| Project Grants |
| Project Grantees |
| Calendar of Funded Events |
| Professional Development Grants |
| Premiere Recording Grants |
| Premiere Recording Grantees |
| Reporting Forms |
| Grants: Grantees:
2003 Grantees |
| 2003 Grantees Academy of Vocal Arts | American Harp Society, Philadelphia Chapter | Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts | Curtis Institute of Music | Mann Center for the Performing Arts | Montgomery County Community College | Philadelphia Classical Symphony | Philadelphia Folklore Project | Philadelphia Museum of Art | Philadelphia Orchestra | Piffaro | Prince Music Theater | Relâche | Sedgwick Cultural Center | SRUTI, the India Music and Dance Society | Strings for Schools | Panelist biographies |
Grant amount: $51,345 The Academy of Vocal Arts will offer a concert presentation of Puccini’s rarely performed opera Edgar. With this performance—a regional premiere for Philadelphia audiences—AVA, joined by the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, will make its debut in the Perelman Theatre at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, with an additional performance in Centennial Hall at the Haverford School. The project also includes a radio broadcast over WRTI-FM and outreach performances for local middle and high school students. Founded in 1934, the Academy of Vocal
Arts provides tuition-free vocal training and opera experience
to talented young singers who have the potential for international stature.
AVA graduates include winners of prestigious vocal competitions, such
as the Richard Tucker Foundation Award and the Pavarotti Competition,
and frequently perform on the major opera stages of the world. Each
year AVA presents its resident artists in fully stages opera performances;
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Grant amount: $2,000 The Philadelphia Chapter of the American Harp Society will commission a new work by Philadelphia composer James Primosch for the Jubal Trio (harp, flute, and voice). The commissioned work will be a set of arrangements of sacred tunes: "How Can I Keep from Singing," "Be Thou My Vision," and "What Wondrous Love is This?" The world premiere will be presented at the national conference of the American Harp Society held in Philadelphia in June 2004. The American Harp
Society fosters the appreciation of the harp, encourages repertoire
development for the harp and seeks to improve the quality of performance
of harpists. Its Philadelphia
Chapter was founded in 1977 and presents recitals by nationally
renowned and student |
Grant amount: $80,000 The Annenberg Center will present the Philadelphia region’s only gospel music series, pairing nationally renowned gospel soloists and choirs (Pastor Hezekiah Walker and the Love Fellowship Choir, Dottie Peoples, and Wilmington Chester Mass Choir) with local artists (the Brockington Ensemble, Freedom Choir of Philadelphia, Tamika Patton, and the David Winslow Singers). The ensembles will perform in residencies and outreach services at West Philadelphia’s Drew Elementary School and University City High School and offer workshops with local church gospel choirs. Dr. Carol Muller, ethnomusicologist and Program Director for Penn’s 2003-04 Humanities Forum "Belief," will develop public academic programs to coincide with the gospel music series, and her students will solicit oral histories from participating artists and choirs as part of their coursework. Founded in 1971, the Annenberg
Center for the Performing Arts presents more than 170 performances each year as part of its PENN Presents
series. The Annenberg Center attracts over 175,000 people annually to
PENN Presents' performances. In keeping with its tradition of presenting
a varied program of established artists and artists new to Philadelphia,
PENN Presents' roster for the 2002-2003 season includes a jazz series
featuring some of the world’s most acclaimed artists, such as
the Michael Brecker Quartet and Juan de Marcos Gonzalez’s Afro-Cuban
All-Stars; a classical and choral music series with performances by
the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, Chanticleer, and the Tallis Scholars;
a new music series featuring eighth blackbird, Philip Glass, and Philadelphia’s
Relâche ensemble; and world music |
Grant amount: $80,000 The Curtis Institute of Music will present "Roremania," a festival celebrating the 80th birthday of renowned composer and Curtis alumnus Ned Rorem. A two-week series of events will begin on Mr. Rorem’s birthday (October 23, 2003) and conclude on November 7th. The festival includes a performance of his song cycle Evidence of Things Not Seen; a retrospective of his songs by students in the Curtis Vocal Studies Department; an all-Rorem chamber music recital featuring performances by Curtis faculty members, including Jeffrey Khaner (flute), Richard Woodhams (oboe), Elizabeth Hainen (harp), and Hugh Sung (piano); and a panel discussion with Mr. Rorem and his former composition students. The festival will culminate in two performances of Mr. Rorem’s opera Miss Julie in the Perelman Theatre. The Curtis Institute of Music trains
exceptionally gifted young musicians for careers as performing artists
on the highest professional level. Founded by Mary Louise Curtis Bok
in 1924, the Curtis Institute offers tuition-free training with today’s
most respected artists and teachers, including Julius Baker, Leon Fleisher,
Claude Frank, Gary Graffman, Jaime Laredo, Otto-Werner Mueller, Ned
Rorem, and Peter Serkin, among others. Curtis’s ensembles include
a symphony |
