"CSUF's New Music Ensembles" program

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CSUF New Music Ensemble and CSUF Contemporary Chamber Music Ensemble

CSUF New Music Ensemble

Eric Dries, director • Pamela Madsen, artistic director

Pamela Madsen and Eric Dries, directors

December 11, 2024

RONALD S. ROCHON

President, California State University, Fullerton

AMIR H. DABIRIAN

Provost and VP for Academic Affairs

ARNOLD HOLLAND, EDD

Dean, College of the Arts

DR. RANDALL GOLDBERG Director, School of Music

KIMO FURUMOTO

Assistant Director, School of Music

BONGSHIN KO

Assistant Director, School of Music

SCHOOL OF MUSIC FULL-TIME FACULTY AND STAFF

FACULTY

CONDUCTING

Kimo Furumoto instrumental

Dr. Robert Istad choral

Dr. Christopher Peterson choral

Dr. Dustin Barr instrumental

JAZZ AND COMMERCIAL MUSIC

Bill Cunliffe* jazz piano; arranging; Fullerton Jazz Orchestra, Fullerton Big Band and combo director

Rodolfo Zuñiga jazz studies, jazz percussion, and music techology; Fullerton Chamber Jazz Ensemble director

PIANO, ORGAN, PIANO PEDAGOGY

Bill Cunliffe jazz piano

Alison Edwards* piano, piano pedagogy, class piano

Myong-Joo Lee piano

Dr. Robert Watson piano

MUSIC EDUCATION, TEACHER TRAINING, AND TEACHING CREDENTIAL

Dr. Christopher Peterson choral

Dr. Gregory X. Whitmore* instrumental

MUSIC IN GENERAL EDUCATION

Dr. John Koegel*

Dr. Katherine Reed

MUSIC HISTORY AND LITERATURE

Dr. Vivianne Asturizaga musicology

Dr. John Koegel* musicology

Dr. Katherine Powers musicology

Dr. Katherine Reed musicology

STRINGS

Kimo Furumoto Director of Orchestra Studies and University Symphony Orchestra conductor

Bongshin Ko cello

Dr. Ernest Salem* violin

THEORY AND COMPOSITION

Dr. Pamela Madsen, composition, theory

Dr. Ken Walicki* composition, theory

VOCAL, CHORAL, AND OPERA

Dr. Robert Istad Director of Choral Studies and University Singers conductor

Dr. Kerry Jennings* Director of Opera

Dr. Christopher Peterson CSUF Concert Choir and Singing Titans conductor

Dr. Joni Y. Prado voice, academic voice courses

Dr. Bri’Ann Wright general education

WOODWINDS, BRASS, AND PERCUSSION

Dr. Dustin Barr Director of Wind Band Studies, University Wind Symphony, University Band

Jean Ferrandis flute

Sycil Mathai* trumpet

Dr. Gregory X. Whitmore University Symphonic Winds conductor

STAFF

Michael August Production Manager

Eric Dries Music Librarian

Gretchen Estes-Parker Office Coordinator

Will Lemley Audio Technician

Jeff Lewis Audio Engineer

Chris Searight Musical Instrument Services

Paul Shirts Administrative Assistant

Elizabeth Williams Business Manager

* denotes Area Coordinator

Welcome to the College of the Arts 2024–2025 season – our first in three years where performing and visual arts programming will take place on one cohesive arts campus following the completion of the Visual Arts Modernization Project. We are thrilled you have joined us! As our visitors, you are part of our extended family of patrons, parents, friends, and fellow Titans, and we strive to reflect your stories and experiences in the programming we present.

