musical enrichment

Enjoy a Workshop with Wu Fei!

LAM presents a virtual workshop with Wu Fei, from Chinese traditional music on the guzheng, Chinese opera to folk music to creative composition and improvisation. Subjects include: 1. Introduction of the guzheng, a 21-string Chinese zither that has about 2500 years of history and the six schools of guzheng performing styles that are all centuries old. 2. Demonstrate a traditional piece “Little Open Hand” from the Henan School. 3. Demonstrate a traditional piece “ Fisherman’s Song” from the Shandong School. 4. Introduction of Chinese folk songs from demonstrating “Wusuli Boat Song” from northeast China. 5. Introduction of Peking Opera. 6. Contemporary guzheng composition including Wu Fei’s original work and other Chinese composers. 7. Discussion with Students 8. Improvisation

Access the recording HERE

Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

“God has wrought many things out of oppression. He has endowed his creatures with the capacity to create—and from this capacity has flowed the sweet songs of sorrow and joy that have allowed man to cope with his environment and many different situations.”

—Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

We take this day for reflection to honor the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

We hope, today and every day, to lift up the contributions, musical and otherwise, of Black Americans and Black musicians across history. We invite you to explore the resources below in this letter that our viola instructor Michael D. Hill wrote to his students, inviting us to explore the work of some incredible Black musicians.

Dear students and families,

The Louisville Academy of Music is closed on Monday, January 18, 2021 in observance of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday. I hope that you will take some time to reflect on the words and work of Dr. King and consider their continued importance.

Through music, we have a great opportunity to learn, to grow, and to create art that benefits and educates those around us. It is important that we learn more about the music of Black composers and performers who contributed to our musical history and support and share the music of Black composers and performers today as well, incorporating them into the canon of our repertoire.

I want to share with you just a few biographies and performances, and hope that you will take the time to explore and learn on your own as well. This is by no means a comprehensive list, but I hope it will help you begin to explore new composers and music on your own. Personally, I hope to educate violinists and violists by incorporating diverse repertoire in education and performances.

JOSEPH BOLOGNE DE SAINT-GEORGES, conductor, violinist, and composer
“Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, was widely regarded as the most accomplished man of his age. Not only was he among the most important musicians in Paris during the pre-revolutionary period but he was also a supurb all-around athlete and man of arms … The combination of artist, athlete and man of action - for he also held military commands during the revolutionary period - is unique in the history of music and the man himself scarcely less extraordinary than the phenomenal range of his talents.” Unfortunately more than two thirds of his works are lost. Though appointed by the king of France to conduct the court orchestra, the musicians refused him in this position due to his race. His accomplishments and popularity as a composer and violinist, however, were always in favor in the court.

Symphony Op. 11, No. 1 in D Major, Allegro

String Quartet No. 3, Chineke!

String Quartet No. 5, 45th Parallel

Chineke! Foundation and the founder, Chi-Chi Nwanoku (I always knew her from her incredible work with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment! She truly does it all!)

FLORENCE PRICE, composer
“Florence Price, the first noted African American female composer to gain national status. Born in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1887, Price, won first prize in the Wanamaker Competition with her Symphony in E minor and as a result, became the first female composer of African descent to have a symphonic work performed by a major national symphony orchestra.  Little of her piano music has been recorded though recently, approximately five hours of music for solo piano and piano duets were discovered in a home that she once owned and had been subsequently abandoned after having been lost for over thirty years in her home.”

In this collection, string quartets were also found. Several years ago local artists performed some her chamber music at the Muhammad Ali Center. She wrote beautiful viola lines which really makes me wish she wrote solo music for the viola!

String Quartet No. 2, Andante cantabile, Castle of Our Skins Concert Series

I absolutely love Price’s romantic style! Many of her works sound like dramatic film scores.

Violin Concerto No. 2, Urban Playground Chamber Orchestra with Kelly Hall-Thompkins, violin

Castle of Our Skins Concert Series
Urban Playground Chamber Orchestra
Kelly Hall-Thomkins

NOKUTHULA NGWENYAMA, violist and composer

https://www.classicalmpr.org/story/2018/06/20/my-name-is-nokuthula-ngwenyama
“Nokuthula Ngwenyama is an artistic force. She is a composer, producer, director, poet and singer. As an instrumentalist, she plays both violin and viola. Ms. Ngwenyama's professional career began after she won the Primrose International Viola Competition when she was 16. Since that time, her performances as an orchestral soloist, recitalist and chamber musician have gained international attention. Ngwenyama has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the National Symphony Orchestra, amongst others. Most recently, Ms. Ngwenyama curated Composer's Choice, the new music series presented by ASU/Kerr Cultural Center and Phoenix Chamber Music Society.”

