YouTube Myspace


Posts Tagged ‘Loren Jones’

MUSIC OF AIR, EARTH, FIRE, AND WATER

Thursday, September 4th, 2014

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

MUSIC OF AIR, EARTH, FIRE, AND WATER

Saturday October 4th, 2014 at 8 pm Old First Presbyterian Church
1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109

$20 General, $17 Seniors (65 and older), $5 Full Time Students (Children 12 and under are free)

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 4, 2014 —-

Tune in, turn on, drop everything and join the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra for Music of Air, Earth, Fire, and Water — elemental sounds from around the world and beyond.  Philosophic / spiritual (and occasionally satirical) compositions include Mark Alburger‘s Abducted by Aliens, where sonic samplings are skewed (and skewered) by sound effects, and Michael Kimbell’s sardonic Frontline, in phantasmagorical fight scenes of a Soldier’s Tale sent to Sanctuary.  Works by Loren Jones and Lisa Scola Prosek connect Ancient animations and Native American traditions in beautiful musical montages of Raven and Panther and The Lariat (the latter in co-operation with the Ohlone/Costanoan-Esselen Nation).  Rounding out the elements of the program, Stardust’s Railway Sonata takes a compositional journey across America Musicana, conducted figuratively and literally by Music Director Mark Alburger and Associate Martha Stoddard.

 

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday October, 2014
TICKETS: $20 General, $17 Seniors (65 and older), $5 Full Time Students (Children 12 and under are free)

THE DARK SERENADE

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“THE DARK SERENADE”

Saturday October 15th, 2011 at 8 pm Old First Presbyterian Church
1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
and
Sunday October 16th, 2011 at 8 pm Chapel of the Chimes
4499 Piedmont Avenue, Oakland, CA

$17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office and at the door for Chapel of the Chimes

SAN FRANCISCOSept. 15, 2011 —- The days are growing shorter, the economy is not improving, and it’s time for The Dark Serenade. Join the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra, on either side of the Bay — at 8pm, October 15 (Old First Church, San Francisco) or 16 (Chapel of the Chimes) — in a haunted landscape of works by Philip Freihofner, David Graves, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, Davide Verotta and Mark Alburger.

Freihofner sets the mood in Carmilla, a beautiful post-minimalist setting of Irish writer Sheridan Le Fanu’s short story of vampires and women, featuring Lisa Scola Prosek.    This talented soprano-composer will then showcase her own luminous Night at the Kremlin excerpt entitled The Goldfish Pond, where world-renowned tenor John Duykers will hold forth as Winston Churchill on Stalinesque situations.

Keeping to matters historically ominous, Verotta’s Facing Chaos illuminates a passage from Seneca the Younger’s Thyestes (“Trembling are our hearts, lest all things fall shattered in fatal ruin . . .”) in a juxtaposition of aggressive Indian talas with plangent basal melodies.  Such contrasts are perhaps even more extreme in the grave Graves Amaranthine Silence, where animated contrapuntal complexities are counterpoised with various pre-recorded “silences” from gardens, restaurants, and parking garages.

Alburger’s Regime Change takes the terror of Ancient and Contemporary civilizations through a kaleidoscope of found musics, sung by Scola Prosek and contralto Olivia Flanigan, as a prelude to Jones’s signature over-the-top outpourings in Graveyard, where the orchestra will be augmented by bouzouki and tombstones.  In the spirit of Erling Wold’s In the Stomachs of Fleas, resoundingly presented a few concerts back, be prepared for Haloweenic smoke-and-mirrors. Fog.  Strobe lights.  Maybe even a small explosion….

Be afraid.  Be amazed.  And prepare for The Dark Serenade.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday October 15th, 2011
TICKETS: $17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: Saturday June 9th, 2011 at Old First Church & Sunday June 10th at Chapel of the Chimes

LOST THINGS FOUND

Saturday, May 21st, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“LOST THINGS FOUND”

Saturday June 25th, 2011 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCOMay 25, 2011 —- The remote you misplaced, the tune you can’t quite remember, the life you may have lived.   You never know what you might find at the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra’s Lost Things Found, 8pm, Saturday, June 25, at Old First Church, San Francisco — in musical items by John Beeman, Allan Crossman, Bernard Herrmann, Loren Jones, Sam Ostroff, Lisa Scola Prosek, William Severson, Martha Stoddard, and Davide Verotta.

Among the places where lost objects will be found are the Mt. Eytan Gabriel Caves, where Jones will guide two young pianists through beautiful and treacherous treasures, and perhaps even A Simple Trifle, as offered in a string trio by Severson. A cached Collage of Beeman (with soprano Maria Mikheyenko) will usher in will usher in the Twilight Zone of Bernard Herrmann’s score to Little Girl Lost, featuring viola d’amorist Roland Kato accompanied by quartets of flutes and harps, conducted by John Kendall Bailey.

Verotta will pianistically explore in Imaginations, while Stoddard leads other musical search parties in Ostroff’s earnest Before You Read, Scola Prosek’s intriguing Churchill in the Bath (showcasing tenor John Duykers), and her own diverting Windsong Variations.  The final excursion of the evening will take listeners and vocalists searchingly across an ocean of the avant and traditional in Crossman’s sing-along Loch Lomond, conducted by Mark Alburger.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday June 25th, 2011
TICKETS: $17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: Saturday October 15th, 2011 at Old First Church

ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, MINERAL

Friday, August 20th, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, MINERAL

Saturday September 25th, 2010 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCO, August 20, 2010 —-  What is reality?  Sentient beings clamoring for existence, the wind whistling through leafy vegetation, the silence and noise of this stony planet.  Come along on musical safari with the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra in Animal, Vegetable, Mineral — a tour of the Earth’s scenic and sonic wonders, in compositions by Michael Cooke, Loren Jones, Jorge Liderman, Terry Riley, Lisa Scola Prosek and Mark Alburger.

