Label: Soundset Recordings Item Number: SR1123 Format: Download Year Recorded: 2020 Carter Pann: The Narrows Carter Pann Christopher Creviston - Soprano Saxophone Margaret McDonald - Piano Alexandra Nguyen - Piano Jeffery Meyer - Conductor Gary Lewis - Conductor
Carter Pann Carter Pann has written for and performed with musicians and ensembles around the world. His numerous albums encompass solo, vocal, chamber, orchestral and wind music which have received a Grammy® nomination and Masterprize seat in London among other awards. Pann was a Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music in 2016. He loves a good game of chess or poker with his students and friends and currently teaches and conducts the Boulder Altitude Directive contemporary music ensemble at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Christopher Creviston - Soprano Saxophone Margaret McDonald - Piano Pianist Margaret McDonald, a native of Minnesota, is an Associate Professor of Collaborative Piano at the University of Colorado Boulder. She joined the College of Music keyboard faculty in the fall of 2004. She helped to develop the College’s graduate degree program in Collaborative Piano and the undergraduate collaborative curriculum. Praised for her poetic style and versatility, McDonald enjoys a very active performing career and has partnered many distinguished artists including the Takács Quartet, Kathleen Winkler, Zuill Bailey, Paula Robison, Carol Wincenc, Ben Kamins, David Shifrin, William VerMeulen, David Jolley, Ian Bousfield, Steven Mead, and Velvet Brown. McDonald received her Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees in Piano Performance from the University of Minnesota and a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Collaborative Piano from the University of California. Alexandra Nguyen - Piano A native of Montréal, Alexandra Nguyen maintains a diverse career as a collaborative pianist, teacher, and arts administrator. She is an accomplished pianist who has appeared throughout the United States and Canada, including performances at Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall (New York, NY), The Barns at Wolf Trap (Vienna, VA), Merkin Hall at the Kaufman Center (New York, NY), the Teatro Nacional (Panama City, Panama), BargeMusic (Brooklyn, NY), the Strings Music Festival (Steamboat Springs, CO), and the Societe Pro Musica Chamber Music Series (Montréal, Canada); recent performances include concerts with violinist Andrés Cárdenes, baritone Patrick Mason, as well as bassoonist Peter Kolkay, a long-standing collaboration. She has been an invited speaker at the National Association of Schools of Music Annual Meeting, the College Music Society Annual Conference, the Music Teachers National Association National Convention, and the National Conference on Keyboard Pedagogy. As Associate Professor of Collaborative Piano at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Dr. Nguyen co-directs the graduate programs in collaborative piano and coordinates accompanying services at the College of Music. She was formerly the Assistant Dean of Academic Affairs at the Eastman School of Music, where she also held part-time faculty appointments in the piano and chamber music departments. Other prior appointments include Administrative Director of the Montréal Chamber Music Festival, Director of Career Services at the Eastman School, and piano faculty at the David Hochstein Memorial School for Music and Dance. Dr. Nguyen is Chair of the Collaborative Committee for the National Conference on Keyboard Pedagogy and served on the steering committee for the Music Teachers National Association’s Year of Collaborative Music. A frequent adjudicator, she has served on the juries of the Eastman International Young Artists Piano Competition, the Gina Bachauer Junior and Young Artists Competition, and MusicFest Northwest, among others. Nguyen was the founder and director of the summer institute, Plays Well With Others, at the Eastman School of Music. She was a member of The Quartet Program West faculty, and served as répétiteur for the 2012 Opera Orvieto program in Orvieto, Italy. Alexandra Nguyen completed her graduate degrees in Piano Accompanying and Chamber Music under the guidance of Jean Barr at the Eastman School of Music where she was awarded the first Performer’s Certificate in Piano Accompanying and Chamber Music. She has studied with pedagogues such as Douglas Humpherys, Anne Epperson, Madeleine Bélanger, and Suzanne Goyette, and holds a Bachelor of Science degree from McGill University and a Premier Prix from the Conservatoire de musique du Québec a Montréal. Jeffery Meyer - Conductor Jeffery Meyer has developed a career as an accomplished conductor, pianist and educator throughout North America, Europe, Russia and Asia with a reputation for championing contemporary orchestral music and innovative collaborations. His programming has been awarded multiple prizes including three ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming and two Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Awards in Orchestral Programming. He is the Director of Orchestras at the Arizona State University as well as the Artistic Director of the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic in Russia. Praised as “one of the most interesting and creatively productive conductors working in St. Petersburg” by Sergei Slonimsky, Jeffery Meyer’s extensive work with the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra has been noted for its breadth and innovation. The orchestra’s American debut with three performances at Symphony Space’s Wall-to-Wall Festival in New York City were described by The New York Times as “impressive”, “powerful”, “splendid” and “blazing.” Gary Lewis - Conductor Gary Lewis is the Director of Orchestral Studies and the Bob and Judy Charles Professor