A Winter Chamber Music Encore Show Reprises Summer's Greatest Hits | Arts News | Seven Days | Vermont's Independent Voice

Please support our work!

Donate  Advertise

A Winter Chamber Music Encore Show Reprises Summer's Greatest Hits 

State of the Arts

Published February 23, 2011 at 10:57 a.m.

Soovin Kim
  • Soovin Kim

Lake Champlain Chamber Music Festival’s “Winter Encore Concerts: Living Traditions” at the E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium at SUNY Plattsburgh on Friday, February 25, at 7:30 p.m.; and at the Elley-Long Music Center at Fort Ethan Allen in Colchester on Saturday, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. lccmf.org.

Summer may seem a long way off for classical music fans who, while mourning the Vermont Mozart Festival’s passing, await a string of more intimately scaled chamber-music events. Among them: the world-famous Marlboro Music Festival; the Central Vermont Chamber Music Festival in Randolph; and public concerts by the faculty of the Green Mountain Chamber Music Festival, a monthlong music school housed at the University of Vermont.

Meanwhile, the relatively new Lake Champlain Chamber Music Festival, which joined the state’s summer musicscape in 2009, includes an off-season bonus: an annual “Winter Encore” concert featuring the summer festival’s greatest hits. Though it involves aspiring musicians through master classes and a nationally competitive Young Composers seminar, the LCCMF is mainly a flurry of high-level professional performances packed into one week in June at the Elley-Long Music Center in Colchester’s Fort Ethan Allen. So the winter concert is not to be missed.

This year’s remix, happening this weekend, has been dubbed “Living Traditions” in honor of three works on the program composed within the last five years by composers of different generations: R. Murray Schafer’s Trio for Violin, Viola, and Cello David Ludwig’s Aigaios for String Quartet, and Tim Woos’ simply titled String Quartet.

Each man influenced the next. Seventy-seven-year-old renowned Canadian composer Schafer’s highly accessible music “opened up a world of possibilities” for Ludwig, says the 38-year-old, when he first heard it as a student at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where he now teaches. Ludwig is the LCCMF’s composer-in-residence, as well as the Vermont Symphony Orchestra’s new-music advisor.

Ludwig’s piece, named for the god of sea storms, was originally commissioned by the Newburyport Chamber Music Festival in Massachusetts, the site of the events depicted in Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm. Aigaios promises to be dramatic: “I wanted to capture the real chaos of a bona-fide hurricane,” Ludwig says.

Woos, an 18-year-old from New Haven, Vt., was in turn influenced by Ludwig’s ability to write music with a “clear purpose.” “He knows exactly what he wants you to take away from a piece. And the sounds he gets — he’s just such a creative person,” enthuses the voluble first-year Curtis student.

Woos first connected with Ludwig in eighth grade, when the seasoned composer posted responses to Woos’ first writing attempts on the Vermont MIDI Project, an innovative online music-composition forum. (The project is just one aspect of Vermont’s rich composing scene, which was recently honored when Gov. Shumlin declared 2011 “The Year of the Vermont Composer.”) Woos completed String Quartet as a 2009 LCCMF Young Composer under Ludwig and continues to study with him at Curtis as one of the highly selective institute’s two composition students.

LCCMF’s founder and artistic director Soovin Kim, a 34-year-old violinist, says the Winter Encore is a chance for people who missed the festival to catch its highlights, and for returnees to hear the same pieces played with a “slightly different interpretation” by other musicians.

Kim is from Plattsburgh, N.Y. — he’s bringing the Winter Encore there, too — but played for five years with the Vermont Youth Orchestra, so he considers Burlington his “musical home.” Kim went on to study at Curtis, also — under Jaime Laredo, who trained and then taught violin there for 35 years before becoming conductor and music director of the VSO. (Ludwig identifies Laredo as the root of Burlington’s rich connections to the country’s most competitive music conservancy.) Kim currently teaches full-time in the U.S. and part-time in Korea, and belongs to chamber groups in both countries.

His range of contacts in the music world accounts for the LCCMF’s top-level performers, who have included pianist Ignat Solzhenitsyn, son of the late Russian author. “I do happen to have a lot of fantastic friends,” Kim admits, “but I don’t believe you can just cram a bunch of wonderful musicians together. So much of it is about chemistry.” The six performers of the Winter Encore include himself and cellist Peter Wiley, whom Woos excitedly describes as belonging to “one of the three top string quartets in the world [the Guarneri Quartet].”

“I’m so pumped,” Woos declares. “It’s why we’re composers: to work with musicians like this, and hear what they bring to the music we write. It doesn’t get better than this.” The audience is likely to agree.

Report for America in collboration with Seven Days logo

Can you help fund our reporting in rural Vermont towns?

Make a one-time, tax-deductible donation to our spring campaign by May 17.

Need more info? Learn how Report for America and local philanthropists are contributing to the cause…

Got something to say? Send a letter to the editor and we'll publish your feedback in print!

About The Author

Amy Lilly

Bio:
Amy Lilly has been a contributing arts writer for Seven Days since 2007.

Comments


Comments are closed.

From 2014-2020, Seven Days allowed readers to comment on all stories posted on our website. While we've appreciated the suggestions and insights, right now Seven Days is prioritizing our core mission — producing high-quality, responsible local journalism — over moderating online debates between readers.

To criticize, correct or praise our reporting, please send us a letter to the editor or send us a tip. We’ll check it out and report the results.

Online comments may return when we have better tech tools for managing them. Thanks for reading.

Latest in Arts News

Keep up with us Seven Days a week!

Sign up for our fun and informative
newsletters:

All content © 2024 Da Capo Publishing, Inc. 255 So. Champlain St. Ste. 5, Burlington, VT 05401

Advertising Policy  |  Privacy Policy  |  Contact Us  |  About Us  |  Help
Website powered by Foundation