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metropolis ensemble<br />

RESIDENT ARTIST SERIES<br />

BRIDGET<br />

KIBBEY<br />

MUSIC<br />

BOX<br />

January 11 & 15, 2012<br />

Le Poisson Rouge<br />

New York City<br />

metropolisensemble.org


Drink specials sponsored<br />

by Buffalo Trace<br />

2012 season is supported<br />

by ConEdison<br />

Supported by Meet the<br />

Composer<br />

WNYC STAR Initiative<br />

participant<br />

Supported by Aaron<br />

Copland Fund for Music<br />

Supported by New York<br />

State Council on the Arts<br />

Supported by NYC<br />

Department of Cultural<br />

Affairs<br />

Supported by Who's In<br />

My Fund?<br />

Major underwriting for our Resident Artist Series<br />

is generously provided by The June Wu Artist Fund.<br />

* Northern Lights commissioned by Conrad and Louise Golaski.<br />

** Glitch Box commissioned by Carolina and Tommy White.<br />

*** Caja de Música commissioned by Concert Artists Guild.<br />

EVENING PROGRAM<br />

KATI AGOCS: Northern Lights *<br />

I. Prelude: Carillon (Church Bells, Montréal)<br />

II. À La Claire Fontaine (Québec)<br />

III. I’s the B’y (New Foundland)<br />

IV. Huron Carol (’Twas in the Moon of Wintertime…)<br />

(Native Canadian)<br />

V. Aurora Rising<br />

PAQUITO D’RIVERA: Bandoneon (world premiere)<br />

PAQUITO D’RIVERA: Habanera (world premiere)<br />

KINAN AZMEH: It’s About Time (world premiere)<br />

RICARDO ROMANEIRO: Glitch Box ** (world premiere)<br />

INTERMISSION<br />

DU YUN: The Ocean Within (…The Lamp Enclosed in a<br />

Glass: The Glass a Brilliant Star) (world premiere)<br />

SUSIE IBARRA: The Little Flowers Cry (world premiere)<br />

DAVID BRUCE: Caja de Música ***<br />

I. First Movement<br />

II. Second Movement<br />

III. Third Movement<br />

BRIDGET KIBBEY: Templehouse


WELCOME NOTE FROM ANDREW CYR<br />

Artistic Director of <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong><br />

Thank you for coming tonight! <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> is thrilled to present the inaugural<br />

concert of our new Resident Artists Series - concerts, <strong>music</strong>al events, and social<br />

gatherings that feature our core ensemble artists as solo instrumentalists in creative<br />

collaborations with composers from all genres.<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong>'s founding harpist Bridget Kibbey kicks-off this new initiative with a<br />

concert presentation entitled Music Box, featuring the world-premieres of six newly<br />

commissioned works for solo harp.<br />

Music Box gathers <strong>music</strong> by composers born in other countries who now call the United<br />

States home. Moved by both their individual stories and their <strong>music</strong>, Bridget solicited<br />

new work whose inspiration is based in folk idioms from each composer's country of<br />

origin as well as from their own personal narratives. The harp is an instrument<br />

emblematic of storytelling and folklore. Music Box will allow the harp to carry this<br />

tradition forward into the 21st century, giving expression to the diverse voices that make<br />

up contemporary American culture.<br />

I would especially like to thank June Wu for her extraordinary leadership and<br />

commitment to our performing artists and composers and to all those who contributed<br />

so generously to The June Wu Artist Fund to make this series possible. I would also like to<br />

thank the good people at (Le) Poisson Rouge, David Handler, Justin Cantor, and Ronen<br />

Givony as well as the able staff at LPR for being such important advocates and<br />

supporters of our community of emerging <strong>music</strong>ians and composers. Special thanks as<br />

well to Jessica Healy and Buffalo Trace, Jakub Ciupinski, Zipora Fried, Kristin Lee,<br />

Candice Madey, Jennifer McCrae, Andrew Schorr, Jonathan Schorr, Sara Menker,<br />

Jennifer Salomon, Richard Salomon and Laura Landro, Roy and Diana Vagelos, and<br />

tonight’s host committee for their efforts to broaden our community of fans, friends, and<br />

supporters.<br />

So, tonight, we are an orchestra of one, yet in Bridget’s hands (and feet), she will sound<br />

like many! Thank you and enjoy tonight’s show.<br />

NOTE FROM BRIDGET KIBBEY<br />

Two summers ago, I flew to France to visit friends in Brittany. Winding our way down the<br />

coast, we discovered Lorient, a town bustling with some of the best Celtic talent from<br />

Ireland, Wales, Scotland, and of course, Brittany - all coming together for the Festival<br />

Interceltique de Lorient. What a find!!<br />

Aside from drinking great beer and listening to fabulous bands, we spent every night<br />

joining hundreds of local Bretons, packed into massive halls to dance to traditional<br />

pipers or bands in large circles, arm-in-arm. With each new reel or change in the <strong>music</strong>,<br />

the locals instinctively changed their steps to a new regional dance. I was in shock.<br />

Citizens of all ages knew these complicated steps, and joyously danced away the<br />

nights, celebrating their region. I was schooled by the eighty-three-year-old woman to<br />

my right wearing stilettos. With a proud gleam in her eye, she firmly grasped my arm,<br />

yelling “Comme ça!!”<br />

With sore feet and a heavy dose of whimsy, I walked away from the festival having<br />

witnessed folk <strong>music</strong> and dance as powerful means to creating and celebrating one’s<br />

community…<br />

I came home with this <strong>music</strong> fresh in my ears and decided to try my hand at arranging<br />

a couple reels - Templehouse and Mountain Road. But, more than that, I decided to<br />

create a project that would showcase some of the folk <strong>music</strong> of some of my very own<br />

NYC neighbors: composers born in other countries who have immigrated to the United<br />

States, weaving their rich cultural backgrounds into the American fabric.<br />

My hope was two-fold: that audiences would have a whimsical taste of these cultures,<br />

much like my experience in Brittany; and two, using their own folk heritage as a<br />

springboard, that each composer would stretch the boundaries of the harp, creating<br />

new solo works for the instrument.<br />

Welcome to Music Box! I hope you enjoy encountering the harp and each of these<br />

cultures as much as I have, and thank you for joining me this evening. I’d like to offer my<br />

sincerest gratitude to Andrew Cyr and <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> for collaborating with me to<br />

present this project, to each of the composers for their incredible contributions, to<br />