The latter’s Animal Farm: Grand Zoological Fantasy-Variations is a dark, Orwellian spin on creatures great and small, including a visual presentation of surrealistically-altered YouTube videos.  In biological distinction, Jones will offer Banyan: an aural giving-tree of multicultural musical delights.  Answering this will be a revival of Riley’s celebrated minimalist-improvisatory anthem In C, in all of its crystalline and granitic splendor.

Also along for the journey are Michael Cooke’s deeply-felt Love Letters; Lisa Scola Prosek’s vibrant Piano Sonata; a retrospective work of the late, great Jorge Liderman.  John Kendall Bailey will join Alburger in the zoomusicological tour-guiding responsibilities.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday September 25th, 2010
TICKETS: $17 General, $14 Seniors (65 and older), $14 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: Saturday June TBD, 2010 at Old First Church

SILENCE OF THE WOLVES

Monday, May 10th, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

SILENCE OF THE WOLVES

Friday June 11th, 2010 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCO, May 10, 2010 —  Listen carefully.  The slightest sound may be of the greatest import.  That wolf howling in the distance, just at the edge of consciousness, may change your life.  For the better.  At least, we sure hope so, as San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra presents Silence of the Wolves — an evening celebration of sounds great and small, at Old First Church on June 11, 2010, in music of John Beeman, Cindy Collins, Loren Jones, Darius Milhaud, Lisa Scola Prosek, Martha Stoddard, and Davide Verotta.

Verotta’s An Enticement of Silence and Jones’s Wolf Wood manifest the head and tail of the concert in musics gentle and disturbing — sentiments also mirrored in Beeman’s Bernsteinianly-appelated Fancy Free.  Scola Prosek provides the requisite bark and bite in three selections from the opera Ten Days (Dieci Giorni, after The Decameron of Boccaccio) with songs tragic, romantic, and comic.  Rounding out the pack are the colorful Collins Synesthesia (directed by Mark Alburger) and the wolf-whistle Cowgirl Rondo of Stoddard (conducted by the composer), with a special howl-out going for the revival of Les Six / Mills College associate Milhaud’s Chamber Symphonies Nos. 1-3, led by John Kendall Bailey.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday February 20th, 2010
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

RETURN TO RETURN TO SORRENTO

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“RETURN TO RETURN TO SORRENTO”

Saturday February 20th, 2010 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCO, January 22, 2010 — Ever have a tune you couldn’t get out of your head? The composers of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra find themselves returning to Ernesto de Curtis’s Return to Sorrento (1902) in Return to Return to Sorrento — on Saturday, February 20, at Old First Church — evoking a sunny, post-El-Nino world of musical fact and fantasy from John Bilotta, Philip Freihofner, David Graves, Loren Jones, Phil Lockwood, Lisa Scola Prosek, Kit Ruscoe, Martha Stoddard, Davide Verotta, Erling Wold, and Mark Alburger.

The Return pieces — a series of variations by Jones, Scola Prosek, Ruscoe, Verotta, Wold, and Alburger — will be interwoven into a mix that will also feature Bilotta’s back-to-the-future Quantum Mechanic (semi-staged in co-operation with Goat Hall Productions / San Francisco Cabaret Opera); David Graves’s relatedly-apocalyptic Tickertape; Philip Freihofner and Phil Lockwood’s evocative Blade of Grass; Martha Stoddard’s enchanting Duo Concertante for Flute, Marimba, and Chamber Orchestra (featuring Bruce Salvisberg and Anne Szalba); Jones’s adventurous Lost Plateau; and Alburger’s frenetic-erotic-violent Salome Suite.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday February 20th, 2010
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: Saturday June 12, 2010 at Old First Church

HAUNTED HOUSE SCIENCE FICTION QUIZ SHOW

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Present:

“HAUNTED HOUSE SCIENCE FICTION QUIZ SHOW”

Saturday November 7th, 2009 at 8 pm
Chapel of the Chimes
4499 Piedmont Ave, Oakland, CA 94611
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

OAKLAND AND WORLD PREMIERES

SAN FRANCISCO, October 7, 2009 —  Be afraid.  Be very afraid, when San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra presents Haunted House Science Fiction Quiz Show, an evening of electro-acoustic fantasy, nightmares, and whimsy.  In its premiere performance in Oakland (a short atomic-powered broomstick ride across the Bay) on Saturday, November 7 — emcee Music Director Mark Alburger, Associate Conductor Martha Stoddard, and compositional contestants Michael Cooke, Philip Freihofner, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, Gerhard Samuel, Davide Verotta, and Erling Wold will conjure up works sounding particularly haunting and resonant in the Julia-Morgan-designed crematory / columbarium / mausoleum Chapel of the Chimes (4499 Piedmont Avenue).

The séance begins with Freihofner‘s Electroacoustic Music for Oboe, which provides the passage into The Secret Door, where Jones will invoke a fantasy alternative-universe San Francisco for piano four-hands.

Cooke calls forth another spirit world “…with the Spirit of the Desert,” an evocative work for violin, bassoon, and piano — inspired by Big Bend National Park in West Texas, and conjuring up in the movements the ghosts of Paul Hindemith, Igor Stravinsky, and Native American music.  Across the great divide, poet Michael McDonough reanimates the genius of Samuel (1924-2008), who set McDonough’s spare minimalist “3″, as night and trees (for clarinet, soprano, and bongos), before departing himself into that good night.

