2008 Montgomery Arts House for Music Architecture Chamber Music Series

Chamber Music Detroit, formerly the Chamber Music Society of Detroit, was founded in 1944 and is the tenth oldest bedchamber music serial in the United States as recognized past Chamber Music America. Information technology is widely respected as metropolitan Detroit's anchor organization for sleeping room music.

Bedchamber Music Detroit'southward offerings include its flagship eight-concert Signature Series at Seligman Performing Arts Centre in Beverly Hills, Michigan too as concerts in Detroit, Grosse Pointe and at Oakland University in Rochester.

History [edit]

Seligman Performing Arts Center, primary venue for Chamber Music Detroit's concert series.

Chamber Music Detroit presents its Signature series at the 724-seat Seligman Performing Arts Center, located on the campus of Detroit Country Day School in Beverly Hills, Michigan.

Founded in 1944 by pianist, educator and internationally syndicated radio host Dr. Karl Haas, Bedroom Music Detroit began as an informal association of people brought together for the purpose of listening to bedchamber music. Dr. Haas instituted lectures (the forerunners to his pop syndicated radio program "Adventures in Good Music") at the Detroit Public Library to inform the public almost upcoming concerts. During its beginning 10 seasons, the Chamber Music Order of Detroit (known in its earliest years every bit the Chamber Music Festival) presented its concerts at the Detroit Institute of Arts Lecture Hall. Until the late 1960s, Chamber Music Guild of Detroit ensembles often comprised the first chair musicians of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, including such artists every bit Josef Gingold and Mischa Mischakoff, as well as Dr. Haas himself as pianist.

In 1969, the leadership of the Sleeping accommodation Music Society passed from Karl Haas to Dr. Zalman "Tiny" Konikow; from this point forward, the Chamber Music Order of Detroit invited touring artists and ensembles from effectually the world to perform on its series. During his 25-year tenure every bit president, Tiny Konikow showcased the talents of many upwards-and-coming musicians. Most notable are the Bedroom Music Guild of Detroit's early on presentations of Emanuel Ax, Gidon Kremer, Yo-Yo Ma, Murray Perahia and the Tokyo String Quartet, equally well as near-annual performances past the Guarneri Quartet and the Beaux Arts Trio. Under Tiny Konikow'due south leadership, the Bedroom Music Society of Detroit played a crucial role in the preservation and renovation of Detroit's Orchestra Hall by becoming, in 1978, its offset permanent tenant since the Detroit Symphony had left the hall decades before.[i]

In 1995, Lois R. Beznos became President of Chamber Music Detroit, after serving as Chair of the Lath of Trustees since 1987. Under Lois Beznos' tenure as president, the arrangement more than tripled its subscriber base and its budget while developing community collaborations, adding professional staff and instituting comprehensive education programs. She established a collaboration with the Wayne State University Department of Music in 1995, introducing master classes by Sleeping accommodation Music Detroit series artists. Gradually increasing its scope over the years, the pedagogy program evolved into an intensive Two-Week Ensemble Residency Plan encompassing school and community collaborations throughout metropolitan Detroit.

In 1996, Chamber Music Detroit along with seven other chamber music presenters in the Us, including the Bedroom Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Freer Gallery of Art at the Smithsonian Institution, was selected to nowadays in perpetuity the winner of the Cleveland Quartet Award.[2]

In the late 1990'due south the Detroit Symphony merged with Orchestra Hall and moved its concerts from Ford Auditorium in Detroit to Orchestra Hall, making fewer dates available to outside presenters like Chamber Music Detroit. At the aforementioned time, Detroit Country Day Schoolhouse opened its newly-built concert facility, Seligman Performing Arts Eye. Bedchamber Music Detroit presented the inaugural concert at Seligman featuring Orpheus Bedchamber Orchestra and moved its entire series to the new hall in the fall of 2000.

In 2001, Lois Beznos worked with the members of the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio and nineteen other U.S. presenters to launch an award to recognize and provide performance and recording opportunities to a gifted early-career piano trio. The Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson International Trio Award was run by Sleeping accommodation Music Detroit for four biennial cycles and brought wider recognition to four winning piano trios: the Claremont Trio, Trio Con Trio Copenhagen, the Atos Trio and the Morgenstern Trio.

In Dec 2010, Lois R. Beznos stepped down from the presidency of the Chamber Music Society of Detroit. After a national search, she was succeeded past Dr. Stephen Wogaman, a pianist and erstwhile student of Beaux Arts Trio pianist Menahem Pressler.

Under Steve Wogaman's leadership, the organization has sought to aggrandize Chamber Music Detroit's reach beyond its flagship concert series and engage new audiences in urban and suburban locations beyond Metro Detroit. Partnering with Wayne State University and Oakland University, concert serial were instituted on both campuses. In recent seasons concerts have also taken place at Christ Church Grosse Pointe and the War Memorial in Grosse Pointe, Pontiac'due south Flagstar Strand Theatre, the Village Theatre at Cherry Colina in Canton, and several venues in downtown Detroit, including the Cube at Orchestra Hall, Music Hall and Schaver Music Recital Hall. Concurrently, the arrangement adopted a multi-year program to bring about more disinterestedness and inclusion in its programming, staff and board membership.

