Wednesday Chamber Music Series
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center| Question & Answer Session Follows
Now in its third season, the Rhode Island Wind Orchestra is a chamber ensemble of professional musicians specializing in masterworks from all periods written originally for winds and brasses. This all-too-often ignored corner of the classical repertoire is replete with musical treasures waiting to be rediscovered, as well as exciting works by contemporary composers. Members include several players from the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra, the Boston Symphony, the Boston Pops, members of the Rhode Island College music faculty, and local freelance artists. Conducted by Robert Franzblau, the program features three wind octets: Beethoven's charming Rondino in E-flat, Eugène Bozza's Octanphonie, and Mozart's sublime Serenade No. 12 in C minor. |
| Under the tutelage of Rhode Island College composition faculty, student composers at RIC present world premieres of their recent works. |
| Question & Answer Session Follows
Natalia Zukerman, singer-songwriter, and the daughter of violinist/conductor Pinchas Zukerman and flutist/writer Eugenia Zukerman, presents "Bottleneck country jazz with smoky come-hither vocals." |
| The creative output of Rhode Island College's jazz faculty is on display in this free recital. Vocalist Shawnn Montiero and trumpeter Joseph Foley lead an all-star cast of musicians, all of whom teach in RIC's jazz studies program. |
Robert Franzblau, Conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
$7 General Admission, $5 Seniors and Non-RIC Students; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
The Rhode Island College Wind Ensemble begins its 2007-08 season with "Milestones," a concert of classics from the repertoire for winds. Included on the program are Giovanni Gabrieli's Sonata Pian e Forte, Dvorak's Serenade Op. 44 for Winds, and Berlioz's monumental Symphonie Funèbre et Triomphale, with RIC trombone professor Kevin Kane as soloist. Variations on a Waltz Theme by Nathaniel Tronerud '07 will add a dimension of "brand new" to the program. Also featured will be a massed trombone choir performing Renaissance tower music in the lobby of Sapinsley Hall prior to the concert. |
Edward Markward, Conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
$7 General Admission, $5 Seniors and Non-RIC Students; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
W.A. Mozart Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, K. 622 |
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| $7 General Admission, or free if in costume
This popular fast-paced high-energy concert features a wide variety of performing ensembles within the Department of Music, Theatre, and Dance, including brass, vocal, woodwind, dance, and percussion groups. Performers appear in costume and audience members are encouraged to do likewise to enhance the ambiance of the Halloween atmosphere. This family-oriented concert is sponsored annually by the RIC chapter of the Music Educators National Conference. |
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Question & Answer Session Follows
Widely recognized as one of the most gifted contemporary composers in America and surely one of the brightest talents of his generation, violinist and composer Mark O'Connor and Rhode Island College Artist-in-Residence Judith Lynn Stillman, who have collaborated on many occasions, present a program along with cellist Mike Block. The New York Times calls O'Connor's performance "one of the most spectacular journeys in recent American music." |
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Advance Tickets Required; Available October 1st
For more than two centuries, the United States Marine Band has been part of events that have shaped our nation. Established by an Act of Congress in 1798, the Marine Band is America's oldest professional musical organization. Its primary mission is unique—to provide music for the President of the United States and the Commandant of the United States Marine Corps. The United States Marine Band, America's oldest performing musical organization, gives more than 500 public performances each year. They perform in and around the nation's capital, and on tour across America each fall. "For more than 200 years the Marine Band has set a standard of musical excellence that has enriched the White House and our entire nation. They have been ‘The President's Own,' and for me it has been a special honor and a treat. They have stirred the spirits of more people than President Adams could ever have imagined when he signed the bill creating the Marine Band." - Bill Clinton |
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This varied and popular performance is a concert in which invited choirs from local high schools perform for each other and for the community at large. The Rhode Island College Chorus and Chamber Singers will also perform, and the concert concludes with a massed choral piece in which all involved ensembles participate. This concert is sponsored annually by the RIC Chapter of the American Choral Directors Association. |
