February 10, 2008 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
The 15th annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival in June will honor four distinguished
American composers celebrating their 70th birthdays in 2008 -- William Bolcom, Joan Tower,
John Harbison and John Corigliano.
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So many musical choices
June 25, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
Wow! When did June get so busy? The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
has long kept the end of the month from turning into a dead zone for classical
music in metro Detroit.
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Creation of the world - a lively frolic
June 21, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
When French composer Darius Milhaud visited New York in 1922,
he did what nearly all European composers did between the wars when in
America: He made a trip to Harlem to hear authentic jazz and promptly tried to write
music infused with this distinctly American revolution in sound.
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Leon Kirchner gets royal treatment at Great Lakes Festival
June 20, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival traditionally features a concert devoted solely to its resident composer for the year. It's always a treat, but Monday's traversal of all four of Leon Kirchner's string quartets - a 57-year autobiographical arch from 1949 to 2006, with the 88-year-old composer in attendance - was one for the ages.
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Music comes together
June 18, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival's eclectic program Saturday surveyed
200 years dating back to a Beethoven set of variations for cello and piano.
There was also Schumann's effusively romantic Piano Quartet, Op. 47 (1842),
five songs by William Grant Still from the 20th Century that channel syncopated
African-American vernacular, and resident composer Leon Kirchner's Piano Trio No. 2
(1993), up-to-the-minute modernism.
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Keeping score: Inside the mind of Jeremy Denk as he breaks down Beethoven
June 13, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
NEW YORK -- Jeremy Denk sits at the Steinway in his Upper West Side apartment
sipping tea and twisting the tailcq-ojackson of the inexhaustible subject of musical
interpretation.
Denk, a featured artist at the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, is exploring how he makes decisions about phrasing, tempo, dynamics, articulation , color and meaning based
on the cues the composer writes - or does not write - in the score.
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Saturday: Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
June 7, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
The 14th annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival gets under way Saturday,
inaugurating a two-week run of 17 concerts throughout metro Detroit. The festival
features national chamber music stars and a diverse menu of music that includes an
intense focus on Beethoven and festival resident composer Leon Kirchner.
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A maverick at 88
Composer Leon Kirchner's expressive, muscular music is enjoying its
greatest success since the 1950's
June 3, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
At a lecture he was introduced to "Pierrot Lunaire" (1912), a beguiling and
beautiful nightmare of expressionism by Viennese composer Arnold Schoenberg, whose
revolutionary atonal style made him one of the most influential composers of the century,
deified and reviled in equal measure.
"That was the music I wanted to write," says Kirchner, resident composer of the 14th
annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, which opens Saturday. "It was different from
anything I had ever heard and it was immensely attractive to me."
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Chamber Music Festival will spotlight Kirchner
February 4, 2007 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
At 88, the American composer Leon Kirchner is having his moment in the sun.
His work is the focus of a season-long survey at New York's Chamber Music Society of
Lincoln Center, and now metro Detroit is getting in on the action.
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Ariel Quartet serves up finest fare of Fontana opening
June 22, 2006 BY WILLIAM R. WOOD
KALAMAZOO GAZETTE
At the end of the opening of the Fontana Chamber Arts 2006 Summer Music Festival Wednesday night,
there was no doubt that the Ariel Quartet was the star of the evening.
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Festival's surprises a delight
June 26, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
The 13th annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, which closed over the weekend after two immensely
satisfying weeks, offered the unexpected in nearly every concert. What was particularly inspiring was that the adventure
came filtered through so many different delivery mechanisms -- a diverse menu of new music, inspired individual performances
and the interplay of the familiar and unfamiliar on thoughtful programs devised by artistic director James Tocco.
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For chamber ensemble, CD is a labor of love
June 25, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
The recording session isn't scheduled to begin until 6, but it's 5:20 Thursday afternoon, and
musicians are warming up onstage at Seligman Performing Arts Center in Beverly Hills.
Oboist Don Baker is trying out reeds in search of the perfect piece of cane. He'll need it.
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New works enliven chamber music fest
June 22, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Tuesday's Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival concert was akin to a World Cup match
pitting the traditional Austro-Germanic powerhouse led by hall-of-famers Mozart and Brahms
against an upstart New World team of composers heavily invested in South America.
