2022-2023 Season Announcement

SEATTLE, WA – Seattle Modern Orchestra (SMO) returns for its thirteenth season with five live performances featuring the West Coast premiere of 2019 Pulitzer-nominated chamber theatre work Ipsa Dixit by Kate Soper; Barlow Endowment for Music Composition commission by Berlin prize winner and 2014 Guggenheim Fellow Wang Lu; commemorating two quintessential explorators in music, Greek composer Iannis Xenakis and Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer, and works by Seattle-based composers Ha-Yang Kim, Jérémy Jolley, Joël-François Durand, along with works by Henry Threadgill, Vijay Iyer, Ash Fure, and Anna Thordsvalsdóttir

This season SMO is excited to present concerts at five different venues across the Seattle area, performing for a wide array of in-person audiences. The first concert will take place at the Royal Room on November 8, featuring pieces by jazz-rooted composers Henry Threadgill (winner of 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Music)  and Vijay Iyer, alongside the music of avant-garde legend, Iannis Xenakis and beloved Seattle composer, Ha-Yang Kim. In February, they will present a world premiere by SMO’s co-artistic director, Jérémy Jolley’s sequels to his original work, (contro-)clessidra II, III, IV for piano and electronics, flute and clarinet, cello and percussion at the Chapel Performance Space. They will also be in residency at the University of Washington School of Music in February, performing faculty and student compositions at the Meany Studio Theater. Kate Soper’s chamber music theatre work Ipsa Dixit will be brought to life by SMO musicians in March at the newly constructed Raisbeck Performance Hall at Cornish College of Arts downtown. Concluding our season in June, they will return to Town Hall Seattle with a world premiere by Wang Lu, and music by Anna Throdsvalsdóttir and Joël-François Durand.

“I’m constantly reminded of how much of our work truly supports local musicians through commissions and performances,” says SMO percussionist and UW professor Bonnie Whiting. “Many U.S. contemporary music ensembles focus on touring and measure their success by high-profile out of town concerts and guest appearances. It’s refreshing to be part of an organization that instead focuses on what it can bring to our already vibrant local arts scene.” 

SMO’s video podcast, Open Score, will return this season bringing in-depth conversations with featured composers to audiences. The discussions will be broadcast live through our Digital Stage on Crowdcast, where audiences are welcome to ask questions and join in the conversation exploring the music and creative paths of this season’s composers. Schedule to be released. 

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Concert #1 – SMO @ The Royal Room 
Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022 @ 8:00pm
The Royal Room

Program:
Henry Threadgill  Sixfivetwo (2018) for string quartet – Seattle Premiere
Vijay Iyer Mutations IV, VI, and VII for string quartet, piano and electronics (2005)
Ha-Yang Kim Lens for cello and pedals (2006)
Iannis Xenakis Mikka (1971), Mikka «S» (1975)
Iannis Xenakis Akéa (1986)

Performers:
Eric Rynes and Pam Liu, violins 
Alessandra Barrett, viola 
Ha-Yang Kim, Cello 
Stephen Olsen, Piano 

Tickets: $15 In Advance | $20 Doors

Seattle Modern Orchestra celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Greek composer Iannis Xenakis with his iconic Akéa for piano and string quartet, and Mikka «S» for solo violin, alongside the Seattle premiere of celebrated composer Henry Threadgill’s Sixfivetwo and works by Vijay Iyer and local composer Ha-Yang Kim.

Sixfivetwo was commissioned for Fifty for the Future: The Kronos Learning Repertoire, a project of the Kronos Performing Arts Association. The score and parts are available for free online at kronosquartet.org.

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Concert #2 – therefore i was
Friday, Feb. 3, 2023 @ 8:00pm
Chapel Performance Space

Program:
Ash Fure therefore i was (2012)
R.Murray Schafer The Crown of Ariadne (1979)
Jérémy Jolley (contro-)clessidra II, III, IV for piano and electronics, flute and clarinet, cello and percussion (2015-2022) 

Performers:
Sarah Pyle, flute
Rachel Yoder, clarinet
Ha-Yang Kim, cello 
Bonnie Whiting, percussion
Cristina Valdes, piano 
Sophie Baird-Daniel, harp

Tickets: $25 General | $20 Seniors | $10 Students 

SMO will return to the Chapel Performance Space for its second concert, featuring exclusively small chamber and solo works. The program includes Ash Fure’s piano trio therefore i was, world premieres by Jérémy Jolley for piano and electronics, flute and clarinet, and cello and percussion from his (contro-)clessidra series, and a remembrance of Canadian composer, R. Murray Schafer, with the performance of his virtuosic work for solo harp, The Crown of Ariadne

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Concert #3 – SMO in Residency at UW School of Music
Tuesday, February 7, 2023 @ 7:30pm
Meany Hall – Studio Theater

Program:
SMO will perform works by students, faculty, and guests of the UW Composition Program.

Tickets: https://tickets.artsevents.washington.edu/tickets/11771
$20 general |  $15 UW Affiliate (employee, retiree, UWAA member) | $10 students and seniors

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Concert #4 – “She, herself, said it…”
Friday, March 24 & Saturday, March 25, 2023 @ 8pm 
Raisbeck Auditorium at Cornish College of the Arts

Program:
Kate Soper Ipsa Dixit: “She, herself, said it…” 

Performers:
Maria Männistö, soprano
Sarah Pyle, flute
Eric Rynes, violin
Bonnie Whiting, percussion
Tickets: $30 General | $20 Seniors | $10 Students

A “twenty-first century masterpiece” (Alex Ross, The New Yorker), Kate Soper’s Ipsa Dixit is a semi-staged, evening-length chamber music theater work for voice, flute, violin, and percussion exploring the intersections of language and music, emotion and meaning, expressivity and truth. 

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Concert #5 – Thorvalsdóttir, Durand, Wang 
Saturday, June 3, 2023 @ 8:00pm
Town Hall Seattle: The Great Hall

Program:
Anna Thorvaldsdóttir aequilibria (2017)
Joël-François Durand Mundus Imaginalis (2015) 
Wang Lu New Work for soprano and ensemble (2023) – World Premiere commissioned for Seattle Modern Orchestra

Tickets: $30 General | $20 Seniors | $10 Students 

The 2022–2023 season will conclude with a world premiere written for SMO by celebrated composer, Wang Lu (commissioned by the Barlow Foundation), and will feature the ensemble soprano, Maria Männistö, who was described in the Seattle Times as “One of the most hauntingly beautiful voices I have heard in years.” The program will also include Aequilibria by Anna Thorvaldsdóttir and Joël-François Durand‘s Mundus Imaginalis, exploring “the intermediary organ between sensible perception and intellectual intuition.”

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SMO Season Subscription: $100 (5-concert pass)
SMO Single tickets: $20-$30 General, $15-$20 Seniors, $10 Students

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SEATTLE MODERN ORCHESTRA
Founded in 2010, Seattle Modern Orchestra (SMO) is the only large ensemble in the Pacific Northwest solely dedicated to the music of the 20th and 21st centuries. Led by co-artistic directors Julia Tai and Jérémy Jolley, SMO commissions and premieres new works from an international lineup of composers, in addition to presenting important pieces from the contemporary repertoire that are rarely if ever heard by Seattle audiences. The ensemble “operates at that exciting cusp between old and new, between tradition and innovation” (Vanguard Seattle) curating new sounds and experiences for concert goers in the region.

SMO provides audiences with performances of the best in contemporary chamber and orchestral music, and develops podcasts, blog posts, lectures, and other forms of community engagement in an accessible and inviting format all designed to expand the listener’s appreciation and awareness of the music of today.

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COMPOSER BIOGRAPHIES 

Henry Threadgill
For over forty years, Henry Threadgill has been celebrated as one of the most forward-thinking composers and multi- instrumentalists in American music. The New York Times has called him “perhaps the most important jazz composer of his generation.” Threadgill is a recipient of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Music for In for a Penny, In for a Pound. Threadgill is an early member of the AACM.

