RE-INVENTION - Bowdoin International Music Festival
Transcription
RE-INVENTION - Bowdoin International Music Festival
notes Spring | 2016 I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L www.bowdoinfestival.org David Ying & Phillip Ying, Artistic Directors Many thanks to the Sponsors of our concert series RE-INVENTION Acadia Trust Baker Newman Noyes Bath Savings Trust Co. The Brunswick Hotel and Tavern The Brunswick Inn Down East Magazine The Gamper Family HM Payson The Highlands L.L. Bean Maine Public Broadcasting Network Norton Insurance—Financial Portland Press Herald/ Maine Sunday Telegram Sebasco Harbor Resort Thornton Oaks The Times Record “The Festival experience gives more than a simple introduction, it is a platform to bond with extraordinary gifted artists, reconnect and strengthen older friendships, and chart new goals together.” — Kaplan Fellow ’15 52nd Season June 25–August 6, 2016 Scholarship Benefit Dinner Tuesday, June 28, 2016 Bowdoin College P lans and preparations are well underway for our 52nd season. Last summer we celebrated the close-knit and nurturing community that has always been a defining feature of the Festival. With this year’s theme of Re-Invention, we move toward the future. Classical music is an art made alive by continual re-invention in composition, performance, and teaching. It also characterizes the process that keeps our Festival growing, vital, and dynamic. Re-Invention is essential to all music making. Our 2016 program of music will be re-invented by our outstanding artist faculty while our students re-invent the artistic traditions taught to them. Re-Invention provides an opportunity for audiences, students, and faculty to reflect on the elements that keep the Festival meaningful and fresh. That is the power of Re-Invention. — David Ying & Phillip Ying welcome Katherine Lehman executive director W e are delighted to announce Katherine Lehman as the new Executive Director of the Bowdoin International Music Festival. For the past six years Katherine has served as the Director of the Sewanee Summer Music Festival (SSMF), a teaching festival held on the campus of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee. She has a long record of successful and innovative leadership in an organization remarkably similar to our Festival. Following Katherine’s appointment as SSMF Director in 2010 she led the Festival out of a decade of artistic and financial distress to fiscal security, a greater quality and diversity of student body than ever before, and ultimately to national recognition. During her first year as Director SSMF went from a $150,000 operating deficit to an $80,000 surplus. She has since increased student enrollment to 200, nearly tripled the annual operating budget, expanded student scholarships, and raised the caliber of students. She has also demonstrated an innovative ability to connect the music of the Festival with various communities in new and effective ways. in connecting music with the community. We believe that her deep personal knowledge of and passion for music will be a valuable asset as we move our Festival forward into the future. Katherine studied music at the Eastman School of Music, the University of Kansas (BA—Violin Performance, Phi Beta Kappa), and Northwestern University (Master of Music—Performer’s Certificate). She previously served as a member of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and the South Bend Symphony Orchestra. As an accomplished violinist and member of the music faculty at the University of the South, Katherine is an avid advocate for chamber music and the mentoring of young musicians. Her principal focus as Director has been to tap into the creativity of talented faculty and students and to provide the resources and structures that enable them to flourish. She brings the potential to connect the artistic with the operational aspects of Bowdoin International Music Festival. Katherine has spent time with David Ying and Phillip Ying and they are particularly excited about her interest Festival Receives Matching Challenge A long-time supporter of the Festival has announced a matching grant of $10,000. The anonymous grant will match dollar for dollar any new or increased donations to the Festival, up to $10,000. The donor said, “There is a new energy at the Festival, an increased vitality. I am happy to support Phillip and David in their vision for the Festival.” The funds will go to support scholarships for Festival participants. Mark Your Calendar The 2016 Gamper Festival of Contemporary Music July 28, 30, and 31. “During this weekend the whole Festival shines. Performers and