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Press Releases

Amit Peled Named Music Director of CityMusic Cleveland

July 29, 2019 | By Katy Salomon
Account Director, Morahan Arts and Media


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: 
Katy Salomon | Morahan Arts and Media
katy@morahanartsandmedia.com | 863.660.2214


 


Amit Peled Named Music Director
of CityMusic Cleveland

Beginning in the 2019-2020 Season, the Orchestra’s 
16th Year Presenting Free Concerts in Northeast Ohio

“Fiery and intelligent” – The Strad 

Watch Amit’s May 2019 Performance with CityMusic  

www.amitpeled.com | www.citymusiccleveland.org 


 


Cleveland, OH (July 29, 2019)— CityMusic Cleveland announces the appointment of Music Director Amit Peledeffective with the 2019-2020 season. In 2019-20, the Israeli-American cellist, conductor, and pedagogue will conduct two, five-concert series. 

Of his appointment, Peled says, "I am deeply honored and excited to be named the next music director of CityMusic. Ever since my first encounter with the orchestra this past spring, I have felt that I found a musical home, a place where making music at the highest level meets the desire to share the art form with as many people as possible and ensuring that it is available to audiences free of charge. I look forward to continuing this special tradition and to enhance it even further. I can’t wait to meet as many people as possible from the community and of course to dive into the symphonic repertoire with my fellow musicians in the orchestra. Lastly, as a huge NBA fan, I’m excited to check out the Cavaliers games in between rehearsals and concerts!"

Amit Peled, a musician of profound artistry and charismatic stage presence, is acclaimed worldwide as one of the most exciting and virtuosic instrumentalists on the concert stage today. At 6'5" tall, Peled started life as a basketball player and was called "larger than life" and "Jacqueline du Pré in a farmer's body" when he enveloped his cello. Peled strives to break down the barriers of the concert hall, about which The Baltimore Sun wrote, “His amiable and inviting personality is exactly the type everyone says we’ll need more of if classical music is to survive.” From 2012 through 2018, Peled performed on the Pablo Casals 1733 Goffriller cello, which was loaned to him personally by Casals’ widow, Marta Casals Istomin. Musical America named Peled one of the Top 30 Influencers of 2015.

Peled won conducting competitions while studying with Maestro Shinik Hahn at Yale University and the late Maestra Tamara Brooks at New England Conservatory, planting a seed in Peled’s heart for what has become a combined love of sharing music with the public from the conducting podium as well as from the soloist riser. Peled’s conducting engagements this season include his debut with the Peabody Symphony Orchestra in Schubert’s Symphony No. 5 and leading the second season of his own Mount Vernon Virtuosi, an orchestra Peled established to nurture young artists and to present free concerts in Maryland and Virginia. A debut conducting CD exploring the music of Mozart is slated for release in 2019 on Peled’s label CTM Classics.

In 2017, Peled published a children’s book, A Cello Named Pablo, written by Marni Fogelson and illustrated by Avi Katz. Funded by a successful Kickstarter campaign, it follows Peled’s journey from the basketball courts of rural Israel to the world’s great concert halls playing one of the most famous instruments of all time and continuing the legacy of Pablo Casals.

The Amit Peled Cello Gang is composed of students from Peled's studio at the Peabody Institute at Johns Hopkins University, where he has taught since 2003 and was one of the youngest professors ever hired by a major conservatory. The students in the Amit Peled Cello Gang range in age from undergraduate freshmen to second year master's students, and the group comes together often to perform works written or arranged for cello ensemble. Peled and the Cello Gang also record in professional studios and tour regularly around the country, performing cello concerti, cello choir repertoire, and more in an effort to give the conservatory students practical experience as professional touring artists. Peled is also the founder, conductor, and artistic director of the Mount Vernon Virtuosi, a chamber orchestra dedicated to launching the careers of recently graduated music students, which this year performs a five-program season in Silver Spring and Rockville, Maryland. 

