Tag: Steven Mackey

  • NJ Symphony Celebrates a Century in Princeton

    A venerable orchestra, celebrating 100 years this season, will strike a balance with some-things-old and something new, when the @[100046173663486:2048:New Jersey Symphony] returns to Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium this Friday at 8 p.m.

    Established classics by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Anton Bruckner will flank a world premiere by Princeton composer Steven Mackey. Vocal soloists and the Princeton University Glee Club will join the orchestra, led by music director Xian Zhang.

    The program will be repeated at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC) in Newark on Saturday at 8 p.m. and at the State Theatre New Brunswick on Sunday at 3:00.

    Find out more about the concerts and a little bit of the orchestra’s colorful history in my article in this week’s @[100063792690234:2048:U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo], in area vending machines and local business, or online now.

  • WPRB Remembering Artists & Classical Music

    WPRB Remembering Artists & Classical Music

    So far, this morning on WPRB, we’ve been remembering artists who died in 2016. We’ll pick up the thread with Part II, which will air next Thursday, January 5, from 6 to 11 a.m.

    For the remainder of this morning, we’ll shift gears, starting at 9:00, when I’m joined by Gail Wein, president of Classical Music Communications. Gail will talk a little bit about what she does and the artists she represents. We’ll also play from some of the CDs she’s been enjoying recently. Some of those will include music by Aaron Copland, Ben Johnston, Steve Mackey, Astor Piazzolla, and Louis Vierne.

    We’ll leave the dead, for the time being, and keep it lively until 11:00, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com.

    More about Classical Music Communications here:

    http://www.classicalmusiccommunications.com/


    Steven Mackey’s “Stumble to Grace,” with pianist Orli Shaham, will be among our featured works, between 9 and 11:00 EST, on WPRB.

  • NJSO Institute: Launching New Composers

    NJSO Institute: Launching New Composers

    “There are three facets to the mentoring – artistic, practical, and career development,” says composer Steven Mackey, director of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra Edward T. Cone Composition Institute. “If you’re writing for your friends, it’s one thing. When you’re dealing with an orchestra, it really becomes a big business. Orchestral rehearsal time costs so much. Gaining the trust of an orchestra to get your music played is already a huge endeavor. It requires a lot of people to put their faith in you.”

    For four composers at the beginning of their careers, the institute is an invaluable experience – six days of intensive evaluations and consultations, culminating in a live performance of their music by a major symphony orchestra under a world-class conductor. The program, now in its third year, brings together the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and the Princeton University Department of Music to promote new music and emerging composers.

    This year’s participants include James Anderson, Matthew Browne, William Stackpole and Jung Yoon Wie. An NJSO concert made up of each composer’s music will take place on Saturday at 8 p.m. at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium.

    The orchestra will be under the baton of David Robertson, who in the fall will begin his 12th season as music director of the St. Louis Symphony. Robertson is also chief conductor and artistic director of Australia’s Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

    Mackey’s “Turn the Key,” written in 2006 for the New World Symphony on the occasion of the opening of the Miami Performing Arts Center, will conclude the Saturday concert.

    Also on the program will be Anderson’s “Places with Pillars,” a metaphorical reflection on the search for meaning in our lives; Browne’s “Farthest South,” a tone poem inspired by the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration; Stackpole’s “… Ask Questions Later,” a meditation on gun violence and the permanence of consequences; and Wie’s “Water Prism,” inspired by the phenomenon of light passing through a prism to create a rainbow.

    You can read more about the institute – and tomorrow night’s concert – in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/07/classical_music_njso_performin.html


    Participants in this year’s NJSO Edward T. Cone Composition Institute: Jung Yoon Wie (top); left to right, James Anderson, William Stackpole and Matthew Browne

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