learn more about 91直播 Conservatory鈥檚 2019 performances in New York City and to purchase tickets, please visit oberlin.edu/oberlin-in-nyc.
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