composers from the faculty and student body collaborate to present and illuminate the music of our time. Audiences are treated to three evenings of cutting-edge works and premieres which could be the classics of tomorrow.” — Derek Bermel Festival Faculty and Alumni; Artistic Director American Composers Orchestra at Carnegie Hall fted young musicians from around the wo i g e r a p e r p rld for “to 2 bowdoin international music festival www.bowdoinfestival.org Introducing a new 2016 String Quartet Fellowship T he Festival is pleased to present a new String Quartet Fellowship for pre-formed ensembles. “There are more string quartets forming now than at any other time in history, and there is more music written for the string quartet than any other ensemble,” according to Artistic Director David Ying. He adds, “I recently read that this isn’t the Golden Age of string quartets, but the Platinum. I’d have to agree.” David calls the string quartet, “one of the great chamber music ensembles.” The String Quartet Fellowship will follow the format of our immensely popular Kaplan Fellowships, which were created in 2014 in celebration of the Festival’s 50th anniversary season. This new program is geared toward mature, accomplished players at the beginning of significant careers in music, with a focus on the study and performance of string quartet literature. Fellows will bring to the Festival multiple years of experience playing and growing as an ensemble, and will have developed into a well-polished quartet. Unlike other programs–where students are assigned to a single faculty studio, Fellows are considered “students of the Festival.” They collaborate with faculty to create an individualized program of significant training with artist instructors and chamber music coaches. a life in music www.bowdoinfestival.org Our student concerts are at an all-time high in terms of quality and attendance. String Quartet Fellows will add polished performances of their own, as they will arrive as a pre-formed, cohesive ensemble. “We have great empathy for them,” David says. “They are on the cusp of doing important things. We want to provide this opportunity for them to grow, develop, and learn.” In an effort to make this program accessible to all applicants, Fellows are provided with room, board, and full tuition. During their six-week residency Fellows will enjoy intensive chamber music study, be featured performers in our Monday Showcase concert series, and will have significant exposure within the Festival and throughout the community. The quartert will study alongside the Kaplan Fellows with renowned artist instructors, guest artists, soloists, and other pre-professional classical musicians from around the world. Their mentors will include the Ying, Jupiter, Ariel, and Shanghai Quartets, and faculty from the New York Philharmonic, major conservatories such as Eastman, Indiana, Juilliard, New England Conservatory, Peabody, and London’s Royal College. Bowdoin International Music Festival Board of Trustees chairman Rol Fessenden vice chairman Jan Williams Treasurer Peter Griffin Secretary Elliot Rosen Patricia Brown Margy Burroughs Maryan Chapin Beatrice Francais Dr. Bernard Givertz Sam Hayward Victoria Miele James T. Morgan Herbert Paris Dr. Hugh Phelps Norman Rapkin, Esq. William A. Rogers, Jr., Esq. Claudia Spies Dominique van de Stadt Richard Stephenson Katharine J. Watson David Ying Phillip Ying through study with world-class artists …” spring news 3 Wonderful Music with the Kaplan Fellows Play a part Sponsor a Student q YES! I would like to underwrite a scholarship for a student to attend the Festival. q $6,500: tuition plus room and board and fees for a Kaplan Fellow q $3,500: tuition for a six-week student q $1,900: tuition for a three-week student q $5,000: sponsor a guest artist Make a Contribution q YES! I wish to make a tax-deductible contribution of $ to the Bowdoin International Music Festival. q Founder q Benefactor q Maestro q First Chair q Patron q Artist q Contributor q Friend ($10,000 and above) ($5,000–$9,999) ($2,500–$4,999) ($1,000–$2,499) ($500–$999) ($250–$499) ($100–$249) (Gifts up to $99) Name(s) Address City StateZip q My check is enclosed, payable to the Bowdoin International Music Festival. q My/our company will match this gift. (Please send a matching gift form, if applicable.) q Please charge my q Mastercard q Visa Card # Exp. Date Sec. Code Signature Telephone # Your name(s) as you wish to appear in the concert program: q I would like my gift to remain anonymous. 