Grant amount: $50,000 The Mann Center for the Performing Arts will offer a multi-media production of music by Terence Blanchard featured in the films of Spike Lee. Performers will include Angelique Kidjo, Floetry, and Angie Stone with a jazz ensemble and chamber orchestra. The event, which will be hosted by Mr. Lee, will also feature a specially designed projection of images from Lee’s films. Originally founded as the summer home of the Philadelphia Orchestra,
the Mann Center for the Performing
Arts is the only outdoor cultural arts venue in the Philadelphia
region and one of the largest of its kind in the nation. Each summer,
the Mann Center presents a diverse range of popular, |
Grant amount: $23,500 Montgomery County Community College will present performances by the Ron Carter Ensemble and the String Trio of New York that will explore the commonalities between jazz and classical music and bring together these musical idioms and their historically divergent audiences. The String Trio of New York will present a program of both contemporary and classic jazz compositions. The Ron Carter Ensemble’s program will focus on repertoire by Bach. The project also includes lecture/demonstrations on improvisation and the history of jazz, and a panel discussion with the hosts of WRTI’s "Crossover," Jill Pasternak and Jack Buerkle, with a subsequent broadcast. The cultural mission of Montgomery County
Community College is to serve as a focal point for cultural activities,
providing public access to the arts for county residents through arts
presenting and educational activities. Over its 14-year history, MCCC’s
Lively Arts Series
has introduced audiences to the work of exemplary artists representing
a variety of performing mediums from |
Grant amount: $60,000 The Philadelphia Classical Symphony will present Composer Connections, a program that brings together Philadelphia-based composers and performers as partners in the creation and performance of new concerti specifically written for underused solo instruments. Maurice Wright and Andrea Clearfield will compose works for Nitzan Haroz (trombone) and Angela Zator Nelson (percussion), respectively. These works will be integrated into thematically unified programs designed to educate listeners about the solo instrument and the ways composers have historically addressed their idiomatic qualities. The project will include two residency programs at the Shawmont School (a magnet school for music) and the High School for the Creative and Performing Arts in downtown Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Classical
Symphony was established in 1993 to foster an appreciation for classical
music among new and diverse audience groups, as well as to provide a
more relaxed, inviting performance format for concertgoers. In an effort
to engage audiences, symphony events are organized around thematic programs
and historical practices and frequently |
Grant amount: $30,000 The Philadelphia Folklore Project will sponsor residencies and performances by local traditional artists Mogauwane Mahloele (South African BaPedi songwriter and performer), Tito Rubio (flamenco guitarist), and John Wilkie (West African and Afro-Cuban drummer). Artists will conduct 18-week residencies at PFP’s new venue, develop new repertoire in their respective traditions, and offer public performances. The Philadelphia Folklore
Project is a 16-year-old multi-disciplinary urban folklife organization
committed to identifying, documenting, presenting, and supporting significant
local folk artists and to preserving and strengthening the folk cultural
life of the Philadelphia community. PFP offers exhibitions, concerts,
workshops and assistance to artists and communities; conducts ongoing
field research into community-based local arts, history, and culture;
preserves a record of Philadelphia’s folklife in its archive;
and offers arts |
Grant amount: $30,000 The Philadelphia Museum of Art will expand its Friday Jazz Series to feature four performances by jazz artists whose work integrates various musical and cultural influences: Omar Sosa (Cuba), Richard Bona (Cameroon), Brave Old World (Eastern European klezmer), and Luciana Souza (Brazil). Chartered in 1876, the Philadelphia
Museum of Art is among the largest art museums in the United States
and houses collections of works from around the world. The museum presents
two weekly concert series: a Wednesday
night series featuring eclectic music and dance performances, films,
gallery talks, and menus based on themes derived from museum exhibitions; |
Grant amount: $160,000 The Philadelphia Orchestra will perform 11 works by living composers, including four world premiere commissions by Gerald Levinson, Ned Rorem, Richard Danielpour, and Nicholas Maw; the U.S. premieres of works by Oliver Knussen, Hans Werner Henze, and James MacMillan; and Philadelphia Orchestra first performances of works by John Corigliano, Jennifer Higdon, Roberto Sierra, and John Adams. Performances will feature renowned guest artists Thomas Hampson, baritone; Joshua Bell, violin; Andrés Cárdenes, violin; and Vadim Repin, violin; and guest conductors Roberto Abbado, David Robertson, Oliver Knussen, Marin Alsop, Simon Rattle, and Charles Dutoit. Founded in 1900, the Philadelphia
Orchestra has distinguished itself as one of the leading orchestras
in the world through a century of acclaimed performances, historic international
tours, and best-selling recordings. Led by Music Director Wolfgang Sawallisch
since 1993, the orchestra recently celebrated its 100th Anniversary
through a series of activities surrounding the year 2000, with performances,
publications, tours, and broadcasts (including the internationally televised
gala Birthday Concert on November 16, 2000). |
Grant amount: $30,000 Piffaro will present The Holly and the Ivy, a fully staged and costumed production based on texts and music of 15th and early 16th century English carols modeled after early Tudor "entertainments" of the 16th century. Guest artists include Laura Heimes (soprano), Paul Shipper (voice, lute), Christa Patton (harp, winds), and Mark Jaster (actor). Piffaro, the Renaissance Band
