MEMETERIA by Thomas May

Music & the Arts

Matthew Aucoin and a New Generation of Composers Are Giving 21st-century Music a Body Again

The New York premiere of “Music for New Bodies” at Lincoln Center as part of the Run AMOC* Festival at Summer for the City. (Lawrence Sumulong / Courtesy of Lincoln Center)

On November 1, Meany Center for the Performing Arts presents Matthew Aucoin’s Music for New Bodies, a “vocal symphony” based on the poetry of Jorie Graham and staged by Peter Sellars — in other words, not to be missed. I spoke with Aucoin about New Bodies for The Seattle Times:

“The voice of the bottom of the ocean. The voice of the medicines moving through your veins. The voice of the core of the Earth.”

Composer Matthew Aucoin names them like a spell — presences that inhabit “Music for New Bodies,” his 70-minute vocal symphony that will receive its West Coast premiere at the University of Washington’s Meany Center on Nov. 1. ..

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Peter Sellars on Music for New Bodies

Filed under: American music, American opera, Meany Center for the Performing Arts, Peter Sellars, Seattle Times

Awards Announced at 2025 Honens

The final results of the 2025 Honens International Piano Competition are in – and the Gold goes to Élisabeth Pion! 🎉

After a dazzling performance of Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto, the 29-year-old French Canadian was named 2025 Honens Gold Laureate in Calgary last night. She takes home CAD $100,000 and a three-year career-accelerator program valued at more than $500,000. She also swept up the Audience Choice Award (worth $5,000 CAD).

The final round featured all three finalists, each in a different concerto, with the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra led by Elias Grandy.

Hearty applause as well for Silver Laureate Carter Johnson (29) and to Bronze Laureate Anastasia Vorotnaya (30) – and for all seven semifinalists who made this year’s Honens an inspiring, memorable festival. They included Ádám Balogh (28), Elia Cecino (24), Giorgio Lazzari (25), Sandro Nebieridze (24), Chaeyoung Park (28), Derek Wang (27), and Yuanfan Yang (28).

With performances this bold and individual, the Honens ideal of the “Complete Artist” feels alive and well.

Filed under: Honens International Piano Competition, music news, pianists

Sharing the Spotlight: The Isidore Quartet at Honens 2025

The Isidore Quartet at Honens: Adrian Steele, Phoenix Avalon, Joshua McClendon and Devin Moore, with finalist Carter Johnson in the centre; photo: Jorge Gustavo Elias

–> Follow the final round and announcement of awards starting at 7pm MDT on the Honens livestream here.

Tonight is the final round at the 2025 Honens International Piano Competition. I spoke with violinist Phoenix Avalon of the Isidore String Quartet about the experience of partnering with each of the three finalists in last night’s first round of the finals. Here’s my interview for The Strad:

For a string quartet, sharing the spotlight with fellow chamber musicians is second nature – but not usually in circumstances like this. The New York City-based Isidore Quartet took the stage last night (23 October) for the chamber-music final of the 2025 Honens International Piano Competition, held at the Jack Singer Concert Hall in the Werklund Centre, downtown Calgary, Alberta. ..

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Filed under: competitions, Honens International Piano Competition, pianists, string quartet, The Strad

“Witness to Courage” at Music of Remembrance

A recommendation for this weekend in Seattle: “Witness to Courage” — Music of Remembrance, 3pm Sunday, Oct 26

MOR opens its new season with the West Coast premiere of “Crossing Borders” by Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer (librettist of the Met’s hit “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay”). The song, for mezzo and piano, draws from a secret diary kept by a teenage girl escaping Nazi-occupied Paris.

Also featured: works by Géza Frid and William Hilsley, written in prison and exile, and Paul Schoenfield’s “Sparks of Glory,” inspired by Holocaust resisters.

Linking music born of exile to today’s immigrant realities, MOR partners with the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project and Jewish Family Service—donating 50 percent of ticket sales to support legal aid for immigrants across Washington, including those detained by ICE.

