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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART:20200215T131000Z
DTEND:20200215T141500Z
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SUMMARY:Beethoven Reflected II: The ConTempo Quartet
DESCRIPTION:The second concert in the Beethoven Reflected series features the ConTempo Quartet. It's on Saturday 15 February 2020 at 1.10pm\n\n\n\nThis concert traces threads of connection from the work of Beethoven through to New York?s Julia Wolfe and Cork composer sisters Irene and Linda Buckley. There is a particular focus on his String Quartet No. 14 in C Sharp Minor\, Op. 131\, written in 1826\, the year before Beethoven died. It is said that upon listening to a performance of this quartet\, Schubert remarked\, ?After this\, what is left for us to write?? Movements I\, VI and VII are featured\, serving as departure points for reimagining material in new work composed for the concert by Linda and Irene Buckley. Julia Wolfe has often spoken of the Beethoven influence in her own work\, most notably from his late quartets. Four Marys marries the worlds of Appalachian folk music with the elegiac qualities of late Beethoven\, reflecting Wolfe?s dissolving of boundaries between genres.\n\n\n\n\n \n\nThe ConTempo Quartet\n\nBogdan Sofei\, violin\n\nIngrid Nicola\, violin\n\nAndreea Banciu\, viola\n\nAdrian Mantu\, cello\n\nProgramme\n\nLinda Buckley\n\nI Adagio Reflected ?\n\nLudwig van Beethoven\n\nString Quartet Op.131: I ? Adagio\n\nLinda Buckley\n\nI Adagio Reflected II ?\n\nJulia Wolfe\n\nFour Marys\n\nIrene Buckley\n\nVI Adagio Reflected ?\n\nLinda Buckley\n\nVII Allegro Reflected ?\n\nLudwig van Beethoven\n\nString Quartet Op.131: VI & VII ? Adagio & Allegro\n\n? Commissioned by the National String Quartet Foundation with funds from The Arts Council/An Chomhairle Eala on\n\n\n\nIrene Buckley\, a composer from Cork\, holds a BMus and a PhD in Composition from University College Cork and an MA in Music Technology from Queens University Belfast. Irene composes for film\, theatre and dance productions. In recent years she has focused on composing live scores for silent movies. These include Dreyer?s The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) for soprano\, organ and electronics and Epstein?s The Fall of the House of Usher (1928) for organ and electronics (both were commissioned by the Cork French Film Festival and have since toured in venues such as Glasgow Cathedral for Glasgow Film Festival and Union Chapel\, London) and Murnau?s Nosferatu (1922) for viola\, cello\, organ and electronics and was co-composed by Linda Buckley (commissioned by Union Chapel\, London and performed at the 2018 Cork Film Festival and The New Sounds Live Silent Films series\, New York).\n\n\n\nLinda Buckley is an Irish composer who has written extensively for orchestra\, and has a particular interest in merging her classical training with the worlds of post punk\, folk and ambient electronica. Her work has been described as ?fantastically brutal\, reminiscent of the glitch music of acts such as Autechre? (Liam Cagney\, Composing the Island) and ?engaging with an area of experience that new music is generally shy of\, which\, simplified and reduced to a single word\, I?d call ecstasy? (Bob Gilmore\, Journal of Music). Awards include a Fulbright scholarship to NYU and the Frankfurt Visual Music Award 2011. Performances include the BBC Symphony Orchestra\, Icebreaker\, Iarla O?Lionaird\, Joby Burgess\, Ensemble Mise-En and Crash Ensemble. She currently lectures in Composition at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.\n\n\n\nJulia Wolfe draws inspiration from folk\, classical\, and rock genres\, bringing a modern sensibility to each while simultaneously tearing down the walls between them. Wolfe?s music is distinguished by an intense physicality and a relentless power that pushes performers to extremes and demands attention from the audience. She has written a major body of work for strings\, from quartets to full orchestra. Her music has been heard at venues throughout the world and has been recorded on the Cantaloupe Music\, Teldec\, Point/Universal\, Sony Classical\, and Argo/Decca labels. In addition to receiving the Pulitzer Prize\, Wolfe was a 2016 MacArthur Fellow\, she received the 2015 Herb Alpert Award in Music\, and was named Musical America?s 2019 Composer of the Year. She is on faculty at the NYU Steinhardt School and is co-founder/co-artistic director of New York?s legendary music collective Bang on a Can.\n\n\n\nLudwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was a German composer and pianist. His early achievements\, as composer and performer\, show him to be extending the Viennese Classical tradition that he had inherited from Mozart and Haydn. As personal affliction ? deafness\, and the inability to enter into happy personal relationships ? loomed larger\, he began to compose in an increasingly individual musical style\, and at the end of his life he wrote his most sublime and profound works. From his success at combining tradition and exploration and personal expression\, he came to be regarded as the dominant musical figure of the 19th century\, and scarcely any significant composer since his time has escaped his influence or failed to acknowledge it. For the respect his works have commanded of musicians\, and the popularity they have enjoyed