Concert Artists Guild, and to all my friends, fans, and family who have supported and<br />

encouraged me in my <strong>music</strong>al endeavors and beyond.<br />

BRIDGET KIBBEY: SOLO HARP / COMPOSER<br />

Harpist Bridget Kibbey's passionate performances<br />

display the unique abilities of this fantastic<br />

instrument, with genre-bending performances<br />

ranging from baroque to world <strong>music</strong>, to<br />

collaboration with singer/songwriters, to<br />

commissioning new works from today's composers.<br />

An Avery Fisher Career Grant recipient, and a<br />

winner of Concert Artist Guild's 2007 International<br />

Competition and Astral Artist Auditions, Ms. Kibbey's<br />

performances have been broadcast on NPR's<br />

Performance Today, on New York's WQXR, WNYC's<br />

Soundcheck, and A&E's Breakfast with the Arts. She<br />

may be heard on Deutsche Grammaphon with<br />

Dawn Upshaw on Berio's Folk Songs and Osvaldo<br />

Golijov's Ayre, and has toured the work with Ms.<br />

Upshaw in the US and abroad. Bridget's debut album, Love is Come Again, was named<br />

one of 2007's Top Ten Releases by Time Out New York. As hailed by the New York Times,<br />

harpist Bridget Kibbey "...made it seem as though her instrument had been waiting all its<br />

life to explode with the gorgeous colors and energetic figures she was getting from it."<br />

Ms. Kibbey has collaborated with an array of artists in repertoire new and established,<br />

including Ian Bostridge, David Krakauer, Jaime Laredo, Edgar Meyer, Mayumi Miyata,<br />

Cristina Pato, Sharon Robinson, David Schifrin, and the Calder and Jupiter Quartets. She<br />

is frequently featured with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and is the<br />

founding harpist of the International Contemporary <strong>Ensemble</strong> and <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong>.<br />

This season's highlights include Opening Night at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln<br />

Center and multiple appearances in Alice Tully Hall showcasing French works with harp,<br />

appearances at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C, Boston's Gardner Museum,<br />

concerto appearances with the Modesto Symphony, Illinois Symphony, a concerto tour<br />

with the Manchester Festival Strings, and performances at Music @ Menlo and the<br />

Mostly Mozart Festival.<br />

A leader in broadening the scope and platform of her instrument, she has premiered<br />

new works by Kati Agocs, Harrison Birtwistle, Sebastian Currier, Pierre Boulez, Nathan<br />

Shields, Kaija Saariaho, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Augusta Read Thomas, Charles<br />

Wuorinen, among others. Ms. Kibbey performed Britten's Canticles in Carnegie Hall's<br />

Zankel Hall with tenor Ian Bostridge, performed the New York premiere of Elliot Carter's<br />

Mosaic in Zankel Hall for the composer's 100th birthday, and the American premiere of<br />

Sebastian Currier's Broken Minuets with Symphony in C in Philadelphia's Kimmel Center.<br />

Ms. Kibbey is a graduate of the Juilliard School, where she studied with Nancy Allen. She<br />

is on the harp faculties of Bard Conservatory, New York University, and the Juilliard<br />

Pre-College Program.<br />

Visit Bridget’s site at bridgetkibbey.com


KATI AGÓCS: COMPOSER<br />

Composer Kati Agócs was born in Windsor, Canada, of<br />

Hungarian and American background, and has been on the<br />

composition faculty of the New England Conservatory in Boston<br />

since 2008. The Boston Globe recently praised the ”fluidity and<br />

austere beauty" of her <strong>music</strong>, while The New York Times has<br />

characterized it as "striking" and "filled with attractive ideas" and<br />

has described her vocal <strong>music</strong> as possessing "an almost<br />

19th-century naturalness." A citation from the American<br />

Academy of Arts and Letters (for the 2008 Charles Ives<br />

Fellowship) noted the "melody, drama, and clear design" of her<br />

<strong>music</strong>, its "soulful directness", and its "naturalness of dissonance."<br />

Recent works include Vessel, on which she collaborated with <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> as<br />

part of Meet the Composer’s Three-City Dash; Immutable Dreams, a Jerome<br />

Foundation commission which has been programmed by over eight different<br />

ensembles since its 2007 premiere, including a national tour by Eighth Blackbird; Elysium,<br />

commissioned by the National Arts Centre and performed as part of the 2010 Olympics<br />

in Vancouver; Perpetual Summer, commissioned for the National Youth Orchestra of<br />

Canada's 50th Anniversary and awarded Special Distinction in ASCAP's 2011 Rudolph<br />

Nissim Prize (one of only three works selected by a jury of conductors out of over 260<br />

anonymously-submitted new orchestral scores); and Supernatural Love, a violin-piano<br />

duet described by Fanfare Magazine as "serene and unworldly, exploring space with<br />

sound in a way that seems to evoke the time before the universe hosted life." Kati<br />

Agócs earned Doctoral and Masters degrees from The Juilliard School, where her<br />

principal teacher was Milton Babbitt, and was a fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center<br />

with the ASCAP Leonard Bernstein Fellowship.<br />

KINAN AZMEH: COMPOSER<br />

Hailed as a "virtuoso" by The New York Times and "Incredibly<br />

Rich sound" by the CBC, Kinan Azmeh is one of Syria's rising<br />

stars. His utterly distinctive sound across different <strong>music</strong>al genres<br />

is now fast gaining international recognition.<br />

Born in Damascus, Kinan was the first Arab to win the premier<br />

prize at the 1997 Nicolai Rubinstein International Competition,<br />

Moscow. A graduate of New York's Juilliard school as a student<br />

of Charles Neidich, and of both the Damascus High institute of<br />

Music where he studied with Shukry Sahwki, Nicolay Viovanof<br />

and Anatoly Moratof, and Damascus University's School of Electrical Engineering, Kinan<br />

is currently finishing his doctoral work at the City University of New York.<br />

Kinan has appeared worldwide as a soloist, composer and improviser. Notable<br />

appearances include: Opera Bastille, Paris; Tchaikovsky Grand Hall, Moscow; Carnegie<br />

Hall, Alice Tully Hall and the UN's general assembly, New York; the Royal Albert hall,<br />

London; Teatro Colon, Buenos Aires; der Philharmonie; Berlin; the Library of Congress, the<br />

Kennedy Center, Washington DC; the Mozarteum, Salzburg and the Damascus opera<br />

house for its opening concert in his native Syria.<br />

As classical Clarinetist, he has appeared as soloist with the Bavarian radio orchestra, the<br />

West-eastern Divan orchestra, the Kiev Camerata, the Corasara Orchestra, and the<br />

Syrian symphony Orchestra among others.; and has shared the stage with Marcel<br />

Khalife, Daniel Barenboim, Zakir Hussein Francois Rabbath, Solhi-al-Wadi, Manfred<br />

Leuchter, Kevork Mourad, and members of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, among<br />

others.<br />

Compositions include several works for solo, orchestra, and chamber <strong>music</strong>; film, live<br />

illustration, and electronics. His discography include three albums with his ensemble<br />

HEWAR, several soundtracks for film and dance, and a duo album with pianist Dinuk<br />

Wijeratne. He serves as artistic director of the Damascus Festival Chamber Music<br />

<strong>Ensemble</strong>, with whom he released an album of new contemporary Syrian chamber<br />

