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Program Books/Sō Percussion (Nov)

Sō Percussion

Saturday, November 12, 2022, 8pm
Zellerbach Hall

Eric Cha-Beach, Josh Quillen, Adam Sliwinski, Jason Treuting

From the Executive and Artistic Director

Jeremy Geffen

This month, Cal Performances’ 2022–23 season shifts into high gear! Our carefully curated, season-long Illuminations programming (see below for details) continues with visits from new-music champions the Colin Currie Group (with Synergy Vocals) and Sō Percussion, and our classical music offerings are distinguished by appearances by acclaimed soprano Ying Fang (with pianist Ken Noda), early-music superstars (and Berkeley favorites!) Jordi Savall and his renowned Hespèrion XXI ensemble, and an astonishing young talent, cellist Zlatomir Fung (with pianist Janice Carissa). We’ll also enjoy a special Vocal Celebration, with three concerts honoring the otherworldly beauty of Georgian polyphony (Ensemble Basiani), the inspirational power of freedom songs from both South Africa and the United States (Soweto Gospel Choir), and—in a joyous launch of the upcoming holiday season—the heart-warming sounds that spring from Austria’s august six-century-old choral tradition (Vienna Boys Choir).

But this is just the start! From now until May 2023—when we close our season with the Bay Area premiere of Octavia E. Butler’s powerful folk opera Parable of the Sower and a highly anticipated recital with international dramatic soprano sensation Nina Stemme—we have a calendar packed with the very best in the live performing arts.

And what a schedule! More than 70 events, with highlights including the return of the legendary Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under conductor Christian Thielemann (in his Bay Area debut); the beloved Mark Morris Dance Group in Morris’ new The Look of Love: An Evening of Dance to the Music of Burt Bacharach; the US premiere of revered South African artist William Kentridge’s astonishing new SIBYL; and a special concert with chamber music superstars pianist Emanuel Ax, violinist Leonidas Kavakos, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. And these are only a few of the amazing performances that await you!

Illuminations programming this season will take advantage of Cal Performances’ unique positioning as a vital part of the world’s top-ranked public university. In the coming months, we’ll be engaging communities on and off campus to examine the evolution of tools such as musical instruments and electronics, the complex relationships between the creators and users of technology, the possibilities enabled by technology’s impact on the creative process, and questions raised by the growing role of artificial intelligence in our society.

This concept of “Human and Machine” has never been so pertinent to so many. Particularly over the course of the pandemic, the rapid expansion of technology’s role in improving communication and in helping us emotionally process unforeseen and, at times, extraordinarily
difficult events has made a permanent mark on our human history. Throughout time, our reliance on technology to communicate has—for better and worse—influenced how we understand others as well as ourselves. During this Illuminations season, we will investigate how technology has
contributed to our capacity for self-expression, as well as the potential dangers it may pose.

Some programs this season will bring joy and delight, and others will inspire reflection and stir debate. We are committed to presenting this wide range of artistic expression on our stages because of our faith in the performing arts’ power to promote empathy. And it is because of our audiences’ openness and curiosity that we have the privilege of bringing such thought-provoking, adventurous performances to our campus. The Cal Performances community wants the arts to engage in important conversations, and to bring us all together as we see and feel the world through the experiences of others.

Please make sure to check out our brochures and our website for complete information about upcoming events. We can’t wait to share all the details with you, in print and online.

Welcome back to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Jeremy GeffenThis month, Cal Performances’ 2022–23 season shifts into high gear! Our carefully curated, season-long Illuminations programming (see below for details) continues with visits from new-music champions the Colin Currie Group (with Synergy Vocals) and Sō Percussion, and our classical music offerings are distinguished by appearances by acclaimed soprano Ying Fang (with pianist Ken Noda), early-music superstars (and Berkeley favorites!) Jordi Savall and his renowned Hespèrion XXI ensemble, and an astonishing young talent, cellist Zlatomir Fung (with pianist Janice Carissa). We’ll also enjoy a special Vocal Celebration, with three concerts honoring the otherworldly beauty of Georgian polyphony (Ensemble Basiani), the inspirational power of freedom songs from both South Africa and the United States (Soweto Gospel Choir), and—in a joyous launch of the upcoming holiday season—the heart-warming sounds that spring from Austria’s august six-century-old choral tradition (Vienna Boys Choir).

