DIGITAL PROGRAM
performing works by
7:30 P.M. FRIDAY, JANUARY 19
1
PROGRAM
Duo 彩 AYA Cycles
Maestría Faculty Artist Series
RachelJenkins, Woolf, flute Linda flute Makana Jimbu, marimba Jeong-Eun Lee, piano th Wednesday, 1, 2023 January 19November , 2024 at 7:30 p.m. UTSA UTSARecital RecitalHall Hall 7:30 p.m.
Program Kembang Suling (1996) I. Bali Sonata in E Major for flute and piano (1741) - J.S. Bach (1685-1750) II. Japan I. Adagio ma non tanto III. II. IndiaAllegro III. Siciliano IV. (2023 Allegro assai Cycles Duo 彩 AYA Commission)
Anima para flauta sola (2023) - Mariana Villanueva (b. 1964)
Wildflowers (2023 Duo 彩 AYA Commission)
Gareth Farr (b. 1968)
Evan Williams (b. 1988) Paul Millette
Troisieme Sonata for flute and piano (1934) - Philippe Gaubert (1879-1941) (b. 1992) I. Allegretto (pas trop vite) Intermede Tres 彩 modere WoodII.Wide Web II pastoral: (2023 Duo AYA Commission) Miriama Young III. Final: Joyeux - Allegretto (b. 1975)
Kassouga (1960)
– Intermission–
Sonatine for flute and piano (1946) - Pierre Sancan (1916-2008)
2
Makoto Shinohara (b. 1931)
Water Planet (2023 Duo 彩 AYA Commission) Lachrymose for solo piccolo (2006) - Derek Charke (b. 1974) For flute, marimba, and electronics
Fumihiro Ono (b. 1990)
Reunion Dance (2007)
Ney Rosauro (b. 1952)
ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES Linda Jenkins is an ardent collaborative musician and teacher based in San Antonio, Texas. She currently teaches at the University of Texas at San Antonio, as well as privately in the greater metroplex, and can be heard playing with various performing groups and frequently works with local composers as a soloist and chamber musician. Most recently, Linda can be heard on the album ‘In Focus 6’, released in June 2022 by RMN Music. Vox Venti, her Denton-based flute quartet, presented programs featuring living women composers at the 2022 Florida Flute Association Convention as well as the 2022 Mid-Atlantic Flute Convention. In 2018, Linda commissioned and premiered a full recital of works for solo flute and piccolo in collaboration with the Oregon Composers Forum. She was also the resident flute and piccolo player for the TaiHei Ensemble, a chamber group dedicated to premiering non-Western inspired contemporary works. Linda has been a guest performer at the biennial Oregon Bach Festival’s Composer Symposium, SEAMUS, University of Oregon’s Musicking conference, Greater Portland Flute Society’s Spring Flute Fair, National Flute Association, and has performed in master classes for Bonita Boyd, Carol Wincenc, Jim Walker, Elizabeth Rowe, and many other notable flutists. Linda has a B.M. from Bowling Green State University and a M.M. from the University of Oregon where she studied with Dr. Conor Nelson and Professor Molly Barth respectively. She recently completed a Graduate Artist Certificate with Professor Terri Sundberg at the University of North Texas and is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Music. Dedicated to performing a wide range of solo and chamber repertoire, pianist Jeong-Eun Lee is Assistant Professor of Instruction in Collaborative Piano at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Prior to joining UTSA, Lee taught at Indiana University as Visiting Assistant Professor and Postdoctoral Scholar and held collaborative pianist positions at the State University of New York at Geneseo and Riverside City College in California. Jeong-Eun Lee has served as a collaborative pianist and performance coach at the Aspen Music Festival, where she previously received instrumental and vocal fellowships. She attended Songfest in Los Angeles as a Professional Piano Fellow and played in masterclasses of Margo Garrett, Graham Johnson, Martin Katz and Roger Vignoles. Lee participated in festivals including the Amalfi Coast Festival, Bowdoin International Music Festival, Collabfest, Kneisel Chamber Festival and Holland International Music Sessions.
3
MAKE A BOLD IMPACT The UTSA School of Music has made incredible strides in providing a high-quality music education for all of our students and being a cultural arts center for the city of San Antonio. You can help us continue to elevate the quality of our program by making a gift to the School of Music. Our donors have made an invaluable impact through scholarships and funding research, innovative academic programs, outreach activities, and beyond. Donations have also contributed to our ability to offer public enrichment activities such as Maestria, En Vivo, the Insitute for Music Research lecture series, and On-Corps, our free music program for U.S. veterans.
HOW TO GIVE Gifts can be made via the secure online donation form. Select “Friends of Music” in the designation dropdown.
View Our Online Form For more information on how to make a gift, visit https://colfa.utsa.edu/music/giving
En Vivo brings high-caliber artists from all over the world to our university for free public concerts and masterclasses for our students. 4
On-Corps engages the community by offering U.S. veterans free music lessons and the opportunity to perform in a concert band ensemble.
WHAT IS MAESTRIA ?
Maestría is UTSA School of Music’s new branding for our faculty artist concert series. As with our guest artist concert series, En Vivo, the name is an homage to our Hispanic cultural identity as a federally designated Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI). The word ‘maestria’ is the Spanish translation of ‘mastery’, which is a reference to the high degree of qualification, wisdom, and experience possessed by our faculty artists. At UTSA, we believe in leading our studemts and community by example, and our faculty exemplify this through innovative teaching methods and engaging recitals. These recitals often feature premieres of new works and tie into our Tier-One faculty research.
5
music.utsa.edu
6