<strong>music</strong> written especially for the ensemble by various composers and is on the advisory<br />

board of the Nova Scotia Youth Orchestra.<br />

DAVID BRUCE: COMPOSER<br />

Born in Stamford, Connecticut in 1970, David Bruce grew up in<br />

England and now enjoys a growing reputation on both sides of<br />

the Atlantic. In the US, his third Carnegie Hall commission<br />

Steampunk (2011), follows Piosenki (2006), and Gumboots<br />

(2008) which have both gone on to be widely performed by<br />

leading ensembles around the world. His song-cycle The North<br />

Wind was a Woman was commissioned by the Lincoln Center<br />

for Dawn Upshaw for the gala opening of the Chamber Music<br />

Society of the Lincoln Center's 2009 season. In the UK, Bruce has<br />

a new chamber opera in development with the Opera Group<br />

and ROH2, based on Philip Pullman's story The Firework Maker's Daughter (for a planned<br />

UK tour in Winter/Spring 2012/13); a new commission from the London Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra for their BrightSparks series; and Fire, a new work for massed choir, horns and<br />

fire artist, one of 20 '20x12' commissions celebrating the Cultural Olympiad.<br />

In great demand as a composer, Bruce continues to work with some of the world's<br />

leading <strong>music</strong>ians. In August 2011 violinist Daniel Hope together with the David Orlowsky<br />

Trio and cellist Vincent Segal premiered his 45 minute chamber work The Given Note,<br />

co-commissioned by the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festival, Germany and the<br />

Savannah Festival USA; and for 2012 Bruce is working on a new commission from Yo-Yo<br />

Ma's Silk Road <strong>Ensemble</strong>.<br />

Bruce's <strong>music</strong> draws inspiration from folk-traditions from around the world. He particularly<br />

enjoys collaborating with <strong>music</strong>ians who have strong connections with both classical<br />

and folk/world traditions, such as accordionist Michael Ward-Bergeman, mandolinist Avi<br />

Avital and clarinettist David Orlowsky. Bruce also enjoys close working relationships with<br />

some of the finest <strong>music</strong>ians of the younger generation including <strong>Ensemble</strong> ACJW;<br />

harpist Bridget Kibbey; the Grammy-nominated <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> in New York;<br />

Chroma in the UK; and Art of Elan in San Diego (whose commission The Eye of Night was<br />

premiered in Jan 2011 and will shortly be recorded).<br />

SUSIE IBARRA: COMPOSER<br />

Composer/Percussionist Susie Ibarra resides in New York and has<br />

performed as a soloist and collaborator in various<br />

configurations. Ibarra is a Vic Firth, Paiste and Yamaha Drum<br />

Artist. Ibarra composes and performs regularly with<br />

composer/percussionist Roberto Rodriguez in their<br />

eco-electronica duo Electric Kulintang, childrens world <strong>music</strong><br />

with Mundo Niatos, and chamber jazz ensemble Susie Ibarra<br />

Quartet, as well as various interdisciplinary art collaborations<br />

with poet Yusef Komunyakaa and visual artist Makoto Fujimura.<br />

She has recorded numerous works as a leader and<br />

collaborator. Recent Works Include: Drum Sketches,solo percussion, Dialects by Electric<br />

Kulintang, Summer Fantasy and Folklore commissioned by MoMa Summergarden and<br />

Jazz at Lincoln Center, A Translation of Silk with Yusef Komunyakaa premiered at the<br />

Harlem Stage, Canciones de Cuna / Lullabies by Mundo Niatos, Madre Selva, a<br />

soundtrack video installation by Juan Sanchez in tribute to Ana Mendieta, Kit: Music for


SUSIE IBARRA: COMPOSER (CONTINUED)<br />

Four Pianists commissioned by Ars Nova Workshop, War Horses <strong>music</strong> by Electric<br />

Kulintang and poetry by Yusef Komunyakaa commissioned by Isamu Noguchi Museum,<br />

These Trees That Speak commissioned by Ethos Percussion Quartet, Pintados Dream/<br />

The Painteds Dream a concerto for drums , visual art by Makoto Fujimura commissioned<br />

by American Composers Orchestra and premiered at Zankel Carnegie Hall.<br />

In 2004 Ibarra began work in cultural and environmental preservation with Indigenous<br />

and children’s groups in the Philippines, US, Asia/Pacific and co-founded in 2008 Song<br />

of the Bird King. She is honored to be a TED Fellow and Asia Society Young Leaders<br />

Delegate as she continues her documentary work and public service projects towards<br />

cultural innovation and preservation.<br />

Ibarra is currently working on several collaborations including a sound walk installation<br />

for lower Manhattan 2012 , Hidden Truths, with percussionist/composer Roberto<br />

Rodriguez and Makoto Fujimura. Hidden Truths are compositions by Electric Kulintang<br />

including recordings of guest Filipino traditional artists from seven Indigenous tribes in the<br />

Philippines. Another collaboration is with Lebanese electronic conceptual artist Tarek<br />

Atoui, Visiting Tarab , new compositions inspired by archival Arabic classical Tarab<br />

<strong>music</strong>, for mixed ensemble of oriental taq and contemporary <strong>music</strong>ians in Sharjah 2012.<br />

Electric Kulintang will release a new record, Drum Codes, beginning of 2012.<br />

PAQUITO D’RIVERA: COMPOSER<br />

Paquito D'Rivera defies categorization. The winner of nine<br />

Grammy Awards, he is celebrated both for his artistry in Latin<br />

jazz and his achievements as a classical composer.<br />

Born in Havana, Cuba, he performed at age 10 with the<br />

National Theater Orchestra, studied at the Havana<br />

Conservatory of Music and, at 17, became a featured soloist<br />

with the Cuban National Symphony. As a founding member of<br />

the Orquesta Cubana de Musica Moderna, he directed that<br />

group for two years, while at the same time playing both the<br />

clarinet and saxophone with the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra. He eventually<br />

went on to premier several works by notable Cuban composers with the same<br />

orchestra. Additionally, he was a founding member and co-director of the innovative<br />

<strong>music</strong>al ensemble Irakere. With its explosive mixture of jazz, rock, classical and traditional<br />

Cuban <strong>music</strong> never before heard, Irakere toured extensively throughout America and<br />

Europe, won several Grammy nominations (1979, 1980) and a Grammy (1979).<br />

His numerous recordings include more than 30 solo albums. In 1988, he was a founding<br />

member of the United Nation Orchestra, a 15-piece ensemble organized by Dizzy<br />

Gillespie to showcase the fusion of Latin and Caribbean influences with jazz. D'Rivera<br />

continues to appear as guest conductor of that group which features such artists as<br />

James Moody, Slide Hampton, Airto Moreira, Flora Purim, Jon Faddis, Steve Turre, and<br />

others. A Grammy was awarded the United Nation Orchestra in 1991, the same year<br />

D'Rivera received a Lifetime Achievement Award from Carnegie Hall for his<br />

contributions to Latin <strong>music</strong>. Additionally, D'Rivera's highly acclaimed ensembles- the<br />

Chamber Jazz <strong>Ensemble</strong>, the Paquito D'Rivera Big Band, and the Paquito D'Rivera<br />

Quintet are in great demand world wide.<br />

While Paquito D'Rivera's discography reflects a dedication and enthusiasm for Jazz,<br />