Dreams and reality collide again in Scola Prosek‘s Roma, hallucinated (on Tylenol PM) at 20,000 feet in a high-tech jet of engine roars, footsteps, lyricism (graced by sopranos Maria Mikheyenko and the composer), and the chariots of the entire orchestra and Rome’s fiery Vittorio Emanuele Monument.  Staying in the surrealist, subalpine, soprani sequence — Verotta‘s Verrà la Morte e Avrà i Tuoi Occhi (Death Will Come and Have Your Eyes) reminds us that there is nothing wrong with your ears, but that, for the evening, we are in control.

Meanwhile, Wold notes in Sweet Encumbrance that bondage-and-discipline can be fun, particularly when the ball-and-chain is the beloved other, in one of his trademark post-minimalist lovelies; while Alburger takes the theme literally for Elijah Ghost, in seven movements drawn from his opera-oratorio Elijah Rock, a twisted techno-take on the scientific fantasies of the Biblical Books of First and Second Kings.

But yet, as it turns out, fear ye not: this is not a test.  This is the Haunted House Science Fiction Quiz Show.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Chapel of the Chimes, 4499 Piedmont Ave, Oakland, CA 94611
WHEN: 8pm Saturday November 7th, 2009
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

DREAMS OF THE RESTLESS

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“DREAMS OF THE RESTLESS”

Saturday June 13th, 2009 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Review

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCO, May 13, 2009 — Inspired by abstract ponderings, restless fears, and childlike hope, San Francisco’s one and only composers’ orchestra will explore the world of suggestion and dreams on June 13, 2009 at Old First Concert. This concert will bring to fruition new works by Mark Alburger, Michael Cooke, Allan Crossman, Philip Freihofner, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, Davide Verotta plus a collaboration between Erling Wold and fognozzle. This final concert of the 08-09 season includes exotic and unique instruments, tribal rhythms, a fog and light show and great soloists!

“A Baby Sleeps”, by Michael Cooke, will showcase Gangqin Zhao and the composer playing traditional Chinese instruments, the sheng and guzheng, in a variation on a Taiwanese lullaby. The Sonoglyph, an invention of featured soloist Tom Nunn’s, will be introduced by Allan Crossman’s composition “Plasticity”. Bay Area New Music giants will emerge with Lisa Scola Prosek‘s “Voodoo Storm” featuring clarinetist Rachel Condry and Philip Freihofner‘s monologue “Obelisk” featuring Rova saxophonist Steve Adams.

Loren Jones’ “Eagle Bear Woman” and “Two Islands” will pay homage to his wife and Indonesian traditions respectively. Mark Alburger‘s “King David Suite (The Young and the Restless)” will portray three angst-ridden youths (David, Jonathan, and Absalom). Davide Verotta‘s sketch “Verso l’Immagine Feroce” (Toward the ferocious image), follows the ascent toward an incomprehensible force. Finally, the much anticipated collaboration between Erling Wold and fognozzle will rise above the fog (machine); “In the Stomachs of Fleas” will depict various outbreaks of the bubonic plague before and after the great San Francisco Earthquake in sonic and visual form.

Don’t miss the dramatic and innovative season show (s)topper!

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday June 13th, 2009
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Steve Adams is a graduate of the School of Contemporary Music in Boston, Adams has appeared on over 40 recordings, including four with Boston’s Your Neighborhood Saxophone Quartet and three as a leader for the Nine Winds label. Adams joined Rova in 1988. He has written the music for seven productions of the annual California Shakespeare Festival, contributed compositions to the repertoires of the Empire Brass Quintet and the violin/marimba duo Marimolin and performed as a sideman with such artists as Anthony Braxton, Sam Rivers, Dave Holland, Donald Byrd, Jaki Byard, Vinny Golia and Ted Nugent. Adams received a Reader’s Digest/Meet the Composer commissioning grant in 1993.

FREE FOR ALL, (but for you $15)

Friday, February 6th, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“FREE FOR ALL, (but for you $15)”

Saturday February 28th, 2009 at 8 pm
Old First Presbyterian Church

1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

SAN FRANCISCOFebruary 2, 2009 — If you are looking for an invigorating new musical experience ranging from new through-composed gems to electronic music and free improv with graphical scores; have we got a deal for you! SFCCO, the only orchestral ensemble comprised of composers, has the largest selection of new and pre-owned new-music premieres.

There is great value! in new music by: John Beeman, Michael Cooke, Philip Freihofner, Gary Friedman, David Graves, Loren Jones, Lisa Scola Prosek, David Sprung, Clare Twohy, Davide Verotta, Erling Wold, and Mark Alburger.

      Michael Cooke considers quantum mechanics and general relativity in “String Theory” utilizing graphical notation and free improvisation for the entire ensemble. Philip Freihofner‘s “What Are You Going to Dream Tonight” presents technology-driven free writing for oboe, clarinet, electric keyboard, and viola. From the dreamy to the hallucinogenic with Davide Verotta’s “Yanitl”. David Graves and Clare Twohy team up for a fire sale in the collaborative “Fireproof WindsLisa Scola Prosek’s “Serenade for Trumpet” is based on a melody by her son Eduard Prosek (who is also the soloist) and the drive-in movie side of film noir. Loren Jones’ “February’s Children” expands the ensemble with electric guitar and bass, harp, synthesizer, and percussion. David Sprung’s “Serendipities” is an ambitious piece for large ensemble. Special deals for you thrill seakers with Erling Wold‘s bawdy “Two Orchestral Waltzes for Lynne” and Mark Alburger‘s deliciously inappropriate “Sex and the Orchestra”. If more traditional means are your thing, consider “Wind Sextet” by Gary Friedman and “Adago and Dance” by John Beeman.

It’s a beautiful program folks and a real Free-for-all (but for you, $15)!

