Ensemble Connect embarks on its 12th season with a New Group of young professional classical musicians joining the fellowship program from around the world. Following a rigorous audition process, 18 fellows were selected from across the United States and also from Israel, Japan, Canada, Taiwan, Hungary, and Korea. The fellows will perform 12 concerts in the New York City area this season at venues including Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall, Paul Hall at The Juilliard School, Our Saviour's Atonement Lutheran Church and the Jackson Heights Branch Library as part of Carnegie Hall Citywide, and in Saratoga Springs, NY as part of Ensemble Connect's continuing biannual residency at Skidmore College.
Ensemble Connect's first concert of the season in Weill Recital Hall on Monday, October 22 at 7:30 p.m. showcases the New York premiere of Anthozoa by Gabriella Smith, commissioned by Carnegie Hall for its 125 Commissions Project. The fellows perform works by Brahms, Dvorák, Ravel, John Adams, Kaija Saariaho, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, Pauline Oliveros, and more in concerts throughout the season, along with presenting 80 interactive performances in schools and 10 in community venues across New York City. In addition, following a successful launch in 2017, Ensemble Connect's Audience Engagement Intensive returns to Carnegie Hall's Resnick Education Wing in June 2019 with new ensembles to be selected from across the country to participate in the week-long intensive aimed at expanding each group's ability to connect and engage with audiences.
An additional highlight of Ensemble Connect's 2018-2019 season will be the group's second residency in Paris, in cooperation with The Edmond de Rothschild Foundations. Eight fellows will travel to Paris in December for coachings and performances at the Philharmonie de Paris with early-music master Jordi Savall for programs that include Baroque music from Italy and France, as well as works by Arvo Pärt. Ensemble Connect will also reunite with Ensemble intercontemporain for an additional performance.
Alongside their performances in New York and beyond this season, each fellow is paired with a New York City public school instrumental music teacher for a 50-day residency over the course of the next two years. With ten new public school partners joining the program this season, the educational relationships formed through Ensemble Connect represents one of the largest and most in-depth collaborations between a cultural institution and New York City public schools. Ensemble Connect fellows bring their expert musicianship, a professional performer's perspective, and creative approaches to musical skill building in band, keyboard, and string programs to 20 schools in all five city boroughs. In addition, Ensemble Connect musicians lead Interactive Performances - hour-long assembly style concerts that engage students in a process of discovery through deeper listening activities - in schools twice this year, with a total of 40 performances reaching roughly 6,000 students this season. The two-year partnership culminates in a performance by students from each partner school at The Juilliard School in spring 2020.
Over the past 12 years, Carnegie Hall has maintained close relationships with the program's 119 alumni. As the reputation of Ensemble Connect has grown, demand for work by its alumni has developed as well. In 2011, Decoda-an ensemble exclusively made up of Ensemble Connect alumni-was formed and later named an affiliate ensemble of Carnegie Hall. Decoda makes its Carnegie Hall performance debut in two concerts in Weill Recital Hall during the 2018-2019 season.
Additionally, alumni perform with current fellows in Ensemble Connect, lead professional development sessions, serve as advisors for current fellows, and perform as part of the Weill Music Institute's Social Impact programs to bring live music to people living in challenging circumstances throughout New York City. Ensemble Connect's alumni currently participate in more than 100 performing ensembles in the US and around the world, including the St. Lawrence String Quartet, New York Woodwind Quintet, Attacca Quartet, Spektral Quartet, Canadian Brass, Ensemble intercontemporain, Argus Quartet, Vega Quartet, and more. Alumni have gone on to perform, teach, and engage with communities in 53 countries around the world. To find out more about the impact of Ensemble Connect worldwide and to learn about alumni projects, follow this link.
Ensemble Connect is an inspirational collective of young musicians created in 2007 by Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and the Weill Music Institute in partnership with the New York City Department of Education. The program prepares the exceptionally talented young musicians for careers that combine musical excellence with teaching, community engagement, advocacy, leadership, and entrepreneurship. It offers them top-quality performance opportunities, two-year partnerships with New York City public schools, and rigorous professional development.
As performers on the concert stage and in their work in schools and communities, musicians of Ensemble Connect have earned accolades from critics and audiences alike for the quality of their concerts, their fresh and open-minded approach to programming, and their ability to actively engage any audience. Exemplary performers, dedicated teachers, and advocates for music throughout the community, these forward-looking musicians are redefining what it means to be a musician in the 21st century.
Introducing the 2018-2020 Ensemble Connect Fellows
Ensemble Connect is excited to welcome the following musicians who join the group for the next two seasons:
Wilden Dannenberg, French horn (Perry, Georgia)
Ari Evan, Cello (Forest Hills, New York)
Tomer Gewirtzman, Piano (Haifa, Israel)
Christopher Goodpasture, Piano (Los Angeles, California)
Gergana Haralampieva, Violin (Norwood, Massachusetts)
Sae Hashimoto, Percussion (Osaka, Japan)
Arlen Hlusko, Cello (Ontario, Canada)
Brian Hong, Violin (Fairfax Station, Virginia)
Thea Humphries, French horn (Ontario, Canada)
Ha Young Jung, Double Bass (Seoul, Korea)
Jennifer Liu, Violin (Santa Monica, California)
Noémi Sallai, Clarinet (Eger, Hungary)
Caeli Smith, Viola (Boulder, Colorado)
Leo Sussman, Flute (San Francisco, California)
Suliman Tekalli, Violin (Orlando, Florida)
Meagan Turner, Viola (Ontario, Canada)
Tamara Winston, Oboe (Skokie, Illinois)
Yen-Chen Wu, Bassoon (Tainan, Taiwan)
Ensemble Connect, 2018-2019 Concert Season
During the 2018-2019 season, Ensemble Connect performs concerts at a number of venues, including Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall; The Juilliard School's Paul Hall; in New York City community venues as part of Carnegie Hall Citywide; and at Skidmore College's Arthur Zankel Music Center, Helen Filene Ladd Concert Hall.