To us, community engagement is more than just opening the doors of our performance and exhibition spaces and inviting you in; it’s about creating a space for dialogue through the work we share. This season, we are proud to bring you a slate of exhibitions, concerts, and performances that not only reflect our humanity but also have the power to transform how we see ourselves and others. In Theatre, “The Prom” opens the season with a joyful celebration of love and acceptance that follows teen Emma Nolan and her quest to attend the prom after she is disinvited for being gay. Will Emma get the prom she deserves? Next, Begovich Gallery presents four exhibitions to celebrate the public opening of Building G on November 2, including “Vitae: A New Generation” featuring CSUF visual arts alumni whose work explores self-discovery and issues of social justice. The following week, the Fullerton Jazz Orchestra and University Symphony Orchestra, along with guest artists Mariachi Divas de Cindy Shea, perform in “Fullerton Pops!” Our award-winning choreographers and dancers take the stage in December for “Fall Dance Theatre,” a powerfully moving collection of performances in a variety of dance styles. And don’t forget everyone’s holiday concert favorite, “Deck the Hall at Cal State Fullerton!” on December 14 and 15.

With the completion of the Visual Arts complex this past summer, we are one of the largest comprehensive colleges of the arts in the CSU system. The complex boasts digitally enhanced classrooms, a green screen lab for film and animation, an expanded photography studio, four art galleries, and several indoor and outdoor spaces to encourage cross-disciplinary exploration. But with the distinction of being a large college of the arts comes great need, and many of our students face personal and financial challenges that prevent them from continuing their education. The Dean’s Fund for Excellence provides our students with funding for immersive, off- and on-campus experiences that contribute to their academic success, including CSU Summer Arts, conferences, and study abroad programs. Your support is not just appreciated; it is vital. If the arts and their continued importance in higher education are essential to you, please consider a gift of any amount to the Dean’s Fund today.

I thank you for joining us and for championing the arts in our community. Your support means the world to me and to our students. When you return, I invite you to visit the Visual Arts complex to see what’s new and to check out the galleries in Building G, across from Clayes Performing Arts Center and open late on select performance nights beginning in November. I hope to see you there!

Sincerely,

Interdependence (1997) ...............................................................

Assumptions (2024) ......................................................................

Shadowgraph No. 5 (1977) ..............................................................

Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) .............................. Paul McCartney, John Lennon

Pauline Oliveros
Emerson Kimble
George Lewis

PROGRAM NOTES

Interdependence (1997)

PAULINE OLIVEROS

Interdependence is a performance composition based on players sending, receiving and responding to each other, improvising pitches that are either very short or long, held sounds. This is the third in the series of the Four Meditations for Orchestra and instrumentation is open. Player reactions can create an atmosphere of electricity that runs through the ensemble in a rippling effect. The variations introduce long tones which develop into chords and textures inside of ripples. There is no set duration. The piece is over when all the players stop playing.

Assumptions (2024)

EMERSON KIMBLE

This piece overall is meant to represent how artificial intelligence is perceived in our society. All text used was generated by artificial intelligence with some edits for clarity. The keywords that were used for the Assumptions movement were, “create a haiku about the assumptions of AI.” The last section is meant to musically depict binary code for the following text: “Hello, nice to meet you.” This piece is meant to musically depict my interpretation of a piece composed by Artificial Intelligence. It has strange unconventional melodic lines and jarring cluster chords to depict an unrefined product.

Emerson Kimble (b. 2001) is a composer based in California. He is well experienced in composing for Symphony Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, mixed chamber ensembles, Brass Ensemble,

and Choral music. After winning the Composition Competition at Sonoma State University where he earned his undergraduate degree in Music Composition, he is currently attending Cal State Fullerton to obtain his Master of Music Composition. In the past he studied with (composer/ percussionist) Dr. Thom Limbert, (composer/theorist) Dr. Brian Wilson and is currently studying with (composer/theorist)

Dr. Pamela Madsen. He had works read by the Sonoma State University Symphonic Orchestra, Cal State Fullerton New Music Ensemble, Cal State Fullerton Brass Ensemble, and the Cal State Fullerton University Concert Choir. In addition, he has had works read by major chamber ensembles such as HUB new music, loadbang, Brightwork new music, Bent Frequency New Music Duo, and HEX vocal ensemble.