of Conducting in the College of Music at the University of Colorado Boulder, where he conducts the University Symphony Orchestra and oversees the entire orchestra program. He is also Music Director and Conductor of the Midland-Odessa (TX) Symphony Orchestra. At CU Boulder Mr. Lewis also leads the graduate program in orchestral conducting including both the masters and doctoral level. His former students are currently enjoying success as conductors with professional orchestras and opera companies, university and school ensembles, and youth orchestras. Prior to his appointment at Colorado, Lewis served on the faculties of Texas Tech University, The Ohio State University, The University of Michigan, and Abilene Christian University. He is equally at home with professional, university, and youth ensembles. He is the Principal Guest Conductor of the Boulder Philharmonic and has appeared with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, the Sichuan Philharmonic Orchestra (Chengdu, China), the Colorado Music Festival, Boulder Ballet, Midland Ballet Theater, Ballet Lubbock, the Lubbock Symphony Orchestra, the Abilene Philharmonic Orchestra, the Quad Cities Symphony Orchestra, the New Symphony Orchestra (Sofia, Bulgaria), and the Western Plains Opera Theater. His work with summer music festivals has also been noteworthy including the Interlochen Center for the Arts, Pine Mountain Music Festival (opera and symphonic) and Rocky Ridge Music Center. Carter Pann: Soprano Saxophone Concerto, performed by Christopher Creviston
My Soprano Saxophone Concerto (2019) was written for Christopher Creviston and commissioned by him, the ASU Symphony Orchestra, and the SUNY Potsdam Symphony Orchestra. The work lasts about 15 minutes and does what it can to show the many sides of one of my favorite musicians on the planet. The work is cast in four movements and makes use of a varied orchestral palette. I. The Old Line (orchestra without brass) presents the soloist almost immediately, akin to the technique in Mendelssohn’s beloved Violin Concerto. The saxophone weaves a song-like melody throughout, often reaching for the highest register of the instrument. II. Aria: Injurious Graffito (full orchestra) was the first movement to be written, inspired by a line in the old television series Frasier. I fell in love with the two words “Injurious Graffito” the way they are delivered on the show. The music, like the TV show, is lofty and somewhat arrogant. III. Jump (full orchestra) is a written-out improvisation on the saxophone. Chris is particularly adept at the leaps and quick changes found throughout the movement, which culminates in a straight-ahead tune incorporating shapes that foreshadow the tune in the last movement. IV. Hymn: A Love Supreme (string orchestra and harp) is a torch song of unabashed sentimentality. A surprising admission: I was not thinking of John Coltrane’s famed album of the same name when naming this last movement. Perhaps it was a subconscious decision.
The Dutch Stonewall (2013) was written for two of the most talented musicians I've come to know, Margaret McDonald and Alexandra Nguyen. The title is synonymous with a particular opening sequence in a chess game, however I am not referencing chess in this music. My attraction to the title is in its evocative stylistic implications. I'm talking about salty, angular harmonies... the kind of sounds I associate with modern Dutch music. As I am not Dutch this music will never be mistaken for that of a native – but some of the work was written while living in Germany with a Dutch friend months ago, and never did the image of a long and gnarled Dutch Stonewall leave my inner eye while writing this music. I fell in love with this image and wrote music inspired by it, some of which is hardened and ice-cold.
Written in an exceedingly remote place called "The Narrows," my Second Symphony (2017) took much of its inspiration from the cosseted beauty of a narrow corridor recessed in a thin crevasse cut by one of the Little Thompson River tributaries among the St. Vrain waterways north of Lyons, Colorado. This location, and what I have become since landing here is the stuff this music is about. The Narrows is a place between things. I cannot walk out my door and be somewhere already. It takes some doing to get anywhere from here. The internet is crippled and spotty at best. This is a beautiful but lonely place, and I must look at myself in less-than-flattering, plainly direct ways now. My vices are clearly apparent without entire populations of proximate friends or neighbors to help me justify them. I often worry about my health as a man in his forties living in The Narrows. It would take some time for any help to get here. One cannot travel the two-lane highway through The Narrows without being confronted by the myriad of shrines placed by families along the road as memorials to all who have either crashed or slipped off the road into the deep ravines. It was while visiting all of the shrines up close (nearly 25) upon moving to the area that I was compelled to compose a musical image of both the secluded beauty and sheer treachery of this place in which I now reside. The pleasures here are rich, but they come with an unspoken warning. - Carter Pann
Label: Soundset Recordings Item Number: SR1123 Format: Download Year Recorded: 2020 Recording Engineer: Kevin Harbison, Jonathan Galle, Alex Kosiorek, Central Sound A live concert recording that features the music of Carter Pann, performed by saxophonist Christopher Creviston with the Arizona State University Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Jeffery Meyer, and by pianists Margaret McDonald and Alexandra Nguyen with the University of Colorado Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Gary Lewis. Not Available | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||