With the onset of COVID-19 in March of 2020, the organization's expansion grew to cover audiences across the United states of america through Sleeping room Music Detroit'southward innovative CameraMusic platform, through which the organization shared its own in-firm webcasting capacity with partnering organizations across the U.Due south. and Canada, presenting webcast concerts during periods when alive performances were not possible. By the stop of 2021, Bedroom Music Detroit had partnered with over 60 organizations to nowadays webcasts that have been viewed in 48 U.S. states and over 50 foreign countries.

Chronology [edit]

1944 Founded past Karl Haas
1944–1968 Karl Haas, President
1969–1994 Zalman "Tiny" Konikow, President
1995–2010 Lois R. Beznos, President
2011–Present Stephen Wogaman, President

Artists [edit]

Among the scores of international artists who accept appeared on the Chamber Music Social club of Detroit series are: Elly Ameling, Emanuel Ax, Daniel Barenboim, Joshua Bell, Yefim Bronfman, Aaron Copland, James Ehnes, Leon Fleisher, James Galway, Richard Goode. Denyce Graves, Lynn Harrell, Daniel Hope, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Gidon Kremer, Alicia de Larrocha, Yo-Yo Ma, Midori, Jessye Norman, Murray Perahia, Itzhak Perlman, Seiji Ozawa, Jon Kimura Parker, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Andras Schiff, Gil Shaham, Isaac Stern, Richard Stoltzman, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Daniil Trifonov, Dawn Upshaw, Krystian Zimerman and Pinchas Zukerman.

Chamber ensembles accept included the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Beaux Arts Trio, the Cleveland Quartet, the Danish String Quartet, the Emerson String Quartet, the English Bedroom Orchestra, the Guarneri String Quartet, Imani Winds, the Juilliard Cord Quartet, the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, and the Tokyo String Quartet.

Commissions and premieres [edit]

During its offset ten years, the Sleeping accommodation Music Society of Detroit presented the Detroit premieres of works by Ernest Bloch, Ernest Chausson, Ernst von Dohnányi, Gabriel Fauré, Darius Milhaud, Francis Poulenc, Serge Prokofiev, Maurice Ravel, Heitor Villa-Lobos and others.[three] During its second decade, several world premieres were presented, including works by Michigan composers Ross Lee Finney and Leslie Bassett.

Other notable premieres and commissions include:

1953: Samuel Barber, Summertime Music for Wind Quintet, commissioned by the Bedchamber Music Society of Detroit in honor of its 10th anniversary. The Bedroom Music Society was nationally recognized for being the first system to committee a work by public subscription.[4]

1968: Ulysses Kay, Scherzi Musicale, commissioned by the Bedchamber Music Society of Detroit in commemoration of its 25th season.

1999: Charles Wuorinen, String Quartet No. 4, commissioned in collaboration with the Chamber Music Guild of Lincoln Center, El Paso Pro Musica and Chamber Music Northwest.

2002: Gunther Schuller Quartet No. 4, world premiere operation by the Juilliard String Quartet.

2007: Richard Danielpour, Book of Hours, co-deputed for the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio and viola by the Sleeping room Music Order of Detroit and six collaborating national presenters.

2009: Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Quintet for Cord Quartet and Saxophone, co-commissioned for the Pacifica Quartet and saxophone by the Bedchamber Music Guild of Detroit, Arizona Friends of Chamber Music, Fontana Chamber Arts and Michigan State University.

2009: Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Septet for Piano Trio and Cord Quartet, co-commissioned for the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio and the Miami Cord Quartet by the Chamber Music Guild of Detroit (made possible by a gift from Geraldine Schwartz); the 92nd Street Y; The Abe Fortas Chamber Music Concerts of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts; Kent/Flower Music; Regional Arts at the Raymond F. Kravis Middle for the Performing Arts; Philharmonic Guild of Orange County; Ruth Eckerd Hall; Denver Friends of Chamber Music; Friends of Chamber Music, Portland OR; Virginia Festival of the Arts; Duke Operation; Hudson Valley Bedchamber Music Circle; through the International Arts Foundation, Inc.

2012: "Fragments," including Fra(nz)1000-mentation by Bruce Adolphe; Marian Tropes by Charles Wuorinen; Finale: Presto, past John Harbison; Reflections on the Theme B-A-C-H; From the Fifth Book by Stephen Hartke and Mozart Effects by Vijay Iyer. Commissioned by the Brentano Cord Quartet and the following co-commissioners: Caramoor Center for the Arts, Katonah, NY; Carnegie Hall, New York, NY; Chamber Music Northwest, Portland, OR; Chamber Music Social club of Detroit with back up from Ruth Rattner and Ann and Norman Katz; onStage at Connecticut College, New London, CT; Da Camera of Houston; Fontana Chamber Arts, Kalamazoo, MI; Hopkins Center, Dartmouth Higher, Hanover, NH; Krannert Eye for the Performing Arts, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL; Luther College, Decorah, IA; Rockport Music, Rockport, MA; Judith and David Falk for Salt Bay Chamberfest, Damariscotta, ME; San Francisco Performances; and Spivey Hall at Clayton Country Academy, Morrow, GA.

