Kate Stenberg joins with the Mills Performing Group celebrating Anthony Braxton’s 75th Birthday.
Program:
Composition No. 1 for solo piano - Brett Carson, piano
Composition No. 63 for chamber orchestra
Ben Goldberg: clarinet (soloist 1), Andy Strain: trombone (soloist 2), Tod Brody: flute,
Mitch Stahlman: flute, Jesse Barrett: oboe, Sophie Huet: clarinet, Karla Ekholm: bassoon,
Hall Goff: trombone, Hrabba Atladottir: violin, Kate Stenberg: violin, Ellen Ruth Rose: viola, Crystal Pascucci: cello, Richard Worn: contrabass, Jennifer Ellis: harp, William Winant: percussion, Scott Siler: percussion, Steed Cowart: conductor
Composition No. 247
Kyle Bruckmann: oboe, James Fei: saxophone, Matt Welch: bagpipes
$15 general, $10 seniors and students
Tickets available at the door, or buy in advance online at:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/anthony-braxton-75th-birthday-celebration-mills-performing-group-tickets-69960039361
Music Building Littlefield Concert Hall 202
Jeannik Méquet Littlefield Concert Hall, Music Building, Mills College
Anthony Braxton (born 1945), the Chicago-born composer and multi-instrumentalist, is recognized as one of the most important musicians, educators, and creative thinkers of the past 50 years. He is highly esteemed in the experimental music community for the revolutionary quality of his work and for the mentorship and inspiration he has provided to generations of younger musicians. Drawing upon a disparate mix of influences from John Coltrane to Karlheinz Stockhausen, Braxton has created a unique musical system that celebrates the concept of global creativity and our shared humanity. His work examines core principles of improvisation, structural navigation and ritual engagement - innovation, spirituality, and intellectual investigation.
From his early work as a pioneering solo performer in the late 1960s through to his eclectic experiments on Arista Records in the 1970s, his landmark quartet of the 1980s, and more recent endeavors, such as his cycle of Trillium operas and the day-long, installation-based Sonic Genome Project, his vast body of work is unparalleled. His small ensembles of the 1970s through to the present day are considered among the most innovative groups of their respective eras, while his Creative Orchestra Music has brought together the varying streams of American jazz orchestras, marching bands, and experimental practices with the traditions of European concert music in a wholly individual compositional voice. His continuing and evolving current systems of the past 15 years, including Ghost Trance Music, Diamond Curtain Wall Music, Falling River Music, Echo Echo Mirror House Music, and ZIM Music, have served as the artistic incubators for some of the most exciting artists of the current generation. Braxton’s many awards include a 1981 Guggenheim Fellowship, a 1994 MacArthur Fellowship, a 2013 Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, a 2014 NEA Jazz Master Award, and honorary doctorates from Université de Liège (Belgium) and New England Conservatory (USA).