Ensemble 20/21 Presents “Music of the Earth” this Saturday, February 11

Ensemble 20/21 presents “Music of the Earth,” this Saturday, February 11, 2023, at 8:00 p.m., in Gould Rehearsal Hall at the Curtis Institute of Music. The eclectic program features selections that celebrate the sights and sounds of the natural world, with works by Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate, Kaija Saariaho, Gabriela Lena Frank, Olivier Messiaen, and the world premiere of Tania León’s song cycle, In the Field. Featuring the talents of Curtis’s extraordinarily gifted musicians under the batons of students Micah Gleason and Jacob Niemann, the Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellows, the specially curated program endeavors to inspire and encourage an eco-conscious mindset from its audience through five exquisitely composed pieces. 

Learn more about “Music of the EarthHERE.

Read composer Tania León and poet Carlos Pintado’s program notes on In the Field HERE and view the libretto HERE


Notes on Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate, Talowa’ Hiloha (Thunder Song

Praised by The Washington Post for his “ability to effectively infuse classical music with American Indian nationalism,” Emmy Award-winning Chickasaw composer and pianist Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate explores the intersection of classical and Indigenous musical culture, history, and ethos through his compositions. Tate’s commissioned works have been performed by numerous major orchestras, including the National Symphony Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony, and his inimitable music was featured on the hit HBO series Westworld 

Written in 1997 when Tate was a master’s student of piano performance and composition at the Cleveland Institute of Music, Talowa’ Hiloha (Thunder Song) is a reverent homage to a time-honored tradition. The title of this astounding piece for solo timpani comes from the Chickasaw word for thunder and lighting. Throughout history, the Chickasaw people believed thunderstorms were the holy people, or beloved, at war above the clouds. Defying death and displaying courage, these warriors would shoot their guns into the sky during the storms. Over eight exhilarating minutes, Tate’s composition shows the breadth, dynamic range, tonal colors, and majestic resonance of one of the oldest instruments in an orchestra as a storm slowly brews, gradually unleashing a high-voltage spectacle of sound and fury.  

Visit Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate’s official website HERE.

Notes on Kaija Saariaho, Terrestre

Inspired by Oiseaux, a collection of poems by Saint-John Perse, award-winning Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho’s Terrestre is a reworking of the second movement of her flute concerto, Aile du songe (Wing of Dream). This beguiling chamber piece uses the rich metaphor of birds to describe life’s mysteries. However, unlike Messiaen’s Oiseaux Exotiques, another avian-influenced composition closing the evening’s program, Saariaho appears to be more intrigued by the idea of birds than referencing the sounds they make.   

Commissioned in honor of Kaija Saariaho’s 50th birthday, Terrestre is divided into two parts. The first frenetic movement, “Oiseau dansant” (“Dancing Bird”), refers to the Aboriginal legend of a bird teaching an entire village how to dance. This intriguing work explores some unique soundscapes and calls for the flutist to sporadically sing, chirp, trill, and purr while playing their instrument, creating a unique dialogue between voice and woodwind. Then, through frenetic syncopations and a driving kinetic pace, the flute incites the xylophone, harp, violin, and cello to dance with wild abandon, evoking the otherworldly mystique of the folktale it aspires to bring to life.   

This hyperactive exchange shifts dramatically within the indigo-hued mood of the second section, “L’Oiseau, un satellite infima,” which likens the bird to a satellite in celestial orbit. Intense and brooding, with a rippling ostinato that climbs and descends as it is passed back and forth between the strings, harp, and xylophone, Saariaho’s haunting movement is a synthesis of previous elements of Aile du songe. As the piece unfolds, one can imagine looking up into the darkness and catching a glimpse of a small, bright object as it rapidly spins across the night sky, orbiting the Earth and reflecting the light of the stars as it drifts by. 

Visit Kaija Saariaho’s official website HERE.

Notes on Gabriela Lena Frank, Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout

Inspired by the “idea of mestizaje as envisioned by Peruvian writer José María Arguedas, where cultures can coexist without the subjugation of one by the other,” Latin GRAMMY winner, composer, and pianist, Gabriela Lena Frank’s Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout fuses elements of western classical forms and Andean folk music tradition within six innovative movements. Initially commissioned by the Chiara Quartet in 2001, these miniature tone poems, as with most of her impressive catalogue, explore Frank’s multiculturalism, paying homage to her Peruvian, Chinese, and Lithuanian-Jewish heritage. Supported by a sizeable grant, she traveled to South America and toured remote villages and cities across the Andes mountains. There she recorded hours of live folk music, a la Béla Bartók, but with microphones hidden in her eyeglasses, stealthily capturing the sounds of what would later influence the musical landscape of Leyendas, one of her earliest works. 