Vijay Iyer
Described by The New York Times as a “social conscience, multimedia collaborator, system builder, rhapsodist, historical thinker and multicultural gateway,” Vijay Iyer has carved out a unique path as an influential, prolific, shape-shifting presence in twenty-first-century music. A composer and pianist active across multiple musical communities, Iyer has created a consistently innovative, emotionally resonant body of work over the last twenty-five years, earning him a place as one of the leading music-makers of his generation.

He received a MacArthur Fellowship, a Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, a United States Artist Fellowship, a Grammy nomination, the Alpert Award in the Arts, and two German “Echo” awards, and was voted Downbeat Magazine’s Jazz Artist of the Year four times in the last decade. He has been praised by Pitchfork as “one of the best in the world at what he does,” by the Los Angeles Weekly as “a boundless and deeply important young star,” and by Minnesota Public Radio as “an American treasure.” 

Iyer’s musical language is grounded in the rhythmic traditions of South Asia and West Africa, the African American creative music movement of the 60s and 70s, and the lineage of composerpianists from Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk to Alice Coltrane and Geri Allen. He has released twenty-four albums of his music, most recently UnEasy (ECM Records, 2021), a trio session with drummer Tyshawn Sorey and bassist Linda May Han Oh; The Transitory Poems (ECM, 2019), a live duo recording with pianist Craig Taborn; Far From Over (ECM, 2017) with the award-winning Vijay Iyer Sextet; and A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke (ECM, 2016) a suite of duets with visionary composer-trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith.

Iyer is also an active composer for classical ensembles and soloists. His works have been commissioned and premiered by Brentano Quartet, Imani Winds, Bang on a Can All-Stars, The Silk Road Ensemble, International Contemporary Ensemble, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, LA Philharmonic, American Composers Orchestra, and virtuosi Matt Haimowitz, Claire Chase, Shai Wosner, and Jennifer Koh, among others. He recently served as composer-in-residence at London’s Wigmore Hall, music director of the Ojai Music Festival, and artist-in-residence at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

A tireless collaborator, he has written big-band music for Arturo O’Farrill and Darcy James Argue, remixed classic recordings of Talvin Singh and Meredith Monk, joined forces with legendary musicians Henry Threadgill, Reggie Workman, Zakir Hussain, and L. Subramanian, and developed interdisciplinary work with Teju Cole, Carrie Mae Weems, Mike Ladd, Prashant Bhargava, and Karole Armitage. 

A longtime New Yorker, Iyer lives in central Harlem with his wife and daughter. He teaches at Harvard University in the Department of Music and the Department of African and African American Studies. He is a Steinway artist. website: vijay-iyer.com management: musicandart.net

Ha-Yang Kim 
Drawing from a breadth of western classical music, American experimentalism, rock, electronic, noise, avant-improv, to non-western sources (Balinese, South Indian, and Korean), Kim’s music is inspired by acoustic phenomena, ritual ceremonial processes, and characterized by an organic visceral lyricism of sound influenced by the East Asian sense of space and emptiness. She developed a unique signature language of extended string techniques and has also composed music for film, dance, and multimedia. Her current practice involves explorations in tunings, and researching acoustical and spatial phenomenology of resonance-amplification-feedback.

Kim’s music is performed throughout the US, Europe, Asia, Russia, Turkey, Morocco, Bali, Cuba, and Canada. She has released 2 monograph albums on the Tzadik label: “AMA” in 2008, and “Threadsuns” in 2014. Performers of her work include the JACK Quartet, FLUX Quartet, flutist Claire Chase, violist Nadia Sirota, vocalist Hanna-Maria Strand, members of  International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), and Odd Appetite. In addition, the diverse range of artists Ms. Kim has worked with include Meredith Monk, John Zorn, Cecil Taylor, Terry Riley, Alvin Lucier, Louis Andriessen, David Lang, Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, Evan Ziporyn, Yannis Kyriakides, Zeena Parkins, Ikue Mori, Miya Masaoka, Hahn  Rowe, Bang on a Can All-Stars, International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), Kronos Quartet, indie-rock band The National, poet Anne Waldman, choreographer Douglas Dunn, video artist Ursula Scherrer, and pop superstar Beyoncè.  

Kim has recorded over 25 albums, for labels such as ECM, Tzadik, New World, Cold Blue, Beggars Banquet, New Albion, Brassland, Karnatic Lab and Bridge Records. Ms. Kim has been Artist-in-Residence at ISSUE Project Room and Roulette Intermedium in Brooklyn, NY, and done residences at Harvard, Princeton, Brown, Brandeis Universities, Dartmouth College, Massachusetts College of Art, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the Walden School for Young Composers. She has also given presentations of her work at MIT, Massachusetts College of Art, and the Royal Conservatory in Den Haag, Netherlands.  

Dedicated to cross-cultural exchange, social transformation, and education, Kim has conducted workshops with Berber youth communities in Morocco, performed at youth detention centers in the Bronx supported by the Ford Foundation, performed alongside gamelan orchestras in Bali, and performed for the UN Humanitarian Aid Campaign.  

Kim has received grants and awards from the Jerome Foundation, Van Lier Fellowship, ASCAP, New Music USA, Meet the Composer, Argosy Foundation, Trust for Mutual Understanding, and the Hemera Foundation. She’s also active as a curator of new music events, and has written an article for “ARCANA Volume III” (edited by John Zorn).  Ms. Kim composed the original music score for the 2014 documentary film, DIOR AND I, which received worldwide critical acclaim. 

Kim studied at the New England Conservatory where her mentors included Joseph Maneri, Lee Hyla, and Michael Gandolfi, and the application of Carnatic music concepts to contemporary music at the Amsterdam Conservatorium. Currently, she lives in Seattle, Washington, and is on the music faculty at the Cornish College of the Arts.

Iannis Xenakis 
Iannis Xenakis was one of the leaders of modernism in music, a hugely influential composer, particularly in the later 1950s and 1960s, when he was experimenting with compositional techniques that soon entered the basic vocabulary of the twentieth-century avant garde.

Xenakis was born, not in Greece, but in Braïla, Romania, of Greek parents, on 29 May 1922. His initial training, in Athens, was as a civil engineer. In 1947, after three years spent fighting in the Greek resistance against the Nazi occupation, during which time he was very badly injured (losing the sight of an eye), he escaped a death sentence and fled to France, where he settled and subsequently became an important element of cultural life.

Xenakis was first active as an architect, collaborating with Le Corbusier on a number of projects, not least the Philips Pavilion, designed by Xenakis, at the 1958 Brussels World Fair. It was in the 1950s, too, that Xenakis’ compositions began to be published. In 1952 he attended composition classes with Olivier Messaien, who suggested that Xenakis apply his scientific training to music.

The resulting style, based on procedures derived from mathematics, architectural principles and game theory, catapulted Xenakis to the front ranks of the avant garde – although there was never any suggestion that he was a member of a clique or group: he was always his own man. He never, for example, embraced total serialism, and he also avoided more traditional devices of harmony and counterpoint; instead, he developed other ways of organizing the dense masses of sound that are characteristic of his first compositions. These stochastic, or random, procedures were based on mathematical principles and were later entrusted to computers for their realization.

But for all the formal control in their composition, Xenakis’ scores retain an elemental energy, a life-force that gives the music an impact of visceral effectiveness: works like Bohor for electronics (1962), Eonta for piano and brass quintet (1963-64), Persephassa for six percussionists, placed around the audience (1969), and the ballet Kraanerg, for 23 instrumentalists and tape (1969) all exhibit a primitive power that belies the complexity of their origins. The Sydney Morning Herald said of Kraanerg, for example, that it “remains staggeringly powerful and clamorous, an essay in constantly renewed energy that shows not the least sign of faltering.” Married with this primordial power is the composer’s fascination with ritualism, most often that of ancient Greece, finding fullest theatrical form in his setting of the Oresteia (1966).