among wider audiences\, he is probably the most admired composer in the history of Western music. (Grove Music Online)\n\n\n\nThe ConTempo Quartet is the resident quartet of the Galway Music Residency and was RTE?s Resident Quartet from 2014 until 2019. Praised as a ?fabulous foursome? (Irish Independent) and noted for performances which are ?exceptional? (The Strad) and ?full of imaginative daring? (The Irish Times)\, RT  ConTempo Quartet has forged a unique place in Irish musical life. Since its formation in Bucharest in 1995\, the quartet has performed more than 1\,800 concerts world-wide in 46 countries\, including prestigious venues such as Wigmore Hall\; Th  tre du Ch telet\, Paris\; St Martin-in-the-Fields\; Berliner Philharmonie\; Palazzo del Quirinale\, Rome\; Carnegie Hall and the Opera House Tel-Aviv. ConTempo have had the honour to meet and play in front of world personalities such as Prince Charles\, Nelson Mandela\, Pope John Paul II\, EU Ministers\, Michael D. Higgins\, Hollywood stars and Nobel Prize winners. The ensemble has won a record of 14 international prizes (including Munich\, Rome\, Berlin\, Prague and London) and worked alongside artists of the highest calibre including Emma Johnson\, Yuko Inoue\, Hugh Tinney\, Chen Zimbalista\, J r me Pernoo\, Peter Donohue and Martin Roscoe. Collaborations with other distinguished quartets have also been a feature\, such as the Amadeus\, Arditti\, Vanbrugh\, Casals and Endellion.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div style="text-align:left">\n<div>\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><span style="background-color: rgb(255\, 255\, 255)\; color: rgb(51\, 51\, 51)\;">The second concert in the </span><a href="https://triskelartscentre.ie/special-events/beethoven-reflected/" rel="noopener" style="background-color: transparent\; box-sizing: border-box\; color: rgb(22\, 117\, 177)\; font-family: sans-serif\,Arial\,Verdana\,&quot\;Trebuchet MS&quot\;\; font-size: 13px\; font-style: normal\; font-variant: normal\; font-weight: 400\; letter-spacing: normal\; orphans: 2\; text-align: left\; text-decoration: none\; text-indent: 0px\; text-transform: none\; -webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px\; white-space: normal\; word-spacing: 0px\;" target="_blank">Beethoven Reflected</a><span style="background-color: rgb(255\, 255\, 255)\; color: rgb(51\, 51\, 51)\;"> series features t</span>he ConTempo Quartet. It&#39\;s on Saturday 15 February 2020 at 1.10pm<br />\n<br />\nThis concert traces threads of connection from the work of Beethoven through to New York?s Julia Wolfe and Cork composer sisters Irene and Linda Buckley. There is a particular focus on his String Quartet No. 14 in C Sharp Minor\, Op. 131\, written in 1826\, the year before Beethoven died. It is said that upon listening to a performance of this quartet\, Schubert remarked\, ?After this\, what is left for us to write?? Movements I\, VI and VII are featured\, serving as departure points for reimagining material in new work composed for the concert by Linda and Irene Buckley. Julia Wolfe has often spoken of the Beethoven influence in her own work\, most notably from his late quartets. Four Marys marries the worlds of Appalachian folk music with the elegiac qualities of late Beethoven\, reflecting Wolfe?s dissolving of boundaries between genres.</span></span></div>\n</div>\n</div>\n\n<div style="text-align:left">\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<h3 style="color:inherit\; font-style:normal\; text-align:left"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">The ConTempo Quartet</span></span></h3>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Bogdan Sofei\, violin<br />\nIngrid Nicola\, violin<br />\nAndreea Banciu\, viola<br />\nAdrian Mantu\, cello</span></span></div>\n\n<h3 style="color:inherit\; font-style:normal\; text-align:left"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Programme</span></span></h3>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Linda Buckley<br />\n<em>I Adagio Reflected ?</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Ludwig van Beethoven<br />\n<em>String Quartet Op.131: I ? Adagio</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Linda Buckley<br />\n<em>I Adagio Reflected II ?</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Julia Wolfe<br />\n<em>Four Marys</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Irene Buckley<br />\n<em>VI Adagio Reflected ?</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Linda Buckley<br />\n<em>VII Allegro Reflected ?</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;">Ludwig van Beethoven<br />\n<em>String Quartet Op.131: VI &amp\; VII ? Adagio &amp\; Allegro</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><em>? Commissioned by the National String Quartet Foundation with funds from The Arts Council/An Chomhairle Eala&iacute\;on</em></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><br />\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>Irene Buckley</strong>\, a composer from Cork\, holds a BMus and a PhD in Composition from University College Cork and an MA in Music Technology from Queens University Belfast. Irene composes for film\, theatre and dance productions. In recent years she has focused on composing live scores for silent movies. These include Dreyer?s <em>The Passion of Joan of Arc</em> (1928) for soprano\, organ and electronics and Epstein?s <em>The Fall of the House of Usher</em> (1928) for organ and electronics (both were commissioned by the Cork French Film Festival and have since toured in venues such as Glasgow Cathedral for Glasgow Film Festival and Union Chapel\, London) and Murnau?s <em>Nosferatu</em> (1922) for viola\, cello\, organ and electronics and was co-composed by Linda Buckley (commissioned by Union Chapel\, London and performed at the 2018 Cork Film Festival and The New Sounds Live Silent Films series\, New York).