The opening movement, “Toyos,” draws the listener in with the imitative sounds of one of the largest types of Andean panpipes, one that requires incredible lung power to play. This is followed by “Tarqueda,” a swiftly paced movement that emulates the tarka, a striking wooden duct flute abrasively blown to split its tones. Like the husky sound of the toto, it is typically played in parallel fourths or fifths, reflected in Frank’s music. The third movement, “Himno de Zampoñas,” displays the rhythmic hocketing technique as the musicians pass the melodic line back and forth by alternating notes. The distinctive sound of the zampoña panpipe is conjured up here with an aggressive double-stop technique that mimics the instrument’s flatly blown fundamental tones overlaid by overtones. 

“Chasqui” depicts the legendary Incan runners who would sprint across the Andes delivering messages. This fourth movement incorporates the sounds of the high-pitched, stringed charango and the airy bamboo quena flute to elicit the feel of sprinting over steep slopes along the precarious Incan Royal Highway (“Qhapac Nan”). The final two movements, “Canto de Velorio” and “Coqueteos,” each capture another unique facet of Peruvian life and culture, with the former referencing the Catholic “Dies Irae” chant, professional crying women (“Llorona”) and a chorus of mourners, the latter patterned after a sensual love song often sung by the flirtatious romanceros, and accompanied by a storm of guitars (“vendaval de guitarras”). Technically challenging yet emotionally rewarding, this crowd-pleasing work is as vivacious, virtuosic, and evocative as it is richly expressive.   

Learn about the Gabriela Lena Frank Creative Academy of Music HERE.

Notes on Olivier Messiaen, Oiseaux Exotiques

A passion for ornithology and music collides in French composer Olivier Messiaen’s dazzling mid-century work for piano and small orchestra, Oiseaux exotiques. Stepping away from total serialism to forge an entirely new musical language and style based upon the transcription of birdsong, Messiaen’s work is based on the recorded songs of 47 birds throughout China, India, Malaysia, and North and South America. Commissioned by his former student Pierre Boulez and given its first performance on March 10, 1956, at the Théâtre du Petit Marigny, with pianist Yvonne Loriod, the composer’s wife, and the ensemble Domaine musical, this chirping, squawking celebration of life is full of colorful noises, both strident and shrieking, cheerful and sonorous.

Described by Messiaen as “almost a piano concerto,” Oiseaux exotiques is roughly divided into nine well-defined sections, with an introduction, a sequence of instrumental interludes and piano cadenzas with two central tuttis, five prominent piano solos framed by six orchestral ritornellos, and a coda for piano solo, woodwind, brass, and percussion. The work opens with a pair of high-pitched, piercing chirps from the Indian myna and unfolds in a feathered frenzy with the sounds of birds thrown together into an imaginary aviary. Beyond simply existing as a sound collage, the composer underpins the work with Hindu and Greek rhythmic patterns, courtesy of the snare drum and woodblock, providing a metronomically firm framework to contrast with the free rhythms of the birdsong. 

Messiaen experienced a form of synesthesia, sensing colors when he heard sounds and harmonies. The vibrant plumage of the birds is illustrated in the choices of instruments he utilizes at specific points throughout and stresses the importance of hearing the different colors of the sounds: “In the second tutti, orange mixed with gold and red are in the horn part; green and gold are found in the first and last piano cadenzas.” In remarking about the score, he even notes that we should see the central tutti as a mixture of “engulfed rainbows in spirals of colour.”   

Delightfully angular and jittery, this cacophonous score concludes with more interesting sounds, including two North American species, the meowing cry of the catbird and the sharp, metallic-throated song of the bobolink, as a two-part invention of sorts. This is followed by the tremendous final tutti, with a main solo from the Indian shama, a piano cadenza on the wood thrush, and the Virginia cardinal, and closes with the clamor of the white-crested laughing thrush. Dazzling, eccentric, uniquely brilliant, Oiseaux exotiques, is a landmark in 20th-century classical music, still defying convention 67 years after its premiere. 

Learn more about the late Olivier Messiaen HERE.

All program notes by Ryan Scott Lathan.