Reprinted by kind permission of Boosey & Hawkes

R. Murray Schaefer
(b. 18 July 1933, Sarnia, Ontario – d. 14 August 2021, Indian River, Ontario).
Canadian composer of interdisciplinary works that have been performed throughout the world; he was also active as a writer.

Mr. Schafer initially studied harpsichord, music theory and piano at The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto from 1945–55. He then briefly studied composition with John Weinzweig, harpsichord with Greta Kraus and piano with Alberto Guerrero at the University of Toronto in 1954–55, from where he was expelled for insubordination. He obtained a piano degree from the Royal College of Music in London while still in Canada. He later taught himself journalism, languages, literature, music, and philosophy in Vienna and London from 1956–61, on a grant from the Canada Council for the Arts. He received six honorary doctorates from universities in Argentina, Canada and France.

Among his honors were two prizes from the Fromm Foundation (1968, 1972), the Canadian Music Council Medal (1972), a Guggenheim Fellowship (1974), the William Harold Moon Award (1974), the Composer of the Year Award from the Canadian Music Council (1976), the Jules Léger Prize for New Chamber Music from the Canada Council for the Arts (1977, for String Quartet No. 2, ‘Waves’), the Prix Honegger (1980, for String Quartet No. 1), the Glenn Gould Prize for Music and Its Communication (1987), the Molson Prize from the Canada Council for the Arts (1993), the Louis Applebaum Composer’s Award (1999, for his œuvre), the Walter Carsen Prize for Excellence in the Performing Arts from the Canada Council for the Arts (2005, for his œuvre), the Governor General’s Performing Arts Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement (2009), and the title of Companion of the Order of Canada (2013).

As a writer, he contributed articles to many publications and edited the collections British Composers in Interview (1963) and Ezra Pound and Music: The Complete Criticism (1977, W. W. Norton & Company). He wrote the books The Composer in the Classroom (1965), Ear Cleaning: Notes for an Experimental Music Course (1967), The New Soundscape (1969), The Book of Noise (1970), When Words Sing (1970), The Rhinoceros in the Classroom (1975), E. T. A. Hoffmann and Music (1975), Creative Music Education (1976), Music in the Cold (1977), The Tuning of the World (1977), On Canadian Music (1984, Arcana Editions), The Thinking Ear: On Music Education (1986), Patria and the Theatre of Confluence (1991, Arcana Editions), A Sound Education (1992), and Voices of Tyranny: Temples of Silence (1993). Among his other writings were the story Wolf Tracks, the novels Dicamus et Labyrinthos: A Philologist’s Notebook (1984, Arcana Editions) and Ariadne, the calligraphic stories The Chaldean Inscription and The Sixteen Scribes, and the autobiography My Life on Earth and Elsewhere (2012, The Porcupine’s Quill).

He was also active in other positions. He founded the series Ten Centuries Concerts in Toronto in 1962 and served as its director in 1962–63. He undertook research in the field of acoustic ecology and remained active as a researcher with the World Forum for Acoustic Ecology (formerly the World Soundscape Project), which he founded in 1970. He later co-founded with Diana Smith, Jerrard Smith and Thom Sokoloski the company Patria Music/Theatre Projects for the production of works in his cycle Patria in 1987.

He taught as artist-in-residence at Memorial University of Newfoundland from 1963–65, then taught at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia from 1965–75, where he founded the Studio for Sonic Research and Electronic Music.

His publisher is Arcana Editions.

Ash Fure
Ash Fure is a sonic artist who blends installation and performance. Called “purely visceral” and “staggeringly original” by The New Yorker, Fure’s full-bodied listening experiences open uncommon sites of collective encounter. Operating outside language or story, Ash shapes charged multisensory atmospheres that listeners and performers navigate together. Recent immersive productions include Hive Rise: for Subs and Megas (2020), commissioned by Club TransMediale (CTM) and premiered in Berlin’s iconic Berghain club; Filament: for Trio, Orchestra, and Moving Voices (2018), commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and premiered in New York’s Geffen Hall; and The Force of Things (2017), an installation opera, premiered at Peak Performances, that wrestles with the rising tide of climate dread inside us. Fure holds a PhD in Music Composition from Harvard University and is an Associate Professor of Music at Dartmouth College. A finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Music, Fure is the recipient of two Lincoln Center Emerging Artists Awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Rome Prize in Music Composition, a DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Prize, a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grant for Artists, a Fulbright Fellowship to France, a Darmstadt Kranichsteiner Musikpreis, and a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship from Columbia University.

Jérémy Jolley
French-American composer Jérémy Jolley was born in Lyon, France, and grew up in the French Alps where he played guitar in rock and fusion bands. He moved to Seattle in 1997 and pursued composition studies and received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Music degrees in Composition from the University of Washington. During these years, he studied composition primarily with Joël-François Durand, electronic music with Juan Pampin, and classical guitar with Steven Novacek. 

Jeremy has been awarded the Brechemin Scholarship in Music, the William Bergsma Endowment for Excellence in Music Composition, and a residency in the 2008 Jack Straw Artist Support Program for his work in the improvisation and experimental ensemble, Unused Lexical Variable. His music has been played by celebrated contemporary music performers such as the Dutch pianist and ensemble ASKO|SHOENBERG member René Eckhart, cellist Séverine Ballon, violinist Graeme Jennings, and clarinetist Carol Robinson. He has attended master classes with Brian Ferneyhough, Chaya Czernowin, Pierluigi Billone, and Mark André at the Darmstadt Internationalen Ferienkurse. 

Since 2010, he has been the co-Artistic Director of the new music ensemble, Seattle Modern Orchestra. He is the Senior Director of Education and Community Engagement  at the Seattle Symphony leading numerous community centered initiatives including community composition projects with Derek Bermel, Alexander Gardner, Charles Corey, Janice Giteck, Swil Kanim, Paul Chiyokten Wagner, and Paul Kikuchi.

Kate Soper

Kate Soper is a Pulitzer Prize-nominated composer, performer, and writer. She has been hailed by The Boston Globe as “a composer of trenchant, sometimes discomfiting, power” and by The New Yorker for her “limpid, exacting vocalism, impetuous theatricality, and mastery of modernist style.” Soper has received awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters (The Virgil Thomson and Goddard Lieberson awards and the Charles Ives Scholarship), the Koussevitzky Foundation, Chamber Music America, the Lili Boulanger Memorial Fund, the Music Theory Society of New York State, and ASCAP, and has been commissioned by ensembles including the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the American Composers Orchestra, and Yarn/Wire. She has received residencies and fellowships from the Civitella Raineri Foundation, the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Camargo Foundation, the Macdowell Colony, Tanglewood, Royaumont, and Domaine Forget, among others.

Praised by the New York Times for her “lithe voice and riveting presence,” Soper performs frequently as a new music soprano. She has been featured as a composer/vocliast on the New York City-based MATA festival and Miller Theatre Composer Portraits series, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW series, and the LA Philharmonic’s Green Umbrella Series. As a non-fiction and creative writer, she has been published by McSweeney’s Quarterly, Theory and Practice, the Massachusetts Review, and the Journal of Interdisciplinary Voice Studies.

Soper is a co-director and performer for Wet Ink, a New York-based new music ensemble dedicated to seeking out adventurous music across aesthetic boundaries. She is the Iva Dee Hiatt Professor of Music at Smith College.

Anna Thorvaldsdóttir
Anna Thorvaldsdóttir’s (b. 1977) “seemingly boundless textural imagination” (NY Times) and striking sound world has made her “one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary music” (NPR). Her music is composed as much by sounds and nuances as by harmonies and lyrical material – it is written as an ecosystem of sounds, where materials continuously grow in and out of each other, often inspired in an important way by nature and its many qualities, in particular structural ones, like proportion and flow.

