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or call: (319) 335-1626
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2010-11 Composer's Workshop I

Anthony Donofrio, concert organizer
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Dame Descano (2008)
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Diego DAVIDENKO b. 1979
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Jacquelin Lang, soprano
Ian Richardson, baritone
Emily Rolka & Megan Karls, violin

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Into the Mind III (2010)
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Anthony DONOFRIO b. 1981
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Jared Fowler, double bass

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10,358 ft. (2010)
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Daniel HOUGLUM b. 1983
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Rolando Jose Hernandez-Gaitan, flute/piccolo
Marjorie Shearer, clarinet
Stephanie Patterson, contrabassoon/bassoon
Meghan Aube, percussion
Daniel Houglum, conductor

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Music for Flute and Piano (2010)
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Jason GREGORY b. 1976
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Nora Epping, flute
Youn-Jung Cha, piano

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A Look Back at Loveliness (2010)
1. The Philosopher
2. The Dream
3. Journey
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Aaron PERRINE b. 1979
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Jacqueline Lang, soprano
Grete Nothling, piano

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Prevailing Wind (2010)
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Zachariah ZUBOW b. 1984
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Casey Rafn, piano

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Diego DAVIDENKO
Dame Descano

is scored for soprano, baritone and two violins. The text, in Spanish, was written by the
composer:

Dame descanso
que me arde la luz del alba.
No estoy lista para el dia.
Dame descanso mientras espero la noche.
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Grant me rest
for the light of dawn stings me.
I am not ready for the day.
Grant me rest as I wait for night.
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The music reflects the juxtaposition between the peaceful comfort of the narrator's desired rest and the
harshness of the intruding dawn and stinging light. The voices and violins blend by sharing similar material
in the restful sections, and they clash when day is invading.
Diego Davidenko was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1979. He earned a bachelor's degree in composition
from SUNY Fredonia where he studied with Donald Bohlen, and a master's degree in composition from Syracuse
University, where he studied with Andrew Waggoner and Daniel S. Godfrey.

He is on the board of the long-running Society for New Music, where he served as education coordinator and chair of the
Meet the Composer program. The Society has premiered several of Davidenko's compositions, most recently his String
Quartet, which was performed by the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra String Quartet. He was awarded the Henry and
Parker Pelzer Prize Fellowship in 2010 to study at The University of Iowa, where he is pursuing a Ph.D. in composition,
studying with David Gompper and Lawrence Fritts. His music can be heard at
www.diegodavidenko.com.

Anthony DONOFRIO
Into the Mind III

was composed in the summer of 2010 for Jared Fowler. It is an experiment in creating contrasts.
Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, Anthony Donofrio is currently a third-year Ph.D. student in
music composition at The University of Iowa. He has studied with David Gompper, Frank Wiley, John Eaton, Paul
Schoenfield, and Thomas Janson. His chamber work Obituary was recently premiered and recorded by the Five-One
New Music Ensemble as a part of the Cleveland Public Theater's BigBOX series. In April 2011, The University of Iowa
Symphony Band and soloists Meghan Aube and Lucas Bernier will premiere his dissertation, In Violent Silence: A Double
Concerto for Two Percussionists and Wind Ensemble. He holds a Bachelor of Music, a Master of Music, and a Master of
Arts from Kent State University.

Daniel HOUGLUM
10,358 ft.

Who do we bring with us into the mountains? How do we benefit from such excursions? What do we leave
behind? As Thoreau states in Walden "...now, a taste for the beautiful is most cultivated out of doors, where there
is no house and no housekeeper." Those of us who venture into the mountains do so for a number of reasons:
to clear our minds and gain perspective, to reflect, to challenge ourselves, to live dangerously (perhaps), to reset
our ears, to breathe rarefied air, to seek transcendence, or to simply get closer to the sky...

The instrumentation for 10,358 ft. was influenced by Galina Ustvolskaya's Composition No. 1 - Dona Nobis
Pacem. In 10,358 ft., I attempt to reconcile a traditional use of motive with a more contemporary approach to
fusing sounds. Motivic and timbral development occur within a mostly straightforward narrative framework.
The piece begins slowly and becomes interrupted by a series of forecasting musical events.

