Avant Garden Party NEW MUSIC WORKS 30
Transcription
Avant Garden Party NEW MUSIC WORKS 30
NEW MUSIC WORKS PRESENTS ITS Avant Garden Party 30th Annual Benefit Concert SUNDAY • JUNE 12, 2011 • 2-6PM At the Garden of Laura Bathrick and Robert Eberle 2701 Monterey Avenue, Soquel 32nd Season 2010-2011 SEASON SPONSORS: ROWLAND & PATRICIA REBELE This project is supported by funding from the Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County, the Cultural Council of Santa Cruz County and the Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation. NEW MUSIC WORKS Avant Garden Party presents its 30th Annual Benefit Concert SUNDAY • JUNE 12, 2011 • 2-6PM At the Garden of Laura Bathrick and Robert Eberle 2701 Monterey Avenue, Soquel Season Sponsors: Rowland & Pat Rebele Philip Collins, Artistic Director GUEST ARTISTS: Kaweh, gypsy rumba, salsa band; Singing Wood Marimba Ensemble; Gamelan de Jardin, directed by Henry Spiller with Dan Landry, tenor; UCSC Percussion Ensemble, directed by William Winant; Ariose Singers, conducted by Michael McGushin with Irene Herrmann, keyboard; Bill Walker, guitar PROGRAM REPERTOIRE 2:00 Ariose Singers, conducted by Michael McGushin with Irene Herrmann, keyboard Island Songs, Stephen Leek (b.1959, Australia), chorus and piano 1. Monkey and Turtle 2. Trade Winds 3. Morning Tide Contraponientes (excerpts), Christopher Pratorius (poetry by Federico Garcia Lorca), chorus and piano • Eco • Agosto • Madrigalillo Three Paul Bowles Songs–arranged by Michael McGushin, chorus and piano • A Little Closer, Please (William Saroyan) • Mes de Mayo (Anonymous) • Three (Tennessee Williams) Tornado Blues (1945), Paul Bowles, chorus and piano 2:20 Gamelan de Jardin, directed by Henry Spiller with Dan Landry, tenor Coyote Songs, Lou Harrison (1983/87), tenor voice and gamelan 3:00 Bill Walker, guitar 3:30 Singing Wood Marimba Ensemble: Music of Zimbabwe 4:30 UCSC Percussion Ensemble, directed by William Winant Pieces of Wood, Steve Reich (1973), five tuned claves William Winant, Neel Kant Agrawal, Eli Allman, Matt Fisherkeller and Caitlin Blondet-Fraser Slant, Charles Boone, snare drum duet Neel Kant Agrawal, Eli Allman 5:00 Kaweh: gypsy rumba, salsa You are invited to attend New Music Works 33rd Season Launch Party & Benefit Concert Sunday, September 18, 2011 • 2-5pm In the Garden of Sandy & Hernan Martinez 880 Old Farm Lane, Aptos, CA 95003 Sign up on our mailing list to receive event and ticket announcements: [email protected] • (831) 425-3526 1 PERFORMING GROUPS PERSONNEL Artistic Director Stage Manager Graphic design Outreach Coordinator Logistics Public Relations & Ad Sales Video Recording Audio Recording Volunteer Coordinator Auction Advisor Auction Coordinator Website design GAMELAN DE JARDIN Henry Spiller, director Colleen Donovan Judy Foreman Frank Foreman Dan Landry (tenor) Victor Schiffrin SINGING WOOD MARIMBA ENSEMBLE Laura Mallon, director Sage Duran Dee Dee Fry Lynda Marin Tom Powers Chuck Stein Kitty Stein Betty Weiss KAWEH Teresa Orozco-Petersen (flute) Alex Specht (piano, bass) Willie Garza (congas, cahon) Kaweh (guitar) Tenor Steven Guire Knight Burr Nissen Alto Rebecca Stuhlbarg Darlene Wilcox Mary Ann Wieland Bass Joel Ford Dan Landry Michael Vojvoda Don Ware Irene Herrmann, keyboard Michael McGushin, conductor Laura Bathrick & Robert Eberle Charlie Verutti Susan Drake Peggy Williams Kathryn Sweet Mandy Spitzer Rico Saarni Irene Herrmann Leta Miller, M.D. Hila Michaelson Charles Hanson Route 1 Farms Ana Marden / 418 Project West End Studio Theatre Alexis Party Rental Salamandre Winery Soquel Vineyard NEW MUSIC WORKS BOARD OF DIRECTORS Phil Collins (Artistic Director) Barbara Burkhart (President) Rico Saami (Vice President) Christina Reyes (Treasurer) Sayaka Yabuki (Secretary) Catherine Burkhart Jack Bowers Arthur Cooley Richard Markell Dakota Dillon NEW MUSIC WORKS ADVISORY BOARD Tandy Beal Jack Body Steed Cowart Frank Foreman Kenny Hill 2 Phil Collins Daev Roehr Judy Foreman Sayaka Yabuki Sayaka Yabuki Sayaka Yabuki Mark Plummer Daev Roehr Laura Zigi Heinz Bonita John Kathryn Sweet Marti Holguin SPECIAL THANKS UCSC PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE William Winant, director (clave) Neel Kant Agrawal (clave, snare drum) Eli Allman (clave, snare drum) Caitlin Blondet-Fraser (clave) Matt