4 bowdoin international music festival T he 2015 Kaplan Fellows were a remarkable group of talented musicians. Their enthusiasm for the Festival and their eagerness to make music together and with the faculty helped form a closeknit bond that even distance could not break. On their own initiative, they created a Kaplan Fellows Concert in New York City on December 7, a first in Festival history. Trustee Beatrice Francais located the perfect venue for the concert, the acoustically wonderful Church of Christ and St. Stephen around the corner from Lincoln Center. The Festival’s office staff sent out invitations and publicized the concert via its vast mailing list, trustees encouraged their friends to attend, and the Fellows took advantage of their social media contacts to spread the word. Challenging and demanding in every respect, the concert was a marvel. The audience heard Tchaikovsky and Lavignac four-hand piano selections of dazzling technicality and bristling fireworks; the unbelievably challenging, exquisitely-played 40-minute Schubert Quintet in A Major, D. 667 “Trout”; Barber’s Summer Music, Op. 31 which featured flute, oboe, clarinet, horn, and bassoon; and Martinu’s Nonet No.2, H. 374, a drop-dead work of intense collaboration. The finale was a double bonus in more ways than one. The 2015 Kaplan Fellow in Composition, Michael-Thomas Foumai, composed a piece specifically for this concert and flew in from Hawaii to introduce it to the audience. His world premiere Concerto Grosso was a rousing success, affording each of the fourteen players a chance to take center stage. In the audience were Festival Co-founder Lewis Kaplan and current Artistic Director Phillip Ying; trustees Elliot Rosen, Katharine Watson, Beatrice Francais, and Margy Burroughs; and Sacha Peiser, the Festival’s Music Office Director. The fourteen Kaplan Fellows were Zuolian Liu, flute; Kristin Leitterman, oboe; Chung Yoo, clarinet; Josh Thompson, horn; Dillon Meacham, bassoon; Haeji Kim and Seohee Min, violins; Emily Brandenburg, viola; Minji Kim and Nan-Cheng Chen, cellos; Isac Ryu, double bass; Fantee Jones, Joon Yoon, and Hsin-I Huang, piano. Following the concert guests walked to Beatrice Francais’ lovely apartment for a delightful reception-reunion overlooking Central Park. The event was a perfect bridge between last year’s season and the 2016 Festival. www.bowdoinfestival.org Faculty News Violinist Janet Sung performed a Haydn Violin Concerto in C Major as well as the world premiere of Inscription/Transformation for Violin and Orchestra by composer, Kenneth Hesketh, with the Goettingen Symphonie Orchester in Germany on Jan. 29. Hesketh was a visiting composer at the Festival in 2013. Under the auspices of Portland Ovations, the Shanghai String Quartet will appear with pipa virtuoso Wu Man at Hannaford Hall March 31 for a “Night in Ancient and New China.” Festival audiences will be pleased to see the quartet return to Maine again this summer, performing in our Monday Showcase series on July 18. The cellist duo of Meta Weiss and David Requiro recently produced their debut album of classical and contempo- rary compositions at Studio Trilogy in San Francisco. The new album includes: J. S. Bach’s Chaconne (from the violin Partita in D Minor arranged for two cellos); Niccolo Paganini’s Variations on One String on a theme by Rossini (arranged for two cellos); Giovanni Sollima’s The Shooting, Il Pino, Il Tasso, and Le Sequoia; Jean-Paul Borremanne’s A Due Celli, and Joan Jeanrenaud’s Oulipo. Quartets Jupiter Quartet W e are happy to introduce the string quartets for this summer’s Monday Showcase concerts. Last year’s series was consistenly sold out, and this year’s promises to present an equally brilliant line-up. During the season we will hear the Shanghai, the Ariel, the Jupiter, and of course our own resident Ying Quartet. In addition to www.bowdoinfestival.org Ariel Quartet performing, these groups will coach our talented students in chamber music and offer master classes. The Shanghai currently serves as Quartetin-Residence at the John J. Cali School of Music at Montclair State University in New Jersey and is Ensemble-inResidence with the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra. The Ariel is the Quartetin-Residence at the University of Cincinnati while the Jupiter serves in the same position at the University of Illinois. The Yings are likewise ensconced at the Eastman School of Music, and quartet members David Ying and Phillip Ying are the Festival’s Artistic Directors. Look for an exciting line up of wonderful music from all of these highly respected groups. spring news 5 Alumni News ing to sold-out houses. Nan-Cheng Chen, (KF ’14) cello, recently toured with his New Asia Chamber Music Society