Silent code whispers Bright weaving worlds unseen Empowered by things

Minds intertwined, fused Mortals and machines now one Boundless synergy

Tireless intellect

It will shape new horizons

A future untold

Shadowgraph No. 5 (1977)

GEORGE LEWIS

Shadowgraph No. 5 is the last in a series of works Lewis composed for creative orchestra between 1975 and 1977. There is not a centralized score for the piece. Instead there is a set of modules, or groups. Each

PROGRAM NOTES

group plays from a different graphic score consisting of 16 boxes set in a 4x4 grid. Groups are different types of instrument groups (i.e. saxophone group, brass group, percussion group, voice group, etc.). Within each box are various instructions, directions, or musical notations that are left up to the performers in each group, as a group, to interpret. Individual players within a group need not perform the same unit at the same time. Any number of people can perform the piece, in any combination desired. Not all of the parts need be played to create a performance. Duration of the piece is determined by real-time negotiation and consensus within the ensemble.

Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) PAUL MCCARTNEY, JOHN LENNON

Tomorrow Never Knows was recorded and released on the Beatles album Revolver. Lennon is said to have drawn inspiration for the song from his experiences with LSD and from the book The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead by Timothy Leary, Richard Alpert and Ralph Metzner. The song utilized pioneering use of sampling, tape manipulation and other production techniques and pointed the way towards the directions the Beatles would take in exploring the potential of the recording studio as artistic medium without regard for live performance. The arrangement tonight draws inspiration from these ideas and incorporates the elements of improvisation that are the foundation of the New Music Ensemble.

CSUF New Music Ensemble, under the direction of Pamela Madsen and Eric Dries focuses on the instruction in the techniques of contemporary concert music, and preparation of performances of contemporary instrumental, vocal, improvisational and electroacoustic music literature from the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries. We study and perform a wide range of repertoire from the contemporary period: from, experimental, atonal, to extended tonal, minimalism, post-minimalism, post-modernism to multi-media collaboration, film music, deep listening and improvisational forms to explore both the repertoire and performance practice in New Music. As part of the New Music Series we work with guest composers, performers and perform with contemporary New Music Ensembles. Chosen by Los Angeles Audience Choice Award as the Best New Music Ensemble in 2022, we have worked with guest ensembles Los Angeles based Brightwork newmusic, Stacey Fraser, HEX Vocal Ensemble and guest artists Jean Ferrandis, and Dominique Williencourt last season.. This season we will work with guest artists: Hub newmusic, Brightwork new music, loadbang, Nicholas Isherwood, Galan Trio and Hex Vocal Ensemble.

Eric Dries, director • Pamela Madsen, artistic director

John Gerling, clarinet

Carl Fong, trumpet

Emerson Kimble, trumpet

Lucas Edwards, voice

Janae Harabedian, voice

Gabriela Guzman, percussion

Wilson Le, percussion

Giovanni Guillen, guitar

Jonathan Bins, guitar

Ivan Parga-Renteria, guitar

Manuel Laverde, piano

Julia Craft, keyboard, electronics

Esther Ridsdale, electric bass

ABOUT THE DIRECTORS

Pamela Madsen

Pamela Madsen is a composer, performer, theorist, writer and curator of new music. From massive immersive concertlength projects, solo works, chamber music to multi-media opera collaborations her work focuses on issues of social change, exploration of image, music, text and the environment. With a Ph.D. in Music Composition from UCSD, studies with Brian Ferneyhough, Mellon Foundation Doctoral Research Award in theory at Yale University, Post- Doctoral research in Music Technology at IRCAM, Paris, and Deep Listening Certificate with Pauline Oliveros, her creative projects and research focuses on the evolution of compositional thought, improvisation, electronic music, and women in music.

Madsen’s works have been commissioned and premiered world-wide by such artists as Los Angeles Percussion Quartet, Brightwork newmusic, ModernMedieval, Moscow Contemporary Music Ensemble, Tony Arnold, Nicholas Isherwood, Stacey Fraser, Claire Chase, Jane Rigler, Anne LaBerge, Brian Walsh, Lisa Moore, Vicki Ray, Aron Kallay, Bugallo-Williams Piano Duo, Ashley Bathgate, Trio Solisti, New York New Music Ensemble, Either/Or, yesaroun’ duo, California Ear Unit, Verdehr Trio, Zeitgeist, JACK, Ethel, Lyris, Formalist and Arditti string quartets with multimedia collaborations with visual artists Quintan Ana Wikswo, Camille Seaman, Jimena Sarno and Judy Chicago.