Fisherkeller (clave) ARIOSE SINGERS Soprano Jaeleen Bennis Kathleen Caton Donna Odryna Catherine Pickerrell PRODUCTION TEAM Michael McGushin Hyo-shin Na Jon Scoville David Tanenbaum 3 PROGRAM NOTES Island Songs, Stephen Leek (1959-, Australia) These songs have been composed as adaptations of traditional songs of the islands from the north of Australia. No attempt has been made to translate or interpret the text or language in which these songs are traditionally sung, but an attempt has been made to capture the essence and joy for singing which is central to the music making from this region. – Stephen Leek Tornado Blues (1945), Paul Bowles This is the only piece Bowles wrote for chorus and piano and displays his gift for incorporating American vernacular in his compositional style. The bluesy feel comes from the dissonance of playing major and minor chords simultaneously.... as close to a replication of a harmonica ‘bendig’ a note as one can do on a piano! – Irene Herrmann Coyote Stories (1983/87), Lou Harrison In 1987, the Gamelan Si Aptos was invited to play on the musical series of St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church in Capitola. I consulted with Father Larry Mikkelson of the church to discover if there might have been an interesting text for that time of the liturgical year which I might set. There proved not to be one that inspired me, so I took my cue from my friend and colleague Daniel Kelly, whose shadow show was to occupy the second half of the program and which was based on an American Indian story. I therefore chose four coyote stories which I had found in a book by Bruce Walter Barton. Several years before, as a spin-off of my Mass for Saint Cecilia’s Day, commissioned for the Saint Cecilia Society of Santa Cruz, I had made a chant-tone rather like the psalm-tones of High Church use, and a short gamelan piece in the form of a ketawang, for use between phrases or texts. Coyote to many Indian groups represents God or, as one author puts it, “the mighty something”. He is, however, subject to “goofing”. Sometimes he gets things right and sometimes not. This is a profound intuition of what we are once more beginning to learn about the universe. I especially like the story that once the stars were evenly spaced, but that Coyote at one point goofed again and now look at them.....every which way. The original four stories were later performed as a shadow show, by the Gamelan Son of Lion, with Barbara Benary as dalang. For Larry Reed I have composed a new first story, from a poem Elderberry Flute Song by Peter Blue Cloud, in which the universe arises from the music of a flute. – Lou Harrison Later (1990), some of the Coyote Stories were used as the vocal movement in Lou’s Symphony No. 4 (“Last Symphony”) – Charles Hanson Pieces of Wood, Steve Reich (1973) Music for Pieces of Wood grows out of a desire to make music with the simplest possible instruments. The rhythmic structure is based on the process of rhythmic ‘build-ups,’ or the substitution of beats for rests, and is in three sections of decreasing pattern length: 6/4, 4/4, 3/4. – Steve Reich Slant, Charles Boone I have written a large number of pieces for percussion instruments, of which Slant is a modest example. The percussion family has the widest range of colors of any of the orchestral groups, but my pieces all are on the black-and-white side, featuring, instead, the rhythmic aspects of drums. For that reason, I don’t call them percussion pieces at all; instead, they are drum pieces for drummers, plain and simple. On my work table at the moment, however, is a half-finished piece for percussion quartet — percussion in the larger sense of the word, in this case — that I hope will be finished before too long. Stay tuned. 