Anna’s “detailed and powerful” (Guardian) orchestral writing has garnered her awards from the New York Philharmonic, Lincoln Center, the Nordic Council, and the UK’s Ivors Academy, as well as commissions by many of the world’s top orchestras. CATAMORPHOSIS was premiered by the Berlin Philharmonic and Kirill Petrenko in January 2021, following the orchestra’s European premiere of METACOSMOS with Alan Gilbert in 2019. CATAMORPHOSIS received its UK premiere by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and Ludovic Morlot in June 2022, with the US premiere with the New York Philharmonic and Santtu-Matias Rouvali taking place in January 2023. ARCHORA – the latest addition to Anna’s “ever-growing and ever more essential catalogue of orchestral pieces” (BBC Radio 3) – was premiered at the BBC Proms in August 2022, by the BBC Philharmonic and Eva Ollikainen. The work will receive its US premiere with the LA Philharmonic and Eva Ollikainen in May 2023. And “while [she] has made the symphony orchestra her own,” according to Gramophone Magazine, “her chamber music is cut from the same cloth and somehow sounds with much the same combination of immensity and intimacy.” Anna’s recent string quartet Enigma was recorded and released by Sono Luminus in August 2021, performed by the Spektral Quartet, and was one of the New York Times’s recordings of the year (“a masterly entrance to the genre”). Portrait albums with Anna’s works have appeared on Deutsche Grammophon, Sono Luminus, and Innova.

Anna’s music is widely performed internationally and has been commissioned by many of the world’s leading orchestras, ensembles, and arts organizations – such as the Berlin Philharmonic, New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, International Contemporary Ensemble, Ensemble Intercontemporain, BBC Proms, and Carnegie Hall. Among the many other orchestras and ensembles that have performed her music include the Boston Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Philharmonic, London’s Philharmonia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Iceland Symphony Orchestra, Bang on a Can All-Stars, BBC Singers, The Crossing, the Bavarian Radio Choir, Münchener Kammerorchester, Avanti Chamber Ensemble, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Helsinki Philharmonic, Oslo Philharmonic, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, and Royal Scottish National Orchestra.

Portrait concerts with Anna’s music have been featured at several major venues and music festivals, including Wigmore Hall, Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival in NYC, London’s Spitalfields Music Festival, Münchener Kammerorchester’s Nachtmusic der Moderne series, the Composer Portraits Series at NYC’s Miller Theatre, the Leading International Composers series at the Phillips Collection in Washington DC, Knoxville’s Big Ears Festival, Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art, Brooklyn’s National Sawdust, and Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra’s Point Festival. Other prominent venues and festivals include the BBC Proms, Aldeburgh Festival, London’s Royal Opera House, Southbank Centre, ISCM World Music Days, Nordic Music Days, Ultima Festival, Lucerne Summer Festival, Beijing Modern Music Festival, Reykjavik Arts Festival, Tectonics, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, Helsinki’s Musica Nova Festival, and the Kennedy Center in Washington DC. 

Anna is currently based in the London area. She regularly teaches and gives presentations on composition, in academic settings, as part of residencies, and in private lessons. Invited lectures and presentations include Stanford, Columbia, Cornell, NYU, Northwestern, University of Chicago, Sibelius Academy, and the Royal Academy of Music in London. Anna is currently Composer-in-Residence with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra. She holds a PhD (2011) from the University of California in San Diego.

Joël-François Durand
Composing, writing, teaching, inventing new ways of hearing – all are linked in the work of Joël-François Durand. As a composer, his career was launched in Europe with important prizes: a Third Prize at in the 1983 Stockhausen Competition for the piano piece “…d’asiles déchirés…,” the Kranichsteiner Preis from the Darmstadt Summer Courses for New Music in 1990. Commissions and performances from many of today’s most significant ensembles followed – Ensemble Intercontemporain, London Sinfonietta, Arditti Quartet, Jack Quartet, Quatuor Diotima, ASKO, Ensemble Recherche, musikFabrik, Talea Ensemble, Dal Niente Ensemble, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre Philarmonique de Radio France, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, Seattle Symphony Orchestra.

Durand is Professor of Composition at the School of Music, University of Washington, as well as Associate Director. He was awarded the Donald E. Petersen Endowed Professorship in 2003-06.

Durand’s works are singular and powerful, combining rigorous and innovative structures with a prominent lyrical impulse.

Durand’s music and personality received critical attention in the 2005 book Joël-François Durand in the Mirror Land (University of Washington Press and Perspectives of New Music) edited by his University of Washington School of Music colleague Jonathan Bernard, which features in addition to analyses by Bernard and several of the School’s students, an innovative self-interview authored by Durand himself.

Commercial recordings of his music are available on the Auvidis-Naïve, Mode Records, Wergo, Albany Records and Soundset Recordings labels.

In 2010, Durand embarked on a new path: he designed and started commercial production of a new tonearm for record players. The Talea, as it was called, took the audio world by storm and was soon followed by two further models, the Telos and the Kairos, also aimed at the most refined audio reproduction systems. For his work at his company Durand Tonearms LLC, he was made a University of Washington Entrepreneurial Fellow in 2010.

As a guest composer and lecturer, Durand has contributed to the “Centre de la Voix” in Royaumont, France where he was co-director of the composition course in September 1993, the “Civica Scuola di Musica” in Milan, Italy (1995), the Royal Academy for Music in London, UK (1997), the Internationale Ferienkurse für Neue Musik in Darmstadt (1984, 1990, 1992, 1994), the “VIII. Internationaler Meisterkurs für Komposition des Brandenburgischen Colloquiums für Neue Musik”, Rheinsberg (1998), Washington State University, Pullman, WA (2004), and Stanford University (2006), among others. In the Fall 1994 he was Visiting Assistant Professor in Composition at the University of California at San Diego.

Durand is listed in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

Wang Lu 

Composer and pianist Wang Lu writes music that reflects a very natural identification with influences from urban environmental sounds, linguistic intonation and contours, traditional Chinese music and freely improvised traditions, through the prism of contemporary instrumental techniques and new sonic possibilities.

She is currently an Associate Professor of Music at Brown University, after receiving her doctoral degree in composition at Columbia University and graduating from the Beijing Central Conservatory of Music. Wang Lu’s works have been performed internationally, by ensembles including the Ensemble Modern, Ensemble Intercontemporain, Chicago Symphony Orchestra MusicNOW, Minnesota Orchestra, Boston Lyric Opera, American Composers Orchestra, Orchestre National de Lille, Holland Symfonia, Shanghai National Chinese Orchestra, Taipei Chinese Orchestra, Musiques Nouvelles, Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, International Contemporary Ensemble, Talea Ensemble, Alarm Will Sound, Ensemble Dal Niente, Third Sound, Yarn/Wire, Curious Chamber Players, The Crossing Choir, Ensemble Pamplemousse, Argento, the Aizuri Quartet, the New York Virtuoso Singers, Momenta Quartet and violinists Miranda Cuckson, Jennifer Koh, pianist Shai Wosner and Joel Fan among others.

A 2020 recent recipient of the Wladimir and Rhoda Lakond award from American Academy of Arts and Letters Wang Lu has also received the Berlin Prize in Music Composition (Spring 2019 residency) and was a 2014 Guggenheim Fellow, and she has received commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation at the Library of Congress and the Fromm Foundation at Harvard. She won first prize at Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne’s Young Composers Forum in 2010 and shared the Tactus International Young Composers Orchestra Forum Award in 2008. She was selected for a Tremplin commission by IRCAM/Ensemble Intercontemporain in 2010 and the International Composition Seminar with the Ensemble Modern in 2012. She has also received two ASCAP Morton Gould awards.

