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A Night at Iowa City for String Quartet
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Leonid IOGANSEN (1981)
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Leonid Iogansen and Andrew Uhe, violins
Miranda Blakeslee, viola
Yoo-Jung Chang, cello

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'Quartet in Five Parts'
for amplified or non-amplified strings (2012)
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Stas OMELCHENKO (1982)
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Leonid Iogansen and Michael Wright, violins
Manuel Tabora, viola
Yoo-Jung Chang, cello

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Angelus Novus II
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Brian PENKROT (1978)
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Nora Epping, flute

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Piano Study No. 5
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Jonathan TAUSCHECK (1979)
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Jonathan Tauscheck, piano

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Perforation
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Jason PALAMARA (1977)
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Michele Aichele, flute
Jeff Bosacki, bass clarinet
Michael Meyer, trumpet
Shelby Keifer, trombone
Andrew Thierauf, xylophone
Katie Meyer, piano
Alysia Raine, piano
Brian Penkrot, guitar
Jason Gregory, violin
Lucy Lewis, violin
Leonid Iogansen, violin
Lori Palamara, double Bass
Jason Palamara, laptop

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Leonid IOGANSEN
A Night at Iowa City for String Quartet

Inspired by the nightlife of Iowa City, the piece strives to describe the impressions one might get
while walking through the downtown of the city after a sunset. The work calls for the violins to be
retuned to microtonal tunings, to add an air of exoticism to the piece. The thematic material draws
its influence from the popular tunes one might hear while passing by the local bars.
Born in St. Petersburg Russia in 1981, Leonid Iogansen started playing violin at the age of seven.
As a violinist, he has won a number of competitions and has performed at numerous venues in the United
States (where he moved seventeen years ago), as well as abroad. As a composer, Leonid has received a
number of commissions, most notably from Shuang Yin International Arts Festival in Taiwan, where
served as a composer-in-residence in 2006. He has written much solo, chamber and orchestral music.
Leonid holds a Summa cum laude Bachelors of Music in violin performance and composition from Boston
University, where he was a Trustee Scholar in 2001-2003, and a Masters degree with the same majors
from Peabody Conservatory.

Stas OMELCHENKO
Quartet in Five Parts

Composed in three short weeks, Quartet in Five Parts is a humorous, yet absolutely sincere
tribute to an American composer, theorist, writer, philosopher, and artist John Cage. The first part
celebrates Cage's life and is based on his musical cryptogram. The second part develops the
cryptogram and introduces indeterminacy. The third part introduces silence and is constructed
entirely from the material borrowed from Cage's Quartet in Four Parts (1950). The fourth part...
The fifth part re-opens the quartet.
Stas Omelchenko (b. 1982) has studied composition with Lawrence Fritts, David Gompper, Stacy Garrop,
Kyong Mee Choi, Don Malone, Gyula Fekete, and John Eaton. Additional studies and master classes were
with Marta Ptaszynska, Bernard Rands, and Mark-Anthony Turnage. He received his Bachelor of Music
degree at the Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University and Master of Arts degree
at the University of Iowa. He is currently pursuing a Doctor of Philosophy degree at the University
of Iowa where he serves as a teaching assistant in music theory.

Brian PENKROT
Angelus Novus II

'Angelus Novus' shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is
fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how
one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain
of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it
in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been
smashed. But a storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence
that the angel can no longer close them. This storm irresistibly propels him into the future to
which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what
we call progress. —Walter Benjamin

My intention in this piece is juxtapose musical elements signifying the trend in musical perception
from pitched based to sound based. Traditional ideals of melody, pulse, and technique are contrasted
with more modern notions of clarity/noise, relative timing, and extended techniques. Instead of being
perceived as disparate elements, they are presented in a fluid manner, fading in and out of one another,
as one would experience a chain of events in time. Despite the somewhat cynical nature of the quote,
I had no intention to comment on the validity of either musical aesthetic and none should be assumed.
Brian Penkrot is an American composer of concert, film, and stage music. Brian is originally
from Chicago but has lived and worked in cities across the US. He is a guitarist and conductor with
additional studies in violin, piano, drum set, vocal performance, improvisation, film, and dance. He
received is MM from the University of Nevada Las Vegas and his BM from Columbia College Chicago. For
a full listing of news and upcoming performances, please visit his website at
www.brianpenkrot.com.

Jonathan TAUSCHECK
Piano Study No. 5

is a jovial piece that contains a short motive consisting of quick repetitive notes within a thin
texture. It is reiterated throughout the piece in different guises: canon, inversion, and in octaves.
The short, disjunctive phrases are filled in with rests, avoiding long continuous melodies.
It is included within a collection of studies that display the influence of the Russian school on
the composer's works. This piece has also been transcribed for string quartet.
Jonathan Tauscheck was born and raised in Minneapolis, MN. He began piano lessons from a
neighborhood teacher in second grade and transferred to MacPhail Center for the Arts in fifth grade.
He was awarded a music scholarship in piano performance at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
where he studied with Alexander Braginsky. He earned his Bachelors and Masters of Music while
attending the University.

Jonathan is also an active composer. He has written many works for solo piano which have been
performed at liturgical services, weddings, and as commissions for ballet performances. He has
given solo composition recitals at the University of Minnesota, and Kirkwood Community College.
His current projects include orchestrating many of his works along with the completion of three piano
concertos. He is currently a music accompanist and piano instructor at Kirkwood Community College
in Cedar Rapids and is pursuing his DMA at the University of Iowa in piano performance under the
tutelage of Rene Lecuona and Eugene Gaub.

Jason PALAMARA
Perforation

is the 75th piece in a series of 100 pieces, each written in a single day. The self-imposed rules of
this project allow for one day to compose, followed (often times years later) by one day of revision.
Many of these pieces were written for unspecified instrumentation allowing for a plethora of performance
experiences. A few of these pieces have been performed, notably Symphony 6 and …dot…, many
have not been performed, some cannot be performed and still others must not be performed. This piece
was composed on 9-27-07 and revised on 10-31-10.
Jason Palamara is a first year doctoral student in music composition at the University of Iowa.
He recently graduated with a Master's degree from the University of Louisville and has a Bachelor's
from Butler University. Mr. Palamara is currently studying with Dr. Larry Fritts. All resemblances
are purely coincidental.

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