Major concert-length projects include Madsen’s Opera America and National Endowment for the Arts Funded Opera: Why Women Went West, National Endowment for the Arts and New Music USA supported Oratorio for the Earth; Luminous Etudes: Visions of the Black Madonna of Montserrat; Luminosity: Passions of Marie Curie multi-media opera; Melting Away: Gravity for orchestra, with Arctic photographer Camille Seaman; We are All Sibyls-Envisioning the Future Project multi-media opera installation with visual artist Judy Chicago. Selected as Huntington Library Mellon Research Fellow, Alpert Award Panelist, Creative Capital artist “on the radar” with awards from Opera America, National Endowment for the Arts, New Music USA, Meet the Composer, American Scandinavian Foundation, artist residency fellowships at MacDowell Colony, UCross, Wyoming, Women’s International Studies Center, New Mexico, Wurlitzer Foundation Award, with international Russia/Siberia Concert tour, featured composer at Pulsar Festival, Denmark, she is a frequent guest artist at festivals and universities worldwide. She is Director of the Annual New Music Festival, InterArts Collaborative Projects at Cal State Fullerton where she is Professor of Music Composition, Music Theory and Director of the New Music Ensemble.

Eric Dries

Eric Dries is a pianist, improviser, composer and educator who explores the innovative fields between traditional jazz, free improvisation, and contemporary classical music. His work explores a wide range of stylistic practices from jazz and contemporary music worlds in diverse performance situations. Dries is interested in expanding experimental ideas while honoring the fundamental tenets of the jazz tradition. His solo piano performances reinterpret and invigorate the tradition of jazz standards with a foundation of rhythmic experimentation and harmonic and melodic expansion. Dries has performed and recorded with some of the top studio and freelance musicians in southern California where he is in high demand at high profile performance venues, and jazz festivals. Dries early notated compositional works explore virtuosic solo instrumental experimentation and unusually orchestrated chamber ensemble combinations. His current compositional work combines the rigor of compositional technique with improvised frameworks of traditional jazz and experimentalism of new music to create systems of group dynamics that encourage performer-composer collaboration and new sonic exploration in each performance. He holds a Ph.D. in Composition and M.A. in Music Theory from University of California San Diego, where he studied with Rand Steiger, George Lewis, Anthony Davis, Roger Reynolds and Brian Ferneyhough, with postdoctoral studies and research in Music Technology at IRCAM. He studied jazz improvisation and composition with bassist Richard Davis and saxophonist Les Thimmig at University of Wisconsin Madison where he received his BM in Music Composition, studying with Stephen Dembski. Dries currently is a Lecturer in Music composition, theory, jazz, and music technology at California State University Fullerton School of Music.

COLLEGE OF THE ARTS • SELECT EVENTS | FALL 2024

Kirsten Yon and Ernest Salem, violins

September 26 • Meng Concert Hall

Hoang Nguyen & Friends: Alumni Piano Recital: September 27 • Meng Concert Hall

Fullerton Jazz Orchestra

October 4 • Meng Concert Hall

University Symphony Orchestra October 5 • Meng Concert Hall

University Wind Symphony October 6 • Meng Concert Hall

The Prom

October 10–19 • Little Theatre Talkbacks: 10/11; 10/19 matinée

University Symphonic Winds

October 12 • Meng Concert Hall

University Singers & Concert Choir October 20 • Meng Concert Hall

Blood Wedding

October 24–November 19 • Young Theatre

Denis Bouriakov, flute

October 26 • Meng Concert Hall

Advanced Vocal Workshop with guest Mark Robson, piano October 29 • Recital Hall

Vitae: A New Generation; Chris O’Leary: Gravity Well; Michelle Emami: Arcana; and Past Forward (Redux)