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Filed under: Uncategorized

BERBERIO BASH – Luciano Berio & Cathy Berberian at 100

Born just months apart in 1925, Luciano Berio and Cathy Berberian formed one of the most daring creative partnerships of the 20th century. Together, the Italian composer and American mezzo-soprano blurred the lines between composer and performer, intellect and emotion, experimentation and play. They expanded our understanding of what a voice could do and reinvented the relationship between music and theater itself.

The Seattle Chamber Orchestra opens its fourth season on Friday 24 October with a centenary tribute to these two kindred spirits. The program, designed by SCO Founder and Music Director Lorenzo Marasso, features Berio’s beloved Folk Songs, Sequenza for voice, and Sequenza for harp, alongside works by John Cage, Luigi Dallapiccola, and Claudio Monteverdi that were signatures of Berberian’s repertoire.

The concert takes place at 8pm at the Good Shepherd Center (4649 Sunnyside Ave N, Seattle). Tickets here.

The Seattle concert is part of a global series of events celebrating Berberian and Berio throughout 2025.

PROGRAM

Luciano BERIO O King

Claudio MONTEVERDI Lamento della Ninfa

Luciano BERIO Autrefois

Luciano BERIO Wasserklavier

Giorgio Federico GHEDINI Arbero pecerillo from Quattro canti antichi napoletani

Luigi DALLAPICCOLA Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi

Luciano BERIO Sequenza II – for solo harp

John CAGE The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs

Luciano BERIO Sequenza III – for solo voice

Luciano BERIO Folksongs

w members of the Seattle Chamber Orchestra

Lorenzo Marasso – conductor & piano

Stephanie Aston – solo voice

Wendy Wilhelmi – flute

Kevin Morton – clarinet

Shelly Myers – oboe

Jordan Voelker – violin & viola

Rose Bellini – cello

Alison Bjorkedal – harp

Arx Duo – percussions

Filed under: Lorenzo Marasso, music news, Seattle Chamber Orchestra

Gabriella Smith’s “Lost Coast” at Seattle Symphony

Gabriella Smith recording “Lost Coast” with cellist Gabriel Cabezas at Greenhouse Studios in Iceland. (Sandro Manzon)

Here’s my Seattle Times profile of the remarkable young composer Gabriella Smith. This week’s Seattle Symphony concerts will feature her innovative cello concerto Lost Coast, with Gabriel Cabezas as the soloist:

Her official bio reads like a manifesto: “Gabriella Smith is a composer whose work invites listeners to find joy in climate action.” The 33-year-old has built a creative world around that idea — one where music and environmentalism are inseparable…

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Filed under: American music, cellists, cello, Seattle Symphony, Seattle Times

Baroque Vitality in Motion: Ivars Taurins Leads the Seattle Symphony

Ivars Taurins conducts the Seattle Symphony; © James Holt | The Seattle Symphony

The Seattle Symphony turned agile chamber band for its all-Baroque evening under guest conductor Ivars Taurins, joined by resident organist Joseph Adam. With the Seattle Opera season opening across town – the company orchestra comprises Seattle Symphony musicians – the program made a virtue of proportion and dramatic resourcefulness….
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Filed under: Handel, review, Seattle Symphony

New from John Adams

I’d meant to post a link to my program note for John Adams’s brand-new orchestral piece, The Rock You Stand On, written for Marin Alsop, who recently led the Philadelphia Orchestra in the world premiere:

Listening to John Adams often feels like stepping into a drama already in motion …

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Filed under: John Adams, Philadelphia Orchestra, program notes

Happy Birthday! Yo-Yo Ma at 70

Yo-Yo Ma © Brantley Gutierrez

The legendary cellist was born on 7 October 1955. The Strad takes a look at some moments of the cellist’s unparalleled career over the decades…

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Filed under: music news, The Strad, Yo-Yo Ma

JACK Quartet Celebrates Helmut Lachenmann at 90

JACK Quartet in rehearsal with Helmut Lachenmann; courtesy of JACK Quartet

To celebrate the 90th birthday of German avant-garde composer Helmut Lachenmann, the JACK Quartet perform his three string quartets in a single evening at Columbia’s Miller Theatre – and reflect on their long association with his radical sound world. My interview with the ensemble for The Strad:

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Filed under: JACK Quartet, string quartet, The Strad

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