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Chamber festival blends old and new
June 19, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Much of what makes the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival such a vital part of Detroit's cultural
landscape came together at Saturday's concert, the midpoint of the two-week festival.
Artistic director James Tocco's satisfying program connected old and new music in meaningful ways
while tying together the themes girding this year's festival: the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth, a 100th birthday
huzzah for Dmitri Shostakovich and an introduction to a young Chinese-born composer, Gao Ping.
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Festival mixes old and new
June 9, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
The Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival has always featured an exemplary mix of new music,
familiar fare and rediscoveries from neglected corners of the repertory.
But artistic director (and pianist) James Tocco has added several twists to the formula
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CHOSEN COMPOSERS: Youth and eclectic cultural influences unite the featured composers at the Great Lakes Festival
June 5, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Composer Gabriela Lena Frank and Gao Ping grew up separated by the Pacific Ocean and a cultural divide that stretches from the progressive
environs of Berkeley, Calif., to communist China. Yet Frank and Gao, whose music will be featured at the upcoming
Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, are kindred spirits
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Great Lakes festival tries something different
February 26, 2006 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Birthday tributes to Mozart and Dmitri Shostakovich and feature roles for four contemporary composers will highlight the 13th annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival in June. In a break with tradition, however, the festival will not name a resident composer for 2006.
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Festival ends on lost note
June 27, 2005 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Sometimes it seemed as if fate had it in for the 12th annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival,
which stared down one crisis after another with grit, grace and great music
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Detroit gives props to Carter
June 23, 2005 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Elliott Carter, the resident composer of the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival and amazingly at the
top of his game at age 96, is one of those high modernists often blamed for driving a wedge between
classical music and the public
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Concert takes new risks
June 17, 2005 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Given the pluralist age in which we live, it's frustrating that the vast majority of mainstream
concerts, if they bother to include any new music at all, restrict the menu to a single piece tucked
in the middle of the program to keep recalcitrant patrons from leaving before the Beethoven
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Puppets, other strings at festival
June 14, 2005 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Never one to play it safe, the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival has been taking even greater risks.
The results have been enormously gratifying artistically and are part of the greater fight to keep classical
music growing and relevant in an era in which presenting concerts of Brahms and Beethoven is not enough
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Age fails to dim Carter's vitality
Great Lake fest composer thrives on his imagination
June 5, 2005 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Frank Sinatra used to toast his audience with a highball and a quip: "May you live to be 100 and
may the last voice you hear be mine." At 96, Elliott Carter is taking aim at the century mark, too,
and he just might note the occasion with yet another premiere
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Composers find muses in photos Quartet goes beyond the powdered wig set
June 25, 2004 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Sometimes composers find inspiration in the most profound manifestations of the human condition, or
in the misty memories of youth, or in the longing for friends and lovers, or in travels to exotic lands.
And sometimes it's a parakeet dressed in a cowboy outfit
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The jazz violinist chose a shot of wild horses taken during a Brazilian vacation.
June 23, 2004 W. Kim Heron, Managing Editor
Metro Times
The jazz violinist chose a shot of wild horses taken during a Brazilian vacation. The jazz bassist,
a picture of his late mother. One classical composer chose a picture of himself as a child on his tricycle.
Another classical composer chose a picture of a parakeet posing as a cowboy.
And as inspirations for compositions that are interpreted by the Elements String Quartet,
they comprised what one Washington Post critic hailed as "the liveliest new-music concert
I’ve heard in ages.
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Ives: Experimental, accessible, thrilling
June 23, 2004 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
'The Music of Charles Ives'
FOUR STARS out of 4 stars
"Play your own way," the innovative jazz composer-pianist Thelonious Monk once said. "Don't
play what the public wants -- you play what you want and let the public pick up what you are doing, even
if does take them 15, 20 years." .
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Russian, French rarities strike up a conversation
June 15, 2004 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
Pianist James Tocco only played on one work on Saturday night's opening concert of the 11th
annual Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, but his fingerprints were all over an inventive program that juxtaposed
rarities from the Russian and French repertoire by Stravinsky, Glazunov, Rachmaninoff and Chausson. .
