
AUGUST PERFORMANCES
ClefWorks fans arrived at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival to attend the Stay Tuned 2008 concerts on Saturday, August 23 and Sunday, August 24 and were treated to multi-sensory concert experiences and fun-filled receptions. Early arrivals could finally discover the identities of ClefWorks’ mystery performers – 100 customized ClefWorks metronomes ticking down to a single voice, accentuated by striking lighting designed by ASF’s Thomas Rodman. Patrons appreciated the beauty, warmth, and intimacy of the Octagon stage, a perfect setting for ClefWorks’ innovative and intentionally casual approach to chamber music. Through this newly-minted partnership, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival continued its tradition of encouraging great cultural offerings in the Montgomery area and ClefWorks reaffirmed its commitment to teaming up with other arts organizations.
The applause following the dying echo of the last metronomic “tock” was only heightened by the entrances of violinist Ben Sung, pianist Xak Bjerken, and horn player Todd Harris Sheldrick. The three musicians first tackled Johannes Brahms’ “Trio for piano, violin, and horn” (1865), a heartfelt and deeply emotional work commemorating and celebrating the composer’s mother’s life, and then presented modern composer Gyorgy Ligeti’s “Trio for violin, horn, and piano” (1982), a dramatic and, at times, unsettling piece that, coupled with Rodman’s lighting designs, more than once elicited gasps from the audience.
At the concerts, Elmore DeMott, ClefWorks Board President, welcomed guests and thanked Bravo Sponsor Sterling Bank and the other patrons http://www.clefworks.org/sponsors.cfm who made the season possible. Deborah Moore, Chair of the ClefWorks Composition Competition, announced the 2008 winner, Scott Robbins of Spartanburg, SC, whose “Quartet for Violin, Viola, Cello, and Piano” (1999/2008) will be performed during ClefWorks’ Dream On season in January 2009. Stephen Poff, David Allred, and the LWT team created a short video of the announcement found at http://www.clefworks.org/currentWinner.cfm.
As an encore, the musicians surprised and amused both audiences by cramming together onto one piano bench to play a Bach chorale transcribed for one piano/six hands by Gyorgy Kurtag. This lighthearted tone continued after each performance, when concert-goers of all ages adjourned to the Patrons’ Lobby of the Carolyn Blount Theatre to dine on delightful dessert creations and raise a glass to the talented ClefWorks musicians.
Also celebrating the conclusion of the ClefWorks Stay Tuned season was Kimberly Baker, fresh from planning and successfully implementing the ClefWorks Outreach Concert, the exciting culmination of the Jubilee Community Center’s summer enrichment program. At the Outreach Concert, children and their parents got up-close and personal with the ClefWorks musicians, test-drove several instruments, and then enjoyed a reception featuring homemade goodies and custom-designed floral arrangements.
Dream On, the next ClefWorks incarnation, arrives in January 2009, and the creative forces of ClefWorks are dreaming up fabulous plans for the festival, including new venues, outreach events, and a children’s concert. To stay in tune with the dreaming, sign up for ClefNotes, the monthly e-newsletter that provides information on ClefWorks and other great classical music happenings in our area. Just click here: www.clefworks.org/nlsignup.php
MEET THE MUSICIANS
Ben Sung, Violin
Ben is a founding member of ClefWorks, Inc. and is also ClefWork’s Artistic Director. He is coming to us from Fargo, North Dakota where he is Concertmaster of the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony Orchestra. He is also a faculty member at both Minnesota State University-Moorhead and North Dakota State University, and is the Series Director of the Cheryl Nelson Lossett Performing Arts Series at MSUM.
This summer, Ben was honored with an invitation to be Guest Concertmaster of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra in Norway. He was also a featured soloist and teacher at Festival Invierno de Garanhuns in Brazil! Along with that, his piano ensemble, called the Arsenal Trio, was selected for the Chamber Music Residency at the Banff Centre for the Arts.
Ben has also performed as soloist with the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony Orchestra, National Repertory Orchestra, Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, Texas Music Festival Orchestra and the Solistas do Virtuosi of Festival Internacional de Musica in Recife, Brazil. He has participated in the Professional Training Program at Carnegie Hall, the Lucerne Festival Academy in Switzerland and at the New York String Seminar.
His accomplishments also include being selected as winner of the Eastman School of Music Starling Award, the Gladys Gingold Scholarship at Indiana University and the Violin Fellowship competition of the Montgomery Symphony. He has also recorded the music of composers Steve Rouse and Marc Satterwhite for the Centaur label. Ben Sung holds a Bachelor’s degree from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied with Oleh Krysa, and Master’s and Doctorate degrees from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he studied with Nelli Shkolnikova. He has also studied with Fredell Lack, Sonya Monosoff, Ida Kavafian and Mitchell Stern.