brings to its audiences historically informed performances of music
from the late Medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, in the
manner of the civic, court, and chapel wind bands that existed between
1450 and 1650. The ensemble has toured extensively throughout the US
and Europe. Piffaro has had successive recording |
Grant amount: $80,000 The Prince Music Theater will mount a retrospective of the opera and theater work of William Bolcom and Arnold Weinstein as part of the American Music Theater Festival’s 20th anniversary celebration in spring 2004. The Bolcom/Weinstein celebration will feature a theatrical revival of Casino Paradise (American Music Theater Festival world premiere, 1990), starring Joan Morris; a concert of their operatic work (McTeague and A View from the Bridge), which will include a sneak preview of Bolcom’s newest work, Idiot’s Delight (world premiere scheduled for 2005), featuring Joan Morris and Timothy Nolen with William Bolcom at the piano; and a cabaret of Bolcom and Weinstein songs, including The Last Lousy Moments of Love. The retrospective will also include master classes on composition by Bolcom and Weinstein, and on cabaret and opera performance by Morris and Nolen. Founded in 1984 as the annual American Music Theater Festival, the
Prince Music Theater
is dedicated to developing the unique American art form of music theater
over a wide aesthetic range, including opera, music drama, musical comedy,
and experimental work. In its 18-year history, the Prince has mounted
more than 100 major productions, including more than 50 world or American
premieres, featuring the work of Philip Glass, Julie Taymore, |
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Grant amount: $30,000 Relâche will commission new works by Tiyé Giraud, Ikue Mori, Kamran Ince, and Uri Caine to be performed on the ensemble’s 2003-04 concert series, Future Sounds. The series follows an inter-cultural exchange thematic framework, with elements of inter-disciplinary collaboration that include improvisatory dance by Phrenic New Ballet in Uri Caine’s work. Each program will be co-curated by the commissioned composer and performed twice in Philadelphia. Tiyé Giraud, Ikue Mori, and Uri Caine will appear as guest artists with the ensemble. Founded in 1979, Relâche
is an eight-member variable instrumental ensemble dedicated to supporting,
performing, and promoting music by living composers. Its repertoire
maintains a close connection to the high art of classical composition
and performance, but also succeeds in embracing the breadth of contemporary
music culture, incorporating aspects of jazz, rock, popular, electronic,
and world music. The ensemble maintains a repertoire of more |
Grant amount: $20,655 Unexpected Light brings together the jazz quartet of Jane Ira Bloom and lighting designer James F. Ingalls for two concert performances in which the interactions of music and light create a new improvised work. Bloom will conduct a residency session on improvisation with the Sedgwick Cultural Center’s Teen Jazz Workshop, and Bloom and Ingalls will hold a panel discussion on interdisciplinary art practice with members of the community and theatre and music professionals. The Sedgwick Cultural Center,
dedicated to building community through the arts, provides a common
meeting ground in the heart of Philadelphia’s historic northwest.
Highlights of past seasons include concerts |
Grant amount: $22,500 SRUTI will present performances by Kadri Gopalnath, the only saxophone player in Indian classical music, accompanied by Kanyakumari (violin) and Thenkanikottai Mani (thavil); and Ali Akbar Khan, one of the pioneering figures in introducing Indian music to the West, on the sarode, accompanied by Swapan Chaudhuri (tabla), Alam Khan (sarode), and Manik Khan (tanpura). SRUTI will also present lecture/demonstrations by Geetha Ramanathan Bennett (vina) and Trichy Sankaran (mridangam) on melody and rhythm, respectively, in Indian classical music. SRUTI, the India Music and Dance Society
strives to enhance the cultural awareness of the region by presenting
live Indian classical music and dance programs. Founded in 1986, SRUTI
has organized over 85 |
Grant amount: $30,000 Strings for Schools will offer a performance featuring highly regarded Latin jazz artists Paquito D’Rivera and Giovanni Hidalgo alongside Strings for Schools roster artists John Blake, Jr. and Marlon Simon, with Simon’s band, the Nagual Spirits. The main concert will be presented at a downtown venue, with an additional performance held at a high school located in the Hispanic community and a student workshop at the Asociación de Músicos Latino Americanos. Founded in 1974, Strings
for Schools presents educational programs on jazz, classical, and
multicultural/multiethnic musical traditions to students in Philadelphia
and the surrounding communities. Strings for Schools offers over 500
school and public concerts a year and has collaborated |
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Emil Kang (panel chair), President and Executive Director,
Detroit Symphony Orchestra Carmen Balthrop, soprano, Associate Professor of Music, University
of Maryland Michael Cain, pianist, Professor of Piano and Improvisation,
New England Conservatory Karen Chester, Director, Merkin Concert Hall Robert Garfias, Professor of Anthropology, University of California,
Irvine Mark Kausch, Manager, Classical & Cultural Programming,
Public Radio International Robert Porco, Director of Choruses, Cleveland Orchestra Joan Tower, composer, Professor of Music, Bard College |
2008 Premiere Recording Grantees
2003 Project Grantees