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Hub New Music Premieres New Works by Hannah Lash & Christopher Cerrone

How does one premiere a new work during a global pandemic? As composers, performers, presenters, and commissioning organizations adjust to the new landscape during COVID-19, there are many different ways to answer this question. Boston's Hub New Music, founded by flutist Michael Avitabile, has found their own path through the physical limitations of the 2020/2021 season by arranging for the videorecording and live premieres of several new works, producing recorded live performances for their season that are available to audiences online. 

One of Hub New Music's premieres this season was Hannah Lash's The Nature of Breaking, commissioned with support from Chamber Music America. According to Hub founder and flutist Michael Avitabile, this commissioning project began in 2017, and was scheduled to be premiered and performed several times in 2020; when live performance became unsafe during the COVID-19 pandemic, Avitabile turned to recording and broadcast technology to produce a sense of "liveness" in Hub's performances, which were filmed live in several venues in Boston.

Composed for Hub's instrumentation—flute, clarinet, violin, cello—and harp, The Nature of Breaking augments the unique timbral possibilities of winds and strings with the unique clarity of the harp, developing four musical ideas, including a fragment from a Bach chorale, throughout its four movements. Hub worked with presenters, including Ashmont Hill Chamber Music and the University of Texas & Texas Performing Arts, to present livestreamed performances of this work, together with Lash on harp. Recorded in Boston's Hibernian Hall, Hub New Music brings a "live" performance experience to virtual space, allowing them to continue commissioning and premiering engaging new works. 

Watch an excerpt of their performance of The Nature of Breaking below. 

Hub also worked with Christopher Cerrone on a new composition entitled New Addresses. This collaboration began in the summer of 2019, and was slated to premiere in October, 2020; instead of a live premiere, Hub produced a videorecording that was premiered during a special livestreamed event in January, 2021, for Arizona Friends of Chamber Music. To develop this piece in a time when working with the composer was physically impossible, Hub traded recordings, scores, MIDI-realizations, and other media with Cerrone in an intense, months-long process, during which Cerrone learned the intricacies and limits of Hub's unique instrumentation. This meant that New Addresses, to Avitabile, is incredibly well-crafted: it bears the mark of countless hours of both prescriptive and descriptive musical notation and thought.

New Addresses is inspired by a collection of poetry by Kenneth Koch of the same name; Cerrone and Hub worked intimately together to create this work, which reflects Koch's rapturous odes ("addresses") to abstract objects in Cerrone's writing for the unique instrumentation of Hub's ensemble. Watch the premiere of this work below. 

PSNY Welcomes James Díaz

Since he began composing music at age 17, James Díaz has often thought of his music as a portal through which one could explore ambivalence: radical moments of sonic possibility. Diaz's music generates multiplicity in order to manifest new sonic worlds, both for performer and listener, fostering a curiosity that transcends existing understandings of musical tradition, history, and referentiality. Díaz's goal in composition is, as he says, "finding multiplicity in the work and in the world." 

As a teenager in Soacha, Colombia, Díaz began to create music in his home recording studio, seeking out ambiguous, ambivalent sound worlds that mirrored the complexities of Colombian social life. Although at first he thought of music as an "escape" from the world, Díaz soon realized that music could rather serve as a tool for concretely altering the ways that we perceive the world, leading him to embrace the idea of "psychedelia": the  manifestation of the mind. And what led to these new manifestations were not chemical structures, but rather musical ones. 

Díaz's compositional process always begins with something on the page: a melodic line, a rhythmic pattern, or some other structural idea that may or may not even be audible. From this organizing element, Díaz continues to compose new possibilities for musical dimensions in performance, often obscuring the original structure, which leads to new kinds of musical manifestations. Díaz's conservatory training exposed him to composers for whom these kinds of musical citations carried the ideological weight of national traditions, especially within the fraught periods of the late 19th and early 20th centuries; for Díaz, however, the "meaning" of these citations has possibilities for multiple dimensions of music. 


