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Forever and Sunsmell (1942)
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John CAGE (1912-1992)
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Janet Ziegler, soprano
Christine Augspurger & Andrew Thierauf, percussion

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Trio
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Frigyes HIDAS (1928-2007)
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Dan Spencer, horn
Jessica Ducharme, trombone
Kate Wohlman, tuba

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Antares
Inner Movements:
I. Eric (piano) Etude
II. Rebecca (violoncello) Cradle Song
III. Garrick (clarinet) Invention
IV. Vessko (violin) Tarantella
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Carter PANN (b. 1972)
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Christine Bellomy, clarinet
Megan Karls, violin
Eunkyung Son, violoncello
Grethe Nothling, piano

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Life Studies (2011) *premiere
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Leslie HOGAN (b. 1964)
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CNM ensemble

Nora Epping, flute
Meghan Kimball, oboe
Marjorie Shearer, clarinet
Stephanie Patterson, bassoon
Drew Phillips, horn
Christine Augspurger and Andrew Thierauf, percussion
Grethe Nothling, piano
Megan Karls, violin
Colleen Ferguson, violin
Manuel Tábora, viola
Eunkyung Son, violoncello
Patricia Silva, double bass
David Gompper, conductor

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Grethe Nothling, piano
Christine Augspurger, Andrew Thierauf & Oliver Molina, percussion

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John CAGE
Forever and Sunsmell

consists of 2 parts (the first dramatic, the second lyrical), connected by an unaccompanied hummed interlude. The work follows the phraseology of the dance by Jean Erdman with texts by e.e. cummings.

Amores

consists of 4 parts: I. Solo (prepared piano) - II. Trio (9 tom-toms, pod rattle) - III. Trio (7 woodblocks, not Chinese) - IV. Solo (prepared piano). The preparation is made using 9 screws, 8 bolts, 2 nuts and 3 strips of rubber. The piano expresses eroticism and tranquility, based on the permanent emotions in Indian tradition. The rhythmic structure of Solo #2 is 3, 3, 2, 2 and of Trio #1: 10 x 10. Trio #2 was written in Santa Monica as part of Trio (1936).
John Cage (1912-1992). American composer, was one of the leading figures of the postwar avant garde.
The influence of his compositions, writings and personality has been felt by a wide range of composers
around the world. He has had a greater impact on music in the 20th century than any other American composer.

Frigyes HIDAS
Trio

Frigyes Hidas was born in Budapest in 1928. He studied composition at the Ferenc Liszt Academy
of Music with János Visky. For fifteen years he was music director of the National Theatre
(1951 - 1966) and between 1974 and 1979 he performed the same function at the municipal Operetta
Theatre. Since leaving that institution, he has been a free-lance composer. Hidas is a highly prolific
composer who firmly believes in tunes and harmonies in a traditional sense of those terms and always
writes in an easily accessible idiom. His oeuvre covers the entire gamut of genres: opera's, ballets,
concertos, orchestral, chamber, solo and choral music. He is particularly well known in the world for
his woodwind and brass chamber music and for his works for wind-orchestra. Hidas has received an
important number of commissions by Ballet Companies, the State Opera House, Radio stations,
Universities and various musical societies.

Carter PANN
Antares

was written for the group by the same name, Antares (clarinet, violin, 'cello, piano), through generous
support from Jim and Ceci Tripp for Concert Artists Guild as a commission prize for the award-winning
chamber group.