ENSEMBLE 20/21
Flexible in size and scope, Ensemble 20/21 performs a wide range of music from the 20th and 21st centuries, including works by Curtis students and alumni. The ensemble has appeared at major U.S. venues such as the Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, and the Miller Theatre, as well as international venues. The ensemble has also presented concert portraits of iconic composers in residence Tania León, Alvin Singleton, Unsuk Chin, John Corigliano, George Crumb, Krzysztof Penderecki, and Chen Yi, among many others.

Ensemble 20/21 closes the 2022–23 season on Saturday, March 25, 2023, at 8 p.m. in Curtis’s Gould Rehearsal Hall, with a “Portrait of Aaron Jay Kernis,” featuring Earth and Goblin Market by the Pulitzer Prize and GRAMMY Award-winning composer.

Visit Curtis.edu/Calendar to view Curtis’s entire season of performances and events.

 

ENSEMBLE 20/21
Music of the Earth

Saturday, February 11, 2023, at 8 p.m.
Gould Rehearsal Hall, Curtis Institute of Music, 1616 Locust Street, Philadelphia

Micah Gleason, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow
Jacob Niemann, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow

PROGRAM

JEROD IMPICHCHAACHAAHA’ TATE Talowa’ Hiloha (Thunder Song)
KAIJA SAARIAHO Terrestre
GABRIELA LENA FRANK Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout
TANIA LEÓN In the Field (world premiere)
OLIVIER MESSIAEN Oiseaux Exotiques

 

This event is sold outJoin the waitlist to be notified should additional tickets become available.

Single tickets for Ensemble 20/21 performances and the 2022–23 season start at $19: Curtis.edu/Ensemble2021. Season subscriptions are also available.

Generous support for Ensemble 20/21 is provided by the Daniel W. Dietrich II Foundation.

Photo of Tania León by Gail Hadani/EFE. Photos of Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate by Shevaun Williams. Photo of Kaija Saariaho by Maarit Kytöharju. Photo of Gabriela Lena Frank, courtesy of the artist. Photo of Olivier Messiaen by Olivier Mille for the documentary La Liturgie de Cristal.

 

Tania León’s “In The Field” Premieres this Weekend with Ensemble 20/21

This Saturday, February 11, 2023, at 8:00 p.m, Curtis’s acclaimed contemporary music group, Ensemble 20/21, will present the world premiere of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, conductor, pianist, and educator Tania León’s In the Field in “Music of the Earth,” a nature-inspired concert with additional works by Jerod TateKaija Saariaho, Gabriela Lena Frank, and Olivier Messiaen. Featuring Spanish and English text by Cuban American writer, playwright, and award-winning poet Carlos Pintado, recipient of the prestigious Paz Poetry Prize, the cycle was commissioned by the McCollin Fund and the Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia in celebration of the latter’s landmark bicentennial. Ensemble 20/21 and captivating Curtis student, soprano Sarah Fleiss, breathe life into León’s exquisite score and Pintado’s nuanced poetry, a meditation on the beauty, mythology, and historical complexity of Philadelphia’s iconic landmarks and its symbols of patriotism and justice. 

Learn more about “Music of the EarthHERE.

Composer Tania León on In the Field:

“The inspiration for creating the song cycle In the Field came from the beauty and insights of Carlos Pintado’s poetry as he recently strolled through the city of Philadelphia. His poems allowed me to imagine the places vividly and feel their emotional power. Pintado connected to the invisible history of the icons we all cherish, and he saw the city with the eyes of his native language—a language we both share. The rhythm of his words touched me profoundly. In his last poem, written in English, he transmutes the love he feels for the city to an imaginary lover that is treated with the utmost respect, evoking the love we all feel for the multiple and diverse communities coming together to create a nation.”

Visit Tania León’s official website HERE.

Poet Carlos Pintado discusses In the Field:

“The first thing I felt in Philadelphia was the weight of poetry and music combined. I had visited the city following the typical tourist’s interest but not knowing—no one could possibly know—the incredible weight of poetry and music that hides and multiplied beautifully in every corner, every street, every bench. To the point that I have the conviction that Philly’s dazzling history and charm can only be narrated or interpreted through poetry and music. (Aren’t they the same thing? One written in the paper, the other floating in the air?)

“The sonorous plazas, the exercise of light and shadows attracted me.