Peled’s extensive discography includes critically acclaimed CDs on the Naxos, Centaur, CAP, CTM Classics, and Delos Labels. His release Casals Homage, which features the legendary 1915 Pablo Casals program, topped the iTunes charts in 2016. Peled and the Amit Peled Cello Gang released a cello ensemble album on Peled’s own label CTM Classics in October 2017. His recording, To Brahms with Love… From the Cello of Pablo Casals, features Brahms’ Cello Sonatas Nos. 1 and 2 performed with pianist Noreen Polera and was released on CAP Records in June 2018. The album was described by AllMusic as “[likely] composer approved, more so than almost any other contemporary recording.” Peled released a recording of Bach’s iconic Cello Suites Nos. 1-3 on the Casals cello in February 2019, which The Classic Review described as “a superb performance, warm-hearted, knowledgeable, and deeply felt” and AllMusic called “an important new statement in the history of these works.” Upcoming album releases include a recording of the Cassado cello sonatas for Naxos and the second installment of the Bach Suites for CTM Classics.

As an active chamber musician, Peled is a founding member of the famed Tempest Trio with pianist Alon Goldstein and violinist Ilya Kaler and the Goldstein-Peled-Fiterstein Trio with Alon Goldstein and clarinetist Alexander Fiterstein.

Raised on a kibbutz in Israel, Amit Peled began playing the cello at age 10. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland with his wife and children and now performs on a 1800 Thomas Dodd cello, which was handed to him by legendary cellist and pedagogue Bernard Greenhouse. For more information, visit www.amitpeled.com.

About CityMusic Cleveland
CityMusic Cleveland has carved a distinctive place in the cultural life of Northeast Ohio since its founding in 2004. Volunteers created the professional chamber orchestra to present free concerts in neighborhoods where audience members may have no other access to classical music. The organization has established a fresh orchestral paradigm by forging relationships, fostering community involvement in the arts, and offering programs full of artistic adventure.

Along with audience development, CityMusic is committed to teaching young people about the joys of music. Its education program,  The Clurie Bennis Children’s Outreach Series, presented in partnership with the Children’s Museum of Cleveland and neighborhood partners, provides diverse arts learning experiences to Cleveland children aged 4 to 9 in underserved areas. 

CityMusic has commissioned several works including  Margaret Brouwer’s Concerto for Violin and Chamber Orchestra (2007) and Daniel and Snakeman (2011)and Dan Visconti’s percussion concerto Roots to Branches (2014). Greek-born Canadian composer Christos Hatzis wrote Redemption: Book I for the orchestra and the Pacifica Quartet, who premiered the score in 2009 under guest conductor David Alan Miller. A year later, CityMusic made its New York debut at Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall in A Celebration of America’s Hellenic Community, a benefit program of music by Hatzis featuring the renowned Greek pop singer George Dalaras. In March of 2019 Avner Dorman’s Violin Concerto Nr. 3 was premiered by internationally  known violinist Sayaka Shoji. CityMusic Cleveland has commissioned John Clayton, an accomplished bass player and composer, whose new work which will be a celebration of African-American influence on classical music and jazz, to be performed in March of 2020.

Since its founding, the ensemble has performed under two music directors, James Gaffigan and Avner Dorman, and many guest conductors, including David Alan Miller, Joel Smirnoff, and Joshua Weilerstein. Its roster of guest soloists and ensembles has been stellar. Here’s a sampling: violinists Gil Shaham, Jennifer Koh, Kyung Sun Lee, Rachel Barton Pine, and Adele Anthony; cellists Edward Aaron and Jan Vogler; Singers Sasha Cooke, Chabrelle Williams, Joshua Blue and Raymond Aceto; clarinetists Franklin Cohen and Daniel Gilbert; and saxophonist Timothy McAllister.

CityMusic has released four compact discs. One features Brouwer’s Concerto for Violin and Chamber Orchestra paired with Stravinsky’s Danses concertantes and Mozart’s Symphony No. 39 under Gaffigan, who also conducts two other recordings of diverse fare. Smirnoff leads a recording devoted to the music of Mozart. Learn more at www.citymusiccleveland.org

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*Photo at the top of release by Israel Orange. Photo within the release by Marian Del Pino.

 

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