2012: Vivid Sheng: Dance Capriccio for Piano and String Quartet (World Premiere); Shanghai Quartet with Peter Serkin, piano.

2014: Charles Wuorinen: Intrada, for solo piano (World Premiere), written for and performed by Peter Serkin.

2016: Vijay Iyer: Time, Place, Action for Pianoforte and String Quartet (Midwest premiere), performed by Vijay Iyer and the Brentano String Quartet. Co-commissioned by Chamber Music Detroit.

2019: Jessie Montgomery: Trading Fours, for 4 string quartets (Attacca, Catalyst, Dover and Harlem Quartets). World Premiere, commissioned past Chamber Music Detroit in honor of its 75th ceremony with back up from Sleeping accommodation Music Detroit audience members.

2019: Kevin Puts, Home, for string quartet, for the Miro Quartet, co-commissioned by Chamber Music Detroit, Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival, Chamber Music Northwest, Chamber Music Monterey Bay, Sleeping room Music Tulsa and Rockport Music.

2022: Stewart Goodyear: Phoenix (U.Southward. Premiere) for solo piano, performed by Stewart Goodyear.

2022: Diverse Composers: CQ Minute for String Quartet (10 short works, by Joan Tower, Andy Akiho, Billy Childs, Angelica Negrón, Kevin Puts, Kishi Bashi, Caroline Shaw, Paquito D'Rivera, Jessie Montgomery and Winner(s), Emerging Composer Competition). In celebration of the Catalyst Quartet's 10th anniversary. Co-commissioned by Chamber Music Detroit.

2022: Jeff Scott, Fallen Petals of Nameless Flowers (Globe Premiere, Deputed by Chamber Music Detroit), performed by Imani Winds with Robert Laidler, poet/narrator, Seth Parker Woods, cello and Cory Smythe, piano.

Education programs [edit]

Chamber Music Detroit's education programming includes an annual serial of pre-concert talks, master classes with international artists and ensemble residencies.

The ensemble residency program brings string quartets and other artists and ensembles to Metro Detroit schools each season, reaching students of all ages with both in-person and digital lecture-demonstrations, equally well as coaching sessions for advanced high school and college ensembles. (In 2020 and 2021 during the COVID pandemic, about live educational programs were suspended due to school closures and concert cancellations.)

The program has reached many thousands of students since its inception in 1995. The Aeolus Quartet, American String Quartet, Borromeo String Quartet, Brentano String Quartet, Cavani Quartet, Claremont Trio, Classical Jam, Cypress Cord Quartet, Juilliard String Quartet, Miami String Quartet, Miro Quartet, Pacifica Quartet and Shanghai Quartet are among the many ensembles that have participated. In addition, pianist Menahem Pressler, violinists Joseph Silverstein and William Preucil, mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves and clarinetists Richard Stoltzman and Franklin Cohen accept presented master classes. In 2010-2011, two members of The Romeros conducted the residency, marking the showtime time a guitar ensemble had participated in the program.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Ushering in the Musical Greats," Detroit Complimentary Press, Oct six, 1976; See also: Chamber Music Club of Detroit archive files, Detroit Public Library, Section of Music and Performing Arts
  2. ^ http://www.sleeping room-music.org/programs/gr_awards.html"awards Archived April 21, 2010, at the Wayback Motorcar
  3. ^ Detroit Public Library, Department of Music and Performing Arts, Chamber Music Society of Detroit archive files
  4. ^ "Unique Concert Full of 'Firsts,'" Detroit News, March 16, 1956

Sources [edit]

  • Anonymous (September 23, 2013). "Oakland Academy partners with Chamber Music Gild of Detroit on concert series" Oakland Printing
  • Baetens, Melody. (July 8, 2020). "Bedroom Music Society of Detroit connects musicians and fans during pandemic," Detroit News
  • Cohn, Fred (Jan/Feb, 2009). "Making Good in Motown", Chamber Music Magazine.
  • Heyman, Barbara B. (1992). Samuel Barber, the Composer and His Music, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-509058-6. pp 359–373.
  • Lyman, David. (September 27, 2018). "In its 75th season, chamber music grouping is thinking regionally" Detroit Complimentary Press
  • Rigg, Sarah A. (November half-dozen, 2008). "Executive Profile: Lois R. Beznos, president, Bedroom Music Society of Detroit," Oakland Business Review.
  • "3 for the Road," Chamber Music Magazine, March/April, 2005.
  • Wu, June Q. (September 15, 2008). "Bedchamber Still Hitting the Loftier Notes at 65," Oakland Press.

External links [edit]

  • Sleeping accommodation Music Detroit

beeberearand.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamber_Music_Detroit

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