“Of all the big cities I have had the pleasure to visit Philadelphia is the only one which has orchestrated its symbols as a perfect symphony with no premeditation needed. The city has accommodated with Time. It has settled itself with Time and it has created its own Time and that intrigued me. It’s History dancing a dance of eternity in its streets. And I’m grateful to have walked the historic places absorbing everything.
In Philly, I questioned myself about my own ideals of the foundational myths and I’m beyond grateful to say that I’m still questioning myself about the foundation of human nature as well. This is what great cities instill in us: a personal journey.

“I’m deeply grateful to have collaborated with my admired Tania León. If any composer is able to shine and vibrate through words and metaphors, that’s Tania León. Her flawless and almost humiliating power of navigating through images and sounds makes her a beautiful uncanny sacred monster. She approaches a poem like approaching a musical score and vice versa: she faces a score extracting the poetry of it. In Philadelphia I searched for symbols for my poetry and in Tania’s work I found that those symbols not only are perfectly portrayed but also elevated, giving them a new life.”

ENSEMBLE 20/21
Flexible in size and scope, Ensemble 20/21 performs a wide range of music from the 20th and 21st centuries, including works by Curtis students and alumni. The ensemble has appeared at major U.S. venues such as the Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, and the Miller Theatre, as well as international venues. The ensemble has also presented concert portraits of iconic composers in residence Tania León, Alvin Singleton, Unsuk Chin, John Corigliano, George Crumb, Krzysztof Penderecki, and Chen Yi, among many others.

Ensemble 20/21 closes the 2022–23 season on Saturday, March 25, 2023, at 8 p.m. in Curtis’s Gould Rehearsal Hall, with a “Portrait of Aaron Jay Kernis,” featuring Earth and Goblin Market by the Pulitzer Prize and GRAMMY Award-winning composer.

Visit Curtis.edu/Calendar to view Curtis’s entire season of performances and events.

 

ENSEMBLE 20/21
Music of the Earth

Saturday, February 11, 2023, at 8 p.m.
Gould Rehearsal Hall, Curtis Institute of Music, 1616 Locust Street, Philadelphia

Micah Gleason, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow
Jacob Niemann, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow

PROGRAM

JEROD TATE Talowa’ Hiloha (Thunder Song)
KAIJA SAARIAHO Terrestre
GABRIELA LENA FRANK Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout
TANIA LEÓN In the Field
OLIVIER MESSIAEN Oiseaux Exotiques

 

This event is sold outJoin the waitlist to be notified should additional tickets become available.

Single tickets for Ensemble 20/21 performances and the 2022–23 season start at $19: Curtis.edu/Ensemble2021. Season subscriptions are also available.

Generous support for Ensemble 20/21 is provided by the Daniel W. Dietrich II Foundation.

Photos of Tania León by Gail Hadani/EFE.  Photo of Carlos Pintado by Yimali Gonzalez. Photo of Sarah Fleiss, courtesy of artist’s official website.

 

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Celebrating Black History: Curtis Faculty Member Todd Duncan

Celebrated operatic baritone, actor, Curtis faculty member (1977–90), and pioneering civil rights activist Robert Todd Duncan (1903–98) is often considered one of the great Black artistic pioneers of the 20th century. Born in Danville, Kentucky, on February 12, 1903, the only child of John C. Duncan, a farmer, and Letitia Cooper Duncan, a piano teacher and church musician, he earned his bachelor’s degree at Butler University in Indianapolis in 1925 and his master’s degree at Columbia University Teachers College in 1930.

In 1933, Mr. Duncan made his professional stage debut in Mascagni’s Cavalleria Rusticana at the Mecca Temple with the Aeolian Opera, a Black opera company in New York. He was personally selected by George Gershwin to originate the iconic lead role in Porgy and Bess and went on to perform Porgy more than 1,800 times in his career following its initial premiere run at the Alvin Theater in New York City. He also recorded an original cast album on Decca Records with the original Bess, Anne Brown.