Bebop and Latin <strong>music</strong>, his contributions to classical <strong>music</strong> are impressive. They include<br />

solo performances with the London Philharmonic, the London Symphony Orchestra, the<br />

Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra, the Baltimore<br />

Symphony, the Florida Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Brooklyn Philharmonic. He has<br />

also performed with the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, the Costa Rica National<br />

Symphony, the SimoÌon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra, the Bronx Arts <strong>Ensemble</strong>, and the<br />

St. Luke's Chamber Orchestra, among others. In 2005, he began touring with guitar duo<br />

Sergio and Odair Assad, in "Dances from the New World." In his passion to bring Latin<br />

repertoire to greater prominence, Mr. D'Rivera has successfully created, championed<br />

and promoted all types of classical compositions, including his three chamber<br />

compositions recorded live in concert with distinguished cellist Yo-Yo Ma in September<br />

2003. The chamber work Merengue, from that live concert at Zankel Hall, was released<br />

by Sony Records and garnered Paquito his 7th Grammy as Best Instrumental<br />

Composition 2004.<br />

In addition to his extraordinary performing career as an instrumentalist, Mr. D'Rivera has<br />

rapidly gained a reputation as an accomplished composer. The prestigious <strong>music</strong><br />

house, Boosey and Hawkes, is the exclusive publisher of Mr. D'Rivera's compositions.<br />

Recent recognition of his compositional skills came with the award of a 2007 John Simon<br />

Guggenheim Fellowship in Music Composition, and the 2007-2008 appointment as<br />

Composer-In-Residence at the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts with the<br />

Orchestra of St. Luke's. As part of the Caramoor Latin American <strong>music</strong> initiative, Sonidos<br />

Latinos, D'Rivera's new concerto for double bass and clarinet/saxophone,<br />

Conversations with Cachao, pays tribute to Cuba's legendary bass player, Israel<br />

“Cachao” Lopez. D'Rivera's works often reveal his widespread and eclectic <strong>music</strong>al<br />

interests, which range from Afro-Cuban rhythms and melodies, including influences<br />

encountered in his many travels, and back to his classical origins. Inspiration for another<br />

recent composition, The Cape Cod Files, comes from such disparate sources as Benny<br />

Goodman's intro to the Eubie Blake popular song Memories of You, Argentinean<br />

Milonga, improvisations on the <strong>music</strong> of Cuban composer Ernesto Lecuona, and North<br />

American boogie-woogie. His numerous commissions include compositions for Jazz at<br />

Lincoln Center, the Library of Congress, the National Symphony Orchestra and<br />

Rotterdam Philharmonic, the May, 2010 Turtle Island String Quartet, Ying String Quartet,<br />

the International Double Reed Society, Syracuse University, Montreal's Gerald Danovich<br />

Saxophone Quartet, and the Grant Park Music Festival.<br />

RICARDO ROMANEIRO: COMPOSER<br />

Composer Ricardo Romaneiro synthesizes his interest in<br />

electronic <strong>music</strong> with his background in classical composition,<br />

he earned a Master Degree from The Juilliard School and a<br />

Bachelor from Manhattan School of Music. His <strong>music</strong> has been<br />

commissioned and performed by ensembles and institutions<br />

such as the <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong>, the Museum of Modern Art's<br />

Summergarden Series, Wordless Music, the Alvin Ailey Dance<br />

Company, the New Juilliard <strong>Ensemble</strong>, Quintet of the Americas,<br />

the Colorado Ballet, and the Sacramento Ballet. In 2010 his<br />

composition Sombras was featured in the American Composers<br />

Orchestra's Underwood New Music Readings, where he was the<br />

recipient of the People's Choice Award. Romaneiro's composition process and <strong>music</strong><br />

was featured in Esquire Magazine's 2007 "Best & Brightest" issue.<br />

His work with <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> includes The Rite: Remixed, a re-imagination of<br />

Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring for brass ensemble, percussion, and live electronics, and<br />

Two-Part Belief, featuring Grammy Award-winning soprano Hila Plitmann. Presented by<br />

Wordless Music Series as part of Celebrate Brooklyn! summer concerts, both were<br />

premiered in Prospect Park Bandshell for an audience of 10,000 and nationally<br />

broadcast live on NPR. Hallucinations his most recent project with <strong>Metropolis</strong> was an<br />

adaptation of selections from composer John Corigliano's Academy Award-nominated<br />

iconic film score Altered States, re-imagined for chamber orchestra and live electronics.<br />

Surrealistic instrumental and electronic effects are combined with frenetic orchestral<br />

textures and sparse, eerie melodies to create a 5.1 surround-sound cinematic


RICARDO ROMANEIRO: COMPOSER (CONTINUED)<br />

experience. Also on the program was Strata, exploring the boundaries of electronica<br />

and classical <strong>music</strong>, it weaves the listener through layers of pulsating grooves and<br />

radiant harmonies, in which New York Times stated "a blissful and compelling mix of<br />

Minimalist-derived rhythmic ecstasy."<br />

DU YUN: COMPOSER<br />

Described as "electrifying... an attractive score ... "<br />

"cutting-edge...to whom the term 'young composer' and 'the<br />

pianist' can hardly do justice " (by New York Times), "ineffably<br />

quaking... stirs a scene" (by La Presse, Montréal); "...a work<br />

loaded with subtle lament, spanning from chaotic sonorous<br />

atmosphere to structured improvisation..." (by Cervantino,<br />

Mexico), "...reconciles savageness and quietness ..." (by<br />

Volkeskrant, Amsterdam), "...the strongest impression made yet,<br />

a political statement against oppression and violence" (by De<br />

Rode Leeuw, Amsterdam), and "...one senses the exceptional<br />

ear, exploration and the results are impeccably powerful" (by Le Devoir, Montréal), Du<br />

Yun's written compositions have been spotlighted on China's National Radio Station,<br />

Radio-Shanghai, Radio-Canada, Radio Canada Internationale (RCI), Espace Musique<br />

100.7 FM, FBi 94.5 (Australia), Canal 22 (Mexico), Art of the States (artofthestates.org),<br />

SinoVision (US), WFMT, WCKR and l'Union Européene de Radio-Télévision.<br />

Recent recipient of the 2007 Fromm Foundation, in the recent years Du Yun has been<br />

granted of awards, fellowships, and commissions including from the Jerome Foundation,<br />

Meet the Composer, American Music Center, Greenwall Foundation, Lower Manhattan<br />

Council, the First Place of China National Young Composer Competition, Harvard<br />

Dissertation Completion Award, winner of the 3rd British and International Bass Forum<br />

Composition Competition (solo section), Adelbert W. Sprague Prize, the audience<br />

award of the 2004 International Composer Forum in Montréal, Canada, New Trumpet<br />

Festival of New York, and the Shanghai New Music Foundation.<br />

Her concert <strong>music</strong> has been premiered by the Radio Kamer Filharmonie of The<br />