Nokulthua Ngwenyama: in the middle of things - Her views as a composer, a performer, and the future of Classical music

Hindemith Sonata for Solo Viola Op. 25, No. 1, IV (one of my favorite sonatas!) 


SPHINX VIRUOSI
“The Sphinx Virtuosi is one of the nation’s most dynamic professional chamber orchestras, comprised of 18 top Black and Latinx classical soloists.

Through the Sphinx Virtuosi National Tour, this self-conducted ensemble brings fresh, diverse programming to leading venues around the country and engages in immersive outreach to bring classical music to communities nationwide, including students of all ages. Including annual stops at Carnegie Hall and Miami’s New World Center, the Sphinx Virtuosi performs to sold-out crowds and continues to garner critical acclaim.”

 SPHINX transforms the arts through artist development, education, and so much more. I encourage you to learn more about this fantastic organization! You will find Sphinx artists engaged in careers as soloists, orchestral and chamber musicians, and educators. Check out:
Harlem String Quartet & Catalyst Quartet

Music has the power to express all emotions. More importantly, the arts can be an important voice in our world.  Sphinx Virtuosi perform Elegy: Stephen Lawrence by Philip Herbert

More about PHILIP HERBERT, composer

SHAWN OKPEBHOLO, composer
I actually really enjoyed my undergraduate class in Orchestration under Shawn while at CCM. While my arrangement of Twinkle Twinkle was probably not very memorable for him,  I learned a lot about considering color and tone in additional to instrumental ranges and technical demands which should be considered when writing for various instruments.

Two Black Churches, Shawn Okpeboholo
Kutimbua Kivumbi, Shawn Okpebholo

What contributions are Black artists making today? A lot! Tia Allen is a dear friend and (though I’m sure she’s tired of me saying this) a huge inspiration and role model. I’ve looked up to her since we were in school together and I am incredibly flattered she considers me a friend as well!

D-Composed is a fantastic chamber music ensemble based in Chicago performing and celebrating Black performing artists and composers.

I hope this provides some beautiful music to listen to, some important musical figures in Black history to consider, and to learn more, now and long into the future. Music unites us and provides a voice we can all understand. Ms. Ngwenyama perhaps put it best: “…music is human. It is universal.”

Michael D. Hill, viola.

Stephen Vitiello: sound in installation, electronic composition and soundtracks - artist talk and mini workshop

Thursdays December 17th

4-5:30pm

Free for LAM students, faculty, families, and board members!

Sound artist, Stephen Vitiello will share insight into his practice in sound art, covering installations, field recording, soundtracks for filmmakers and choreographers as well as collaborations with musicians, ranging from legendary figures of the avant-garde to contemporary classical musicians as well as visual artists, writers and a biologist. All participants are asked to pre-record and upload a 1-minute sound file of their choosing prior to the workshop - it may be sounds from nature, the home or instrumental (or anything else you like to listen to). Recording with a smartphone is fine. Please register through the link in your email!

Stephen Vitiello is an electronic musician and media artist. CD releases have been published by New Albion Records, Sub Rosa, 12k and Room 40. His sound installations and multi-channel works are in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Lyon. Exhibitions include a site-specific work for NYC’s High Line, “Soundings: A Contemporary Score,” at the Museum of Modern Art; the 2002 Whitney Biennial; and the 2006 Biennial of Sydney. Over the last 25 years, Vitiello has collaborated with such artists and musicians as Pauline Oliveros, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Taylor Deupree, Joan Jonas, Julie Mehretu and Steve Roden. Vitiello has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for “Fine Arts,” a Creative Capital grant for “Emerging Fields” and an Alpert/Ucross Award for Music. In 2012, Australian Television produced the documentary, Stephen Vitiello: Listening With Intent. Originally from New York, Vitiello is now based in Richmond, VA where he is a professor of Kinetic Imaging at Virginia Commonwealth University.


"What more can you ask of a work of art than that it alter your breath -- that it first make you aware of your own breathing and then slow it, shape it, sculpt it?