November 2, 2024 – May 17, 2025 Begovich Gallery

High School Honor Orchestra & CSUF Chamber Ensembles Orchestra

November 2 • Meng Concert Hall

Bent Frequency Duo Project with CSUF New Music Ensemble

November 6 • Meng Concert Hall

Michael Yoshimi, clarinet

November 8 • Meng Concert Hall

Lost Girl

November 7–16 • Hallberg Theatre

CSUF SCHOOL OF MUSIC PRESENTS Fullerton Pops! feat. Fullerton Jazz Orchestra

University Symphony Orchestra and Mariachi Divas de Cindy Shea

November 10 • Meng Concert Hall

Opera Scenes

November 15–17 • Recital Hall

Jazz Singers

November 20 • Meng Concert Hall

University Wind Symphony

November 22 • Meng Concert Hall

Cello Choir

November 22 • Recital Hall

Fall Dance Theatre

December 5–14• Little Theatre

University Symphonic Winds

December 7 • Meng Concert Hall

Titan Voices & Singing Titans

December 9 • Meng Concert Hall

CSUF New Music Ensemble & CSUF Contemporary Chamber Music Ensemble

December 11 • CPAC 119

University Band

December 11 • Meng Concert Hall

CSUF SCHOOL OF MUSIC PRESENTS Deck the Hall at Cal State Fullerton! December 14,15 • Meng Concert Hall

$1,000,000 +

Mr. Bob & Mrs. Terri Niccum

Mr. Stan Mark Ryan ‘75

$500,000 + Mrs. Junko Klaus

$50,000-$100,00

Mr. Ernest R. Sweet*

Mr. Matthew Scarpino & Ms. Karyn Hayter

Sallie Mitchell*

Mrs. Louise P. Shamblen

Johnny Carson Foundation

Mr. Steve & Mrs. Robin Kalota

$25,000 - $49,999

Mr. Darryl Curran

Leo Freedman Foundation

Mrs. Lee C. Begovich

Dr. Ed & Mrs. Sue Sullivan

$10,000-$24,999

Mr. John Aimé & Ms. Robin de la Llata Aimé

Drs. Joseph & Voiza Arnold

Mr. John J. Brennan & Ms. Lucina L. Moses

Ms. Kathleen Hougesen

Mr. Ernest & Mrs. Donna Schroeder

Mr. James & Mrs. Eleanore Monroe

Mrs. Marilyn D. Carlson

$5,000-$9,999

Mr. Richard & Mrs. Susan Dolnick

Mr. Framroze & Mrs. Julie Virjee

Continuing Life LLC

Southern California Arts Council

Ebell Club of Fullerton

DONOR APPLAUSE

Mrs. Harriet Cornyn

Mr. William Cornyn

Ms. Teri Kennady

Dwight Richard Odle Foundation

Swinerton Builders

Morningside of Fullerton

Dr. Margaret Gordon

Dr. Marc Dickey

Mrs. Jill Kurti Norman

Orange County Community Foundation

Mr. Edward & Ms.

MaryLouise Hlavac

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Mrs. Norma Morris

Mrs. Evelyn Francuz

Friends of Jazz, Inc.

$1,000-$4,999

Mrs. Marilyn Little

Mr. Allan & Mrs. Janet Bridgford

Dr. George & Mrs. Karen Mast

Mrs. Thelma Mellott

Ms. Karen Bell

Mrs. Judy Atwell

Mr. Stephen Collier & Ms.Joann Driggers

Mr. Paul Coluzzi & Mr. John M. Martelli

Mr. Douglas Stewart

Mr. Nick & Mrs. Dorothy Batinich

Mr. Tom & Mrs. Carolyn Toby

Mrs. Marsha Gallavan

California Community Foundation

Mrs. Martha Shaver

Ms. Susan Hallman

Mr. John A. Alexander

& Mr. Jason Francisco

Mr. James Henriques

Mr. Billy Owens & Mrs. Michelle H. Jordan

Mr. Robert & Mrs. Nancy Rennie

Mr. Robert & Mrs. Roberta Sperry

Mr. John Boos

& Ms. Shanon Fitzpatrick

The Jane Deming Fund

Dr. Leon & Mrs. Annette Gilbert

Ms. Verne Wagner

Dr. Robert & Mrs. Teri Watson

Mr. E. B. & Mrs. Linda Powell

The Presser Foundation

Mr. Norman & Mrs. Sandra Johnson

Dr. Arie & Mrs. Deanna Passchier

Mrs. Marion Brockett

Mr. Juan Lopez

Mr. David Navarro

Mrs. Bettina Murphy

Ms. Jeannie Denholm

Mr. Gregory & Mrs. Shawna Ellis

Mr. William H. Cunliffe, Jr.