2018-2019 season highlights include:
2018-2019 Residencies & Special Projects
Paris Residency: Ensemble Connect takes part in a residency in Paris, France from December 8-15 made possible in cooperation with The Edmond de Rothschild Foundations. The residency includes coaching and a performance at the Philharmonie de Paris with early-music master Jordi Savall in a program that include Baroque music from Italy and France, as well as works by Arvo Pärt. Ensemble Connect also reunites with Ensemble intercontemporain for an additional performance in Paris.
For more information about the Edmond de Rothschild Foundations, please visit edrfoundations.org.
Skidmore College: For the 12th consecutive year, Ensemble Connect returns to Saratoga Springs, New York, for two five-day residencies at Skidmore College from October 15-19 and from February 11-15. During these residencies, the fellows engage with Skidmore College students as well as the broader Saratoga Springs community. While on campus, they work with music department faculty and students, offering master classes, lessons, and class demonstrations. The fellows also play side by side with the students of the Skidmore College Orchestra and read student composers' new works. Ensemble Connect performs in the Arthur Zankel Music Center, this season presenting concerts that include the world premiere of a new work by Gabriella Smith in October and works by Pauline Oliveros, Steve Reich, and Terry Riley in February. In addition, the fellows offer collaborative demonstrations and informal performances beyond the music department in classes, dormitories, and libraries, as well as in schools and other community venues in the Saratoga Springs area.
Carnegie Hall Citywide: Throughout the season, Ensemble Connect fellows perform several times per year as part of Carnegie Hall Citywide, a series of free concerts throughout New York City. Fellows also participate in community-based performances across New York City as part of the Weill Music Institute's social impact programs. These programs are designed to bring live music to people coping with challenging circumstances in correctional facilities, senior care facilities, as well as for special needs populations and those without access to live music.
Audience Engagement Intensive: Launched in 2017, Ensemble Connect's Audience Engagement Intensive welcomes established chamber groups from across the United States to participate in an eight-day series of tuition-free workshops at Carnegie Hall during the summer. During the workshops, the ensembles learn how to strengthen their professional portfolios, design and perform interactive concerts for school and community audiences, and explore strategies for building dynamic concert experiences. They have the unique opportunity to work with alumni and current members of Ensemble Connect as well as with distinguished arts professionals and artists. The weeklong intensive culminates in each group presenting an interactive performance in a NYC public schools and a community venue, implementing what they created and fine-tuned during the week. Ensemble Connect hosts the second Audience Engagement Intensive in June 2019.
Alumni Activities
Throughout the 12 years since Ensemble Connect was established, Carnegie Hall has maintained close relationships with the program's alumni. As the reputation of this group has grown, demand for work by its now 119 alumni has developed as well. In 2011, Decoda-an ensemble made up exclusively of Ensemble Connect alumni-was formed and later named an affiliate ensemble of Carnegie Hall. In the 2018-2019 season, Carnegie Hall presents Decoda for the first time in concert for two performances in Weill Recital Hall. In addition, alumni are at the forefront of initiatives that use their art form to impact a variety of audiences around the world; examples include Notes with a Purpose in Las Vegas, Musicambia in New York, New Docta international music festival in Argentina, Scrag Mountain Music in Vermont, Vivo Festival in Ohio, and Reveler in California. Many alumni also hold faculty and guest artist teaching positions at US universities and colleges.
Additionally, alumni regularly perform with current fellows in Ensemble Connect, lead professional development sessions, serve as advisors for current fellows, and perform as part of the Weill Music Institute's Social Impact programs.
About Ensemble Connect
Ensemble Connect is made up of some of the finest young professional classical musicians residing in the US who take part in a two-year fellowship program created in 2007 by Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and the Weill Music Institute in partnership with the New York City Department of Education. The program prepares fellows for careers that combine musical excellence with teaching, community engagement, advocacy, entrepreneurship, and leadership by offering top-quality performance opportunities, intensive professional development, and partnerships throughout the fellowship with New York City public schools.
On the concert stage and in schools and communities, Ensemble Connect has earned accolades from critics and audiences alike for the quality of the concerts, the fresh and open-minded approach to programming, and the ability to actively engage any audience.
Exemplary performers, dedicated teachers, and passionate advocates of music throughout the community, the forward-looking musicians of Ensemble Connect are redefining what it means to be a musician in the 21st century.
Ensemble Connect concerts at Juilliard's Paul Hall are free, but tickets are required and are available The Janet and Leonard Kramer Box Office at Juilliard, located at 155 West 65th Street; by calling the Box Office at 212-769-7406; or by visiting the Juilliard website: events.juilliard.edu
Ticket Information for Skidmore College's Arthur Zankel Music Center
Tickets: $8 adults, $5 seniors, Free for students and children For more information, please visit skidmore.edu/zankel or call the college's Department of Music at 518-580-5320. Y 10019 United States.
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