4 COMPOSER BIOS STEPHEN LEEK (born Sydney, Australia, 1959) Stephen Leek has established a reputation for his unique work as a composer who takes music out of the concert hall and to the people. He has received the highest accolades for his work, especially for his choral compostions which are “fresh and imaginitive, whilst easy on the ear”. His compositional output ranges from simple songs for the youngest singer to masterworks of the choral repertoire for more mature voices. In 1991, his Once on a Mountain recieved the “Sounds Australian Award for the Best Choral Composition by an Australian Composer”. He is frequently performed and recorded by such ensembles as St. Peters Chorale, Sydney Children’s Choir, Young Voices of Melbourne, The Australian Voices, Chanticeer, and The St. Olaf Choir. www.stephenleek.com CHRIS PRATORIUS Chris Pratorius is a composer, music educator and accompanist who work in the greater Bay Area. He received both his B.A. and M.A. from UCSC and has lived in Santa Cruz for almost 20 years. Chris’ works have been performed in Istanbul, New York, Boston, Manitoba, New Haven, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Omaha, Annandale VA, Tempe AZ, Guatemala and in the greater Santa Cruz area. In addition to composing he has taught at UCSC as a lecturer in theory, musicianship, ear training, music literature and piano. Currently Chris is Staff Accompanist at The Studio, School of Classical Ballet in Soquel and teaches theory at the Longay Conservatory of Guitar in Santa Clara. PAUL BOWLES (1910-1999) Paul Bowles, best known for his writing (novels, travel essays, short stories) spent his early creative life as a composer. In this medium, he is best known for his art-song and piano music (both solo and duo). During the 30s - 60s, he was in a circle of artists and musicians that included Virgil Thomson, Aaron Copland, Gertrude Stein, and Tennessee Williams. Bowles’ other contribution to the world of American Arts and Letters include translations (from French, Spanish, Italian), Incidental Music for the theatre and Music Criticism. LOU HARRISON (1917-2003) For fifty years, Lou Harrison was in the vanguard of American composers. An innovator of musical composition and performance that transcended cultural boundaries, Harrison’s highly acclaimed work juxtaposes and synthesizes musical dialects from virtually every corner of the world. Lou was born in Portland, Oregon, and raised in the culturally diverse San Francisco Bay Area, where he was influenced by Cantonese Opera, Gregorian chants and the music of California’s Spanish and Mexican cultures. As a young man, Lou worked as a dancer and a dance accompanist, while studying composition and World Music with Henry Cowell. Lou met John Cage through Cowell and the two students created a wealth of percussion music that freely mingled junkyard-items with percussion instruments indigenous of Asia, Africa and the Americas. In 1941 Lou began a year of study with Arnold Schoenberg in Los Angeles, followed by nearly a decade in New York, during which time he wrote music reviews for the Herald Tribune under the editorship of Virgil Thomson. In addition to reviewing, Lou composed prolifically, built instruments, and continued his editing of Charles Ives’ music, a responsibility of Harrison’s since 1935, when Ives sent him box loads of scores. In 1946 Lou conducted the premiere of Ives’ Third Symphony, which won the composer a Pulitzer Prize. Lou returned to the West Coast in 1953, to a cabin in the mountains of Aptos, California. During his 50 years in Aptos, Lou composed 138 works, many that reflect his deep fondness for Asian cultures and tunings. STEPHEN REICH (b. New York,1936) American-born composer Steve Reich is considered one of the most important living composers of our time, recognized internationally for his impact on different genres of music. His music embraces not only aspects of Western Classical music, but also structures, harmonies and rhythms of non-Western and American vernacular music, particularly jazz. Reich pioneered the style of minimalist music and his works are performed by major orchestras and ensembles across the globe. Reich has been described as one of “a handful of living composers who can legitimately claim to have altered the direction of musical history.” Reich received his M.A. in Music from 5 Mills College in 1963, where he worked with Luciano Berio and Darius Milhaud. Reich has received numerous awards including the 2006 Preamium Imperial award in Music, the 2007 Polar Music Prize from the Royal Swedish Academy of music and 2009 Pulitzer Prize for his Double Sextet. For detailed bio, please visit www.stevereich.com/ CHARLES BOONE (bio by composer) “I have been extremely fortunate in having many wonderful musicians play my music. Percussionists have included