| $10 General Admission, $5 Seniors and Non-RIC Students; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
Founded in 2002, the Rhode Island Philharmonic Youth Wind Ensembles were created to give advanced woodwind, brass and percussion students from Rhode Island and nearby Massachusetts and Connecticut an opportunity to perform wind ensemble repertoire of the highest quality. Conducted by David Martins and Marc Blanchette, the Senior and Junior Wind Ensembles will share this special concert with the Rhode Island College Wind Ensemble, conducted by Robert Franzblau. |
| Question & Answer Session Follows
William Anderson and Oren Fader, duo-guitarists and members of the Award-winning new music ensemble CYGNUS, have been hailed as "electrifying" by Allan Kozinn of the New York Times. |
Rob Franzblau, Conductor
Where: Auditorium at Roberts Hall![]() |
$7 General Admission, $5 Seniors and Non-RIC Students; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
H. Owen Reed's La Fiesta Mexicana forms the centerpiece for this offering by the Rhode Island College Wind Ensemble. This symphonic work was inspired by the composer's travels in Mexico and reflects the spirituality, passion, and vitality of that culture. The balance of the concert program includes Joaquín Rodrigo's Adagio Para Orquesta de Instrumentos de Viento and Steven Bryant's latest work, Radiant Joy. |
Edward Markward, Conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
$7 General Admission, $5 Seniors and Non-RIC Students; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
Maurice Ravel, Mother Goose Suite |
Alan Shockley, Director
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center| RIC's new contemporary music ensemble, New York System, will open its premiere season on December 5 with a concert featuring avant-garde chamber works by American composers including works by Earle Brown, Morton Feldman, John Cage, and Christian Wolff. |
Teresa Coffman, Conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
$4 General Admission; RIC Students, Staff and Faculty Free
This winter choral concert will feature the four RIC choral ensembles in performances of works by important composers throughout western music history as well as a few non-traditional and lesser-known composers and pieces. Planned works include Eric Whitacre's Leonardo Dreams of His Flying Machine, three motets by Anton Bruckner (Locus iste, Os justi, Christus factus est) and traditional holiday favorites. The RIC Chorus, Chamber Singers and Women's Chorus are conducted by Teresa Coffman and the RIC Men’s Chorus is led by Tianxu Zhou. |
with Judith Lynn Stillman, pianist
Wednesday Chamber Music Series
General Admission: $5
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian CenterWednesday Chamber Music Series
Question & Answer Session Follows
General Admission: $7
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
An inaugural inductee of the American Classical Music Hall of Fame and winner of the Downbeat Lifetime Achievement Award, Gunther Schuller's legacy as a Pulitzer Prize winning composer, conductor, horn player, educator/administrator, historian/author, record producer, and music publisher has changed the course of contemporary music. The Rhode Island College Wind Ensemble will host a week-long residency by this living legend, culminating in two public events in Sapinsley Hall on Friday, February 29th: a round-table discussion titled "Birth of the Cool and its Impact fifty Years Later" at 3:00 pm, and a concert, "Gunther Schuller and Friends," at 8:00 pm. Several of Mr. Schuller's jazz and classical compositions will be performed, and he will be featured as guest conductor on his latest work for wind ensemble, "Nature's Way." |
John Sumerlin, conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian CenterWednesday Chamber Music Series
Question & Answer Session Follows
RIC Chorus, Chamber Singers and Women's Chorus
Teresa Coffman, Conductor
RIC Men's Chorus
Tianxu Zhou, conductor
The Rhode Island Children's Chorus
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This concert culminates the three-day residency of guest composer/conductor
Alice Parker at Rhode Island College. During this time, she will work with the
RIC Chorus, Chamber Singers, Women's Chorus (all conducted by Teresa Coffman),
and Men's Chorus (conducted by Tianxu Zhou), as well as guest chorus, the Rhode
Island Children's Chorus (conducted by RIC alumna Christine Noel). She will
conduct several of her compositions on the concert, which will conclude with an
audience SING, an event in which Ms. Parker involves the entire audience in the
creation of a magical, spontaneous, unpredictable and fun musical event. Ms.