Stephen Vitiello's show at MC is revelatory in that most visceral way. It doesn't just appear before you but instead engenders a kind of reciprocal occupation: You enter its realm and, in turn, the work makes its way into both body and mind."

“Rattle and hum: Stephen Vitiello's 'duets'” Leah Ollman, Los Angeles Times, August 22, 2008

“Electronic musician and sound artist Stephen Vitiello transforms incidental atmospheric noises into mesmerizing soundscapes that alter our perception of the surrounding environment. He has composed music for independent films, experimental video projects and art installations, collaborating with such artists as Nam June Paik, Tony Oursler and Dara Birnbaum. In 1999 he was awarded a studio for six months on the 91st floor of the World Trade Center’s Tower One, where he recorded the cracking noises of the building swaying under the stress of the winds after Hurricane Floyd. As an installation artist, he is particularly interested in the physical aspect of sound and its potential to define the form and atmosphere of a spatial environment.”

LAM Summer Symposium Playlist

We are so excited to release our performances from the first ever LAM Summer Symposium!! We had a wonderful couple weeks of music making and collaboration between LAM faculty, NouLou Chamber Players, student composers, student musicians, and artists and educators locally and nationally. We are excited to continue the program next summer and continue offering chamber experiences for our students throughout the year. Jon Shaw, filming and video production Jon Shaw and Elliot Carris, filming Andrew Callaway and Jesse Lucas, recording Andrew Callaway, audio production part of the 2020 LAM Summer Symposium

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDiRVXrN94pyldoTuscHUaTZqUFwyVRck

LAM Tuition Relief Fund

COVID RELIEF FUND

We are offering assistance to those who have lost jobs and are struggling to pay for lessons during this crisis. We believe music is now more important than ever and it is our goal to make sure all students have the ability to continue their studies. We have received an anonymous donation of $2,500 to fund these scholarships and we hope to match funds to meet the need that is requested. If you are a LAM student and in need of financial assistance please fill out THIS form. If you are able to donate a lesson to someone in need please GIVE HERE and write in the comments that you would like this to go toward COVID relief scholarships. 100% of the money received will go towards paying for students' lessons who are in need. If any funds remain we will keep these for future scholarships. 

As always thank you for your dedication to music, our teachers, and our school. Wishing you health and happiness from afar.

Clayton Stephenson joins LAM students for Chamber Music and a Masterclass

The Louisville Academy of Music is honored to host the Gheens Great Expectations artist Clayton Stephenson for a recital and masterclass with students from our school and around the community.

Named the 2017 U.S. Presidential Scholar in the Arts, Lang Lang Music Foundation Young Scholar Clayton Stephenson is prize winner of the 2015 Van Cliburn Junior International Competition and 2016 Cooper International Competition. He is also a proud recipient of the Jack Kent Cooke scholarship.

Highlights of Clayton’s burgeoning career include recitals at the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris, the Kissinger Sommer Festival in Bad Kissinger, BeethovenFest in Bonn, Star and Rising Star in Munich, and at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. Clayton’s orchestral performance includes Chicago Sinfonietta Season Opening Concert at Chicago’s Symphony Center, the Colour of Music Festival Gala Concert at Charleston Gaillard Center, the Midwest Young Artists Symphony at the Ravinia Festival and Chicago’s Millennium Park Pritzker Pavilion, and with the International Youth Orchestra at the United Nations General Assembly Hall on the 69th U.N. Day. Most recently, Clayton appeared at “Grammy Salute to Classical Music” Concert at Carnegie Stern Auditorium.

Clayton was admitted into the Juilliard Pre-College at age ten. Currently, He is studies at the Harvard/NEC Dual Degree program, pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Economics at Harvard University and Master Degree in piano performance at the New England Conservatory with Wha Kyung Byun.

Thank you to the The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts and Jeff Jamner for this incredible opportunity.

Louisville/Port au Prince Musical Exchange

The Holy Trinity Music School from Port au Prince, Haiti visited Louisville September 19th-22nd. We hosted 2 of their students for music lessons, took 4 of our students to dinner with their choir, and invited a few LAM students and families and Laura Atkinson, our voice teacher, to their concert on Saturday night. It was a beautiful week of sharing music across language and cultures and we look forward to working again with the Holy Trinity Music School in the future.

LAM and Holy Trinity students sing together before the Saturday concert.

LAM and Holy Trinity students sing together before the Saturday concert.