William Winant, Jan Williams, Robyn Schulkowsky,Lukas Schiske, Jack Van Geem, Jerome Neff, David Rosenthal, and Rick Kvistad, among many others. A couple of years back, two of the trios were splendidly played in Santa Cruz on a New Music Works concert.” The Santa Cruz County Arts Commission is pleased to announce 2011 Artist of the Year Phil Collins Profile Performance Friday, July 15, 7:00 pm at the Cabrillo College Recital Hall Phil Collins has been named the 2011 Artist of the Year by the Santa Cruz County Arts Commission. Collins, an award-winning musician, composer and conductor, is the County’s 25th artist to be so honored. The high level of artistic production in this County is acknowledged through this award which goes to an artist who lives in Santa Cruz County, has a national and/or international reputation as well as having contributed to the cultural enrichment of the local community. Join us for a Profile Performance on Friday, July 15, 7:00 p.m. at the Cabrillo College Recital Hall. Local and Bay Area musicians will be performing several of Collins’ works, including “Trojan Slave Aria,” “Seven Haiku,” and “Springing.” Soloists include pianist Sandra Gu and countertenor Jesse Buddington. For a complete program of the evening’s music, please visit www.scparks.com Admission is FREE to the public. Advance tickets are not available. Seating is limited, and available on a first-come, first-served basis the night of the event. The Artist of the Year program is sponsored by the Santa Cruz County Arts Commission and the County of Santa Cruz Department of Public Works - Parks Open Space & Cultural Services Division. For more information, please call (831) 454-7901 or visit www.scparks.com. 6 GUEST ARTIST BIOS ARIOSE SINGERS Ariose Singers is an acapella chorus that performs a varied repertoire of vocal music. They are located in Santa Cruz, California, drawing skilled singers from the community and nearby universities. Their repertoire focuses on master works for small groups from the ancient to the modern. Ariose was started in 2002 by Leta Miller of the University of California at Santa Cruz, and since the 2006-7 season has been directed by Michael McGushin, who also conducts the chorus. This year’s Avant Garden Party performance will be accompanied by Irene Herrmann, keyboard. For more info, please visit: http://ariosesingers.org MICHAEL MCGUSHIN, Music Director and Conductor, Ariose Singers Michael McGushin is a professor of music at Cabrillo College in Aptos, and coach/accompanist for the UCSC Music Department. He is well known in the Santa Cruz area as a pianist, composer, and conductor. He has served as Music Director for productions with Shakespeare Santa Cruz, Cabrillo Stage and the UCSC Opera Theater. Michael has performed regularly with New Music Works since 1985. IRENE HERRMANN, keyboard, Ariose Singers Irene Herrmann is staff accompanist at UCSC and Cabrillo College. She is executor of the Paul Bowles Music Estate and has introduced much of bowles’ piano/vocal/ensemble repertoire to audiences both in the US and Europe. She has been part of the Santa Cruz music community for 30 years and also plays cello and Italian mandolin music. GAMELAN DE JARDIN Gamelan de Jardin was specially formed to perform Lou Harrison’s Coyote Songs at this year’s Avant Garden Party. They perform on several metallophones from Lou Harrison and Bill Colvig’s American Gamelan Old Grand Dad replica by Richard Cooke, supplemented by a few instruments from gamelan degung Pasir Batang.The gamelan players are Henry Spiller (director), Colleen Donovan, Victor Schiffrin, Dan Landry (tenor), Judy Foreman and Frank Foreman. DAN LANDRY, tenor Dan will sing Lou Harrison’s Coyote Songs with Gamelan de Jardin. Later in the day you can catch him singing as part of Ariose Singers at this year’s Avant Garden Party. BILL WALKER, guitar Bill Walker is an internationaly acclaimed guitarist and composer who happens to call Santa Cruz his home. His cutting edge self described “solo chamber improvisation” involves the use of live loop recording techniques that allow him to create multi layered guitar and lap steel compositions of uncommon beauty and dimension. A stylistic chameleon, Bill’s music bears the influence of music from around the world, as well as traditional