Ben and his wife Jihye moved from Montgomery to Fargo last year, and there he is enjoying running, watching the snow fall and everything that comes out of Jihye’s kitchen.
Todd Harris Sheldrick, French Horn
At eight years old Todd fell in love with the sound of the horn at his first Boston Symphony Orchestra concert. He decided at that early age to be a performing musician. Todd lives in Portugal now and is enjoying his position as principal horn of the Orquestra do Algarve. He finds special joy in bringing out the great wit and character found in horn parts of the symphonic repertoire, especially that of the classical period.
In addition to his regular duties, he has performed solo with orchestras on several occasions, he has recorded four CDs, including the Symphonie Concertante K.279b by Mozart, he has performed in many concert tours - including trips to London, Brussels, Milan and Vienna - and he has participated in numerous radio and television broadcasts.
Todd is equally comfortable with contemporary music and enjoys being an innovator, composer and improviser, specializing in extended techniques in both solo and collaborative performances. He is the creator of “Overtone74,” a horn based electro-acoustic improvisation machine. Since its premier in Phoenix in 2000, “Overtone74” has been heard in Tuscaloosa, Lisbon, Porto Edinburgh and most recently in Denver this past July. As an instructor, Todd has also presented lectures and demonstrations on extended techniques, improvisation and “Overtone74” at music festivals and horn symposia in Europe and the United States. Todd holds a B.M. from the Oberlin College Conservatory and a M.M. from Arizona State University, where he studied with Thomas Bacon.
Xak Bjerken, Piano
Pianist Xak Bjerken has performed solo and chamber music recitals in Europe and throughout the United States. He has made orchestral solo appearances in Edinburgh with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, in Rome with the Spoleto Festival Orchestra and in Disney Hall, Los Angeles, with members of the LA Philharmonic. Xak has also performed at the Royal Concertgebouw Hall in Amsterdam, at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Hall and at the Kennedy Center. He has also given recitals in Germany, Switzerland, Spain and Hungary.
Xak is the pianist of the Los Angeles Piano Quartet, which tours the U.S. regularly, and with his wife, pianist Miri Yampolsky, he directs MAYFEST, an annual chamber music festival in Ithaca, New York. In addition, he has directed three festivals of 20th-century music: “Angels, Saints and Birdsong: A Messiaen Festival,” “Through the Iron Curtain: Music of Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union” and “The Stravinsky Project.” Mr. Bjerken has held chamber music residencies at the Tanglewood Music Center and the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy. He has performed at the Olympic Music Festival and the Tucson Winter Chamber Music Festival and he has served as well on the faculty of the Eastern Music Festival.
Xak’s first solo recording for CRI, High Rise, was released in 2001. He has also recorded for Chandos, Albany Records, Fleur de Son and Koch International. He has also made three recordings with violist Michael Zaretsky for the Artona label. Mr. Bjerken earned his bachelor’s degree cum laude at UCLA, studying with Aube Tzerko, and his master’s and doctoral degrees from the Peabody Institute as a student and teaching assistant to Leon Fleisher.
EDUCATION AND OUTREACH 2008
Beyond extraordinary performances, ClefWorks has taken an active role in bringing music to new places within Montgomery. The ClefWorks musicians hit early high notes in January and February with engaging performances at the Montgomery Cancer Center, Carver Elementary School, Booker T. Washington (BTW) High School and at the YMCA.
Returning ClefWorks musician and cancer survivor, Gabby Diaz (on violin) and Katerina Juraskova (on cello) chose to provide free concerts at the Montgomery Cancer Center. It was Gabby’s way of giving back to the staff that treat cancer patients, and it was Gabby and Katerina’s goal to brighten the days of patients in the cancer center that day. They accomplished that goal along with the help of Gabby’s father, Manuel Diaz who played viola, and that of her mother, Betty Anne Diaz, who played the piano.
Also at the beginning of 2008, four returning ClefWorks musicians reached more than 500 children between the ages 3 to 18 by providing nine free master classes and six performances at local schools. Ben Sung and fellow musicians Matt Dunlap (on guitar), Hrant Parsamian (on cello) and Jihye Chang (on piano) worked with groups of music students to provide immediate, hands-on instruction and constructive criticism. At BTW and Carver, the ClefWorks musicians visited individual classrooms where students performed and received feedback. Ben Sung and Hrant Parsamian went to strings classrooms, Jihye Chang worked with piano students and Matt Dunlap worked with young guitarists.