Netherlands, le Nouvel <strong>Ensemble</strong> Moderne of Canada, le Decadanse of France, Nueva<br />

Musica Duo of Mexico, the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, the Shanghai New Music<br />

<strong>Ensemble</strong> the Bang On a Can All-Stars, the Oberlin Orchestra, the Boston Modern<br />

Orchestra Project, the North/South Consonance Chamber Orchestra, the New York<br />

Miniature <strong>Ensemble</strong>, cellists Frances-Marie Uitti, Joakim Munkner, and among others.<br />

And most importantly, she is blessed to continue to compose for the International<br />

Contemporary <strong>Ensemble</strong> (the group with whom she is the founding composer and has<br />

had the working relationship since its inception).<br />

Aside from composing notated <strong>music</strong> for concert halls, Du Yun's <strong>music</strong> also spans from<br />

writing for art shows, experimental theatres to improvising/performing actively at<br />

avant-garde venues on the amplified/processed Chinese zither (the 21-string zheng),<br />

piano, laptop, and with her own voice. Propelled by the kernel of genere-defying, her<br />

approach to <strong>music</strong>, regardless its formation, has always aimed to be ultimately visceral;<br />

to evoke a sense of corporeality stripped-down from spirituality. Cast as the leading role<br />

of her own hour-long <strong>music</strong>-theatre, Zolle, she was seen on stage at the Performance<br />

Space 122 for a week-run in October 2005, with ICE and director Lydia Steir. Recently<br />

signed with Tag Team Records as a songwriter and singer, her first LP in the genre of<br />

alternative/experimental electronica is scheduled to release in US and China in 2009.<br />

Du Yun's classical compositions can be heard on labels such as Wugui (Beijing),<br />

Shanghai Classical Music, ATMA Classique, and Focus (upcoming). She is a member of<br />

ASCAP.<br />

This current season her concert <strong>music</strong> has been featured at the festivals that include<br />

Ultima Contemporary Music Festival in Oslo, Norway; the Festival Internacional<br />

Cervantino in Mexico and the Shanghai New Music Festival; at a torn-down theatre<br />

space in Cartagena, Columbia; world premiere of her most recent orchestra piece by<br />

the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra at the Shanghai Symphony Hall. Her current<br />

composing engagements include a work (Cockroach's Tarentella) for string quartet, a<br />

narrator, and electronics for iO quartet; a commission from the Vision & Voice Theater to<br />

work on a play, I have been to Hiroshima Mon Amour, with playwright Chiori Miyagawa<br />

and director Jean Wagner, which will be on preview at the Culture Project in April 2008;<br />

a dance/multimedia project, Karaoke Superstar, with the Moving Theater for featuring<br />

at the Whitney Museum Live in November 2008.<br />

Born and raised in Shanghai, China, Du Yun currently resides in New York City. She is an<br />

alumna of Shanghai Conservatory, Oberlin Conservatory (B.M.) and Harvard University<br />

(M.A., Ph.D). Her principal compositional teachers include DENG Erbo, Randolph<br />

Coleman, Bernard Rands, Joshua Fineberg, and Mario Davidovsky. She currently serves<br />

on the composition faculty at the State University of New York-Purchase.<br />

ANDREW CYR: ARTISTIC DIRECTOR<br />

Grammy-nominated conductor Andrew Cyr is a leader in the<br />

rapidly growing contemporary <strong>music</strong> scene. His enthusiasm for<br />

fostering the outstanding <strong>music</strong>ians and composers of a new<br />

generation and for connecting them with new audiences led<br />

him to create <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> in 2006.<br />

Cyr has appeared in performances at Lincoln Center, Carnegie<br />

Hall, The Kimmel Center, (Le) Poisson Rouge, and, in 2008, made<br />

his debut with the Wordless Music Series, sharing the stage with<br />

indie-rock sensation Deerhoof and conducting a remix of The<br />

Rite of Spring to a live audience of 10,000 people, also broadcast live on National Public<br />

Radio. In April of 2011, Cyr made his conducting debut at Kimmel Center’s Verizon Hall<br />

as part of ?uestlove and The Roots’ Philly-Paris Lockdown at the Philadelphia<br />

International Festival of the Arts.<br />

Cyr’s work leading <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> in their first studio album, which featured Avner<br />

Dorman’s Concertos, earned him a classical nomination in the 53rd Annual Grammy<br />

Awards along with Avi Avital (soloist) for Avner Dorman’s Mandolin Concerto. The album<br />

was released on the NAXOS label and was made in collaboration with Grammy-winner<br />

“Classical Producer of the Year” David Frost. Next season, Cyr will lead <strong>Metropolis</strong><br />

<strong>Ensemble</strong> in two new studio albums in collaboration with David Frost, featuring the<br />

<strong>music</strong> of Timothy Andres and Vivian Fung.<br />

Cyr is a native of Fort Kent, Maine, and holds <strong>music</strong> degrees in trumpet, organ, and<br />

conducting from Bates College, the French National Conservatory (Études Supérieures),<br />

and Westminster Choir College. His primary <strong>music</strong>al mentors include Dr. Joseph<br />

Flummerfelt, Kenneth Kiesler, Pierre Grandmaison, and Kynan Johns. Cyr’s work as<br />

conductor has been described by Esa- Pekka Salonen (Conductor, London<br />

Philharmonia) as “...precise, rhythmically incisive and fluid. He made complex new<br />

pieces sound natural and organic.”<br />

Learn more about Andrew at metropolisensemble.org/about


ABOUT METROPOLIS ENSEMBLE<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> is a professional chamber orchestra and ensemble dedicated to<br />

making classical <strong>music</strong> in its most contemporary forms. Led by Grammy-nominated<br />

conductor Andrew Cyr, <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> gathers today's most outstanding<br />

emerging composers and young artists to produce unique, innovative concert<br />

experiences. Founded in 2006, <strong>Metropolis</strong> has commissioned over 75 works of <strong>music</strong><br />

from a dynamic mix of composers and has been presented by The Wordless Music<br />

Series, Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall's Weill Music Institute, (Le) Poisson Rouge, and<br />

Celebrate Brooklyn. <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> has quickly established a reputation of<br />

presenting “new <strong>music</strong> played with the same kind of panache and bravura we usually<br />

experience only in performances of standard repertoire” (Esa-Pekka Salonen).<br />

In 2010, <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> was proud to receive a classical nomination in the 53rd<br />

Annual Grammy Awards for Avi Avital (soloist) and Andrew Cyr (conductor) for Avner<br />

Dorman's Mandolin Concerto, part of their first studio album, Avner Dorman's<br />

Concertos. In recent activity, <strong>Metropolis</strong> made its Lincoln Center debut this summer,<br />

presenting the New York premiere of Tan Dun’s Martial Arts Trilogy for their Out of Doors<br />

Festival. This fall, <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> collaborated with David Frost, 2010<br />

Grammy-winner “Producer of the Year“, and Grammy-winning producer Tim Martyn to<br />

record the debut orchestral albums of composers Timothy Andres (for Nonesuch) and<br />