elements of western classical, blues, and jazz. Most recently Bill has been collaborating with Turkish electronic music composer and producer Erdem Helvacioglu on music for independent films, and was asked to shoot a promotional video for Moog Music demonstrating their ground breaking new Moog lap steel guitar. For today’s performance, Bill plays a guitar by Hideki Nakanishi, made of Japanese ash and curly maple. It is a modern interpretation of an electric lap steel guitar with a bridge that allows for individual string bending like a pedal steel guitar. A detailed relief carving of Kannon, the bodhisattva Goddess of Mercy, is on the headstock. Check Bill out at: www.youtube.com/user/BillWalkerGuitar 7 UCSC PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE For over 20 years this ensemble has been featured at the April in Santa Cruz New Music Festival and during that time has also been a featured performing group at the Avant Garden Party. Repertoire includes the music of Varese, Cowell, Chavez, Russell, Cage, Harrison, Roldan, Xenakis, Stockhausen, Zappa as well as more current composers ie: John Zorn, Fred Frith, James Tenney, Larry Polansky, Chris Brown, Frederic Rzweski, Alvin Curran, Peter Garland and Steve Reich. The group works directly with many of the composers listed above. The UCSC Percussion Ensemble members performing at this year’s Avant Garden Party are Neel Kant Agrawal, Eli Allman, Matt Fisherkeller and Caitlin Blondet-Fraser along with ensemble director and percussionist, William Winant. WILLIAM WINANT, Director, UCSC Percussion Ensemble Described as “one of the best avant-garde percussionists working today” according to Mark Swed of the Los Angeles Times, William has collaborated with some of the most innovative and creative musicians of our time, including John Cage, Iannis Xenakis, Keith Jarrett, Anthony Braxton, James Tenney, Cecil Taylor, Steve Reich, the Kronos String Quartet, and Frank Zappa, among others. He has made over 100 recordings, covering a wide variety of genres, and many important composers have written works for him. He has appeared as percussion soloist with major orchestras including the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the San Francisco Symphony Mavericks series. He teaches at UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, and is an Artist-In- Residence at Mills College. SINGING WOOD MARIMBA ENSEMBLE This ten-member ensemble, founded and directed by Laura Mallon, is dedicated to promoting the performance of Shona style marimba ensemble playing. This expert ensemble evokes the wonderful dance rhythms of Zimbabwe’s Shona music; as infectious as it is complex! The current ensemble features Jennifer Cass, Sage Duran, Dee Dee Fry, Laura Mallon, Lynda Marin, Tom Powers, Chuck Stein, Kitty Stein, Amy Stoddard, and Betty Weiss. For more info, please visit: SingingWoodMarimba.com KAWEH Kaweh is founder of the San Francisco Bay Area based ensemble KAWEH. Their sound incorporates Flamenco Rumba, Mediterranean, Middle Eastern as well as Latin and Brazilian styles of music. Kaweh has worked with premier Flamenco, Brazilian, Bollywood and Belly dancers in Northern California. Kaweh began his music training at the age of 9 in Tehran, Iraq, during the Iran/Iraq war. In school, Kaweh showed a natural interest and ability for memorizing and singing songs, leading prayers to 300 + students. He was also a member of the school choir and sang lead vocals in the school ensemble. “The school teachers and officials made us march in the streets, protesting, singing “death to America”. I was only 9 years old at the time but even then I questioned myself as to why? But we had no choice”. In 1984 he moved to the US and was soon inspired by a high school friend to learn guitar. Shortly after, Kaweh formed a quintet group that quickly received rave reviews and opened for major artists including Robby Krieger of the Doors. Throughout the 1990’s after the breakup of the quintet, he continued exploring many musical styles. In the late 1990’s he moved to the San Francisco Bay Area and began work on his debut album “Seven” released in 2000. Kaweh went on to record four more albums “Play Spanish”, “Long Ago” , “España” and “Live In San Francisco”. He is currently working on his sixth album. Kaweh band