R E SID EN T A R T I S T S E R I E S
Nicolasa Kuster Sabine Klein, piano Thursday, September 30, 2021 7:30 p.m. Conservatory Recital Hall
6TH PERFORMANCE OF 2021-22 ACADEMIC YEAR
CO N CER T P ROGR A M , S EP T EM B ER 3 0 , 2 0 2 1 , 7 : 3 0 P M Bayou Home
William Grant Still (1895 -1978) Arr. Alexa Still
Arabesque (1963)
Elizabeth Gyring (1909–1970)
Variations Concertantes (1970)
I. Variation - Lyrique
II. Variation - Linéare
III. Variation - Véloce
IV. Variation - Expressive
V. Variation - Ostinato
Ida Gotkovsky (b. 1933)
Dance Suite for solo bassoon (2021) Jacqueline Wilson (Yakama) (b. 1984)
I. Prelude: Grand Entry
II. Grass
III. Men’s Traditional
IV. Fancy Shawl
V. Women’s Traditional
VI. Fancy Feather
Trouble Don’t Last (2012)
Mark Lomax, II (b. 1979)
Bassoonist Nicolasa Kuster joined the faculty of University of the Pacific's Conservatory of Music in Stockton, CA, in the fall of 2008. She balances her full-time teaching position with a rich orchestral, chamber, and solo performing life around northern California and beyond. She also launched and continues to lead the Meg Quigley Vivaldi Competition, a biennial competition for young women bassoonists from the Americas. This competition awards $20,500 in prizes at the exciting three day MQVC Bassoon Symposium open to all. Kuster is Principal Bassoon of the Stockton Symphony and New Hampshire Music Festival Orchestras, Second Bassoon of the Monterey Symphony, and performs on occasion with the San Francisco and San Diego Symphonies. Previous positions include the Wichita Symphony (also serving on the faculty of Wichita State University), the Tulsa Philharmonic Orchestra, the Rhode Island Philharmonic, and the Virginia Symphony. She spent six summer seasons performing and recording with the Spoleto Festival Orchestra in Italy and can be heard on the Chandos Label playing Principal Bassoon on Gian Carlo Menotti's operas and other works. She has enjoyed teaching and performing at many summer festivals and camps, including Anchorage Music Festival; Ameropa Chamber Music Festival in Prague, Czech Republic; Sequoia Chamber Music Workshop in Arcata, CA; the Marrowstone Festival in Bellingham, WA; Bocal Majority and Operation O.B.O.E. as well as Pacific Music Camp in Stockton. Her solo appearances with orchestra include performing Ellen Taaffe Zwilich's Bassoon Concerto in the opening Gala performance of the International Double Reed Society in 2013, Peter Schickele's Concerto for Bassoon and Orchestra with the Stockton Symphony in 2015, multiple-city tours of Kazakhstan, as well as televised performances in Italy and Panama. She is the winner of the 1995 Chicago Musicians Club of Women's Solo Competition Farwell Award, which she won while a member of the Civic Orchestra of Chicago studying with the late Bruce Grainger, Assistant Principal Bassoon of the Chicago Symphony. She is a double degree graduate from Oberlin College and Conservatory with a BM in Bassoon Performance and a BA in Religion. She was a student of George Sakakeeny and taught at Oberlin as his sabbatical replacement in fall 2002. Her solo album, Metamorphosis, can be found at NicolasaKuster.com.
Sabine Klein received BFA in Piano Performance with University Honors from Carnegie Mellon University where she studied piano with Natasha Snitkovsky and violin with Saul Bitran. She holds the degrees MA and Zweite Diplompruefung in chamber music from the University for the Arts Mozarteum, Austria, with a thesis on color-hearing synesthesia. Teachers include Erika Frieser, Aloys Kontarsky and members of the Hagen Quartet. Prior to coming to the University of the Pacific Sabine Klein worked for the Norwegian National Opera in Oslo as repetiteur, member of the orchestra and soloist /chamber musician for smaller touring ensembles. At the main house, she frequently performed keyboard soli in works like The Nutcracker, Cinderella, Ein Stelldichein. She also taught at the Steiner School Nordstrand, Oslo. Sabine Klein has appeared as chamber musician and recitalist on WQED FM Pittsburgh, the Pittsburgh Concert Society recital series, the Norwegian National Opera's chamber music series, in various venues across northern and eastern Spain, as well as in Germany, Austria, Sweden and the U.S.
music.pacific.edu