Vivian Fung (for NAXOS) at Tanglewood's Ozawa Hall, set for release next season. In<br />

recent highlights, <strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> appeared on NBC’s Late Night with Jimmy Fallon<br />

with the multiple Grammy-winning hip-hop sensation The Roots as part of their new<br />

album Undun.<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> is equally dedicated to making a difference in its local community<br />

and offers innovative <strong>music</strong> programs to some of New York’s most under-resourced<br />

populations. Its education and outreach program Youth Works collaborates with<br />

cultural organizations, nonprofit partners, and schools such as The Teak Fellowship, PS 11<br />

and PS11 programs in Lower Manhattan, and the Special Music School at PS 859.<br />

Join the community at metropolisensemble.org<br />

NOTES FROM THE COMPOSERS<br />

Kati Agócs<br />

Northern Lights is a cycle for solo harp that incorporates folk songs from three regions of<br />

Canada, bookended by a prelude and postlude of original material that set the mood,<br />

interpolate, and comment. The three central movements are not folk-song<br />

arrangements, but instead subject the original melodies to my own harmonic<br />

inflections, fragmentation, and juxtaposition with new motives. Much of this process<br />

involves searching for ways to make the material sound resonant on the harp. In this<br />

way, the piece builds upon my 2005 harp cycle Every Lover is A Warrior, where I worked<br />

with folk songs from Appalachia, France, and Hungary.<br />

Since I spent my first nineteen years in Canada and many of its folk songs are as familiar<br />

to me as breathing, choosing and working with its songs presented a special challenge.<br />

I needed to cast aside my own associations with the songs, to hear them in a new light,<br />

and to mine the <strong>music</strong>al material for its own intrinsic beauty.<br />

À la Claire Fontaine is a lyrical French Canadian folk song about lost love. I used<br />

changes in modality and unusual non-diatonic pitch collections to capture the<br />

bittersweet essence of the original words: “It has been a long time since I have loved<br />

you; I will never forget you.”<br />

I’s the B’ye is an irrepressible Newfoundland jig, its title in dialect: “I am the boy who<br />

builds the boat, and I am the boy who sails her…” I interwove continuous melodic layers<br />

with cross-rhythms against the tune and played with the coloristic possibilities of harp<br />

harmonics, making a hybrid that resembles a Maritime jig fused with a Baroque<br />

toccata.<br />

The Huron Carol (‘Twas in the moon of Wintertime) is a Christmas song introduced to<br />

Canada by the Jesuits with the goal of converting its Native people. It describes the<br />

birth of Jesus in a silent, snow-covered winter landscape. Wise men’s gifts are replaced<br />

by furs and pelt harvested by the native people in the woods. This movement links the<br />

mystery of Christian mysticism with the pristine natural environment in Ontario, the<br />

county’s central region.<br />

My prelude - the opening movement - features bell-like sonorities; the postlude is a<br />

perpetual-motion movement that accumulates resonance over the entire range of the<br />

harp, evoking the emergence of the Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis).<br />

Northern Lights was written on a private commission from the Boston-based couple<br />

Conrad and Louise Golaski to celebrate their 40th Wedding Anniversary in 2011.<br />

Paquito D’Rivera<br />

Habanera, dedicated to Maurice Ravel, was originally part of my 5-movement work,<br />

Aires Tropicales, for woodwind quintet. The piece is based on a rhythmic cell of the first<br />

Cuban <strong>music</strong> style.<br />

Bandoneon, inspired by the expressive accordion-like instrument regarded by many as<br />

the soul of the Argentinean Tango, was initially scored as the second movement of my<br />

Cape Cod Concerto, for clarinet, piano, and orchestra.<br />

My dear assistant Charles Whalen and I specially adapted both pieces for the<br />

wonderfully talented harpist, Bridget Kibbey.


NOTES FROM THE COMPOSERS (CONTINUED)<br />

Du Yun<br />

The Ocean Within<br />

I open my gaze and saw nothing. I close my eyes and sit still.<br />

Should you look closer, you will see how old that feeling is, how loud the sound is.<br />

As old as the world, as loud as the ocean.<br />

Ricardo Romaneiro<br />

“Glitch” is a term used to describe a genre of electronic <strong>music</strong> that emerged in the late<br />

1990’s. In Glitch Box, a piece for amplified harp and live electronics, the acoustic harp<br />

is processed through computer software as well as audio hardware to "glitch" the live<br />

sound, creating a tapestry of cascading rhythmic counterpoint. The most common<br />

"glitch" technique is similar to the sound of a skipping CD, except here the effect is<br />

notated into rhythmic patterns that correspond to certain <strong>music</strong>al material and forms,<br />

transforming the sounds associated with digital reading errors into something aesthetic.<br />

In Glitch Box, I have also created a live electronic element in which dozens of <strong>music</strong>al<br />

cells, modular pre-composed <strong>music</strong>al material that can be activated spontaneously,<br />

combined with the texture, and manipulated at will. This allows for live improvisation<br />

within predetermined parameters when ‘played’ by the laptop performer throughout<br />

the piece. The combined results mix the dry amplified signal from the harp with<br />

processed and pre-generated sounds to create the impression that the acoustic harp<br />

and electronics sound as a single instrument.<br />

Susie Ibarra<br />

Las Pequenas Flores Lloran<br />

Little Flowers Cry, is a reflection on the delicate dance of nature and urbanization. It is a<br />

metaphor I've felt while working in heritage sites and homelands with traditional<br />

Indigenous artists in the Philippines. It is a spiritual, a lament and a reverence for fragile<br />

beauty. Las Pequenas Flores is composed with a section for the soloist to improvise on.<br />

The intention to compose this piece for solo harp was to capture it's delicacy and<br />

power, as well as am homage to <strong>music</strong> for plucked strings in traditional and<br />

contemporary <strong>music</strong>.<br />

Kinan Azmeh<br />

“It's about time" for solo harp was commissioned by American Harpist Bridget Kibbey in<br />

2011. My original plan was to draw elements from my Syrian roots and traditional Arabic<br />

<strong>music</strong> vocabulary as many of my earlier works did. However, the end product ended up<br />

borrowing elements from New York City’s electronic <strong>music</strong> scene, a genre that I have<br />

been fascinated by for many years.<br />

The piece plays around the very subtle difference between a steady 4/4 meter and<br />

that of a 17/16 meter when played in a fast tempo. This extra sixteenth note adds some<br />

sort of anxiety to the mix that makes one look for other “downbeats” to relate to.<br />

In this piece, one can find elements of American minimalism, in which<br />

apparently-distant rhythmical elements can actually groove together in a unifying<br />

larger cycle, as well as one of the most used motifs in club <strong>music</strong>: the never-ending<br />

triplets against a steady beat. Elements of Indian rhythms techniques are equally found<br />

in the middle transition section, which uses time compression that leads the piece to the<br />

end of the “party”. In short, it is all about time and groove, using an instrument that is<br />

not known for its club-capacity!<br />

David Bruce<br />

I wrote Caja de Música for Bridget Kibbey's Weill Hall recital debut in 2009 on a<br />

commission from the Concert Artists Guild. Around that time I had come across the<br />

wonderful Joropo <strong>music</strong> from Venezuela, which is usually written for a trio of harp,<br />