At these unique master classes both the student performers and their classmates learned how to listen for and recognize technical elements such as rhythm, pitch, tone and phrasing, in addition to more general matters of musical style and expression. At the YMCA, the ClefWorks musicians made quite a hit by giving very young children the chance to play child sized instruments, including a cello and violin!
Stay Tuned for More Education and Outreach to Come this Season!
Dream On 2009 Festival January 21-January 31
Education, Outreach & Performances
Local elementary aged children enjoyed sample music styles ranging from bluegrass to jazz to ragtime to international folk at the ClefWorks Children's Concert on Saturday morning, January 31, at First Baptist Church of Montgomery. Everyone discovered the variety and excitement of live musical performance and learned the differences between a tango and a waltz and the similarities shared by a violin and a fiddle. The talented ClefWorks musicians walked their audience through the unique histories and special features of pieces by Scott Joplin, William Kroll, John Adams, Joaquin Turina and Dawn Wooderson and explained how these composers sometimes inspired or required the modification of musical instruments. Concertgoers also enjoyed viewing the colorful and creative entries of the inaugural ClefWorks Children's Art Contest, whose winners were revealed during the concert. This concert was made possible by ClefWorks and its community partner, The Junior League of Montgomery.
The final concert of the Dream On season, “Celebrate Montgomery”, was performed on Saturday night, January 31, at 129 Coosa. Listeners' civic pride was inspired by the fascinating rhythms of George Gershwin, the viscerally powerful tones of Dvorak, and the world premiere of 2008 ClefWorks Composition Competition Winner Scott Robbins’ “Quartet for Violin, Viola, Cello, and Piano (1999/2008).” Concertgoers explored with ears, eyes, mind, AND feet Montgomery’s storied past and newly-revitalized present while enjoying the casual atmosphere with Chris' famous hotdogs, popcorn, peanuts and Coca-Cola. With its winning combination of historical landmark and modern party place, 129 Coosa provided the perfect address for this exciting exploration and celebration of our city’s yesterdays and tomorrows.
Players for the Dream On performances included returning Montgomery Symphony Orchestra violin fellows Andy Simionescu and Ben Sung, along with former cello fellow Hrant Parsamian. Other performers were John Pickford Richards from the Alarm Will Sound ensemble and August concert favorite, pianist Xak Bjerken along with Kevin Manderville on guitar.
Touch the Music. Hear the Art. Yesterdays from the collection of Robert Fouts highlighted both evening concerts as ClefWorks continued to masterfully weave other art forms into its performances. Eyes feasted on projected images as ears soaked up the delicious mixture of music. Vintage photographs of Montgomerians enjoying afternoon picnics and dancing flapper-style complemented "Dance and Romance". "Celebrate Montgomery" spotlighted times past with historical photographs displayed in the 129 Coosa space. For a modern twist, selected cityscapes contrasted to their historical counterparts inspired "Celebrate Montgomery" patrons to envision the city's promising future.
ClefWorks and Junior League of Montgomery volunteers teamed together to create ClefWorks' first Art Contest. Fourth graders from Montgomery's four magnet elementary schools submitted artistic creations depicting their favorite place in Montgomery. The resulting colorful pieces provided the perfect backdrop for a Saturday morning of musical fun as enthralled children listened to the sounds of Americana and danced to ragtime favorites and new music. Junior League President, Susannah Cleveland, who was on hand to present winning participants with a special gift, watched as League volunteers partnered with ClefWorks in a morning of musical delights for children from all over the city, along with proud teachers and parents who joined the fun.
While the young winners were less thrilled with parting with their art for even a second, ClefWorkers cleverly convinced the budding artists to turn loose of their pieces just long enough for inclusion in ClefWorks' Saturday night "Celebrate Montgomery" concert.
Education and Outreach Inspiring young dreamers with a sampler of music styles was the theme of outreach efforts to local children, including the fourth graders of Paterson Elementary School located in downtown Montgomery during the 2009 Dream On Season. ClefWorks musicians took kids on a journey through time as they experienced a frolicking roller coaster ride of musical styles that dipped from bluegrass to jazz then back up again to ragtime to international folk. With listening ears, open hearts and tapping toes, mesmerized children entered uncommon worlds of opportunity to think beyond computer games and hitch their holiday bikes and scooters to a new star.