Breaking the color barrier, he was instrumental in desegregating opera houses and theaters at a time when African Americans were forced to either attend performances for Black audiences only or use side entrances and sit in the balcony sections. A firebrand for change, he led the protest against the National Theatre’s segregation policy in Washington, D.C., when the Porgy and Bess cast were to perform there in 1936, stating voicing his firm belief that he “would never play in a theater which barred him from purchasing tickets to certain seats because of his race.” The management yielded to the cast’s demands, and the opera became the first integrated performance at the National Theatre. [1] 

In 1936, Mr. Duncan traveled to London to perform at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in the heart of Covent Garden as the lead in C.B. Cochran’s musical production The Sun Never Sets, with original music by Cole Porter. When the show ended its West End run, he and fellow cast member Adelaide Hall toured the U.K. with the production. Mr. Duncan then returned stateside, where he taught at Howard University and continued to perform, becoming one of the first Black performers hired by a major opera company. In 1945, he sang the role of Tonio in Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci with  New York City Opera with an all-white cast. He performed the role of the bullfighter Escamillo in Bizet’s Carmen with the company later that same year. Mr. Duncan also played the role of Lord’s General in Vernon Duke’s Broadway musical Cabin in the Sky in 1940 and Stephen Kumalo in the first production of Kurt Weill’s Lost in the Stars (1949–50). 

Mr. Duncan inspired generations of African American musicians and vocalists as a voice and music teacher. Over the years, he observed hundreds of vocal surgeries to understand the human voice’s physical workings. The methods he taught his students were easily recognizable, becoming known as the “Duncan Technique.” Due to his lasting influence and efforts, significant changes in classical musical performance for Black artists began to take place in the United States. They still can be felt today within academic institutions across the country.

Mr. Duncan starred in two films, Syncopation (1942) and Unchained (1955), which featured the rock and roll classic tune “Unchained Melody” and earned him an Academy Award nomination. He lived in Washington, D.C. for seventy years, left Howard University after fifty years at the peak of his recital (2,000 performances in 56 countries) and opera career, and taught at Curtis for thirteen years. In 1984, he was presented with the George Peabody Medal of Music from the Peabody Conservatory of Music of Johns Hopkins University. During his lifetime, he was awarded the Medal of Honor from Haiti, an NAACP award, the New York Drama Critics’ Award for Lost in the Stars, the Donaldson Award, and he received honorary doctorates from Butler University and Valparaiso University. He was posthumously inducted into the Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame at Kentucky State University in 2005.

“The name CURTIS will serve you well for it carries with it dignity, nobility, and its name is known all over this world,” said Mr. Duncan at Curtis’s May 1985 Commencement ceremony. “Today, I challenge you to be grateful for your talents and abilities by accepting them as obligations to be invested for the common good, accepting your special gift as a challenge to achievement.”

Read Todd Duncan’s stirring 1985 Curtis Commencement speech HERE

Photos taken from the Curtis Archives and Special Collections. Please visit Curtis Institute of Music Open Archives and Recitals (CIMOAR). Learn more about Curtis’s library and archives HERE.

[1] “Porgy and Bess: Today in History, September 2″. Library of Congress. December 6, 2007. https://www.loc.gov/item/today-in-history/september-02/.

Photo Credits: 1.) WBSS Media 2.) Mr. Duncan coaching Bavat Marom in Field Concert Hall at a Curtis in a 1992 masterclass; Don Tracy. 3.) The Internet Archive, Gershwin: Porgy and Bess 4.) Mr. Duncan during a masterclass with James Burgess at Field Concert Hall in 1998; Robin Miller. 5.) Todd Duncan, circa 1930s. Image by © John Springer Collection/CORBIS.

 

Meet the Student: Q&A with Flutist Annie Li

Annie Li, from Beijing, entered the Curtis Institute of Music in 2022 and studies flute with Jeffrey Khaner. All students at Curtis receive merit-based, full-tuition scholarships, and Ms. Li is the Huldah Bender Kerner, M.D., Fellow.

 


 

What was your first musical experience as a child, and what is your most memorable performance experience so far?
I was born into a musical family where my parents are both musicians. My life has been surrounded by music since then. My parents would play recordings for me when I was an infant, which fueled my passion for music.

The most memorable performance experience for me was back in 2022, my first ever Curtis Symphony Orchestra conducted by Maestro Yannick Nézet-Séguin. We performed Daphnis et Chloé by Ravel, which is especially challenging for the flute. I have heard this piece many times because there is a famous flute solo, and it’s my first time performing this fantastic piece with three of my studio mates on stage instead of being an audience. It was indeed a special experience, and I learned how to blend my sound into an orchestra.

When did you decide you wanted to pursue a career as a flutist and why?
I pursued becoming a musician when I was young because of my family’s influences, but I had not decided on a specific instrument until I was ten. I had tried several instruments before, such as piano and cello, but I was utterly fascinated by the flute’s voice and beauty. Since then, I have decided to become a flutist, and have been playing it for almost eight years.