Dr. Stephen Rochford, DMA

The Garrabrant Family

Very special care has been given to the preparation of this donor listing. Please contact Ann Steichen at (657) 278-7124 with questions or concerns. Gifts received from July 2, 2023 to September 1, 2024 *deceased

ONTIVEROS SOCIETY

The Ontiveros Society includes individuals who have provided a gift for Cal State Fullerton through their estate plan. We extend our deep appreciation to the following Ontiveros Society members, whose gifts will benefit the students and mission of the College of the Arts:

ANONYMOUS

JOHN ALEXANDER

LEE & DR. NICHOLAS A.* BEGOVICH

GAIL & MICHAEL COCHRAN

MARC R. DICKEY

JOANN DRIGGERS

BETTY EVERETT

CAROL J. GEISBAUER & JOHN* GEISBAUER

SOPHIA & CHARLES GRAY

MARYLOUISE & ED HLAVAC

GRETCHEN KANNE

DR. BURTON L. KARSON

ANNE L. KRUZIC*

LOREEN & JOHN LOFTUS

ALAN A. MANNASON*

WILLIAM J. MCGARVEY*

DR. SALLIE MITCHELL*

ELEANORE P. & JAMES L. MONROE

LYNN & ROBERT MYERS

MR. BOB & MRS. TERRI NICCUM

DWIGHT RICHARD ODLE*

SHERRY & DR. GORDON PAINE

*deceased

DR. JUNE POLLAK

& MR. GEORGE POLLAK*

DR. STEPHEN M. ROCHFORD

MR. STAN MARK RYAN ‘75

MARY K. & WILLIAM SAMPSON

LORENA SIKORSKI

DOUGLAS G. STEWART

ANDREA J. & JEFFREY E. SWARD

RICHARD J. TAYLOR

VERNE WAGNER

RICHARD WULFF

DR. JAMES D. & DOTTIE YOUNG*

The College of the Arts Proudly Recognizes the 300+ Members of Our VOLUNTEER

SUPPORT

GROUPS

ALLIANCE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS: The Alliance for the Performing Arts (formerly MAMM) benefits performing arts students through underwriting visiting artists; special theatre, dance, and music performances; and other unique experiences for members.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Judy Atwell

Drs. Voiza & Joe Arnold

Dr. Margaret Faulwell Gordon

Susan Hallman

Norma Morris Richard Odle Estate

Kerry & John Phelps

Jeanie Stockwell Verne Wagner

ART ALLIANCE: Art Alliance promotes excellence and enjoyment in the visual arts, and their fundraising efforts contribute to student scholarship, gallery exhibitions, opening receptions and sculpture acquisition on campus.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Fay Colmar John DeLoof

Joann Driggers & Steve Collier

Loraine Walkington

MUSIC ASSOCIATES: Music Associates maintains a tradition of active involvement and community support, and raises scholarship funds for School of Music students through annual fundraising events and membership dues.

SPECIAL SUPPORT AND EVENT UNDERWRITING

Marilyn Carlson

Evelyn K. Francuz

Sandy & Norm Johnson

Marti & Bill Kurschat

Karen & George Mast

Thelma & Earl Mellott

Bettina Murphy

Grace & Ujinobu Niwa

Kerry & John Phelps

Mary & Jerry Reinhart

Ann & Thad Sandford

Dodo V. Standring

Carolyn & Tom Toby

John Van Wey

MORE INFORMATION: Haley Sanford • 657-278-2663

There are many ways to support the College of the Arts, the School of Music, Department of Theatre and Dance, and Department of Visual Arts

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