But this is just the start! From now until May 2023—when we close our season with the Bay Area premiere of Octavia E. Butler’s powerful folk opera Parable of the Sower and a highly anticipated recital with international dramatic soprano sensation Nina Stemme—we have a calendar packed with the very best in the live performing arts.

And what a schedule! More than 70 events, with highlights including the return of the legendary Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under conductor Christian Thielemann (in his Bay Area debut); the beloved Mark Morris Dance Group in Morris’ new The Look of Love: An Evening of Dance to the Music of Burt Bacharach; the US premiere of revered South African artist William Kentridge’s astonishing new SIBYL; and a special concert with chamber music superstars pianist Emanuel Ax, violinist Leonidas Kavakos, and cellist Yo-Yo Ma. And these are only a few of the amazing performances that await you!

Illuminations programming this season will take advantage of Cal Performances’ unique positioning as a vital part of the world’s top-ranked public university. In the coming months, we’ll be engaging communities on and off campus to examine the evolution of tools such as musical instruments and electronics, the complex relationships between the creators and users of technology, the possibilities enabled by technology’s impact on the creative process, and questions raised by the growing role of artificial intelligence in our society.

This concept of “Human and Machine” has never been so pertinent to so many. Particularly over the course of the pandemic, the rapid expansion of technology’s role in improving communication and in helping us emotionally process unforeseen and, at times, extraordinarily
difficult events has made a permanent mark on our human history. Throughout time, our reliance on technology to communicate has—for better and worse—influenced how we understand others as well as ourselves. During this Illuminations season, we will investigate how technology has
contributed to our capacity for self-expression, as well as the potential dangers it may pose.

Some programs this season will bring joy and delight, and others will inspire reflection and stir debate. We are committed to presenting this wide range of artistic expression on our stages because of our faith in the performing arts’ power to promote empathy. And it is because of our audiences’ openness and curiosity that we have the privilege of bringing such thought-provoking, adventurous performances to our campus. The Cal Performances community wants the arts to engage in important conversations, and to bring us all together as we see and feel the world through the experiences of others.

Please make sure to check out our brochures and our website for complete information about upcoming events. We can’t wait to share all the details with you, in print and online.

Welcome back to Cal Performances!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Angélica Negrón
gone and go back
Commissioned for Sō Percussion

gone and go back are two short pieces written for Sō Percussion as part of a three-part series inspired by things I deeply care about but am sometimes afraid to confront. Each piece in the series focuses on the quartet’s interactions with a series of mechanical instruments built by Brooklyn-based artist and engineer Nick Yulman. Yulman’s sound machines (called the Bricolo Mechanical Music System) consist of a variety of mechanical modules that users can attach to acoustic instruments or physical objects, allowing digital music makers to incorporate robotics into their performance and recording setups. Each piece requires the performers to interact with the modular music devices in different ways.

The first piece in this series, gone, was written in 2018 and explores the visceral physical feelings of emptiness and absence while at the same time searching for connections and meaning in those things and the people who are left. The second piece, go back, written in 2022, confronts the anxiety and internal conflict I have around the idea of returning to my home of Puerto Rico. I’ve been living in New York for the past 15 years and though I’m constantly traveling back to the island to visit family and friends, for the past few years there seems to be a growing pressure and almost impulsive need to return home. Parents getting older, close friends returning to the island and raising their new families, as well as a new wave of young Diasporicans returning to contribute to rebuilding the island after many recent natural disasters and social and political crises (including disaster capitalism). Circular migration has long been a part of the Puerto Rican narrative and over the past few years, I’ve been struggling constantly with my desire to come back to the island, a growing sense of duty to participate in the local “fight,” my increasing yearning to be close to my loved ones, and the difficult realization that this might not be the best decision for me at this point in my career and life. go back uses cacerolas and calderos (pots and pans) in Nick’s mechanical modular devices to evoke the domestic sounds of my childhood, as well as the sounds of resilience and resistance that characterize many of the protests on the island and in the diaspora—creating a particular form of sonic protest known as “cacerolazo.”