Wang Lu’s music was programmed on festivals such as the 2022 New York Philharmonic’s Sound On series curated by Nadia Sirota, 2014 New York Philharmonic Biennial, MATA Festival, Cresc. Biennale in Frankfurt, Gaudeamus Music Week, Tanglewood, Cabrillo Music Festival, Beijing Modern, Pacific and Takefu festivals in Japan, Mostly Mozart, Aspekte Festival in Salzburg, Mizzou International Composers Festival, and the Havana New Music Festival. She has also been a resident at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation and Hermitage Artist Retreat. Collaborations have included an installation at Brown University’s Cohen Gallery with artist Polly Apfelbaum and an evening of poetry and music with poet Ocean Vuong. In 2019, her music was featured on portrait concerts at Miller Theater with ICE and Yarn/Wire, with Ensemble Recherche in Paris, and with Ensemble Mosaik plus soloists Ryan Muncy and Wu Wei in Berlin. In 2021, her projects include Aftertouch a flute electronic and video piece for Claire Chase’s Density 2036; a solo piano work Lacuna for Shai Wosner in honor of Chinese American architect I.M. Pei; a new work for the LongLeash trio supported by New Music USA; November Airs for the Talea Ensemble commissioned by the Fromm Foundation at Harvard University; At Which Point a new choir and electronic work for The Crossing, and episode V of TV opera desert in, produced by the Boston Lyric Opera.

Wang Lu is the current Vanguard Emerging Opera Composer at the Chicago Opera Theatre (2020-22). On March 4th her full-length chamber opera The Beekeeper in collaboration with librettist Kelley Rourke was concert premiered at Chicago’s Athenaeum Center.

Her upcoming projects include a new chamber work commissioned by the Berlin Based Ensemble Mosaik, and a commission from the Barlow Foundation for soprano and large ensemble with the Seattle Modern Orchestra.

Of her portrait album Urban Inventory, released in March 2018, Alex Ross wrote in the New Yorker, “I’ve listened at least a dozen times to the composer Wang Lu’s new album, “Urban Inventory” (New Focus Recordings), and remain happily lost in its riotous maze of ideas and images. Every moment is vividly etched, drenched in instrumental color, steeped in influences that range from ancient Chinese folk music to the latest detonations of the European avant-garde… The sense of loneliness that emerges at the end of “Cloud Intimacy” lurks behind all of Wang Lu’s meticulous frenzies: it is of a piece with the essential solitude of composing, of sitting in silence and dreaming of a music that has never been heard.

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2021-2022 SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT

SEATTLE, WA – Seattle Modern Orchestra returns for its twelfth season with live performances and five world premieres, featuring SMO commissions from local composers Kaley Lane Eaton, Huck Hodge, Jérémy Jolley, and Yiğit Kolat. This bold season also includes a world premiere and performance collaboration with NY-based composer and saxophonist, Darius Jones, two US premieres by Mexican composer, Marisol Jiménez, a commemoration of Canadian composer, R. Murray Schafer, and works by Ash Fure, Fausto Romitelli, Tania León, and Kate Soper. All concerts will be available for audiences both in-person and through live broadcast via Crowdcast Digital Stage. 

SMO’s video podcast, Open Score, will return this season bringing in-depth conversations with our featured composers to audiences. The discussions will be live-broadcast through our Digital Stage on Crowdcast, where audiences are welcome to ask questions and join in the conversation as we explore the music and creative paths of this season’s composers. Schedule to be released. 

“We’re so excited to be back performing live for our Seattle audiences again,” says co-artistic director, Julia Tai. “Last season we were able to experiment with online software to rehearse and perform remotely, and we were proud to present five virtual concerts. It has expanded our reach to audiences not just in Seattle, but around the country. This season we’re glad to continue our live broadcast for all of our concerts, while welcoming back our beloved Seattle audiences. We’re thrilled to be bringing new music to listeners wherever they are, whether or not they live in Seattle.”

Concert #1 – Dissociation
Friday, Nov. 19, 2021 @ 8:00pm
Town Hall Forum

Program:
Kaley Lane Eaton Dissociation, or Self-Portrait (2020) – World Premiere
Marisol Jiménez Bestiario Onírico III – Ciudadela – (2009)US Premiere
Marisol Jiménez Yiríya aiteiya (2017) – US Premiere
Wang Lu Ryan and Dan (2017)
Fausto Romitelli Professor Bad Trip, Lesson I (1998)

Our season opening concert will present a world premiere from Seattle composer and Cornish faculty member, Kaley Lane Eaton. Eaton’s music has been described as “disconcertingly lovely” (Seattle Magazine), and her new work, Dissociation, or Self-Portrait, “puts pop and experimental idioms at war with one another as a metaphor for […] authentic self-expression.” Alongside Eaton’s premiere, SMO will give two US premieres by Mexican composer, Marisol Jiménez, and Seattle premieres by Wang Lu and celebrated Italian composer, Fausto Romitelli.

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Concert #2 – therefore i was
Saturday, Feb. 5, 2022 @ 8:00pm
Chapel Performance Space

Program:
Murray Schafer The Crown of Ariadne 
Jérémy Jolley (contro-)clessidra III & IV
Ash Fure therefore i was

SMO will return to the Chapel Performance Space for our second concert, featuring exclusively small chamber and solo works. The program includes Ash Fure’s piano trio therefore i was, world premieres by Jérémy Jolley for piano and electronics, and cello and percussion from his (contro-)clessidra series, and a remembrance of Canadian composer, R. Murray Schafer, with the performance of his virtuosic work for solo harp, The Crown of Ariadne. Performances will be given by pianist Cristina Valdés, percussionist Bonnie Whiting, cellist Ha-Yang Kim, and harpist Sophie Baird-Daniel.

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Concert #3 – Darius Jones in Seattle
Friday, April 15, 2022 @ 8:00pm
Town Hall Seattle Forum
 
Program:
Darius Jones NEW WORK
Yiğit Kolat NEW WORK
 
After the enthusiastic reception of our collaboration with New York-based composer and saxophonist, Darius Jones, in 2019, SMO is commissioning a new work from the celebrated composer. This experimental concert will feature Jones on the saxophone and will explore the intersection between written and improvised music. The second SMO commission of the concert will be by Seattle-based composer, Yiğit Kolat, composed specially for Mr. Jones and SMO. 

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Concert #4 – The shape of the wind, the shadow of time
Friday, June 24 @ 8:00pm
Town Hall Great Hall
 
Program:
Tania León Indígena
Kate Soper Now is Forever for soprano and chamber orchestra
Huck Hodge The shape of the wind, the shadow of time for percussion soloist and ensemble 
 
The season will conclude with a world premiere percussion concerto by celebrated Seattle composer, Huck Hodge, entitled The shape of the wind, the shadow of time (commissioned by the Koussevitzky Music Foundation) and will feature the ensemble’s tour-de-force percussionist, Bonnie Whiting. The program will also include Now is Forever by Kate Soper, specially arranged for SMO, and Pulitzer Prize-winning Cuban composer Tania León‘s Indígena

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SMO Season Subscription: $100 (including access to all concert broadcasts)
SMO Single tickets: $25 General, $15 Seniors, $10 Students
SMO Digital Stage Season Pass: $50
SMO Digital Stage Single Tickets: $15
For more information, please visit: www.seattlemodernorchestra.org.
 
Safety Protocols
The safety of our musicians and audience is of top priority to us. We will continue to follow guidelines and recommendations from the CDC, King County, and the City of Seattle as we move forward this season. All of our performances this season will require masking and proof of vaccination. Details about Town Hall Seattle’s Covid-19 policy can be found here.

2020-2021 SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT PRESS RELEASE

SEATTLE, WA – Seattle Modern Orchestra will produce its eleventh season with six ambitious commissions and six concert broadcasts. The lineup of composers includes Iranian composer Anahita Abbasi, Cornish faculty member Tom Baker, saxophonist and composer Darius Jones, cellist and composer Ha-Yang Kim, Brown University assistant professor Wang Lu, and SMO co-artistic director, Jérémy Jolley

This season is flexible by design in order to ensure the health of our musicians and community. Each program is centered around commissioned works that can be performed socially distanced on stage or remotely. The decision of whether each individual event will take place in person or virtually, as well as the full program for each performance, will be made based on evolving community health guidelines throughout the season. 

“New compositions have always been created for their contemporary technologies and spaces. While the current performance paradigm is new, the creativity and humanity of the artists will explore, challenge, and bear witness to today’s experience,” noted SMO co-artistic director, Jérémy Jolley. 

