All material found in the Press Releases section is provided by parties entirely independent of Musical America, which is not responsible for content.
Press Releases
The Azrieli Foundation Partners with Talea Ensemble for U.S. Premieres in New York City
Talea Ensemble performs the U.S. premieres of three Azrieli Music Prize-winning works
On October 16 at 8 PM at the DiMenna Center for Classical Music, Talea Ensemble conducted by James Baker is thrilled to perform the U.S. premieres of award-winning works by 2020 Azrieli Music Prize (AMP) laureates: Keiko Devaux (The Azrieli Commission for Canadian Music), Yotam Haber (The Azrieli Commission for Jewish Music) and Yitzhak Yedid (The Azrieli Prize for Jewish Music). Mezzo-soprano Eliza Bagg joins for Yotam Haber’s Estro Poetico-armonico III. Also featured on the program are David Adamcyk’s Double Concerto and Jonathan Monro’s arrangement of Dissidence by the celebrated Canadian composer Pierre Mercure. Soprano Sharon Azrieli, who conceived of the Azrieli Music Prizes for the Azrieli Foundation, joins the ensemble for Dissidence and Sam Jones, trumpet, and Mike Lormand, trombone, join for Double Concerto. ???????
The first AMP-winning work on the program, Keiko Devaux’s Arras – meaning a richly woven tapestry – contains a kaleidoscope of influences from across generations, cultures and musical genres as found within Devaux’s, and her families’, sonic histories. Devaux draws inspiration from a range of material representing the professions of both sides of her family tree (the sound of wind through fields symbolizing agriculture, and that of a mechanical loom apropos of weaving), the natural environments in which they lived (including patterns of animal behaviours such as those of starlings and fireflies), as well as the musical traditions both religious (plainsong and Buddhist chant) and vernacular (chanson franc¸aise and Japanese-American popular) through which these families expressed their identities. The result is in an evocative, constantly shifting and captivating musical experience.
Yotam Haber’s Estro Poetico-armonico III for mezzo-soprano and chamber orchestra – the third work in a series – continues the composer's long exploration into the music of Rome’s Jewish community, as discovered through the archival recordings of ethnomusicologist Leo Levi. Haber employs these recordings of traditional cantillation and liturgical texts in conjunction with – or in opposition to – texts by four modern Israeli poets (Ory Bernstein, Eli Eliahu, Israel Bar Kohav and Aharon Shabtai) that reflect upon aspects of modern Israeli life while also grappling with its history.
The final work by a 2020 AMP laureate, Yitzhak Yedid’s Kadosh Kadosh and Cursed, was inspired by the Temple Mount in Jerusalem – a holy yet conflicted place, sacred to Muslims and Jews alike. Yedid writes, “The work, in two parts, consists of 24 connected musical scenes that bridge compositional approaches originating from two opposing musical traditions: on the one hand from Arabic art music and Mizrahi piyyutim (Arabic-influenced, Jewish liturgical songs) and on the other from European traditions, avant-garde music and improvisation.”
This concert serves as part of the prize package each 2020 AMP laureate receives – valued at $200,000 CAD – which also includes the recent album release (Oct. 1) New Jewish Music Vol. 3 – Azrieli Music Prizes. Other components of the prize package include a cash award of $50,000 CAD; a gala world premiere; and another international performance in Israel this coming December. Tickets ($10-20) for this performance are available at https://bit.ly/AMPinNYCOct2021.
Established in 2014, the biennial Azrieli Music Prizes seek to fulfill the Azrieli Foundation’s pursuit of its belief in music as a vital human endeavour that allows humankind to express its creativity; to expand its worldview; and to foster positive cultural exchanges. The Prizes will be announcing their 2022 laureates on November 4, 2021.
About Keiko Devaux, 2020 Azrieli Commission for Canadian Music Winner
Keiko Devaux is a Montre´al-based composer who writes for ensembles, dance and film. Her compositions focus on musical ‘translations’ of experience through the interpretation of extra-musical form and patterns. She holds a Master’s in Instrumental Composition from the University of Montre´al and is currently completing a Doctorate in Composition under the direction of Ana Sokolovic´ and Pierre Michaud. She has been awarded several distinctions, including the 2019 Jan V. Matejcek Award from the SOCAN Foundation and the audience and jury prizes of the 2017 Acce`s Arkea Competition. She was the 2016-18 composer in residence with Le Nouvel Ensemble Moderne and is currently a Carrefour composer-in-residence with the National Arts Centre Orchestra.
About Yotam Haber, 2020 Azrieli Commission for Jewish Music Winner
Yotam Haber was born in Holland and grew up in Israel, Nigeria and Milwaukee. He is the recipient of many prestigious prizes, residencies and commissions, and is widely performed by the leading new music groups around the world. Haber is Associate Professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory and Artistic Director Emeritus of MATA, the non-profit organization founded by Philip Glass that, since 1996, has been dedicated to commissioning and presenting new works by young composers from around the world.
About Yitzhak Yedid, 2020 Azrieli Prize for Jewish Music Winner
The multi award-winning Yitzhak Yedid melds the music of his ancestral Syrian and Iraqi Jewish background with Western art music. His musical style is eclectic, multicultural and very personal, blending jazz and Jewish cantorial music with classic European and avant-garde techniques. His added experience as an improvising concert pianist allows him to create a highly expressive, eclectic and alluring new Jewish music. Yedid studied piano at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, continued his schooling at the New England Conservatory and earned a Ph.D. from Monash University. He currently lectures in composition and piano at the Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University in Brisbane. Most recently, Yedid was named a 2021 Prelude Composer in Residence at Gallop House in Australia.
About the Azrieli Music Prizes
Established in 2014, the biennial Azrieli Music Prizes (AMP) seek to fulfill the Azrieli Foundation’s pursuit of its belief in music as a vital human endeavour that allows humankind to express its creativity; to expand its worldview; and to foster positive cultural exchanges. Open to the international music community, AMP accepts nominations for works from individuals and institutions of all nationalities, faiths, backgrounds and affiliations, which are then submitted to its two expert juries through an open call for scores and proposals.
The three AMP prize packages – valued at $200,000 CAD per Laureate – currently makes it the top competition for music composition in Canada and one of the largest in the world. Past prize-winners include Israeli-American composer Avner Dorman (2018), Canadian composer Kelly-Marie Murphy (2018), Canadian composer Brian Current (2016) and US-based Polish composer Wlad Marhulets (2016).
About Talea Ensemble
Heralded as “a crucial part of the New York cultural ecosphere” by The New York Times, the Talea Ensemble’s mission is to champion musical creativity, cultivate curious listeners, and bring visionary new works to life with vibrant performances that remain in the audience’s imagination long after a concert