Parker has delighted audiences worldwide with her unique approach to group
singing, using traditional hymns and folk songs from many cultures. Her life-work has been in choral and vocal music, combining composing, conducting and teaching in a creative balance. Her arrangements with Robert Shaw of folksongs, hymns and spirituals form an enduring repertoire for choruses all around the world. She continues composing in many forms, from operas to cantata, sacred anthems to secular dances, song cycles to string quartets. She has been commissioned by such groups as the Vancouver Chamber Chorus, the Atlanta Symphony Chorus and Chanticleer. Her many conducting and teaching engagements keep her traveling around the United States and Canada. In 1985, she founded Melodious Accord, Inc., a non-profit group that presents choral concerts, sponsors workshops, symposia, and her many professional appearances. The Fellows programs have provided unique training for composers, conductors and song leaders. She has made eleven acclaimed recordings with the Musicians of Melodious Accord, a sixteen-voice professional chorus. The group has received generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Copland Foundation, and the New York State Council for the Arts. |
Edward Markward, Conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
"ERIC RUSKE'S APPROACH...ENCHANTS BY VIRTUE OF ITS CONFIDENCE, IMAGINATION AND EBULLIENT VIRTUOSITY." -New York Times "A SOUND BOTH LUMINOUS AND BRILLIANT, ALWAYS WITH A PERFECT ROUNDNESS, AN IMPECCABLE VIRTUOSITY..." -Le Monde, PARIS "...ONE OF THE WORLD'S GREAT MUSICIANS...EVERY NOTE WAS PURE MUSIC..." -The Herald, GLASGOW |
Wednesday Chamber Music Series
Question & Answer Session Follows
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Wednesday Chamber Music Series
Question & Answer Session Follows
Department of Music, Theatre and Dance
Donations accepted
| This is the sixth annual Faculty Recital sponsored by the RIC Student Chapter of the American Choral Directors Association. The concert showcases members of the RIC Music, Theatre, and Dance faculty. Donations received benefit the Deborah Griffin Memorial Scholarship Fund which will provide scholarships to outstanding music majors. |
General Admission: $20, seniors $15, students $10
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center
When: April 5, 7:00 PM
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In 1974, Susan Milan was appointed Principal Flute of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra where she remained for eight years. Since then she has continued to forge a multi-dimensional career as an orchestral guest principal, chamber musician, soloist, teacher and lecturer. She has given numerous world and UK premieres and has inspired contemporary composers to write for her, among them Richard Rodney Bennett, Antal Dorati, and Cecilia McDowall. Susan Milan is often featured on the BBC and has recorded concertos and recitals for the Chandos label. |
Department of Music, Theatre and Dance
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center![]() |
John Sumerlin - violin Rebecca Thornblade - cello Philip Martorella - piano Program will include trios by Mozart, Turina, and Dvorak. |
John Sumerlin, conductor
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian CenterDepartment of Music, Theatre and Dance
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian CenterRIC Concert Jazz Band: Joseph Foley, conductor
General Admission $7
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Trumpeter Jens Lindemann is hailed as one of the most celebrated soloists in his instrument's history. He has played in every major concert venue in the world, from the Philharmonics of New York, Los Angeles, London, Manchester, Munich, Hamburg, Lucerne and Berlin to playing principal trumpet with the renowned Canadian Brass. Joseph Foley, Assistant Professor of Music at Rhode Island College, is Principal Trumpet in the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra, a founding member of the Atlantic Brass Quintet, and a frequent performer with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Boston Pops Orchestra, among several others. The Rhode Island College Wind Ensemble and Concert Jazz Band will present a joint concert on Friday, April 25th at 8:00 pm in Roberts Auditorium featuring this "dynamic duo" of artists. |
Edward Markward and Teresa Coffman, Conductors
General Admission Donation: $10
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Featuring
Diana McVey, Soprano Georgette Ross Hutchins, Mezzo-soprano Fredric Scheff, Tenor Tianxu Zhou, Baritone Rhode Island College Chorus Members of the Rhode Island Civic Chorale Teresa Coffman, Conductor Edward Markward, Conductor Bernstein - Chichester Psalms Beethoven - Symphony No. 9 |
Teresa Coffman, Conductor
RIC Men's Chorus
Tianxu Zhou, conductor
General Admission $4
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This concert will feature the RIC Chorus, Chamber Singers, Women's Chorus (conducted by Teresa Coffman) and the RIC Men's Chorus (conducted by Tianxu Zhou) in a Bon Voyage concert to celebrate and "send off" graduating senior music majors as well as the participants in the May 2008 Concert Tour of Vienna, Slovakia, and Prague. |
General Admission $5
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian CenterAlan Shockley, Director
Where: Sapinsley Hall, Nazarian Center
When: May 7, 7:00 PM
| RIC's contemporary music ensemble, New York System, will continue its first season with a concert on May 7 of avant-garde chamber works by composers Christian Wolff, Olivier Messiaen, Black Sabbath, and featuring two world premieres of newly commissioned works by young American composers Ted Coffey and Colby Leider. Several of the works will speak to the theme "War and Peace." (Please note the early start time of 7 pm.) |
* = Free Admission
Department of Music, Theatre, and Dance
Rhode Island College Theatre Organization
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General Admission: $14 |
Department of Music, Theatre, and Dance
Rhode Island College Theatre Organization
| General Admission: $14 |
RIC Theatre Organization's Growing Stage
Where: Little Theatre, Nazarian Center| Donations |
Donations accepted
Where: Sapinsley Hall in the Nazarian CenterDepartment of Music, Theatre and Dance
General Admission: $14
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Jean Anouilh's modernized version of the classic Greek tragedy Antigone sets
the story in the sleek palace of a fascist state ruled by Creon. His niece
Antigone is horrified by Creon's order that the body of her brother--who led a
rebellion against the state--be left on the battlefield to rot. The great
strength of Antigone is that there is no easy solution to the conflict, which
leads to disaster for everyone involved. With fierce originality, this powerful
adaptation of the Sophocles tragedy presents a world of honor, treachery and
fateful consequences. Jean Anouilh, one of the foremost French playwrights of the twentieth century, replaced the realist works of the previous era with his dramas, which exploit fantasy, tragic passion, scenic poetry and cosmic leaps in time and space. He used Greek myth to explore the disturbing moral dilemmas of our times. This version of Antigone was performed in 1944 in Nazi-controlled Paris. |
Department of Music, Theatre and Dance
Reserved Seating: $18
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NO, NO, NANETTE is a lighthearted framework for the music of Vincent Youman.