SMO 2020-2021 SEASON 

Virtual Concert #1 – Tom Baker’s Simultaneously Solitary (Shendos No. 14) 
Friday, Oct. 23, 2020 @ 7:30pm

Our first virtual concert of the season will include the world premiere of Tom Baker’s Simultaneously Solitary. The work is No. 14 in his series of compositions titled Shendos, which explore a graphical notation system that provides a framework for improvisation. The performance features stellar musicians versatile in both the jazz and classical music realms such as James Falzone (clarinet), Raymond Larson (trumpet), Maria Ritzenthaler (viola), Abbey Blackwell (bass), and Bonnie Whiting (percussion). The concert will also feature solo and duo works by SMO ensemble members.

Virtual Concert #2 – This is Beethoven: Farrin, Wang, & Kagel
Dec. 16-19, 2020

Our second concert will be a part of a city-wide Beethoven Festival, curated by Emerald City Music, celebrating the 250th birthday of this iconic classical composer. SMO will present music as revolutionary, critical, and responsive in our time as Beethoven was in his time. The program includes Mauricio Kagel’s Ludwig van (1970), a tribute to Beethoven on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth. The indeterminate “meta-collage” of Beethoven’s music challenges the performers not only in their technical virtuosity but also their ability to recreate music as composers themselves. The concert will also feature a new work by Chinese composer and pianist, Wang Lu. Wang, Professor of Music at Brown University, has received many awards including the Berlin Prize in Music Composition, 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship, as well as commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation and the Fromm Foundation. This new work will explore Wang’s personal relationship with the music of Beethoven and is a response to its ideals using her own aesthetic and musical language. The concert will open with American composer Suzanne Farrin who disrupts the romantic idealization of Petrach’s sonnet on Apollo and Daphne in her work for viola and percussion, uscirmi di braccia (leave my arms)

Virtual Concert #3 – Jeremy Jolley’s (contro-)clessidra I, III, IV.
Sunday, Jan. 31, 2021 @ 7:30pm

Our third concert will be a live broadcast from Town Hall Seattle, featuring SMO’s own co-artistic director, Jérémy Jolley, in his new work (contro-)clessidra I, III, IV. The work explores the tension between “being together” and “being apart,” individualities and community, listening and being heard. The (contro-)clessidra series, (reverse-hourglass), is a set of duets (violin and electric guitar; piano and fixed media; cello and percussion) that are composed independently but can be performed all at once, separated, or dove-tailed in any order. The concert will also include Chen-Hui Jen‘s Across & Between II and Alvin Singleton‘s Greed Machine.

Virtual Concert #4 – Ha-Yang Kim’s the day is burnt, the night is calm 
Sunday, Mar. 14, 2021 @ 7:30pm

Our fourth concert, also a live broadcast from Town Hall Seattle, features the local multifaceted cellist, composer, and improvisor, Ha-Yang Kim. Kim creates her own music based on a unique musical language of extended string techniques which she developed. Her musical influences draw equally from a range of western classical music, American experimentalism, rock, jazz and improvised music, to non-western musical sources. This new work, composed for violin, viola, cello, bass, harp, and electric guitar, explores the sonic wonderland of microtuning.

Virtual Concert #5 – Darius Jones’ World Premiere
Saturday, May 1, 2021 @ 7:30pm

Our fifth concert returns to the artistic collaboration between SMO and experimental saxophonist and composer, Darius Jones. After the powerful performance of his LawNOrder last fall as part of the Earshot Jazz festival, where SMO’s performance was described as “delectable, eclectic” by Paul de Barros in Downbeat magazine, we will continue our musical partnership by commissioning a brand new work for SMO, to be streamed live from Seattle’s beloved Royal Room. Jones’ music embraces individuality and innovation in the tradition of African-American music and is at times dramatic commentary on social justice and American politics. This new work will coincide with May Day and represent the voices of the people.  

Virtual Concert #6 – Anahita Abbasi’s World Premiere
Sunday, June 6, 2021 @ 7:30pm

Our final concert of the season highlights the up-and-coming Iranian composer, Anahita Abbasi, whose music has been played by prominent ensembles such as Ensemble Modern, Klangforum Wien musicians, and the International Contemporary Ensemble. SMO will premiere a new “game piece” further exploring her 2017 work Enigma Patterns which is a tribute to the brilliant and intelligent women in Bletchley, England, who cracked the German code using telex-machines during WWII. The new work will consist of different types of packs of “cards,” which can be performed in a different order each time. 

SMO Virtual Season Pass: $50 / Single Tickets: $10

For more information, please visit: www.seattlemodernorchestra.org.

Founded in 2010, Seattle Modern Orchestra (SMO) is the only large ensemble in the Pacific Northwest solely dedicated to the music of the 20th and 21st centuries. Led by co-artistic directors Julia Tai and Jérémy Jolley, SMO commissions and premieres new works from an international lineup of composers, in addition to presenting important pieces from the contemporary repertoire that are rarely if ever heard by Seattle audiences. The ensemble “operates at that exciting cusp between old and new, between tradition and innovation” (Vanguard Seattle) curating new sounds and experiences for concert goers in the region.

SMO provides audiences with performances of the best in contemporary chamber and orchestral music, and develops blog posts, lectures, and other forms of community engagement in an accessible and inviting format all designed to expand the listener’s appreciation and awareness of the music of today.

COMPOSERS BIOGRAPHIES 

Anahita Abbasi, Composer
Anahita Abbasi’s music has been commissioned and performed by distinguished soloists and ensembles such as Mahan Esfahani, Steven Schick, Ensemble Modern, Mivos Quartet, and the International Contemporary Ensemble, and has been showcased at festivals all around the world including Mostly Mozart Festival, The Kitchen, Kennedy Center, Lincoln center, Time Span, Soundnow festival- Bent Frequency, Mise-En festival (USA), Darmstadt Ferienkurse (Germany), Ircam – Manifeste Academy (France), and many others.

A recipient of a 2015 Morton Gold ASCAP young composers award, Ms. Abbasi was also nominated in 2017 at the Cairo Contemporary Festival as one of the “women composers of our time” alongside Kaija Saariaho and Isabel Mundry. Aside from teaching composition and giving lectures and workshops on fundamentals of creation, she is also the founding member of Schallfeld Ensemble in Graz, Austria as well as IFCA (Iranian Female Composers Association) in New York City where she is curating concerts, creating platforms and advocating for young composers, acting as their ambassador in presenting their music to others. 

Anahita Abbasi was born and raised in Iran. In 2005 she moved to Austria and pursued her undergraduate degree at the University of music and performing Arts Graz, where she studied music theory with Clemens Gadenstätter and Christian Utz and composition with Beat Furrer and Pierluigi Billone, while working closely with Georges Aperghis, Franck Bedrossian, and Philippe Leroux. Abbasi is currently residing in San Diego and finishing her Ph.D. in composition under the supervision of Rand Steiger at the University of California San Diego.

Tom Baker, Composer/Guitarist/Improviser/Electronicist/Educator
Tom Baker has been active as a composer, performer, and producer in the Seattle new-music scene since arriving in 1994. He is the artistic director of the Seattle Composers’ Salon, co-founder of the Seattle EXperimental Opera (SEXO), an advisory board member of the Washington Composers’ Forum, founder of the new-music recording label Present Sounds Recordings, and is currently professor of composition at Cornish College of the Arts.

Tom has received awards and grants for his work from many organizations, including Meet The Composer, the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, 4Culture, and Artist Trust. He has been an artist-in-residence at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in Florida and the Montalvo Arts Center in California. His works have been performed throughout the United States, in Canada, and in Europe.

Tom is also active as a performer and improviser, specializing in fretless guitar and live-electronics. He has recorded seven albums, including two solo records. Triptet, a trio with Michael Monhart and Greg Campbell, recently released its third album, Figure in the Carpet, on Brooklyn-based Engine Records. Tom has worked with many innovative musicians, including Stuart Dempster, William O. Smith, Christian Asplund, Chinary Ung, Ellen Fullman, Matana Roberts, and Henry Threadgill.