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:

WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 9410
WHEN: 8pm Saturday February 28, 2009
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: Saturday June 13, 2009 at Old First Church

MOVING TARGETS

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO COMPOSERS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
and Old First Concerts Present:

“MOVING TARGETS” 
Saturday November 8, 2008 at 8 pm

Old First Presbyterian Church
1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
$15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students

Tickets are available through the Old First Concerts Box Office at (415) 474-1608, online at http://oldfirstconcerts.org and at the door. For more information, please call Old First Concerts box office.

 
SAN FRANCISCOOctober 8, 2008 –Come November 8, 2008 our world will have surely changed. There will be a new President of the United States and the hopes and dreams of the world will have a new sense of possibility. One constant, that will provide perspective and focus for the changing world? The San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra will be there to provide “Moving Targets” a concert of new music by Harry Bernstein, Gary Friedman, Loren Jones, Sheli Nan, Lisa Scola Prosek, Martha Stoddard, and Clare Twohy. A concert experience that will shed some light on the vagaries of life, the changing universe, and everything in between.  

Program:  

 

Gary Friedman…………………..Meanderings and On the Go
Loren Jones……………………..Wabli Mato Wiya and Two Islands
Sheli Nan…………………………Signatures in Time and Place
Lisa Scola Prosek………………How They Move from Badessa
Martha Stoddard…………………In Search of Planet X
Clare Twohy……………………..Untitled
Davide Verotta ………………….Sinfonia

      Gary Friedman’s Meanderings and On the Go, two octets for winds, will feature transformations of traditional materials over time and space. The music of Clare Twohy will show new take on the halls of academia respectively. Martha Stoddard’s In Search of Planet X will blast off fireworks of atonality inspired by minimalism and the works of Gustav Holst; while Sheli Nan’s Signatures in Time and Place reflects back to the sounds of Medieval France and Ancient Greece. From here, Lisa Scola Prosek will invoke ideas from Renaissance Italy in How They Move, from her opera-in-progress after Boccaccio’s Decameron, entitled Badessa, with two intriguing movements conjuring up “Little fast ones” and “Big fat ones.” Loren Jones will contribute two pieces based on the music of Indonesia: Wabli Mato Wiya “Eagle Bear Woman flies across the land.” and Two Islands. Davide Verotta’s non-programmatic (though similarly Italianate and serendipitously pictorial) Sinfonia, Per Orchestra da Camera will as the pressing question, “If one insists in asking what [the music] tries to express, well, the journey is from a place of relative stasis, to the interplay of the slightly whimsical and energy bursts (escape? emergence?), back to a place of stasis.” Find your own answers at SFCCO’s concert “Moving Targets” under the baton of Assistant Conductor Martha Stoddard on Saturday November 8, 2008.

CALENDAR EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:


WHO: San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra
WHAT: New Music premieres for orchestra by Bay Area composers
WHERE: Old First Church 1751 Sacramento Street/Van Ness, San Francisco, CA 94109
WHEN: 8pm Saturday November 8, 2008
TICKETS: $15 General, $12 Seniors (65 and older), $12 Full Time Students
UPCOMING SFCCO CONCERTS: February 28th, 2009

Dr. Mark Alburger (b. 1957, Upper Darby, PA) is a multiple-award-winning ASCAP composer of postminimal, postpopular, and postcomedic sensibilities. His compositions are generally assembled or gridded over pieces ranging from ancient and world music, to postmodern art and vernacular sources -- 174 opus numbers (markalburgerworks.blogspot.com), including 16 concertos, 20 operas, 9 symphonies, and the four-hours-and-counting opera-oratorio work-in-progress, The Bible. He is Music Director of San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra (sfcco.org) and San Francisco Cabaret Opera / Goat Hall Productions (goathall.org), Editor-Publisher of 21st-Century Music Journal (21st-centurymusic.blogspot.com and 21st-centurymusic.com), Instructor in Music Literature and Theory at Diablo Valley and St. Mary's Colleges, and Music Critic for Commuter Times. He studied at Swarthmore College (B.A.) with Gerald Levinson and Joan Panetti, Dominican University (M.A., Composition) with Jules Langert, Claremont Graduate University (Ph.D., Musicology) with Roland Jackson, and privately with Terry Riley. Alburger writes daily at markalburger2009.blogspot.com and is in the fifth year of an 11-year project recording his complete works for New Music Publications and Recordings.

Alexis Alrich is presently living in Hong Kong but visits the Bay Area frequently. Her Marimba Concerto, which was presented by the SFCCO, will be played by the Plymouth Symphony in Plymouth, Michigan in 2009 with conductor Nan Washburn. Her piece Island of the Blue Dolphins was performed by the Santa Barbara Symphony on January 19, 2007. She attended an artists' colony in 2007, I-Park in Connecticut, where she wrote Fragile Forests II: Cambodia, next in the series after Fragile Forests I: California Oaks, which was premiered in December 2006 by the San Francisco Composers Orchestra. As one of the winners of a Continental Harmony grant from the American Composers Forum she has written a piece for chorus, orchestra and soloists for the state of Maine. Avenues, her first orchestra piece, was premiered by the Women's Philharmonic and has been played around the country. Her chamber compositions have been performed by members of the San Francisco ballet, opera and symphony orchestras and ensembles including Bay Brass, City Winds, the Ahlert and Schwab guitar and mandolin duo in Germany, the Ariel Ensemble, New Release Alliance and Earplay in San Francisco. Ms. Alrich is the director of the John Adams Young Composers program in Berkeley, California. This is an intensive training program for composers ages 9-18 in honor of and under the aegis of John Adams.