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Summer Festivals
May 14, 2004 By ROBERT J. HUGHES
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
ICONOCLASTIC American composer Charles Ives influenced today's composers with his dissonant
music and use of American folk tunes in classical works
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GREAT LAKES CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL:
Charles Ives and pianos highlight 2004 program
March 14, 2004 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Charles Ives wrote music that was sprawling, cacophonous, thorny and dissonant but also
filled with New England hymns, patriotic songs, backyard tunes and band marches. Ives' music is filled with
contrariness and contradiction. But then, so is America
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Festival matures stylishly
Elaborate production staged for Stravinskys.
June 30th, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
Igor Stravinsky's "The Soldier's Tale" ("L'Histoire du Soldat") has
become something of a house anthem for the Great Lakes Chamber
Music Festival, which celebrated the closing weekend of its 10th
anniversary season with a fully staged performance of this addictively
astringent union of music, dance and theater
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Composer jazzes up festival
Music wins over chamber players.
June 25th, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
One of the most satisfying facets of Monday's Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival concert
devoted to the polyglot composer David Baker was that so much of the music heard could have flowed only
from Baker's pen
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Offstage passion hotter than music
Language trimmed from 'Wondrous the Merge'.
June 23rd, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
Does eroticism have a place in the concert hall? Of course it does.
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Summer festival lets composer shine
Creative inspiration, teaching still fuel David Baker at age 71.
June 21st, 2003 BY Lawrence B. Johnson / Detroit News Music Critic
Composer David Baker has been around a long time and enjoyed a good deal of success.
At age 71, this affable, gentle-spoken African-American musician and teacher also has seen his share of
rough spots. He knows better than to take recognition for granted. But right now, as composer in residence
for this summer's Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, Baker is basking in the warm light of celebrity.
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No joke, the violist was masterful
Forgive me, Father, for I have told viola jokes.
June 19th, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
Like, how can you tell when a
violist is playing out of tune?
Answer: The bow is moving
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10th season gets off to strong start
Emerson electrifies a Beethoven masterpiece
June 16th, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
NEW YORK -- When the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival made its modest debut in
1994 with six concerts, nobody could have predicted that a decade later the idea would yield a 15-day,
20-concert extravaganza. Nor could anyone have forseen a concert as ambitious, star-studded or
commanding as that which opened the 10th anniversary season on Saturday
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FANTASTIC 4
June 10th, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
NEW YORK -- The Emerson String Quartet is the greatest string quartet on the planet more...
Emerson Quartet helps fest celebrate
February 16, 2003 BY MARK STRYKER
FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER
In a coup for the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, the Emerson String
Quartet will help celebrate the 10th anniversary of the event in June
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Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
CONCERT SETS STANDARD
Date: June 17, 2002 Detroit Free Press (MI)
By MARK STRYKER FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
FOUR STARS out of 4 stars
The ninth Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival opened Saturday on such a note of
excellence that the only negative I can think of is that the concert may have inadvertently set
a standard impossible to sustain during the rest of the two-week festival. The concert pulsated
with committed performances of unusual repertoire, fresh readings of standard fare and thrilling
work by festival regulars and newcomers like the Elements Quartet
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Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS NEW SOUNDS
Date: June 20, 2002 Detroit Free Press (MI)
By MARK STRYKER FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
THREE STARS out of 4 stars
Contemporary music has always been centralto the Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival,
but with the dynamic new-music sextet Eighth Blackbird bringing its expansive repertoire to this
year's festival, the menu is broader than usual
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Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
A CONCERT THAT TOUCHES THE ROOTS OF MEMORY
Date: June 22, 2002 Detroit Free Press (MI)
By MARK STRYKER FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
THREE STARS out of 4 stars
The persistence of memory has always been a powerful narcotic for composers,
inspiring a broad range of dreamlike music rooted in autobiography but transformed by craft
and creativity. But whose autobiography and to what end?
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Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
SEXTET'S ENERGY TAKES STAGE BY STORM
Date: June 24, 2002 Detroit Free Press (MI)
By MARK STRYKER FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
THREE STARS out of 4 stars
Among the many reasons to celebrate the young new-music sextet Eighth Blackbird
is that the group has not only allied itself with established composers but has also sought
out composers of its own generation
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Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival
FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS ITS COMPOSER'S CAREER
Date: June 26, 2002 Detroit Free Press (MI)
By MARK STRYKER FREE PRESS MUSIC CRITIC
FOUR STARS out of 4 stars
The 25-year survey of John Harbison's music presented Monday by the Great
Lakes Festival illuminated the diverse influences that have inspired the festival's resident
composer and the steady evolution of his music.
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