Cuatro (a guitar-like instrument) and shakers, with the harp taking a central melodic<br />

role. I was immediately taken with the use of the harp as a raw, vibrant and above all,<br />

rhythmic instrument and this piece is a kind of homage to the Venezuelan tradition. Of<br />

course, being a solo harp piece, the soloist needs to be both lead and rhythm section -<br />

making for a pretty challenging piece - the third movement in particular is packed with<br />

fiendish cross-rhythms which no mortal harpist should be able to play.<br />

Composers often struggle to write for the harp, not just because of the technical<br />

difficulties of the instrument, but also, I think, because everything sounds so beautiful - it<br />

can be hard to get variety when even the harshest dissonance sounds so sweet. But my<br />

instinct was to embrace this sweetness rather than deny it and I was struck by the fact<br />

that what came out as I started writing the piece reminded me of the sound of the old<br />

wind-up <strong>music</strong> <strong>box</strong>es we've all seen lying around our relatives houses.<br />

“Caja de Música” - Spanish for “<strong>music</strong> <strong>box</strong>” - seemed an appropritate title, and the<br />

resulting piece, in three movements, is a strange hybrid of these two totally<br />

unconnected traditions. There are strong hints of Joropo throughout – including a<br />

3-beats-to-a-bar time signature at the start of all three movements; but there is also<br />

something of that <strong>music</strong> <strong>box</strong> naivety here too.<br />

It has been my great pleasure to get to know and work with Bridget Kibbey these last<br />

couple of years, who is deservedly gaining a reputation as one of the finest harpists of<br />

her generation. Her commitment to my new piece from the earliest sketches to the<br />

finishing touches has been a model that I only wish other players would follow and it is<br />

an infinitely richer piece thanks to her thoughtful contributions and suggestions during<br />

the process of our transatlantic collaborations. It is also a pleasure to work again with<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong>, a group of extraordinarily talented and spirited <strong>music</strong>ians I have<br />

had the pleasure to write <strong>music</strong> for on many occasions.


SUPPORTERS 2011/2012<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> <strong>Ensemble</strong> would like to thank the following individuals, foundations and<br />

corporations for their generous support for the 2011/2012 programming year.<br />

