performers on darkened stage from 2018 Production of Lucretia
News

Cali Residencies Hit a High Note

Students engage with ensembles, solo artists rotating through a series of professional residencies

Posted in: Cali News

Trumpet players
Gavin Ard, second from left, rehearses with the Wind Symphony for a performance with percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie and composer Michael Daugherty.

It would have been understandable if Gavin Ard was nervous the day he played for legendary trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis. “Oh man, it’s the guy,” he recalled thinking during a master class. But he kept his cool, attuned to the way Marsalis was connecting with everyone around him.

“I immediately got the vibe that his focus was more about being with people through music than being with musicians. He was focused on the humanity aspect of everything,” says Ard, a senior Music Performance major from St. Petersburg, Florida. “He’d put his hand on your shoulder and say, ‘You just played, we’ll talk about it, but let’s remind ourselves we’re not just trumpet players, we’re people.’ It was a big thing with Wynton. I played a classical piece and all of his comments were based on things not on the page.”

The opportunities to learn from masters like Marsalis are hitting a high note for Ard and other students at the John J. Cali School of Music, where ensembles and solo artists are rotating through a series of professional residencies.

The visiting musicians cross boundaries and a variety of genres, from a classical rock-star duo to a vocal band evoking emotional sound palettes to an experimental string quartet. The spring rosterincludes an evening of immersive music with Grammy-winner James Blachly conducting the Experiential Orchestra and Montclair State University Symphony Orchestra. (This free public event on Saturday, March 26 will allow the audience to experience the sound with creative seating among the orchestra).

Kamala Sankaram on stage
Composer and soprano Kamala Sankaram performs her newest work Crescent for solo voice and electronics during a public event on February 17 in Leshowitz Recital Hall.

“We’ve tried to keep the artists diverse in every possible way,” says Anthony Mazzocchi, director of the Cali School. “It’s important that students from all walks of life see a part of themselves up on stage, and at the same time to have students exposed to musicians who play a genre that they never thought of, has opened up a lot of eyes.”

Nick Scafuto, a lead tenor with the University Singers, recently had the opportunity to workshop with composer, vocalist, playwright and actress Kamala Sankaram on an a cappella commission, Let My Country Awake, based on the poetry of Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore. “It’s extremely evocative,” Scafuto says of the piece. “Being able to work with interesting meter changes and tonalities is not something you see in the choral space.”

During her residency, Sankaram showcased a variety of creative events, culminating in a performance at Merkin Concert Hall in New York City. “It’s one of those things where you’ve been seeing these people on YouTube videos with millions of views and in different kinds of spaces and then to actually have them in front of you is wild,” says Scafuto, a senior Music Education major from Bridgewater, New Jersey.An open rehearsal in early February with the Harlem Quartet, Montclair’s quartet-in-residence, pulled back the curtain on the ensemble’s creative process as they worked through String Quartet in C Major K. 465 “Dissonance” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, a piece they will perform this spring.

The musicians worked on tempo, “leaving room to breathe” between notes, creating space for their imaginations to come through. “We have a plan, but we change and react in the moment,” Harlem Quartet cellist Felix Umansky explained.

Ard says he takes those lessons on interpretation to heart. “Slowing down, pushing through, dynamics that aren’t on the page, there’s a part of me as a young musician that thinks that’s not what the composer said, when in reality that’s what separates incredible musicians from people who play just what’s on the page.”

 

Members of the Harlem Quartet rehearsing on stage
The Harlem Quartet, from left, Ilmar Gavilán, Melissa White, Felix Umansky and Jaime Amador, discuss the score of “Dissonance” during an open rehearsal at the John J. Cali School of Music.

Ard is preparing for a residency pairing percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie and composer Michael Daugherty. The week will culminate on Friday, March 4 in the world premiere performance of the wind band version of Daugherty’s Dreamachine by the MSU Wind Symphony with Glennie as soloist.

“It’s incredible that we get to work with the musicians and evolve with them,” says Ard, who plays with the University’s Wind Symphony and Jazz Band. “It reminds us why we’re artists and why we’re musicians, to see these people who are out there doing what we want to do at the very highest levels.”

See the full list of performances and classes at Cali Immersive Residency.

Photo Gallery

Violinist Melissa White makes notes on the score of “Dissonance” during an open rehearsal of the Harlem Quartet, which performs at New York’s Merkin Concert Hall on March 12, 2022, and on March 14 at Montclair’s Leshowitz Recital Hall.

 

Montclair Wind Sypmphony at rehearsal
The Montclair Wind Symphony rehearses for a March 4 world premiere of Michael Daugherty’s Dreamachine in the Kasser Theater.

 

Musicians clapping on stage
Cali musicians applaud Kamala Sankaram following the Montclair performance. The program featured students in the composer’s works Ololyga, The Far Shore and Eight Phases of Luna. Shown from left are Taylor Amato, William Hobbs, Courtney San Martin, Jason Zacher, GaDa Lambert and Seungchan Hong.

Story by Staff Writer Marilyn Joyce Lehren. Photos by University Photographer Mike Peters.

You May Also Like:

Learning From a Master
Orchestra Rocks Monday Night Football