Welcome to our community calendar of arts events — the best arts calendar in the South Sound! OLY ARTS does not charge for posting arts events. Events are submitted by organizations and community members and published at OLY ARTS’ discretion. Events are not sponsored or endorsed by OLY ARTS. Please do not upload images or files larger than 1 MB. Please only post once, and your event is sent to the OLY ARTS’ Editor for review and approval.

Loading Events

« All Events

FIVE! Kristin Lee and Sandbox Percussion

March 7 at 7:30 pm 9:30 pm PST

IN BRIEF Artistic Director Kristin Lee teams up with our three-time GRAMMY®-nominated ensemble-in-residence, Sandbox Percussion, for a groundbreaking performance featuring three new premieres. This cutting-edge program showcases the dynamic blending of violin and percussion quartet- an unforgettable experience that pushes the boundaries of chamber music. PROGRAM Vivian Fung New Work (World Premiere) ECM co-commission Gabriella Smith FIVE (World Premiere) INTERMISSION Joan Tower To Sing or Dance (Seattle Premiere) ECM co-commission ARTISTS Kristin Lee, VIOLIN | Sandbox Percussion, Ensemble in Residence: Jonny Allen, Victor Caccese, Ian Rosenbaum, Terry Sweeney, PERCUSSION This concert is dedicated to Robert Cole and Jean MacGregor for their generous support of Emerald City Music. FOR THE CURIOUS MIND Featuring premieres by three generations of female American composers, this program showcases the dynamic blending of violin and percussion quartet. Hear from the composers themselves: “I see this project as a violin concerto of sorts, but in a more adventurous vein, as a percussion orchestra forms the backdrop for this setting. There is an inherent theatricality in the sound world I am seeking to explore, so as part of the process of composition, I worked with the performers to maximize the use of spatial possibilities in the room, placement of instruments, and movement of performers.” — Vivian Fung on her New Work “When I spent some time with the wonderful composer Arvo Pärt, we had a discussion about the origins of music. He felt music came from the voice (or singing) and I had a different idea that it came from the drum (or dancing). Basically, this difference of opinion reflects a longtime split between composers who write mostly for the voice (Pärt, Verdi, Puccini, Wagner, etc.) and those that compose mostly for instruments (me, Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, etc.). When I was asked to write a piece for violin and percussion, that difference became immediately apparent: how to have these two very different instruments in the same space, living fairly comfortably together.” — JOAN TOWER on ‘To Sing or Dance’

Details

Organizer

Kenneth J Minnaert Center for the Arts at South Puget Sound Community College

2011 Mottman Road SW
Olympia, WA 98512
+ Google Map