The work was designed to be a signature piece for the players, showcasing each individual musician in
his/her own movement. The four personal movements comprise the central, work-proper, while the outer
movements (both of which are titled Antares and consist of the same music) present the ensemble as
a single entity. This Antares movement calls attention to the group's actual name—the name
given to the super-giant star in the Scorpio constellation. The music here is celestial in nature, often
evoking a cosmic sense, a feel of stellar beauty and stagnancy.
In the last fifteen years Carter Pann's music has become known for its blend of crafty,
popular-sounding idioms, subtle and unabashed humor, and haunted melodic writing. His music has
been performed around the world by such ensembles and soloists as the London Symphony, City of
Birmingham Symphony, Berlin-Stockholm-Finnish Radio Symphonies, Seattle Symphony, Vancouver Symphony,
National Repertory Orchestra, National Symphony of Ireland, New York Youth Symphony, Richard
Stoltzman, the Ying Quartet, pianists Barry Snyder and Winston Choi, and the Antares ensemble,
among others. Honors in composition include the K.Serocki Competition for his First Piano Concerto
(premiered by the Polish Radio Symphony in Lutoslawski Hall, Warsaw 1998), the Charles Ives
Scholarship from the Academy of Arts and Letters, and five ASCAP composer awards. His Piano
Concerto was nominated for a GRAMMY as "Best Classical Composition of the Year" 2001. Carter's
Clarinet Concerto Rags to Richard, commissioned for Richard Stoltzman, was recorded by the Seattle
Symphony under Gerard Schwarz. Love Letters (string quartet no. 1) was commissioned by the Ying
Quartet for their LIFE MUSIC commissioning project through a grant from the American Music Institute.
His work SLALOM (for orch.) was performed by the London Symphony under Daniel Harding in 2001 and
has since been widely performed throughout the United States and Europe (and subsequently showcased
on NPR's Performance Today). CONCERTO LOGIC (Piano Concerto No. 2) was commissioned by a consortium
of nearly two dozen wind symphonies around the country with the composer as soloist. His most recent
work, MERCURY CONCERTO for flute and orchestra, was written for and premiered by fellow faculty member
Christina Jennings and the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra in Houston. Throughout the last seven years
Carter has contributed regularly to the explosion of new Wind Symphony works being written for the
many ensembles around the country. He was the most featured composer at the recent Nationwide CBDNA
conference in Austin, TX (2009).

Leslie HOGAN
Life Studies

He was all austerity and rage.
He was as mute as a fish.
He was music.
He viewed the world in the bright flame of the torch we light for the dead.
His joys were sometimes mysterious.
He was full of confusion.
Every day dawns but once.
—P. Quignard, Tous les matins du monde

Just as my fingers on these keys
Make music, so the self-same sounds
On my spirit make a music, too.

Music is feeling, then, not sound;
And thus it is that what I feel,
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Is music.
—Wallace Stevens, "Peter Quince at the Clavier"

Late in March 2011, as I began conceptual work on this composition, it came to me that I wanted to try
to take the highly subjective world of felt emotion and transmute it into the highly objective and
disciplined world of music as organized sound. The impulse came both from whatever place composers'
ideas come from and from my work, over the past several years, talking about the relationships between
art, the artist, and aesthetic gesture from the standpoint of a working composer (the panels and workshops
on creativity in which I've participated have been directed toward practicing psychotherapists).
The result is a work of strong contrasts. I was most interested in dichotomies—stasis and chaos, the
lyrical and the disjunct, extreme dissonance and extreme consonance—and in transformation and recombination
of those materials. Eventually, the music fell into a loose three-part structure with an extended
introduction.

The title Life Studies is borrowed from Robert Lowell's book of the same name.
Leslie A. Hogan received her principal training at the University of Kansas (BM 1987), and the
University of Michigan (MM 1989, DMA 1992). Her music increasingly reflects a longtime fascination
with other art forms and with the potential of music to reflect or respond to visual stimuli from
the natural world. In 1999, she co-founded Current Sounds, a new music consortium based in Santa
Barbara, California, and also serves on the board of the Chamber Music Society of Santa Barbara,
an organization which promotes the performance and appreciation of chamber music repertory through
sponsoring workshops, concerts, and outreach activities. She has received awards from the American
Academy of Arts and Letters (Charles Ives Fellowship, 2002; Charles Ives Scholarship, 1993), the
American Music Center, ASCAP, and the Chicago Civic Orchestra, among others. Prof. Hogan has taught
composition in the College of Creative Studies at the University of California-Santa Barbara since 1995.

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