To make sure that ClefWorks spun its dream-like web for those among us who still feel like kids and who enjoy a good tune or two, ClefWorks musicians made visits to Montgomery Area Council on Aging Centers located in the Normandale and Newtown communities of the city. What a treat! This was not rocking to or with the oldies. Instead, it was Touching the Music. Hearing the Art in places that musicians and audiences found to be spirited and inspired.
Dream On Musicians
Xak Bjerken, Piano
Pianist Xak Bjerken has performed solo and chamber music recitals in Europe and throughout the United States. He has made orchestral solo appearances in Edinburgh with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, in Rome with the Spoleto Festival Orchestra and in Disney Hall, Los Angeles, with members of the LA Philharmonic. Xak has also performed at the Royal Concertgebouw Hall in Amsterdam, at Alice Tully Hall, Weill Hall and at the Kennedy Center. He has also given recitals in Germany, Switzerland, Spain and Hungary.
Xak is the pianist of the Los Angeles Piano Quartet, which tours the U.S. regularly, and with his wife, pianist Miri Yampolsky, he directs MAYFEST, an annual chamber music festival in Ithaca, New York. In addition, he has directed three festivals of 20th-century music: “Angels, Saints and Birdsong: A Messiaen Festival,” “Through the Iron Curtain: Music of Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union” and “The Stravinsky Project.” Mr. Bjerken has held chamber music residencies at the Tanglewood Music Center and the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy. He has performed for ClefWorks as well as the Olympic Music Festival and the Tucson Winter Chamber Music Festival, and he has served as well on the faculty of the Eastern Music Festival.
Xak’s first solo recording for CRI, High Rise, was released in 2001. He has also recorded for Chandos, Albany Records, Fleur de Son and Koch International, and in March of this year a cd of Stephen Hartke's solo and chamber music will be released by Chandos. He has also made three recordings with violist Michael Zaretsky for the Artona label. Mr. Bjerken earned his bachelor’s degree cum laude at UCLA, studying with Aube Tzerko, and his master’s and doctoral degrees from the Peabody Institute as a student and teaching assistant to Leon Fleisher.
Hrant Parsamian, Cello
Hrant Parsamian's interests range from the solo cello repertoire to chamber music and orchestral playing. He has recently been a soloist with the Houston Symphony and Montgomery Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Parsamian has been a prize winner in international competitions including Houston Symphony Ima Hogg Competition, Olga Koussevitzky Competition, Holland American Music Society Competition, and the Hudson Valley Competition. He is also a past Cello Fellow of the Montgomery Symphony, and has been an active ClefWorks musician since the organization’s inception.
Hrant is also an extensive collaborative artist, and has appeared frequently in venues such as Weill Recital Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Music Gettysburg, Banff Center for the Arts, and the Orford concert series. Recently he has collaborated with artists such as Hans Graf, Carlos Prieto, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Zakhar Bron, Natalya Shakhovskaya, Franz Helmerson, Richard Watkins, and Hansjorg Schellenberger. Together with violinist Benjamin Sung and pianist Jihye Chang, Hrant is a founding member of the Arsenal Trio, with recent performances at the University of Louisville New Music Festival and the Gregory Singer Concert Series in New York.
Born in Bulgaria, Hrant Parsamian began his cellos studies early under the guidance of his mother, giving his first recital at the age of six. Two years later he gave his debut as a soloist performing the cello concerto of C.P.E. Bach. Hrant Parsamian holds bachelor degrees from the Hochschule fur Music in Vienna and The Juilliard School, and received his Masters of Music from Yale University where he studied with world renowned cellist Aldo Parisot.
John Pickford Richards, Viola
John Pickford Richards holds degrees from the Interlochen Arts Academy and Eastman School of Music where his primary teachers were David Holland and John Graham.
Chiefly committed to new music, John is a founding member of the new music ensemble Alarm Will Sound, bringing him into contact with composers Steve Reich, David Lang, John Adams, and Wolfgang Rihm at venues including New York’s Carnegie Hall, Amsterdam’s Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ, and Moscow’s International Performing Arts Center. Former Artists-in-Residence at Dickinson College, Alarm Will Sound has worked with students at Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, New York University, and Duke University.
In addition to his work with Alarm Will Sound, John is a founding member of the JACK Quartet, a string quartet focused on new music, which has been fortunate enough to work closely with composers Helmut Lachenmann, Wolfgang Rihm, Samuel Adler, and Matthias Pintscher with appearances at Carnegie Hall, La Biennale di Venezia, the Lucerne Festival, and the Festival Internacional Chihuahua. Since forming, the quartet has studied closely with the Arditti Quartet, Kronos Quartet, Muir String Quartet, and members of the Ensemble Intercontemporain.