members performing at this year’s Avant Garden Party are Teresa Orozco-Petersen on flute, Alex Specht on piano and bass, Willie Garza on percussion and Persian/German guitarist Kaweh. More info at www.kaweh.com 8 CHEF BIOS MICHELE POLZINE, pastry chef Michele Polzine is an award-winning pastry chef at one of Bay Area Top 100 Restaurants, Range, located at 842 Valencia Street, San Francisco, CA, 94110 (www.rangesf.com). Called a “rockabilly rebel” with a retro vision, her desserts harken back days of old-fashioned goodness like grandma’s but with a unique twist, take for instance her tart made with lemon verbana. Michele has been nominated for James Beard Award and was awarded SF Weekly best pastry chef in 2006. Flo Braker, renowned pastry chef and author of Baking for All Occasions raves Michelle is a “fabulous pastry chef who is on top of her game”. Michele has been featured in publications including San Francisco Magazine, Chow.com and 7x7 Magazine. New Music Works is thrilled to present her gourmet chocolate truffles at this year’s Avant Garden Party. INDIA “JOZE” JOZSEPH SCHULTZ, chef Joze is a pioneer and award-winning chef of multi-cultural cuisine who brings over 25 years of experience to the field of catering. He’s served intimate dinner parties as well as delighted the throngs at the Avant Garden Party, Cabrillo Music Festival and Shakespeare Santa Cruz. Joze takes pride in making everything he serves from scratch, including relishes and condiments, baked goods, and drinks. In May 2010, Joze opened the doors to his restaurant at 418 Front St., Santa Cruz - the fifth incarnation of his restaurant that originally opened its doors in 1972. At his new location he offers casual dining in addition to presenting his famous food festivals and cooking lectures that highlight historical, scientific and practical perspectives to issues of food, farming, cooking and dining. Joze and his operation have been profiled in the New York Times, Christian Science Monitor, Washington Post, Gastronomica, and all of the local media for decades, winning awards–including the first Gail Rich Artist of the Year Award for Culinary Achievement. For more info please visit: www.indiajoze.com ABOUT NEW MUSIC WORKS Mission Statement NEW MUSIC WORKS (NMW) is dedicated to presenting music of our time in concert. Our goal is to develop a positive relationship between today’s audiences and music of our time, through imaginative, diverse programming.NMW’s annual concert series offers works by living composers in a variety of media, emphasizing music by Santa Cruz area composers, producing original music/theater works, while also including masterworks of the 20th and 21st centuries. New Music Works was voted best “Small Classical Ensemble” by Editors at Santa Cruz Weekly, 2008 & 2009 Gold Awards 9 PHILIP COLLINS, Artistic Director Phil has lived in Santa Cruz since 1976. In 1979 he co-founded New Music Works and has served as the organization’s Artistic Director and Conductor since 1982. Collins has guest conducted numerous ensembles and has performed residencies at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, and at Vassar College on a the Martha Farmer Fellowship. His orchestral and chamber works have been played throughout the U.S. and Canada. As a lecturer, Collins has been hosted by numerous schools and conferences, including the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, the American Composers Forum, San Francisco Conservatory of Music, and in February 2007 he lectured in Wellington, New Zealand, for the ACL (Asian Composer League). Awards include: Santa Cruz County Arts Commission “2011 Artist of the Year”; First Prize (Air), 1996 International Clarinet Society Composition Competition; First Prize (Sappho Songs), 1994 L’ARCIM Festival in Montreal; 1997 The Gail Rich Award; and Dramalogue Award for Best Musical Direction. 1010-H Fair Ave. Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831-425-0110 S a l e s • Re n t a l s • Re p a i r s • L e s s o n s Huge Selection of Sheet Music Special Orders • Print-On-Demand Rent • Purchase Consignment Available Free Instrument Appraisals Full-service Repair Shop Reeds • Strings • Accessories 831-425-0110 M-F 11:00-6:00 Sat. 11:00-5:00 10 NEW WORKS FUND Join New Music Works in establishing a New Works Fund to support future commissions! This fund will be used exclusively to expand the contemporary music literature, both locally and internationally. Supporting musical composition is a great tradition, from Count Esterhazy’s support of Haydn to Betty Freeman’s decades of support for the experimental music of John Cage, Lou Harrison and others. Please consider becoming a founding member of the New Works Fund. As a supporter you will receive acknowledgment in NMW publications and at premiere performances. Also, opportunities will be provided for contributors to meet with composers sponsored by the fund. Your tax-deductible contribution to New Works Works’ “New Works Fund” will underwrite the creation of original classical music for the 21st Century! We welcome inquiries about the New Works Fund from interested individuals. For More Info: New Music Works, (831) 425-3526 [email protected] SCHOLARLY BOOKS Rare Out-of-Print Used New 204 Locust St., Santa Cruz, CA 95060 (831) 457-1195 11 Rio Theatre & New Music Works present a live soundtrack film experience 2 nights only! Friday, October 28 th & Saturday, October 29 th See the 1927 classic Fritz Lang silent film in its newly restored version with 25 21 extra minutes of discovered footage! Experience the Rio Theatre transformed into the world of Metropolis! Original film score by Phil Co llins Music performed by New Music Wo rks Ensemble and The A rio se Sin gers Guest Artist: Timb Harris Receive performance updates and advance ticket info Join the Rio Theatre mailing list www.riotheatre.com More Info Coming Soon! 12 13 14 DONOR LIST Angels ($1,000+) Supporters ($50+) Anonymous Richard and Harriet Markell Rowland & Pat Rebele Kenny Hill Bruce & Phyllis Rosenblum Richard & Leslie Andrews Barbara Burkhart Tom Ellison & Larry Friedman Paul Stephen Johnson Anonymous Jim & Andrath Brandley Fred Buskirk Ceil Cirillo John & Ann Dizikes Pat & Ted Durkee Ron & Anita Elfving Scott Lewis & Leslie Swaha Leta & Alan Miller Earleen L. Overend Walter E. 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Pingree Stan Poplin Charly Price & Delo Rio-Price Robert Schaffer Chase & Judy Weaver Robert & Doris Witte Friends ($25+) Anonymous Rolf S. Augustine Valerie Bengal Rita Bottoms Kim Jones Crayons John and Ann Dizikes Raymond Ellis & Lori Golden Deanne & Rich Hart Kristin Hayward Richard & De Anne Klein Joan Lowden Hila F. Michaelson Meg Sandow Priscilla W. Shaw Lee Slaff A.L. Stanislawsky Kathryn StenbergKathryn Stenberg NEW MUSIC WORKS P.O. Box 2266 • Santa Cruz, CA 95063-2266 • 831-425-3526 • www.newmusicworks.org 15 cabrillo festival of contemporary music july 31-august 14 2011 join our mailing list at: cabrillomusic.org celebrating music director marin alsop's 20th anniversary season! "Led by conductor Marin Alsop, Cabrillo is the most important festival of new orchestral music in North America" —San Jose Mercury News 16 The Santa Cruz Art Center | 1001 Center Street | Santa Cruz, CA 95060| www.santacruzartcenter.com A Home to Arts and Community-Minded Businesses Since 1971 Celebrating 40 years connecting the Community, Arts and Business * The Center Street Grill * Bookkeeping & Tax Anywhere * Santa Cruz Actor’s Theatre * Center Stage Theatre * Body Resultz Skin Care * Cornucopia Real Estate * Accelerated Personal Training & Sports * Motion Pacific Studio and Company * Kate Nolan Designs * Guitar Shop Santa Cruz * Beyond the Box Kitchen Design * Hula School Santa Cruz Lease a commercial space in the Art Center: * Public Atrium available to tenants for events * Downtown Santa Cruz, walk to all amenities * On-site restaurant Contact: Lee Slaff, Broker Associate Wilson Brothers Commercial 315 Soquel Avenue Santa Cruz, CA 95062 T 831-423-9100 ex 211 F 831-423-9105 [email protected] 17 Natural Foods Market Produce • Seafood • Vitamin s • Bulk & • r y e k a Mo re •B D eli congr at u l at es new music works ON TH E IR 2010-2011 Season STAFF OF LIFE IS MOVING IN 2011 TO OUR NEW LOCATION AT 1266 SOQUEL AVE. YOUR FAVORITE LOCAL MARKET WILL NOW BE LARGER, GREENER, MORE MODERN AND ENERGY EFFICIENT. Check our website for information about the move and opening day! STAFF OF LIFE'S NEW HOME: 1266 Soquel Ave • Santa Cruz 831-423-8632 Current Location: 1305 Water Street, Santa Cruz • www.staffoflifemarket.com