The multi-instrumentalist Michael Cooke is a composer of jazz and classical music. This two-time Emmy, ASCAPLUS Award and Louis Armstrong Jazz Award winner plays a variety of instruments: you can hear him on soprano, alto, and tenor saxophones, flute, soprano and bass clarinets, bassoon and percussion. A cum laude graduate with a music degree from the University of North Texas, he had many different areas of study; jazz, ethnomusicology, music history, theory and of course composition. In 1991 Michael began his professional orchestral career performing in many north Texas area symphonies. Michael has played in Europe, Mexico, and all over the United States. Cimarron Music Press began published many of Michael's compositions in 1994. After relocating to the San Francisco Bay Area, he has been exploring new paths in improvised and composed music, mixing a variety of styles and techniques that draw upon the creative energy of a multicultural experience, both in and out of America. In 1999, Michael started a jazz label called Black Hat Records (blackhatrecords.com) and is currently on the Board of Directors of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra. The San Francisco Beacon describes Michael's music as "flowing out color and tone with a feeling I haven't heard in quite a while. Michael plays with such dimension and flavor that it sets (his) sound apart from the rest." Uncompromising, fiery, complex, passionate, and cathartic is how the All Music Guide labeled Michael's playing on Searching by Cooke Quartet, Statements by Michael Cooke and The Is by CKW Trio. His latest release, An Indefinite Suspension of The Possible, is an unusual mixture of woodwinds, trombone, cello, koto and percussion, creating a distinct synergy in improvised music that has previously been untapped.

David Graves has been writing orchestral works since 2003 and has been a resident composer with the Berkeley Symphony since 2007. He studied composition at the University of Nebraska as well the SF Conservatory and City College of SF. He writes "neoclassical," ambient, jazz, and rock pieces, and has also scored music for film and theater. In 2003 David was awarded the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Fellowship with the Djerassi Resident Artist Program. His large-scale ambient piece, tree/sigh, was installed in a redwood canyon during Djerassi's 2003 Open House and became Deciduous, a surround-sound performance in 2006. Human Street Textures used collected street sounds from the outside of a moving double-decker bus while David modified and merged these with prerecorded works in real time, part of the 2008 Soundwave>Series. Last year he released albums with ScienceNV (progressive rock), AmbientBlack (electronic space music), a collection of pop vocal tunes (The Discontented), and a website with video paintings (Living in the Village of My Dreams). He is currently scoring music for Mark Jackson's production of Miss Julie, scheduled to open at the Aurora Theater in Berkeley in five weeks.

Gary Friedman was born in 1934 and raised in University Heights, a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, Gary Friedman received his higher education at Antioch College, The University of Chicago (B.S. and M.D. degrees), and Harvard University (M.S. degree). His main career has been as a physician-epidemiologist. He worked in the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research for 30 years including 7 years as its Director. Since retiring from Kaiser Permanente in 1999, his current position is Consulting Professor, Stanford University School of Medicine. Dr. Friedman's musical education started with piano at age 5. He also played trumpet in junior high and high school and studied organ and music theory during teen age. Playing and improvising on the piano only occasionally during adulthood, he returned to music seriously at age 54, studying oboe and English horn with Janet Popesco Archibald. He currently plays these instruments in the San Francisco Civic Symphony, the College of Marin Symphony, the Bohemian Club Band and chamber groups. Starting at age 64, he studied composition for four years with Alexis Alrich in the Adult Extension Division of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. His musical compositions, mostly chamber works, are described in his music web site www.garyfriedmanmusic.net.

Davide Verotta was born in a boring mid-sized Italian town close to Milano (Gallarate, one can Google-earth it), and moved to the much larger and very much more exciting San Francisco in his late twenties. He studied piano, and music, in Milano with Isabella Zielonka, Ernesto Esposito, and Giacinto Salvetti, and in San Francisco with Renee Witon, Peggy Salkind, Robert Helps, and Julian White. Composition is a more recent endeavor (with graduate studies at SFSU and UC Davis with Richard Festinger, Josh Levine, Kurt Rohde, and Laurie St. Martin), but it is little by little coming to dominate as his main musical interest. As a pianist he teaches, in his home and at the Community Music Center in San Francisco, and performs regularly in the Bay Area as a soloist, with multiple appearances at the Trinity Chamber, St. Timothy, Piedmont Piano, Chapel of the Chimes, and Lakeshore Presbyterian concert series. As a composer/pianist he studies the craft, performs his and others works (in particular, for the last three years, as a pianist with the San Francisco Composers' Chamber Orchestra), and writes for solo instruments, chamber, orchestra, and voice. Davide's interest in music is intertwined with a lifelong academic occupation in mathematical modeling of biological systems. Although this might generate the familiar reaction (Ah! Musicians and Math!), he admits that the relationship of music and mathematics still eludes him. Acoustic phenomena can of course be described, up to a certain point, using mathematics, but when it comes to music (how we organize those sounds) the suspicion is that 'math' can be as poor a descriptive tool as it is for literature, painting, or other art forms... this is just to say that, unfortunately, there is little connection between his two careers: those two main occupations do not talk too much to each other! More generally, Davide looks at music as a way to explore his self and his relationships with others, and to reflect on reality. It is a highly metaphorical way, which gives only hints, intuitions, and often, especially if one is honest, some surprising and disconcerting insights. It is a vague, mysterious, and sometimes confusing endeavor: a mirror of our life that might bring some light on it, or cast more shadows.