"Infrastructures", Díaz's 2017 string quartet, was composed during the composer's first winter spent in New York City. The first and last movements are described as a kind of collage, sharing related musical materials but transformed through processes of inversion. Influenced by Díaz's study of the work of Morton Feldman, "Infrastructures" is a study in convolution—and as its title suggests, the many ways in which internal musical structures can play themselves out. 

James Díaz · "A song for..." for amplified violin and electronics [2018]

Díaz's 2018 "A Song For...", for amplified violin and electronics, continues this study with a very different kind of instrument. In this work, Díaz takes the sounds of the violin and convolves it with itself, producing a kind of reverberant sound world generated from the instrument and its player. The amplification of the instrument allows for small gestures to produce intense sounds, leading the performer to interact with her instrument in new kinds of ways. 

"in her dream song", for piano trio, begins with a melodic fragment from "A Song For...". But unlike that work, for solo violin and fixed media, "in her dream song" asks the three performers to listen to each other as unpredictable, reverberant partners, triggering cues and actions dictated in the score. 

"never was the way" continues Díaz's exploration of performative gestures of listening in a Pierrot ensemble, which also introduces the human voice. The score for this work is a fine example of the kinds of interactivity that Diaz wants to foster between his performers; the second movement, is written not in score format, but rather in independent parts (which you can see beginning around 5:55 above). 

James Díaz · "In times of passive voice" for amplified cello [2019] feat James Burch

"in times of passive voice", Díaz's 2019 work for solo cello, allows for even more flexibility by the performer, providing them with several germinal musical structures and instructing them to perform them in an order of their choosing. The cellist's instrument is transformed into a new kind of partner with the combination of a metal practice mute, which eliminates nearly all of the internal acoustic resonances of the instrument, and heavy amplification, which emphasizes the noisy timbres of bow, string, and bridge. 

PSNY is thrilled to publish these five interrelated works by Díaz, bringing his work to new performers who can continue to explore the mind-manifesting and ambivalent qualities of his work. 

Michael Hersch and Christopher Cairns Present New Concert Series: ...thus far and no further...

As the landscape of live musical performance continues to change in the era of COVID-19, composer Michael Hersch and his long-time collaborator, the sculptor Christopher Cairns, have planned an intimate series of concerts—each limited to 15 audience members—held in Cairns's studio in Havertown, Pennsylvania. Titled ...thus far and no further..., this series revives Carins and Hersch's practice of small, intimate, informal concerts held in Carins's studio among his work; both artists hope that this new five-event series will help (re-)imagine what live music can look, feel, and sound like in the current global climate. 

Featuring world premeires by Hersch, Missy Mazzoli, Christopher Fox, Alican Çamci, and Patricia Kopatchinskaja—who is increasingly augmenting her profile as a composer, in addition to her work as a violnist—this series will feature some of Hersch's closest collaborators, including Miranda Cuckson, Ah Young Hong, Emi Ferguson, Daniel Gaisford, and the FLUX Quartet.

Carins's sculptures, which were also featured in the set design of Hersch's monodrama On the Threshold of Winter, will surround the small audience, who will be presented with musical programs that pair world premieres with other works of our time by composers such as Rebecca Saunders, Meredith Monk, Georg Friedrich Haas, Anthony Braxton and Isabel Mundry, among many others.  Pre- and post-concert sound installations will also enhance the sonic experience of these five events, allowing audience members time and space to contemplate sculpture and music in a haptic, three-dimensional experience. 

The first of Hersch and Cairns's five programs falls on October 24th, and will pair early vocal music by Machaut and Josquin with three works by Hersch (including the premiere of unwrung, apart, always), book-ended by Morton Feldman's sparse, enigmatic Only, for solo voice. This program will be performed by violinist Miranda Cuckson and flutist/vocalist Emi Ferguson

Cairns's Sculpture Studio

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