to Taiwan, perform- Xiaoxiao Du, (’15) violin, gave a successful senior recital and earned a B.M with honors from University of Missouri School of Music this past December. William McGregor, (’13 & ’15) double bass, won the Juilliard PreCollege Open Concerto Competition and performed with the PCO (Pre-College Orchestra) in February at Sharp Theater at Lincoln Center. Joon Yoon, (KF ’14 & ’15) piano, performed two concerts in Hawaii with Carmit Zori, violin; Joel Smirnoff, viola; Peter Wiley, cello; and Festival faculty member Kurt Muroki, double bass. Yoon played Ravel’s La Valse and joined the ensemble to perform Schubert’s Trout Quintet. Amir Siraj, (’15) piano, has won the New England Philharmonic’s 21st annual Young Artist Competition. Siraj will perform Franz Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1 at the Philharmonic’s annual family concert, Musical Characters, on December 13, 2016 at the Tsai Performance Center. Hsin-I Huang, (KF ’14), piano, performed as piano soloist for the Sinfonia de Amor concert tour with the Evergreen Symphony Orchestra in Macau. The concerts were broadcast by TVB Hong Kong and Teledifusão de Macau. He played to a sold out house of 4,000 seats. Nathaniel Pierce, (KF ’14) cello, is the 2015 winner of the Indiana University Concerto Competition. Nathaniel is Artistic Director of the Anchorage Chamber Music Festival in Anchorage, Alaska and a member of the Koinonia Trio in Ann Arbor. J o i n U s f o r A n E v e n i n g o f M usic Wednesday April 6, 2016 Frank Huang, David Ying and Phillip Ying, and the renowned Dover Quartet to benefit the Scholarship Fund of the Bowdoin International Music Festival. The Century Association, New York. To reserve your seat call Kippy Rudy at 207-373-1440 or email at kippy@bowdoinfestival.org lassical music in concerts performed to t c t n e s e r p o t “ he high 6 bowdoin international music festival www.bowdoinfestival.org Statement of Activities: Fiscal Year End October 31, 2015 Earned Income Student Revenue—Tuition, room, board, fees Concert Revenue—Tickets, sponsorships, advertising Other Total Earned Income $1,164,754 $159,766 $106,697 $1,431,216 Contributed Income Individual and board gifts Grants, foundations, corporations Events Total Contributions Total Income $216,396 $177,815 $56,918 $451,129 $1,882,345 Expense Scholarships Student Expense Artistic personnel Program staff and outside vendors Administrative staff, taxes, and benefits Operating expenses Total Expense Net Income $314,900 $391,369 $486,435 $322,356 $127,047 $210,249 $1,852,356 $29,989 2015 Statement of Financial Position Assets Total current assets Investments Pledges receivable Net property and equipment Total assets $274,969 $2,509,853 $184,682 $21,891 $2,991,395 Liabilities and Net Assets Total current liabilities Long term obligations $99,240 $30,000 Net Assets Unrestricted net assets Temporarily restricted net assets Permanently restricted net assets Total Net Assets Total liabilities and net assets $1,346,741 $140,459 $1,374,955 $2,862,155 $2,991,395 Staff Directory Bowdoin International Music Festival 6300 College Station Brunswick, ME 04011 (207) 373-1400 Toll Free: (855) 832-3393 www.bowdoinfestival.org info@bowdoinfestival.org Artistic Directors David Ying Phillip Ying Executive Director Katherine Lehman ed@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1444 Director of Development Kippy Rudy kippy@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1440 Director of Admissions Daniel Nitsch dan@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1400 Financial and Human Resources Officer Brittan Pistole britt@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1414 PR and Marketing Coordinator Casey Oakes casey@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1400 Administrative Assistant and Data Manager Nancy Simmons nancy@bowdoinfestival.org (207) 373-1400 est artistic stan dards” www.bowdoinfestival.org Admissions Volunteer Lorna Flynn (207) 373-1400 spring news 7 I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L 6300 College Station Brunswick, ME 04011-8463 www.bowdoinfestival.org I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L “The days here are so wonderful; fresh air, great music, and the beautiful town. Everything here makes it the greatest way to spend your summer time.” I N T E R NAT I O NA L U Saudience I C F E Smember T I VA L —M 2015 The Bowdoin International Music Festival is funded in part by a grant from the Maine Arts Commission. I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L notes Spring | 2016 I N T E R NAT I O NA L M U S I C F E S T I VA L www.bowdoinfestival.org