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Feb. 27 EMPAC Concert at Rensselaer Features Music for Violin, Piano, and Computer With Neil Rolnick, Todd Reynolds and Vicky Chow
Composer Is Rensselaer Professor and iEAR
Studios Founding Director
Photo credit: Rika Iino
Photo courtesy of Sozo Media
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Neil Rolnick, professor of music at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, will present a concert of music for violin, piano,
and computer at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27, at the Curtis R.
Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) at Rensselaer. The
concert, which is free and open to the public, features a
selection of his most recent compositions from 2003 to the
present.
Rolnick said the
program showcases solo and duo works (plus computer) he has
written in the past decade, a departure from the works for
large ensembles that have made up the bulk of his recent
work.
“In the last few years, most of my efforts have been on
larger works: two violin concerti, and extended monodrama with
a large ensemble and three singers, and a full evening dramatic
project which I hope to premiere by 2015,” Rolnick said. “In
the midst of those projects, I find that working with musicians
who have played my solo and duet works continues to provide me
with a vehicle for bringing my music to different
audiences.”
Rolnick said many of the compositions reflect an interest –
which he dates to his 2002 move to New York City – in combining
virtuoso instrumental playing with digital processing.
Balkanization and Gate Beats, for example,
are two solo laptop pieces that “explore aspects of working
with digital samples as the only instrument.” Other pieces
include Digits, a composition for solo piano, digital
processing, and video, and Fiddle Faddle, a “sweet and
enjoyable” composition for violin and computer.
The program does, however, also include the 2007 composition
Hammer & Hair, an acoustic piece for violin and
piano, which he described as “the closest I’ll ever come to a
traditional violin sonata.”
Rolnick will perform with longtime collaborators Todd
Reynolds, violin, and Vicky Chow, piano.
Reynolds is known as one of the founding fathers of the
hybrid-musician movement and one of the most active and
versatile proponents of what he calls “present music.” He has
long been violinist of choice for Steve Reich, Meredith Monk,
Bang on a Can, and was a founder of the string quartet known as
Ethel.
Chow joined the Bang on a Can All-Stars in 2009. Since then,
her passion has propelled her to work with an A-to-Z of leading
composers and musicians such as John Adams, Louis Andriessen,
Bryce Dessner (The National) Philip Glass, Glenn Kotche
(Wilco), David Longstreth (Dirty Projectors), Steve Reich,
Terry Riley, and Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth).
Rolnick said he has several ongoing projects with both
musicians.
“I’m working on new projects for both of the players in the
upcoming EMPAC performance,” Rolnick said. “In June, Todd will
be featured soloist in a recording of my second violin/computer
concerto Gardening at Gropius House, with members of
the New York City-based ensemble Alarm Will Sound. And over the
next six months, I’ll be writing a new piece for Vicky,
exploring the range of technical and expressive possibilities
for piano and live digital processing.”
The composition for Chow, Dynamic Ram & Concert
Grand, is a 2011 commission from the Fromm Music
Foundation at Harvard University, a prestigious award that
recognizes significant achievements in contemporary music.
Rolnick, the founding director of the iEAR (Integrated
Electronic Arts at Rensselaer) Studios, is a pioneer in the use
of computers in performance. Beginning in the late 1970s,
Rolnick has often included unexpected and unusual combinations
of materials and media in his music. He has performed around
the world, and his music appears on 15 CDs.
Rolnick’s work has been received enthusiastically by
critics, with the New York Times describing
his MONO Prelude as “driven, vital music,” describing
his piece Digits as “an exhilarating interactive
piece,” and including his CD The Economic Engine as
among the best classical CDs of 2009.
For additional information about Neil Rolnick, Todd Reynolds
and Vicky Chow, please visit:
http://www.neilrolnick.com
http://about.me/toddreynolds
http://www.vickychow.com
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Published
February 7,
2013 |
Contact: Mary L. Martialay
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: martim12@rpi.edu |
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