10,358 ft. is dedicated to my brother, Chris, who dodged quite a few bolts with me.
Daniel Houglum, from Soldotna, Alaska, is pursuing the Ph.D. in music composition at The University of Iowa. He
received his B.A. from Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington and his M.Mus. degree from Northern Illinois
University. Houglum has served as an instructor for Kishwaukee College in Malta, Illinois. His composition teachers
include Kevin Waters, S.J., Robert Fleisher, David Maki, John Eaton and David Gompper. Houglum is the UI Center
for New Music RA and teaches at the Preucil School of Music as a theory instructor for the Certificate Program. Recent
composition projects include collaborations with musicians Stephen Page, Mabel Kwan, Christopher Sande, Emily Rolka,
and poet Patrick Haas. Visit www.houglum-music.com for more
information.

Jason GREGORY
Music for Flute and Piano

The premise for Music for Flute and Piano is basic: to make music. In doing so, I made use of many compositional
techniques, but unfortunately, they do not lucidly conform to a particular form of musical doctrine, nor do
they establish any new techniques or formulas in this regard. Nevertheless, I have used two ideas which isolate
areas within the work: short and long durations.
Currently studying with Dr. Lawrence Fritts, Jason Gregory is pursuing a master's degree in music composition
at The University of Iowa. He holds a research assistantship within the dance department as a composer and
sound designer, and he is a violinist for the cause of new music. He obtained his bachelor's degree in music composition
from Northern Illinois University. In addition, Jason had the opportunity to study violin with Mathias Tacke of the
former Vermeer Quartet.

Aaron PERRINE
A Look Back at Loveliness

Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950) was an American poet and playwright. Independent and rebellious
by nature, her best-known and most characteristic works are about love, grief, the inevitability
of change, abandonment and death. Millay achieved much success during her lifetime, including
the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1923.
Born in McGregor, Minnesota, Aaron Perrine earned his bachelor's degree in trombone
performance and music education with high distinction from the University of Minnesota-Morris in 2002.
While an undergraduate, he received the Edna Murphy Morrison Award, Daisy Hansen Award, Chancellor's
Award, and multiple awards in composition from the Minnesota Music Educators Association. After his time
in Morris, Perrine moved to Minneapolis and began working on his master's degree. While at the University
of Minnesota, he studied composition with Judith Zaimont and jazz arranging with Dean Sorenson. Perrine
completed his master's degree in 2006, and is now pursuing his Ph.D. in composition from The University
of Iowa, studying with David Gompper and Lawrence Fritts. For more information, please visit his website
at www.aaronperrine.com.

Zachariah ZUBOW
Prevailing Wind

Wind from any one area of the world can be attributed primarily to that area's prevailing wind: the wind source
that blows in one general direction over the earth's surface. Many factors can contribute to the direction and
speed of the wind including elevation, terrain, and temperature. Prevailing winds then cause other, more inconsistent
patterns in wind speed and direction across that area's surface. However, the new wind still remains
a derivative of the original source. Prevailing Wind is a musical exploration for piano that grows and
receives power from one original source. The consistencies and inconsistencies of wind can be felt throughout
the piece, while still maintaining its beginning idea of one general direction through time.
Zachariah Zubow received his bachelor's degree from Luther College in Decorah, Iowa and graduated in 2008 with a
master's in music composition from Illinois State University in Normal, Ill. Recently, Zach's music has been chosen to
be included on the Society of Composers National Conference, Society of Composers Regional Conference, Electronic
Music Midwest, and Iowa Composers Forum Conference this fall. His music has also been performed in Europe as
well as the United States in recent years. Zach's composition teachers include David Gompper, Lawrence Fritts, David
Feurzeig, Brooke Joyce, and Martha Horst. Zach is pursuing a Ph.D. in music composition at The University of Iowa
and is a member of Iowa Composers Forum, Society of Composers, ASCAP, College Music Society, SEAMUS, and
Electronic Music Midwest.

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