This is the story of Jimmy Smith, and all the trouble he gets into and out of on
a summer weekend. Included in the score are two of the most famous show tunes
ever written: Tea for Two and I Want to Be Happy. Standard numbers like Too Many
Rings Around Rosie and You Can Dance with Any Girl at All accompany many other
delightful songs. The whole experience is refreshing, silly and uplifting! 4 Tony Awards for Choreography, Costume Design, Actress and Featured Actress 3 Drama Desk Awards for Book, Choreography and Costume Design The Outer Critics Circle Award for Production |
![]() Photo: Sue Rees |
Nugent+Matteson Dance first appeared at RIC in 2005, and their performance
included the critically acclaimed duet, Fare Well, described by Jennifer Dunning
of The New York Times as " . . . that rare work that lives up to its advance
billing... conjuring up two imperfectly messy lives and two ordinary human
beings who just might find themselves some new place if they only stay the
course . . . a delight".
The 2007 October Concert will be made up of five precarious dances. The opener is a condensed version of Fare Well that highlights the synchronistic partnering of Nugent and Matteson within Edmund Mooney's richly atmospheric sound score. Next Block Idol, a solo by Matteson with music by Michael Krassner, layers bittersweet coming-of-age narratives with impossible physical challenges. The third piece, Semi-Formal, a solo by Nugent with live music by violinist Heather Somerland, is a hip circling ceremony of ballroom dance fantasies. Nugent strips away all that seems familiar with hopes of re-experiencing the first time again. Fourth is Saints Smother Swans, an intricately technical new duet for Nugent and Matteson choreographed by Terry Creach. Erika Kinetz from The New York Times writes, "Terry Creach's curiosity about what the human body itself might reveal about human beings is timeless." The final work is Cozy Up, an intensely physical new group work choreographed by Nugent and Matteson in collaboration with Rhode Island College dancers. General Admission: $12** |
![]() Photo: Nikki Carrara |
Rhode Island school children will be treated to the RIC Dance Company's Annual Mini-Concert Series in morning concerts October 24-26 in Sapinsley Hall in the Nazarian Center. Repertory selections will include works by Nathan Andary (Providence, RI), Jackie Henderson (Newport, RI), Jennifer Nugent and Paul Matteson (NYC), and Drika Overton (Maine). Offered free to all school children in Rhode Island and nearby Massachusetts since the 1960s, these concerts provide young audiences with an informative and enjoyable introduction to contemporary dance forms. Lastly, Rhode Island community dancers are invited to participate in open Dance Company classes with visiting choreographers in August and November. |
![]() Photo: Nikki Carrara |
New for fall 2007 will be a College Dance Invitational on Friday, October 26
in Sapinsley Hall sponsored by the Department of Music, Theatre, and Dance.
Celebrating the rich creativity and productivity of our local-area dance
programs, the College Dance Invitational will provide a showcase Rhode Island
and nearby Connecticut and Massachusetts college dance companies. Don't miss
this opportunity to experience the past, present, and future of American
dance. General Admission: $10** |
| The RIC Dance Company is very pleased to be collaborating once again with
Bridgman/Packer Dance in a fall 2007 residency and performance project.
The dance company has previously hosted residency/performance projects with
Bridgman/Packer Dance in 2002, 1994, and 1984 and we hosted a
choreographic residency project in 1992. Admission: $8 per class |
General Admission $10
Where: Auditorium in Roberts Hall![]() |
Sponsored by the RIC Department of Music, Theatre & Dance
General Admission $12
Where: Forman Theatre in the Nazarian CenterGeneral Admission $8
Where: Forman Theatre in the Nazarian Center![]() |
* = Free Admission
** = Admission discounts for seniors, groups, and students