DONORS<br />

up to $200<br />

Timothy Andres<br />

Josh Atkins<br />

John & Nancy Austin<br />

Michael Bacon<br />

Brad Balliett<br />

Katie Banser-Whittle<br />

Louise Barder<br />

Patricia Berg<br />

Charles Boudreau & Vivian<br />

Fung<br />

Robert & Joellen Carlson<br />

Midwin Charles<br />

Amy Chen<br />

Pauline Chiou<br />

Portia Chiou<br />

Michael Clarke<br />

Jakub Ciupinski<br />

Brian Cohen<br />

Bradley & Charlotte Detrick<br />

Kiera Duffy<br />

Ryan Francis<br />

Bowie Fu<br />

Merwin Geffen<br />

Myriam Ghazi<br />

Jeff Guida<br />

Conor Hanick<br />

Umi Hashitsume<br />

Olga Jobe<br />

Bridget Kibbey<br />

Takayuki Kigawa<br />

Edward Klorman<br />

Kristin Lee<br />

Sean Lee<br />

Henry Lin<br />

Frank David & Julie Lin<br />

Raymond Lustig and Ana<br />

Berlin<br />

Sarina Mahasiri<br />

Marino & Associates, PC<br />

Yeou Cheng Ma<br />

Suzanne McClellan<br />

Laura Melnyczenko<br />

Abigail Mohlin<br />

Emily Moqtaderi<br />

Jenna Mulberry<br />

John Mulliken<br />

Bruce Rabb<br />

Richard Raymond<br />

Gabrielle Rieckhof<br />

Gary Rosenberg<br />

Isabel Sadumi<br />

The Samuel Lawrence<br />

Foundation<br />

Emily Smith<br />

Norman Solomon<br />

Janet Stradley<br />

Lance Suzuki<br />

Rachel Teoh<br />

Mary Thibeault<br />

Saeunn Thorsteinsdottir<br />

Pamela Grau Twena<br />

Jennifer Undercofler<br />

Vienne Vincent<br />

Andrew Vogelman<br />

Stephanie Wang<br />

Tema Watstein<br />

Jacob Werner<br />

Kevin Winther<br />

Francine Wolterbeek<br />

Anthony Webb<br />

Eric Wolff<br />

Jeffrey Zerba & Linda Jeo<br />

$200+<br />

Louise Barder<br />

Mandy Berman<br />

David Bruce<br />

Robert Cerutti & Caroline<br />

Hancock<br />

Kitty Chou<br />

Christina Dalle Pezze<br />

Catherine Fukushima<br />

Alice Dubois<br />

Anne Dunning<br />

Evanne Gargiulo<br />

David Hsia<br />

Deutsche Bank<br />

Peter Knell<br />

Edward Lai<br />

Winsome Lee<br />

Mateo Paiva & Lily Lim<br />

Tom & Imre Lendvai<br />

Marie Lewis<br />

Edmond Loedy<br />

Ronald Ma<br />

Jane McIntosh<br />

Leila Mureebe<br />

Russell Savage<br />

Jocelyn Stone<br />

Hamburg & Kelly Tang<br />

Miranda Wong Tang<br />

Michael Vitale<br />

John Voiklis & Charlotte<br />

Jones<br />

Janet Wang<br />

Erin Wiley<br />

$500+<br />

Anonymous<br />

AJ Bocchino & Phoebe<br />

Washburn<br />

Jeremy Barbera & Charise<br />

Beckett<br />

Carrie Chiang<br />

Andrew Cyr & Kate<br />

Gilmore<br />

Michael & Louise Cyr<br />

Jack & Lillian Davidson<br />

Joe Fig and Rosie Walker<br />

Bard Geesaman<br />

Richard & Judith Gilmore<br />

Drew Helmer<br />

Michael Hessol &<br />

Stephanie Amarnick<br />

David and Sandra Joys<br />

Chloe Almour-Kramer<br />

Sophie Lee<br />

Christiane Lemos<br />

Jeffrey Leung & Selina<br />

Poon<br />

Benjamin Lillie<br />

Michael Lin<br />

Candice Madey<br />

Nanette Po<br />

New York City, Department<br />

of Cultural Affairs<br />

Johanna Roman<br />

Jonathan Schorr<br />

Stax Inc. & Rafi Musher<br />

Who’s In My Fund?<br />

Flora Wong<br />

David Wu<br />

$1000+<br />

John Avery & Elisabeth Bell<br />

Avery<br />

Richard & Greta Conway<br />

Florence De Rosa<br />

Memorial Fund<br />

David Deforest Keys<br />

Allan & Joan Fisch<br />

Maura Fitzpatrick<br />

Kenneth Greif<br />

Irene Ho<br />

Allen & Valerie Hyman<br />

Rhiannon Kubicka<br />

Eduardo & Jennifer Loja<br />

Rodney McDaniel<br />

Christie Salomon<br />

Eriberto & Marguerite<br />

Scocimara<br />

Roxann Taylor<br />

Roy & Diana Vagelos<br />

Thomas & Caroline White<br />

Cynthia Wilcox<br />

Clyde Wu<br />

Roger Wu<br />

$2,500+<br />

Miranda Chiu<br />

Meet the Composer<br />

Foundation<br />

Josephine Jones<br />

Sandra and David Joys<br />

Anke Nolting<br />

Trip & Allyson Samson<br />

Andrew Schorr<br />

Edward Sien<br />

Jonathan & Tania Wilcox<br />

Carol Wu<br />

Con Edison<br />

$5,000+<br />

American Chai Trust /<br />

Cohn Family<br />

The Aaron Copland Fund<br />

for Music<br />

Scott & Ksenija Belsley<br />

Alex & Irene Chu<br />

Christopher & Sarah Cox<br />

Steve & Jill Lampe<br />

Mikhail Iliev<br />

NYSCA<br />

New York City Department<br />

of Cultural Affairs<br />

David Pong<br />

Weill Music Institute at<br />

Carnegie Hall<br />

Jennifer Salomon<br />

Richard Salomon<br />

Thomas Wu<br />

$10,000+<br />

Robert Bielecki<br />

Crosswicks Foundation /<br />

Jones Family<br />

Akarin Gaw & Mali<br />

Sananikone Gaw<br />

$15,000+<br />

The Augustine Foundation<br />

The van Otterloo Family<br />

Foundation<br />

$25,000+<br />

The Richard Salomon<br />

Family Foundation<br />

Gordon & Ivy Wu<br />

In Memory of James M. H.<br />

& Esther F. C. Wu<br />

$50,000+<br />

June Wu<br />

CORPORATE and IN-KIND<br />

DONATIONS<br />

Blue Ribbon Sushi & Bowie<br />

Fu<br />

Buffalo Trace<br />

Con Edison<br />

City Winery<br />

Zipora Fried<br />

Stanley James<br />

Dan Lerner<br />

The Looking Glass<br />

Candice Madey<br />

Jennifer McCrae<br />

Sara Menker<br />

Miro Cellars<br />

On Stellar Rays<br />

Paul Hastings &<br />

Friedemann Thomma<br />

(le) Poisson Rouge<br />

Rayogram<br />

Riverpark<br />

Glenn Schoenfeld<br />

Andrew Schorr<br />

Jonathan Schorr<br />

Stax Inc. & Rafi Musher<br />

Who’s In My Fund?<br />

‘wichcraft<br />

Jeffrey Zurofsky & Satya<br />

Twena<br />

MEMBERS 2010–2012<br />

Clay Andres<br />

John Austin<br />

Na Young Baek<br />

Jerome & Jodie Basdevant<br />

Astrid Baumgardner<br />

Armistead Booker<br />

Melissa Bito<br />

Charles Boudreau & Vivian<br />

Fung<br />

John Childs & Peggy<br />

Fogelman<br />

Dominic Carbone<br />

Coralie Carlson<br />

Nicholas Cohn<br />

Glenn Cornett<br />

Paul Corrigan<br />

Conrad Cummings<br />

Witney Earle<br />

Rochelle Feinstein<br />

Carl Fisher<br />

Lori Fox<br />

Lilah Gaw<br />

Umi Hashitsume<br />

Tom Healy<br />

Nancy Hubbard<br />

Thomas Jackson<br />

Jerry Katz<br />

Mindy Kaufman<br />

Catherine Lee<br />

Ray Lustig & Ana Berlin<br />

Britton Matthews<br />

Merrill Matthews<br />

Anne Meyers<br />

Laura Moore<br />

Jenna Mulberry<br />

Sarah Murkett<br />

Alexis Neophytides<br />

Vladimir Nicenko<br />

Kate Oberjat<br />

Arienne Orozco<br />

Renata Parras<br />

Alixandra Pearlstein and<br />

Patricia Pinto<br />

Christopher Reiger<br />

Asher Remy-Toledo<br />

Dennis & Andrea Roberts<br />

Carin Roman<br />

Rachel Rauch<br />

Penelope Rowlands<br />

Colin Ryan & Kaitlin Collins<br />

Rachel Salomon<br />

Daniel Schofield<br />

Jonathan Schorr<br />

Noah Smith<br />

Cara Starke<br />

Susan Steiner<br />

Matthew Strassler<br />

Lisa Switkin<br />

Kim Van Atta<br />

Jack & Linda Viertel<br />

Anthony Webb<br />

Carol Wernick<br />

Francine Wolterbeek<br />

Paul Young<br />

Jiayun Zhong<br />

Andrew & Abigail<br />

Zimmerman<br />

Adam & Ariel Zurofsky


SPECIAL THANKS<br />

HOST COMMITTEE<br />

Melina Beim, Sharland Blanchard, Lia Chavez, Andrew Cyr, Alyson Denny, Maggie<br />

Duckworth, Ariel Esposito, Jeannie Rose Field, Megan Folkmann, Zipora Fried, Patrick<br />

Gibson, Sara Hunninghake, Rae Kim, Moon Kim, Andy Lerner, Elana Margulles, Candice<br />

Madey, Matthew McNulty, Sara Menker, Kristen Oliveri, Tim Pinkston, Shan Raovfi,<br />

Ricardo Ravasini, Michael Reingold, Nisha Richardson, Frederick Schjang, Andrew<br />

Schorr, Jonathan Schorr, Sarah Shore, Melanie Stein, Jessica Stone, Misty Tolle, Jeff<br />

Valenty, Linda Vitaletti, Joanna Williams, Katja Zigerlig<br />

PRODUCTION TEAM<br />

Carly Gaebe, Photography<br />

Ryan Streber, Audio Engineer<br />

Alex Popov, Videography<br />

METROPOLIS ENSEMBLE BOARD OF DIRECTORS<br />

Mali Sananikone Gaw, Jeff Guida, Mikhail Iliev, Edward Jones, Eduardo Loja, Candice<br />

Madey, Jennifer Salomon, Glenn Schoenfeld, Ed Sien, June Wu<br />

BECOME A MEMBER<br />

<strong>Metropolis</strong> members ($50 students, $100 individuals, $175 couples) enjoy benefits<br />

including invitations to members-only events and exclusive discounts for concerts.<br />

Members provide vital support to our artistic and education programs, consider joining<br />

our vibrant and growing community today!<br />

Get started at metropolisensemble.org/members<br />

STAY CONNECTED<br />

metropolisensemble.org<br />

info@metropolisensemble.org<br />

@metroensemble<br />

bit.ly/metroface<br />

vimeo.com/metropolis<br />

flickr.com/metropolisensemble<br />

metropolisensemble.org/itunes<br />

139 Jackson Street, Suite 2A<br />

Brooklyn, NY 11211

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