</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><br />\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>Linda Buckley</strong> is an Irish composer who has written extensively for orchestra\, and has a particular interest in merging her classical training with the worlds of post punk\, folk and ambient electronica. Her work has been described as ?fantastically brutal\, reminiscent of the glitch music of acts such as Autechre? (Liam Cagney\, Composing the Island) and ?engaging with an area of experience that new music is generally shy of\, which\, simplified and reduced to a single word\, I?d call ecstasy? (Bob Gilmore\, Journal of Music). Awards include a Fulbright scholarship to NYU and the Frankfurt Visual Music Award 2011. Performances include the BBC Symphony Orchestra\, Icebreaker\, Iarla O?Lionaird\, Joby Burgess\, Ensemble Mise-En and Crash Ensemble. She currently lectures in Composition at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><br />\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>Julia Wolfe</strong> draws inspiration from folk\, classical\, and rock genres\, bringing a modern sensibility to each while simultaneously tearing down the walls between them. Wolfe?s music is distinguished by an intense physicality and a relentless power that pushes performers to extremes and demands attention from the audience. She has written a major body of work for strings\, from quartets to full orchestra. Her music has been heard at venues throughout the world and has been recorded on the Cantaloupe Music\, Teldec\, Point/Universal\, Sony Classical\, and Argo/Decca labels. In addition to receiving the Pulitzer Prize\, Wolfe was a 2016 MacArthur Fellow\, she received the 2015 Herb Alpert Award in Music\, and was named Musical America?s 2019 Composer of the Year. She is on faculty at the NYU Steinhardt School and is co-founder/co-artistic director of New York?s legendary music collective Bang on a Can.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><br />\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>Ludwig van Beethoven</strong> (1770-1827) was a German composer and pianist. His early achievements\, as composer and performer\, show him to be extending the Viennese Classical tradition that he had inherited from Mozart and Haydn. As personal affliction ? deafness\, and the inability to enter into happy personal relationships ? loomed larger\, he began to compose in an increasingly individual musical style\, and at the end of his life he wrote his most sublime and profound works. From his success at combining tradition and exploration and personal expression\, he came to be regarded as the dominant musical figure of the 19th century\, and scarcely any significant composer since his time has escaped his influence or failed to acknowledge it. For the respect his works have commanded of musicians\, and the popularity they have enjoyed among wider audiences\, he is probably the most admired composer in the history of Western music. (Grove Music Online)</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="margin-left: 0px\; margin-right: 0px\; text-align: left\;"><br />\n<span style="font-size:14px\;"><span style="font-family:arial\;"><strong>The ConTempo Quartet</strong> is the resident quartet of the Galway Music Residency and was RTE?s Resident Quartet from 2014 until 2019. Praised as a ?fabulous foursome? (Irish Independent) and noted for performances which are ?exceptional? (The Strad) and ?full of imaginative daring? (The Irish Times)\, RT&Eacute\; ConTempo Quartet has forged a unique place in Irish musical life. Since its formation in Bucharest in 1995\, the quartet has performed more than 1\,800 concerts world-wide in 46 countries\, including prestigious venues such as Wigmore Hall\; Th&eacute\;&acirc\;tre du Ch&acirc\;telet\, Paris\; St Martin-in-the-Fields\; Berliner Philharmonie\; Palazzo del Quirinale\, Rome\; Carnegie Hall and the Opera House Tel-Aviv. ConTempo have had the honour to meet and play in front of world personalities such as Prince Charles\, Nelson Mandela\, Pope John Paul II\, EU Ministers\, Michael D. Higgins\, Hollywood stars and Nobel Prize winners. The ensemble has won a record of 14 international prizes (including Munich\, Rome\, Berlin\, Prague and London) and worked alongside artists of the highest calibre including Emma Johnson\, Yuko Inoue\, Hugh Tinney\, Chen Zimbalista\, J&eacute\;r&ocirc\;me Pernoo\, Peter Donohue and Martin Roscoe. Collaborations with other distinguished quartets have also been a feature\, such as the Amadeus\, Arditti\, Vanbrugh\, Casals and Endellion.</span></span></div>\n</div>\n
LOCATION:Triskel Arts Centre Tobin Street Cork
UID:e.2489.21653
SEQUENCE:3
DTSTAMP:20260521T080938Z
URL:https://chamber.corkchamber.ie/events/details/beethoven-reflected-ii-the-contempo-quartet-21653
END:VEVENT

END:VCALENDAR