John was a ClefWorks Premiere Season musician, and has performed as soloist with the Pasadena Symphony, Armenian Philharmonic, Ossia New Music, and performed the solo part to Luciano Berio’s Chemins II under Pierre Boulez with the Lucerne Festival Academy Orchestra.
Andy Simionescu, Violin
Romanian-born violinist Andy Simionescu continues to enjoy an extremely active and multi-faceted performing career. He is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music where he studied with Szymon Goldberg. Andy was a First Prize winner in the Concert Artists Guild and the Washington International Competitions and was awarded the Silver Medal and Prize for Commissioned Work at the 1987 Montreal International Violin Competition. A Presidential Scholar in the Arts, he was also the recipient of a Career Grant from the Yale Gordon Trust.
Andy’s solo performances have been praised by critics for their “passion” and “elegance” and have taken him to the stages of Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Vienna’s Musikverein, Tokyo’s Casals Hall and throughout the United States, Europe and Asia. He was awarded a fellowship with the Montgomery Symphony Orchestra where he led the orchestra in several concerts. As Artistic Director of Performers of Westchester since 1998, Andy has played over sixty concerts in diverse collaborations with such artists as Pamela Frank (his wife), Leon Fleisher, Claude Frank, Gary Graffman, Jeremy Denk, Anthony Newman, Ed Arron, Nathaniel Rosen, Ron Thomas, Peter Wilcy, Paul Coletti, Toby Appel, Paul Neubauer, Cynthia Phelps, Eugenia Zukerman, Ricardo Morales, and Ben Verdery. He is a member of the Raphael Trio, and Visiting Artist with the Kansas City String Quartet Program.
He plays on a Sergio Peresson violin, which was made for him in 1983. An avid tennis player, Andy makes his home in the New York area.
Ben Sung, Violin
Ben is a founding member of ClefWorks, Inc. and is also ClefWorks’ Artistic Director. He is coming to us from Fargo, North Dakota where he is Concertmaster of the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony Orchestra. He is also a faculty member at both Minnesota State University-Moorhead and North Dakota State University, and is the Series Director of the Cheryl Nelson Lossett Performing Arts Series at MSUM.
This past summer, Ben was honored with an invitation to be Guest Concertmaster of the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra in Norway. He was also a featured soloist and teacher at Festival Invierno de Garanhuns in Brazil! Along with that, his piano ensemble, called the Arsenal Trio, was selected for the Chamber Music Residency at the Banff Centre for the Arts.
Ben has also performed as soloist with the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony Orchestra, National Repertory Orchestra, Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, Texas Music Festival Orchestra and the Solistas do Virtuosi of Festival Internacional de Musica in Recife, Brazil. He has participated in the Professional Training Program at Carnegie Hall, the Lucerne Festival Academy in Switzerland and at the New York String Seminar.
His accomplishments also include being selected as winner of the Eastman School of Music Starling Award, the Gladys Gingold Scholarship at Indiana University and the Violin Fellowship competition of the Montgomery Symphony. He has also recorded the music of composers Steve Rouse and Marc Satterwhite for the Centaur label. Ben Sung holds a Bachelor’s degree from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied with Oleh Krysa, and Master’s and Doctorate degrees from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he studied with Nelli Shkolnikova. He has also studied with Fredell Lack, Sonya Monosoff, Ida Kavafian and Mitchell Stern.
Ben and his wife Jihye moved from Montgomery to Fargo last year, and there he is enjoying running, watching the snow fall and everything that comes out of Jihye’s kitchen.
Kevin Manderville, Guitar
Kevin Manderville is active as a solo recitalist, chamber musician, and member of the Tantalus Quartet, appearing in major cities and festivals throughout North America and Europe. He has won prizes in several international competitions, including first prize at the Concours International de Guitare de Lachine, second prize at the Rantucci International Guitar Competition and consecutive top prizes at the Columbus Guitar Symposium Competition. He holds degrees from Stetson University, where he studied with Stephen Robinson and Florida State University, where he completed the Doctor of Music degree under the tutelage of Bruce Holzman. In addition, he has studied in masterclasses with some of today’s most prominent guitarists, including Sergio and Odair Assad, Manuel Barrueco, Eliot Fisk, Roland Dyens, and Oscar Ghiglia. A dedicated teacher, Dr. Manderville has taught in many diverse settings from universities to community programs. He currently resides in Montgomery, AL, where he directs the classical guitar program at Carver Elementary Arts Magnet School and is on the faculty at Troy University.
Touch the Music. Hear the Art
Internationally-renowned JACK Quartet Energizes Audiences during 2010 ClefWorks Festival