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Percussion Ensemble: Credo in US (you and me)

Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 7:30pm
$10 all tickets.
Percussion Ensemble in rehearsal at Meany Hall (Photo: Juan Rodriguez).
Percussion Ensemble in rehearsal at Meany Hall (Photo: Juan Rodriguez).

The UW Percussion Ensemble (Bonnie Whiting, director), explores North American Experimentalism from 1942-present in its collage concert "Credo in US (you and me)," performing John Cage's Credo in US, as well as works by Jonathan Bingham, Rich Burkhardt, Randolph Coleman, inti figgis-vizueta, Edward Miller, Juri Sea, and Sebastian Zhang.


Program Detail

John Cage's Credo in US, one of the earliest examples of Postmodern collage techniques in music, juxtaposes pre-recorded canonical classics, live radio, fanciful text, and found as well as traditional percussion. UWPE presents this work from 1942 alongside newer music from North America in a collage concert that features innovation in notation, performer choice, improvisation, text, groove, and spatialization. Come celebrate Cage's classic work as well as music by Jonathan Bingham (Essay for Percussion, 2020), Rick Burkhardt (Simulcast, 2002), Randolph Coleman (Soundprint III, 1972),  inti figgis-vizueta (to give you form and breath, 2019), Edward Miller (Around, 1972), Juri Seo (Wah, 2014), and Sebastian Zhang (Birdfrog, 2024.)


Program

 Soundprint III: A Requiem for Ezra Pound (1972: Randolph Coleman (b. 1937)

Wah (2014): Juri Seo (b. 1981)

Simulcast (2002): Rick Burkhardt

Essay for Percussion (2020): Jonathan Bingham (b. 1989)

To give you form and breath (2019): inti figgis-vizueta (b. 1993)

Birdfrog (2024): Sebastian Zhang (b. 2003)

Around (1972): Edward Miller (1930-2013)

Credo in US (1942): John Cage (1912-1992)

The UW Percussion Ensemble
Aiden Lok Fung Chan, Cyan Duong, Abigail George, Colin Lehman, Taryn Marks, Jamison Maciel, Alexander McLean, Rose Martin, Ivy Moore, Zane Raissis, Luigi Salvaggio, Tyler Smith,Nat Yamamoto
Bonnie Whiting, Director

Guest performers on Soundprint III
Dancer: Cameo Lethem, Trombone: Richie Torres: Percussion: Alex Ford, Tobias Miller, Matthew Walton


Acknowledgements

Many thanks to: Taryn Marks (our TA and grad student worker), Abigail George (our student worker),  the Meany Center staff, Doug Niemela and the School of Music staff, as well as our Director Joël-François Durand

The University of Washington acknowledges the Coast Salish peoples of this land, the land which touches the shared waters of all tribes and bands within the Suquamish, Tulalip and Muckleshoot nations.

Randolph Coleman’s SOUNDPRINT III: a REQUIEM for EZRA POUND integrates whispered passages from Pound’s Canto 90; the majority of the percussive sound world that delicately surrounds the hall tonight is derived from the sibilance of the consonants in this passage. Listen for slow shifts in texture, timbre, and pitch as you watch nearly-imperceptible movement from the dancer.


Director Biography

Bonnie Whiting (Photo: Steve Korn).

Bonnie Whiting (she/her) performs, commissions, and composes new experimental music for percussion. She seeks out projects involving the speaking percussionist, non-traditional notation, improvisation, and interdisciplinary performance. Her debut album, featuring an original solo-simultaneous realization of John Cage's 45' for a speaker and 27'10.554” for a percussionist, was released by Mode Records in April 2017. Her sophomore album Perishable Structures, launched by New Focus Recordings in 2020, places the speaking percussionist in the context of storytelling and features her own music as well as works by Vinko Globokar, Frederic Rzewski, Richard Logan-Greene, and Susan Parenti.

Her recent season highlights include onstage work in the multimedia chamber opera The Ritual of Breath Is the Rite to Resist, featuring productions at Lincoln Center’s Summer for the City, at The Hopkins Center at Dartmouth College, and at Stanford Live; a reprise of composer Wang Lu’s Stages for solo speaking/singing percussionist at New York’s Performance Spaces for the 21st Century (PS21); and four performances of a new concerto written for her by Jonathan Bingham with the National Symphony Orchestra for the family pops series at the Kennedy Center alongside renowned children’s book author Mo Willems. Whiting also creates original, improvised music with clarinetist James Falzone and pianist Lisa Cay Miller; their first album was released on Allos Documents in 2024, and the trio performs this season in Seattle, Vancouver, and Portland. 

In 2022 she premiered Through the Eyes(s): an extractable cycle of nine pieces for speaking/singing percussionist collaboratively developed with composer Eliza Brown and ten artists and writers incarcerated at the Indiana Women’s Prison. The project was featured on NPR’s nationally-syndicated Slingshot, and locally via Seattle’s ClassicalKING radio station. Whiting has an ongoing relationship as a soloist with the National Orchestra of Turkmenistan via the U.S. Embassy Cultural Affairs Office, playing concerti in Ashgabat in 2017 and 2018. She performs frequently with percussionist Jennifer Torrence, giving concerts of new experimental work for speaking percussionists throughout Norway and the US. Her collaboration with multimedia artist Afroditi Psarra generated the album <null_abc>, released on the Zero Moon label in 2018, and their project with designer Audrey Desjardins on transcoding data from IoT devices as performance received a 2019/20 Mellon Creative Fellowship. The project was explored in a workshop at the 2020 Transmediale Festival in Berlin, and currently lives as an interactive net art installation. She spent four years performing music for voice and percussion with the Harry Partch Ensemble on the composer’s original instrumentarium while the instruments were in residence at the UW. Whiting has presented solo and small ensemble shows at The Stone in New York, the Brackish Series in Brooklyn, The Lilypad in Boston, The New York City Electroacoustic Music Festival, at Hallwalls in Buffalo, the Tiny Park Gallery in Austin, The Wulf in LA, the Carl Solway Gallery in Cincinnati, The Grove Haus in Indianapolis, on the Wayward Music Series in Seattle, on tour throughout New Zealand, and at colleges and universities around the country.

Whiting is the Co-Artistic Director and core percussionist of the Seattle Modern Orchestra, the Pacific Northwest’s only large ensemble solely dedicated to music of the 20th and 21st Centuries, and she plays vibraphone with the Torch Quartet.  As a chamber musician, she has collaborated with many of today's leading new music groups, including red fish blue fish percussion group, (George Crumb's Winds of Destiny directed by Peter Sellars and featuring soprano Dawn Upshaw for the Ojai Festival), eighth blackbird (the “Tune-in” festival at the Park Avenue Armory), the International Contemporary Ensemble (on-stage featured percussionist/mover in Andriessen's epic Die Materie at the Park Avenue Armory, and the American premiere of James Dillon's Nine Rivers at Miller Theatre), Talea Ensemble (Time of Music Festival in Finland), Bang on a Can (Steve Reich's Music for 18 Musicians for the LA Philharmonic's Green Umbrella Series) and Ensemble Dal Niente (the Fromm Concerts at Harvard.) She attended Oberlin Conservatory (BM), the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (MM), and the University of California San Diego (DMA). She is an Associate Professor of Music at the University of Washington, where she has been Chair of Percussion Studies since 2016.

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