Angélica Negrón

Nathalie Joachim
Note to Self
This work was co-commissioned for Sō Percussion by Andrew W. Siegel and Carnegie Hall. The world premiere was given by Sō Percussion at Zankel Hall, Carnegie Hall, in New York City, on December 11, 2021.

Though I’ve spent much of my life trying to quiet my inner voice, for this work, I chose to focus on and explore the thoughts that occupy my headspace as a result of my chronic anxiety.

Note to Self, for percussion quartet and recorded samples of my voice, takes the listener through different phases of cyclical thoughts and states of being that I experience regularly. Composed in three short movements—Much More, Maybe, and Motivated—this work examines the notion of having my inner voice embodied elsewhere, in an attempt to create new space for processing emotion. It also plays with repetition as an opportunity to bring new meaning, understanding, and perhaps some levity to the language itself. Each movement is a reimagining of vocal incantations that, driven by imaginative, virtuosic, and whimsical percussion scoring, re-center and re-purpose my voice as a tool for healing.

Nathalie Joachim 

Dan Trueman
neither Anvil nor Pulley
Premiered on March 11, 2010 at the University of Texas, Austin.

 neither Anvil nor Pulley is an epic musical exploration of the man/machine relationship in the digital age. In the second movement, the piece explores how differently machines and people measure time—a longtime interest of mine. The laptops provide a constant click at 120 beats-per-minute (at first), but the humans can reset the metronomes at any time by striking a handy piece of wood. Not to be thwarted, the clicks keep re-emerging, like Whac-A-Mole, relentless.

The fourth movement also investigates using a computer as a storage bin and the many ways of messing with the things we store. A concert bass-drum becomes a speaker that is caressed (by speaker drivers taped to its heads) rather than struck, and its output is fed back to the computer with hand-held microphones. The computer stores that sound for a very short period of time, works some magic, and then sends it right back out again, transformed, to the speaker-drum, where the process starts again. Surrounding the concert bass-drum are an array of digital drum machines that also use feedback in unusual ways, and a real-live drummer, who attempts to survive what amounts to a brutal, accelerating, digital blender: this truly is man versus machine!

Composing for (I really should say “with”) Sō Percussion is an incredible pleasure. The members’ collaborative and adventurous spirits (not to mention their sheer musical abilities) are awesome. In the past, I’ve had the privilege of actually performing my own music with them, and to this day, I’ve never become comfortable with that traditional (or is it?) role of the composer: sitting in the audience. I’d much rather be up there with my fiddle! Well, placed around and in between 120 bpm and Feedback are three fiddle tunes that sound from long ago as well as sounds of the fiddle itself embedded deep within 120 bpm, frozen in time, and extracted from the computer via, of all things, a modified $12 golf video game controller.

Dan Trueman

Sō Percus­sion

Thank You
Sō Percussion’s 2022–23 season is supported, in part, by awards from:
  • The National Endowment for the Arts.  To find out more about how NEA grants impact individuals and communities, visit www.arts.gov.
  • The New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature
  • The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council
  • The Aaron Copland Fund for Music
  • The Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University
  • The Amphion Foundation
  • The Brookby Foundation
  • The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
  • The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation
  • The Howard Gilman Foundation
  • The Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation

Sō Percussion uses Vic Firth sticks, Zildjian cymbals, Remo drumheads, Estey organs, and Pearl/Adams instruments. Sō Percussion would like to thank these companies for their generous support and donations.

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