Jérémy Jolley, Composer
French-American composer Jérémy Jolley was born in Lyon, France, and grew up in the French Alps where he played guitar in rock and fusion bands. He moved to Seattle in 1997 and pursued composition studies and received his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Music degrees in Composition from the University of Washington. During these years, he studied composition primarily with Joël-François Durand, electronic music with Juan Pampin, and classical guitar with Steven Novacek. 

Jeremy has been awarded the Brechemin Scholarship in Music, the William Bergsma Endowment for Excellence in Music Composition, and a residency in the 2008 Jack Straw Artist Support Program for his work in the improvisation and experimental ensemble, Unused Lexical Variable. His music has been played by celebrated contemporary music performers such as the Dutch pianist and ensemble ASKO|SHOENBERG member René Eckhart, cellist Séverine Ballon, violinist Graeme Jennings, and clarinetist Carol Robinson. He has attended master classes with Brian Ferneyhough, Chaya Czernowin, Pierluigi Billone, and Mark André at the Darmstadt Internationalen Ferienkurse. 

Since 2010, he has been the co-Artistic Director of the new music ensemble, Seattle Modern Orchestra. He has also been Associate Director of Artistic Collaborations at the Seattle Symphony since 2017, leading numerous community centered initiatives including community composition projects with Derek Bermel, Alexander Gardner, Charles Corey, Janice Giteck, Swil Kanim, and Paul Chiyokten Wagner.

Darius Jones, Alto saxophonist/Composer
Over the past decade, Darius Jones has created a recognizable voice as a critically acclaimed saxophonist and composer by embracing individuality and innovation in the tradition of African-American music. “Jones’ concept is proudly his own,” writes Philip Clark in The Wire. “[His music] poses big questions about the relationship between the African-American tradition of spirituals, blues and gospel, and now.” With New York City as his base since 2005, Jones has brought his unique sound to dozens of cities around the United States, Canada, and Europe.

Jones early on established himself as a powerful voice in the jazz community and was nominated in 2013 for Alto Saxophonist of the Year, and for Up & Coming Artist of the Year two years in a row for the Jazz Journalists Association Jazz Awards. More recently The New York Times named Jones among the Best Live Jazz Performances of 2017 for his Vision Festival performance with Farmers by Nature.

Jones has collaborated with artists including Gerald Cleaver, Oliver Lake, William Parker, Trevor Dunn, Branford Marsalis, Steve Lehman, Sun Ra Arkestra, and many more. Signed to AUM Fidelity records in 2009, Jones has released a string of diverse recordings which comprise his Man’ish Boy Epic, featuring music and images evocative of Black Futurism. Darius’ 2012 release, Book of Mæ’bul (Another Kind of Sunrise) was listed among NPR’s Best Top 10 Jazz Albums of that year.

Jones graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University with a Bachelors in Jazz Studies in 2003, earning a Master’s Degree in Jazz Performance/Composition from New York University in 2008, where he also taught New Music Improvisation for a year as an adjunct professor. Jones taught saxophone and improvisation at Columbia University in 2017.

Ha-Yang Kim, Cellist/Composer/Collaborative Artist
Drawing from a breadth of western classical music, American experimentalism, rock, electronic, noise, avant-improv, to non-western sources (Balinese, South Indian, and Korean), Kim’s music is inspired by acoustic phenomena, ritual ceremonial processes, and characterized by an organic visceral lyricism of sound influenced by the East Asian sense of space and emptiness. She developed a unique signature language of extended string techniques and has also composed music for film, dance, and multimedia. Her current practice involves explorations in tunings, and researching acoustical and spatial phenomenology of resonance-amplification-feedback.  

Kim’s music is performed throughout the US, Europe, Asia, Russia, Turkey, Morocco, Bali, Cuba, and Canada. The diverse range of artists Kim has worked with include Meredith Monk, Terry Riley, Alvin Lucier, Bang on a Can All-Stars, International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), Kronos Quartet, indie-rock band The National, poet Anne Waldman, choreographer Douglas Dunn, video artist Ursula Scherrer, and pop superstar Beyoncè. Kim has recorded over 25 albums, for labels such as ECM, Tzadik, New World, Cold Blue, Beggars Banquet, New Albion, Brassland, Karnatic Lab, and Bridge Records.

Dedicated to cross-cultural exchange, social transformation, and education, Kim has conducted workshops with Berber youth communities in Morocco, performed at youth detention centers in the Bronx supported by the Ford  Foundation, performed alongside gamelan orchestras in Bali, and performed for the UN Humanitarian Aid Campaign.  

Kim studied at the New England Conservatory where her mentors included Joseph Maneri, Lee Hyla, and Michael Gandolfi, and the application of Carnatic music concepts to contemporary music at the Amsterdam Conservatorium. Currently, she lives in Seattle, Washington, and is on the music faculty at the Cornish College of the Arts. 

Wang Lu, Composer/Pianist
Composer and pianist Wang Lu writes music that reflects a very natural identification with influences from traditional Chinese music, urban environmental sounds, linguistic intonation and contours, and freely improvised traditions, through the prism of contemporary instrumental techniques and new sonic possibilities.

She is currently the David S. Josephson Assistant Professor of Music at Brown University, after receiving her doctoral degree in composition at Columbia University and graduating from the Beijing Central Conservatory of Music. Wang Lu’s works have been performed internationally, by ensembles including the Ensemble Modern, Ensemble Intercontemporain, Alarm Will Sound, American Composers Orchestra, Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, Ensemble Dal Niente, the Aizuri Quartet, violinist Jennifer Koh, and many others. Wang Lu has received the Berlin Prize in Music Composition (Spring 2019 residency), was a 2014 Guggenheim Fellow, and has received commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation at the Library of Congress and the Fromm Foundation at Harvard. 

In 2019, her music was featured on portrait concerts at Miller Theater with ICE and Yarn/Wire, with Ensemble Recherche in Paris, and with Ensemble Mosaik plus soloists Ryan Muncy and Wu Wei in Berlin. Some of Wang Lu’s recent compositions include a brass fanfare Code Switch for the opening of the Chicago Symphony’s MusicNOW 2019-20 season, a flute and electronic piece for Claire Chase’s Density 2036, and a new work for the Talea Ensemble commissioned by the Fromm Foundation at Harvard University. Wang Lu is the next Vanguard Emerging Opera Composer at the Chicago Opera Theatre, and her residency will conclude in 2022 with a full-length opera produced by the Chicago Opera Theatre.

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SEATTLE MODERN ORCHESTRA CELEBRATES 10TH ANNIVERSARY WITH 2019-20 SEASON

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 2, 2019

SEATTLE MODERN ORCHESTRA’S 10TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT

SEATTLE, WA – Seattle Modern Orchestra’s co-artistic directors, Jérémy Jolley and Julia Tai, are thrilled to announce its 10th Anniversary season, an ambitious celebration of SMO’s well-earned reputation. The season will feature ten concerts in ten venues, cross-genre collaborations, and the world-class premieres and performances the city has come to expect from this intrepid ensemble.  

“We’re so excited to celebrate our 10th Anniversary! We’re making it a really special year by collaborating with several partners in the city – Earshot Jazz Festival and National Nordic Museum, as well as mounting our first chamber opera – Ipsa dixit by Kate Soper at Base: Experimental Arts + Space. We have concerts all over the city – Folio Library, Chapel Performance Space, Foster/White Gallery, Fremont Abbey, and the Royal Room. The culminating highlight of the season will be our 10th Anniversary concert at the newly renovated Town Hall, bringing back our first Seattle Premiere, Tehillim by Steve Reich, and past SMO commissions by Kate Soper and Tom Baker. We will also present the world premiere of our first Koussevitzky Music Foundation commission – Huck Hodge’s New work for solo percussion and ensemble. It’ll be a monumental season for us!” – Co-Artistic Director, Julia Tai.