Lisa Scola Prosek, Composer, Librettist, Soprano, Pianist "A gifted local composer "The San Francisco Bay Guardian, 2008was raised in Rome, Italy, and graduated from Princeton University, where she studied with Edward Cone and Milton Babbitt, and privately with Lukas Foss in New York. During this time, Lisa studied singing with Margherita Kalil of the Met. After Princeton, Lisa returned to Italy, where she attended the Conservatorio Luigi Cherubini, and studied with composer Gaetano Giani-Luporini. To date, Scola Prosek has composed two oratorios, and 5 operas, in Italian and English, including Satyricon, reviewed by the San Francisco Observer as a "Tour de Force" and featured on KRON TV; and Leonardo's Notebooks, in Italian, both of which premiered to capacity audiences, and were featured on NPR's West Coast Live.. The Contemporary Classical Music Weekly writes: "This composer's work is steeped in the Mediterranean world of gestures, writ both big and small. Her vocal writing references bel canto and the madrigal, and the instrumental writing, with its shadowy inner voices, has character and point. Intricate and highly expressive music. "Sequenza 21. Lisa Scola Prosek is the recipient of numerous commissions, grants and awards, including from the Argosy Foundation, for Belfagor, and from the LEF Foundation, Meet The Composer, The Hewlett Foundation, the Argosy Contemporary Music Fund, and the American Composers Forum for her opera Trap Door. Look for Lisa's new opera, Identity Theft, in 2010. Visit Lisa and her work on the web at lisascolaprosek.com, where video excerpts from Belfagor and Trap Door are posted.

Sheli Nan, composer, harpsichordist, pianist, teacher and author, is published by PRB Productions of Albany California and Screaming Mary Music of El Cerrito, California. She is the author of 2 books, "The Essential Piano Teacher's Guide" and "Bach the Teacher a Practical Approach to Teaching Bach from the Beginning", co-authored with the late Laurette Goldberg. Sheli's latest large scale works include "SAGA Portrait of a 21st Century Child", the opera for our time. SAGA is social commentary through a musical lens. Her new Symphony, "Signatures in Time and Place", will be performed under the baton of Martha Stoddard, by the San Francisco Composer's Orchestra this fall. "Absinthe avec mes amis", Sheli's new sonata for harpsichord and violin, will be preformed this holiday season along with the Brandenburg concertos, by the Ariel quartet and Bill Barbini. Sheli is a member of ASCAP and the consistent recipient of the Standard Awards panel for compositions and performance for the last 20 years. She is a member of the American Composers Forum and the New York Composers Circle. She is also a member of Early Music America, Music Sources in Berkeley, Ca., The San Francisco Early Music Society and she is program coordinator for WEKA; The Western Early Keyboard Association. Her many published articles on different aspects of the musical experience as well as information about Sheli and her books, cds and scores is available on www.shelinan.com

Martha Stoddard has held the position of Artistic Director of the Oakland Civic Orchestra since 1997. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Humboldt State University and a Master of Music degree from San Francisco State University, where she studied flute, conducting and composition. Her compositions have been performed by American Composer's Forum, on the New Directions Series of the Bakersfield Symphony, by the San Francisco Composers' Chamber Orchestra, schwungvoll!, the Community Women's Orchestra, Womensing, the San Francisco Choral Artists, and in the Trinity Chamber Concert Series and the New Music Forum Festival of Contemporary Music. Ms Stoddard teaches Instrumental Music at Lick- Wilmerding High School in San Francisco.

Loren Jones began experimenting with composition as a child. He spent his early years dividing his time between film-making and music, and some of his film work was periodically broadcast on local San Francisco television. Eventually choosing to pursue music instead of film, Loren formed and was part of several bands performing and creating different genres of original music. To this point largely self-taught, in the 1980's Loren returned to serious study to acquire greater depth musical education in order be able to create the kind of music that he had always been the most passionate about. Loren has studied with Tom Constantine, Alexis Alrich and is currently working with David Conte at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where he is also a member of the chorus. His music has been performed by his own chamber group, by the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra, and by students and teachers from around the Bay Area. He has produced several recordings, worked in radio and film, including creating the sound track for an animated short which won a special Academy Award. His 2006 release, Woodward's Gardens, features two guitars, piano, flute, oboe, harp, and cello. He was the recipient of a 2007 Meet the Composer Grant. His project, Dancing on the Brink of the World, a fourteen movement piece for chamber orchestra and period instruments, on the history of San Francisco, has been an ongoing part of the repertoire of the past three seasons of SFCCO concerts.

Dr. Erling Wold is a composer and man-about-town. Last year saw the premiere of two large works, his Missa Beati Notkeri Balbuli Sancti Galli Monachi in St Gallen, Switzerland, and his solo opera Mordake for tenor John Duykers as part of the San Francisco International Arts Festival. He is currently working on a personal autobiographical theater piece detailing his corruption and death with the help of James Bisso, which may never be finished, and on a more tractable violin sonata for the Denisova-Kornienko duo in Vienna. He is best known for his operas, including Sub Pontio Pilato, an historical fantasy on the death and remembrance of Pontius Pilate, a chamber opera based on William Burroughs' early autobiographical novel Queer, and his critically acclaimed work A Little Girl Dreams of Taking the Veil, based on the Max Ernst collage novel.

Dan Reiter is the Principal cellist with the Oakland East Bay Symphony, the Fremont Symphony and the Festival Opera orchestra. In 2007, the contemporary music ensemble "earplay" performed his trio for clarinet, viola and cello. At the Oakland symphonys Sound Spectrum series Dan recieved critical acclaim for his Pyramids, Canon and Raga, for 3 cellos and middle eastern drum. In 1997 he earned an "Izzy" award for his dance piece, Raga Bach D minor, for cello percussion and solo dancer Robert Moses. As arranger and performer, he has worked with Indias master musician,Ustad Ali Akbar Khan , on 2 recordind projects and the "Maihar" orchestra. In collaboration with his wife, harpist Natalie Cox, they have toured the U.S. performing his many transcriptions and compositions including a cello and harp sonata, a trio for flute, cello and harp, and a sonata for flute and harp.