How did you first hear about Curtis?
Curtis was the first school that I heard about from my teachers, friends, and families when I was young. I was told it is a utopian place for all musicians. I could never imagine myself studying here. Therefore, getting into Curtis is a dream come true, and I am forever grateful for it.

After one semester, what do you enjoy most about the Curtis experience?
Curtis is a place that nurtured hundreds of musicians, providing students with the best musical resource undoubtedly. Performing with my wonderful colleagues is definitely the most enjoyable thing about Curtis. Everyone has unique ideas, and I can learn a lot through rehearsing with them.

Tell us about other hobbies or interests beyond playing the flute.
My favorite thing to do other than music is photography. I love capturing the natural scenery and lovely faces of my friends and family. I particularly enjoy the moment when I press down the shutter button and am able to save the image that I see through my eyes, which reminds me of all the precious moments that I experience with the people I love.

 

Photo credit: Banner and second image courtesy by Nichole MCH Photography.

Congratulations to Curtis’s 2023 GRAMMY Winners!

The 2023 GRAMMY Awards Premiere Ceremony was held on Sunday, February 5, at the Microsoft Arena in Los Angeles. Among those nominated for awards this year were several celebrated faculty and alumni of Curtis who stand in the front rank of classical musicians around the world. Critically acclaimed ensemble Time for Three and renowned conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin won awards.

Alumni Nicholas Kendall (Violin ’01) and Ranaan Meyer (Double Bass ’03) and violinist Charles Yang of Time for Three won Best Classical Instrumental Recording for their recording Letters for the Future, under the baton of Xian Zhang with The Philadelphia Orchestra. The trio also performed on the Kevin Puts Contact recording, which won Best Contemporary Classical Composition with Maestro Zhang and The Philadelphia Orchestra.

Michelle Cann (Piano ’13), Eleanor Sokoloff Chair in Piano Studies at Curtis, was the featured soloist on Works by Florence Price, Jessie Montgomery, and Valerie Coleman with the New York Youth Symphony, which won the GRAMMY for Best Orchestral Performance. Ms. Cann, a champion of Price’s music, performed the composer’s Piano Concerto in One Movement, the premiere recording of the composer’s newly-discovered original orchestration.

Mentor conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin, internationally renowned music director of New York’s Metropolitan Opera and The Philadelphia Orchestra, won the GRAMMY Award for Best Opera Recording (for Blanchard: Fire Shut Up In My Bones with the Metropolitan Opera).

Mr. Nézet-Séguin also won Best Classical Solo Vocal Album (for Voice of NatureThe Anthropocene with Renée Fleming), for which he accompanied the internationally lauded soprano at the piano. This collection of works on climate change features curated selections from the Romantic era to new commissions from Nico Muhly, Caroline Shaw, and Kevin Puts.

Curtis Faculty and Alumni Nominees for the 2023 GRAMMY Awards

The Dover Quartet, Curtis alumni and Penelope P. Watkins Ensemble in Residence, was nominated for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance for their album Beethoven: Complete String Quartets, Volume 2 – The Middle Quartets. The Dover Quartet was also on the Ligneous Suite recording, nominated for Best Contemporary Classical Composition.

Alumna Hilary Hahn (Violin ’99) was nominated in the Best Classical Instrumental Solo category for composer Michael Abels’s Isolation Variation. Los Angeles-based ensemble Wild Up, a modern musical collective which includes Curtis alumna JIJI (Guitar ’15), was nominated for Best Orchestral Performance with Eastman: Stay On It, taken from the second entry in Wild Up’s seven-volume anthology celebrating Julius Eastman (Piano ’63).

Alumna J’Nai Bridges (Opera ’12) was a collaborative artist on Okpebholo: Lord, How Come Me Here?, nominated for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album for baritone Will Liverman and pianist Paul Sánchez. Alumnus Nicholas Cords (Viola ’97), part of acclaimed quartet Brooklyn Rider, joined tenor Nicholas Phan, conductor Eric Jacobson, young orchestra The Knights, and countertenor Reginald Mobley for the nominated album Stranger – Works For Tenor by Nico Muhly.

In addition to the above wins, Yannick Nézet-Séguin received nominations for Best Choral Performance (for Verdi: Requiem – The Met Remembers 9/11) with Eric Owens (Opera ’95), Director, Vocal Studies and the Curtis Opera Theatre, and Best Classical Compendium (for A Concert For Ukraine with the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra).

Congratulations to all of this year’s nominees and winners!

VIEW ALL NOMINEES & WINNERS