Concert 1: Earshot Jazz Festival
Oct. 15, 2019 | 7:30 pm | Town Hall Forum

Earshot Jazz presents an exceptional meeting of local jazz and classical artists exploring the freedom and complexity of the two genres. This all-star collaboration includes Darius Jones, and Wayne Horvitz leading SMO musicians in the premiere of his new work, Vagabond. Expand your ears and mind with innovators who merge chamber music with improvisation, scored and experimental jazz, and open form composition.

Anthony Braxton: Composition No. 56
Earle Brown: Oh, K
Wayne Horvitz: Vagabond: Constructions for Chamber Orchestra and Improvisers [commission/World Premiere]
Darius Jones: LawNOrder
George Lewis: Artificial Life

Concert 2: Norwegian Odyssé
Nov. 3, 2019  | 1:30 pm | National Nordic Museum

Step into the mystic sounds of Norway with a chamber music collaboration between SMO and the Bergen-based Valen Trio. Through five U.S. premieres, explore how talented Norwegian composers across generations are continuing and reinterpreting the rich history of Nordic culture through sound. 

Rebecka Sofia Ahvenniemi: Barnet som blev osynligt (The child who became invisible) for soprano, percussion and electronics [US Premiere]
Anders Torgunrud Røshol: Livorno Fragments [US Premiere]
Lasse Thoresen: Hagen (The Garden) [US Premiere]
Knut Vaage:Odyssé for sinfonietta [US Premiere]
Knut Vaage: Svev for piano trio [US Premiere]

Concert 3: Inside Out
Jan. 24, 2020 | 7:30 pm |  Folio: The Seattle Athenaeum Library

Art can turn our viewpoints inside out, bringing to light deep human experiences, and urging us to reexamine our reality. Opera becomes chamber music, revealing both beauty and tragedy in miniature; finite geometry inspires wild virtuosity; and captivity and grief bring transcendence. Join SMO for this intimate journey set in one of Seattle’s most cherished cultural and civic gathering places. 

Thomas Adès: Court Studies from “The Tempest”
Anthony Cheung: Elective Memory
Ivan Fedele: Arcipelago Möbius
Tristan Murail: Stalag VIIIA
Alfred Schnittke: Hymn No. 2

Concert 4: Sequenza Marathon
Feb. 15, 2020  | 8:00 pm | Chapel Performance Space

Luciano Berio’s fourteen Sequenzas span more than forty years, an essential catalogue of twentieth-century performance. Each work is an astonishing exploration of the experimental potential of modern instruments and places Olympian demands on the performer. In this marathon of ten Sequenzas, witness incredible feats of musical athleticism that push the boundaries of virtuosity and possibility.

Luciano Berio
Sequenza I for flute (1958, rev. 1992) | Sarah Pyle, flute
Sequenza II for harp (1963) | Sophie Baird-Daniel, harp
Sequenza III for voice (1965) | Maria Männistö, soprano
Sequenza IV for piano (1965) | Cristina Valdés, piano
Sequenza VIII for violin (1976) | Michael Lim, violin
Sequenza IX for clarinet (1980) | Angelique Poteat, clarinet
Sequenza XIV for cello (2002) | Ha-Yang Kim, cello

Concert 5: Celebrating 10 Years of SMO
Mar. 27, 2020  | 8:00 pm | Town Hall 

Join SMO in a joyful celebration of its tenth anniversary in the newly-renovated Town Hall. The ensemble revisits some of its most memorable performances, local collaborators, celebrated composers, and Seattle “firsts.” The program includes SMO’s first commission (Baker), an environmental piece for ensemble and tape (Cage), the ensemble’s nationally noted vocal collaboration/arrangement (Soper), a revival of Steve Reich’s seminal work, Tehillim (premiered in Seattle by SMO), and a world premiere by Huck Hodge featuring SMO’s tour-de-force percussionist, Bonnie Whiting.

John Cage: Etcetera
Tom Baker: Shendos No. 12
Huck Hodge: New work for solo percussion and ensemble
Kate Soper: Now Is Forever for soprano and chamber orchestra
Steve Reich: Tehillim

Concert 6: The Stories We Tell
Apr. 26, 2020  | 7:30 pm | Foster/White Gallery

Rich traditions of storytelling span across cultures and time, transporting us through fantastical fairy tales or taking us into the truth of lived experience. With a backdrop of dramatic contemporary art, SMO ventures through mythology and folklore, contrasted with more Earthly tales, including a commission by local composer/cellist Ha-Yang Kim. 

Marcos Balter: delete/control/option for alto flute and cello
Ha-Yang Kim: New work for flute, cello, harp [commission/World Premiere]
Murray Schafer: The Crown of Ariadne, suite for solo harp, percussion, and tape
Freya Waley-Cohen: Skye for solo harp

Concert 7: Parts of the Whole
May 14, 2020  | 8:00 pm | Fremont Abbey Arts Center

A showcase of young compositional voices, SMO explores the artistic process of rearranging, reversing, or combining parts of a whole idea. Through experimental textures, fragment combinations, and live performance choices, composers take us through the complexities of dreams, human relationships, and time, including a commission/world premiere by Seattle composer Jérémy Jolley.

Anahita Abbasi: Faab IV / a femme fatale
Chen-Hui Jen: Across & Between II
Marisol Jiménez: Bestiario Onírico III – Ciudadela [US Premiere]
Jérémy Jolley: (contro-)clessidra I, II, III, IV (2020) [commission/World Premiere]
Fausto Romitelli: Professor Bad Trip – Lesson I

Concert 8: Ipsa Dixit
Jun. 5 & 6, 2020 | 8:00 pm |  Base: Experimental Arts + Space

A “twenty-first-century masterpiece” (Alex Ross, The New Yorker), Kate Soper’s Ipsa Dixit is a semi-staged, evening-length chamber music theatre work for voice, flute, violin, and percussion exploring the intersections of language and music, emotion and meaning, expressivity and truth. SMO welcomes notable local director Bobbin Ramsey in her operatic directorial debut, to help bring to life a staged performance of this moving work for Seattle audiences.

Kate Soper: Ipsa Dixit
Bobbin Ramsey: Director

Concert 9: Digital Humanity
Jun. 14, 2020  | 7:00 pm | The Royal Room

The complicated political and social environment of today inspires three provocative works by young composers. Wang Lu and Seattle-based Kaley Lane Eaton delve into our deeply problematic relationship with the digital realm. Turkish composer and Seattle resident Yigit Kolat brings us back to reality to face the very real humanitarian crisis of immigration.

Kaley Lane Eaton: New work [commission/World Premiere]
Yigit Kolat: Tierra Arrasada (Scorched Earth) [commission/World Premiere]
Wang Lu: Cloud Intimacy

Concert 10: Secret Free Show!
Coming July 2020

Programs and scheduling are subject to change.

PURCHASE TICKETS: 
Online: https://www.seattlemodernorchestra.org/concerts/

About SEATTLE MODERN ORCHESTRA
Founded in 2010, Seattle Modern Orchestra (SMO) is the only large ensemble in the Pacific Northwest solely dedicated to the music of the 20th and 21st centuries. Led by co-artistic directors Julia Tai and Jérémy Jolley, SMO commissions and premieres new works from an international lineup of composers, in addition to presenting important pieces from the contemporary repertoire that are rarely if ever heard by Seattle audiences. The ensemble “operates at that exciting cusp between old and new, between tradition and innovation” (Vanguard Seattle) curating new sounds and experiences for concert-goers in the region.

SMO provides audiences with performances of the best in contemporary chamber and orchestral music and develops radio talks, lectures, and other forms of outreach in an accessible and inviting format all designed to expand the listener’s appreciation and awareness of the music of today.

Press Contact:
Clarisse Benson, Communications & Operations Manager, clarisse.benson@seattlemodernorchestra.org

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Seattle Modern Orchestra is fiscally sponsored by Shunpike.

Shunpike
815 Seattle Boulevard S, Suite 215
Seattle, WA 98134
About Shunpike:
Shunpike is the 501(c)(3) non-profit agency that provides independent arts groups in Washington State with the services, resources, and opportunities they need to forge their own paths to sustainable success.