Phil Freihofner has been a composing and performing member of SFCCO since 2004.

Erik Jekabson is a trumpet player and composer whose music draws from many different sources, but remains firmly rooted in the "third-stream" explorative west coast tradition. A Berkeley, California native, his music has been shaped by his time spent studying at the Oberlin Conservatory, playing professionally in New Orleans (1994-98) and New York (1998-2003), and by his recent completion of graduate studies in classical composition at the San Francisco Conservatory in 2006. Erik has toured with John Mayer, Illinois Jacquet, the Woody Herman Big Band and the jam-band Galactic, and has composed for film and dance projects. His solo album "Intersection" was released in the fall of 2003 by the Fresh Sound/New Talent label.

Jonathan Russell writes music for a wide variety of ensembles, from orchestra to chorus to rock band. His works have been performed by numerous ensembles, including the San Francisco Symphony, Berkeley Symphony, Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, Woodstock Chamber Orchestra, Empyrean Ensemble, the new music bands FIREWORKS and Capital M, and pianists Sarah Cahill and Lisa Moore. Important influences on his work include Johannes Brahms, Gustav Mahler, Igor Stravinsky, Olivier Messiaen, Charles Mingus, Steve Reich, Guns N' Roses, Radiohead, Cornelius Boots, Ryan Brown, Ben Gribble, klezmer music, and free improvisation. Also active as a performer on clarinet, bass clarinet, and alto saxophone, Jonathan is a member of the heavy-metal inspired Edmund Welles bass clarinet quartet and the Balkan/Klezmer/Experimental band Zoyres. He also plays in, composes for, and is a founding member of the Sqwonk bass clarinet duo, and freelances in the Bay Area as a classical and klezmer clarinetist. Jonathan teaches Theory and Musicianship at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, serves as Music Director at First Congregational Church, San Francisco, and is a critic for the San Francisco Classical Voice. He has a BA in Music from Harvard University and an MM in Composition from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. His composition teachers have included Dan Becker, Elinor Armer, Eric Sawyer, John Stewart, and Eric Ewazen.

John Beeman studied with Peter Fricker and William Bergsma at the University of Washington where he received his Master's degree. His first opera, The Great American Dinner Table was produced on National Public Radio. Orchestral works have been performed by the Fremont-Newark Philharmonic, Santa Rosa Symphony, and the Peninsula Symphony. The composer's second opera, Law Offices, premiered in San Francisco in 1996 and was performed again in 1998 on the steps of the San Mateo County Courthouse. Concerto for Electric Guitar and Orchestra was premiered in January 2001 by Paul Dresher, electric guitar. Mr. Beeman has attended the Ernest Bloch Composers' Symposium, the Bard Composer-Conductor program, the Oxford Summer Institutes, and the Oregon Bach Festival and has received awards through Meet the Composer, the American Music Center and ASCAP. Compositions have been performed by Ensemble Sorelle, the Mission Chamber Orchestra, the Ives Quartet, Fireworks Ensemble, the Oregon Repertory Singers and Schola Cantorum of San Francisco.

Beeri Moalem is a violist, violinist, composer, teacher, writer. In addition to SFCCO, he plays with the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, Monterey Symphony, and Fresno Symphony. He teaches orchestra at Terman School in Palo Alto, and is a critic for the San Francisco Classical Voice. His other interests include mountain biking, travel, green technology, and computer games.

Allan Crossman has written for many soloists and ensemble. The North/South Consonance (NYC) recording of Millennium Overture Dance received a GRAMMY nomination in 2003; Music for Human Choir (SATB) shared Top Honors at the Waging Peace through Singing Festival; North/South recently recorded his FLYER (cello and string orchestra, with soloist Nina Flyer); and a recent commission is the piano trio Icarus, for the New Pacific Trio (San Francisco).

One of his many theatre scores, The Log of the Skipper's Wife, was produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford and the Kennedy Center, with Crossman's music drawn from Irish/English shanties and dances. His music is the soundtrack for the award-winning animated short, X man, by Christopher Hinton (National Film Board of Canada). His work has been supported by such organizations as Canada Council for the Arts, American Composers Forum, and Meet the Composer (NY). Professor Emeritus, Concordia University (Montreal), he has also taught at Wheaton College, the Pacific Conservatory, and is presently on the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. His doctoral studies were with George Rochberg, George Crumb, and Hugo Weisgall at the University of Pennsylvania.

Brian Holmes is a physics professor at San Jose State University, specializing in the physics of musical instruments. He usually composes for voice or chorus. During the last year, he has completed commissions for the Peninsula Women's Chorus, the Peninsula Girls Chorus, Pinewood School, and Castileja School. His opera The Fashion God was performed last May by Fresh Voices VI; the song cycle Updike's Science will be performed by Lara Bruckmann as part of Fresh Voices VII later this month. Next weekend, the San Jose Symphonic Choir will perform two pieces of his in Palo Alto as part of a NACUSA concert; one is a premier.

Harry Bernstein has been involved in the Bay Area for many years as a composer, performer and teacher. He has written primarily chamber music, songs and choral music. He has studied composition with Jerry Mueller. Mr. Bernstein is co-founder of the Golden Age Ensemble, a duo presenting varied programs of instrumental and vocal music around the area. He is currently active with the SFCCO (flute), San Francisco's Civic Symphony, and Irregular Resolutions--a composers’ circle. He is an instructor at City College of San Francisco and teaches privately.

Katrina Wreede has been a professional symphony musician, a jazz violist, a member of the Turtle Island String Quartet, a concert soloist, a belly dancer, a police fingerprinter, a non-denominational wedding officiant, a player of Tango Nuevo, Persian, Central European and Roma (gypsy) music and a composer for soloists, chamber ensembles, orchestras, film, and dance, sometimes collaborating with other artists to create works about social injustice. Her works are distributed by MMB Music and performed internationally, including "Mr. Twitty's Chair", now in it's 10th touring season with the David Parsons Dance Group.

Christopher Carrasco is a burgeoning young composer, hailing from the San Francisco bay area. He is becoming fairly well known throughout the Contra Costa and Solano Counties and has been commissioned by several schools in that area to write works for band and percussion ensembles, many of which have received awards. An expert in the fields of brass and percussion, Christopher toured for two years with the world champion Concord Blue Devils. A combination of this strong wind band and percussion background along with a passion for minimalist music gives his music its unique sound that can be described as Drum Corps meets Philip Glass.

Dr. Michael A. Kimbell is composer-in-residence and principal clarinettist of the San Francisco Community Music Center Orchestra directed by Urs Leonhardt Steiner. He studied composition with Robert Palmer and Karel Husa at Cornell University where he received his D.M.A. in 1973. He has written works for orchestra, piano, chamber ensembles, chorus and theatre. His orchestral works, which were premiered by the CMC Orchestra, include Rondino Capriccioso, Kritik des Herzens (also performed by SFCCO), Taklamakn, Night Songs, and Arcadian Symphony (which was also performed by the Mission Chamber Orchestra and won the Southern Arizona Symphony Orchestra Competition in 1998).

Jan Pusina's compositional career started in the 1960's while he was studying at U.C. Berkeley, with Four Songs on Zen Texts and Tape Composition #1. It continues today in the instrumental and electro-acoustic genres. His recent performances include Pink Wind, by the San Francisco Community Music Center Orchestra, and Furtive Assymptotes by the SFCCO. He has also recently produced a set of computer music pieces, available on request.

Ruby Fulton is a native of Northwest Iowa, she has studied composition at Boston University, the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and the Peabody Institute. Her music has been played in Boston, San Francisco, Cincinnati and London. Primary mentors include Elinor Armer, Dan Becker, Charles Fussell, Tom Benjamin and Chris Theofanidis.

Composer, conductor and bass trombonist, Frank Bunger has recently returned to California after performing as acting bass trombonist with the Auckland Philharmonia, in Auckland, New Zealand. Among his top honors: he was 1st place in the 2001 Zellmer Competition, the world's largest cash-prize awarding trombone competition; 1st place in the 1997 Eastern Trombone Workshop HS division competition; and 3rd place in the 2002 Lewis Van Haney competition.

David Sprung was born in Jersey City, New Jersey and grew up in New York City where he attended Stuyvesant High School and Queens College from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree with Honors in Music. After military service during the Korean War, he attended Princeton University, receiving a Master of Fine Arts degree in Music Composition. His composition teachers included Vittorio Rieti, Luigi Dallapiccola, Roger Sessions and Milton Babbitt. Boris Schwarz and Seymour Lipkin were his teachers in conducting. Mr. Sprung's career has been divided between education, performance and composition. He has been a professor on the faculties of Wichita State University, Sonoma State University and is Professor Emeritus of Music at California State University, East Bay. He is a well-known French horn performer, having played principal horn with a number of major and regional symphony orchestras, opera companies and festivals. Highlights have been his 35 year tenure as co-principal horn with the San Francisco Opera orchestra and as principal horn with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Wichita Symphony, San Francisco Ballet orchestra, the Chautauqua Symphony and Opera and the Midsummer Mozart Festival. Mr. Sprung was music director and conductor of the Flagler Symphonic Society, Sonoma State Philharmonic and has appeared as guest conductor of the Wichita Community Theatre, Napa Symphony, CSUEB orchestra, and others.Davide Verotta studied piano in Milano (Italy) with Isabella Zielonka Crivelli, Ernesto Esposito, and Giacinto Salvetti. and in San Francisco with Renee Witon, Peggy Salkind, Robert Helps, Julian White; composition at SFSU with Josh Levine, at UC Davis with Kurt Rode, and, this coming year, Laurie San Martin. He performs regularly in the Bay area as a piano soloist, and for the last three years has played with the San Francisco Composers' Chamber Orchestra. He teaches piano in his home studio and at the Community Music Center in San Francisco.

Clare Twohy is an active performer and composer in the Bay Area and an alumna of The Crowden School and a former violin student of Anne Crowden,. She holds a B.M. in violin performance from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where she studied violin with Camilla Wicks and composition with Elinor Armer. Clare is a long-standing member of the SFCCO, which performed her latest composition last November. Clare has attended summer festivals including the Music Academy of the West, Roundtop, and Bowdoin festivals. Currently, she has a private composition studio and is on the Musicianship faculty in the Preparatory division at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.

=0){ mysqli_data_seek($res,$row); $resrow = (is_numeric($col)) ? mysqli_fetch_row($res) : mysqli_fetch_assoc($res); if (isset($resrow[$col])){ return $resrow[$col]; } } return false; } include("dbinfo.inc"); $con=mysqli_connect($mysqlhost,$username,$password,$database); if (mysqli_connect_errno()) { echo "Get Bio Website Failed to connect to MySQL: " . mysqli_connect_error(); exit; } $query="SELECT * FROM staff"; $result=mysqil_query($con,$query); $num=mysqli_num_rows($result); mysqli_close($con); echo "
SFCCO Composers Biographies


"; $i=0; while ($i < $num) { $firstname=mysqli_result($result,$i,"First"); $lastname=mysqli_result($result,$i,"Last"); $bio=mysqli_result($result,$i,"Bio"); echo "$firstname $lastname

$bio


"; $i++; } ?>