Showing posts with label Anthony Elliott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Elliott. Show all posts

Monday, January 17, 2011

Nokuthula Ngwenyama, 2: 'I was just thrilled when I was chosen as the Duncanson Artist-in-Residence for the year!'

[Nokuthula Ngwenyama]

Violist and violinist Nokuthula Ngwenyama, whose website is http://www.Ngwenyama.com, has been featured at AfriClassical.com since 2005. AfriClassical interviewed her by phone on Jan. 13, 2011. Part 1 of the interview appeared Jan. 15. Today we present Part 2:

Wow! Well of course, sometimes people call you because a volcano erupts in Iceland!
Yes, that happens too!
Is it Harold in Italy that you did on short notice?
Yes! In Cincinnati!
You sure got great reviews on that one!
Oh thanks! Well, you know, it always feels good to come in the hero at the last minute! People, I think, are very appreciative when you do that! But also, with something like Harold in Italy, it's just part of the standard repertoire. I think if you are a professional, you have to know that! Certain pieces at least that I've played, if someone needed me to perform it tomorrow, I could do it! And that's one of those pieces, so...
Well, I can see why they called you then!
I was happy that I was able to be there, in the right place at the right time to help and to enjoy the performance! They are such a great orchestra – it was really a lot of fun!
Of course, that seems to have been a step on the way to your Duncanson residency!
Yes, well you know, Cincinnati is really a very musically and arts-minded town!
Yes!
Historically speaking as well! And when I played there, somebody heard me and knew about the Duncanson Artist-in-Residency Program, and knew that they were looking for a classical musician for that year. So they strongly recommended that they contact me, which they did, and they explained the program and so I submitted materials, and I was just thrilled when I was chosen as the Duncanson Artist-in-Residence for the year! So really, I guess it did turn out to be a stepping stone to that position. It was great to spend a couple weeks in Cincinnati going to schools, playing multiple recitals around the city, doing a lot of outreach, doing a lot of talking, working in the Museum as well. It was really a great experience!
It looked like they got their money's worth out of you!
Oh, they definitely worked me hard, but you know, it's something for the community, and I really think the program is wonderful, and I was happy to be out in the community doing all that kind of outreach and working with kids and all that. I think it's a really important thing that we have to do!
I noticed that you said it was a special pleasure to be able to honor the connection between African Americans in music and other fine arts?
Absolutely! I think that that's something that really is not part of mainstream knowledge, the contribution that African-Americans have made to the fine arts in this country or around the world! We just don't hear about it that much, and so when I became acquainted with Duncanson and his work, I just was blown away, especially given the time in which he lived and when he was actually able to flourish as an artist, and so I think celebrating that connection, being part of that legacy was a really wonderful thing for me to be a part of, and to show other people in the community that this legacy has been long-rooted in their community, and it continues to this day and is a part of their cultural heritage, was really important. I think it sheds light on things that should be mainstream and hopefully will become more mainstream, as people become more aware of these contributions.
Well I was very happy to write about it because it gets right to the heart of the message that is the focus of the blog.
Yes, absolutely!
Something else that you did just a year ago, involving classical music and diversity, you were a Sphinx Competition Juror I believe for 2010?
Yes, and that was the second time I'd actually served as a Juror for the Sphinx Competition.
Apparently you had an interesting pair of fellow performers while you were in the Detroit area; you performed with Sanford Allen and Anthony Elliott?
Yes!
What was that like?
Oh, my gosh! Well you know obviously their reputation precedes both of those people!
Yes!
Everyone told me what amazing players they were!
They were telling the truth, weren't they?
They were! So when we sat down to play, I was just blown away! Tony Elliott has such a beautiful rich sound, he's very musical, very sensitive! And Sanford plays like an angel! I mean, he has such a cantabile! He has a very distinct voice; he plays with incredible sweetness, incredible control. I was really just blown away playing with them! Actually, since then, Sanford has his Leef Peepers series in New York?
Yes.
So he invited me up to play with him this past Fall.
Oh!
I was able to play with him some more, and he's one of my favorite musicians to play with! I just love being able to spend time with him, talking with him about his experiences. I think that it's a very important connection for me to have. He's walked the walk, in a major way!
I believe he was the first permanent instrumentalist of African descent in the New York Philharmonic, wasn't he?
Yes, he was! But what's kind of hard to see though, today, is that I don't really see those numbers changing all that much in orchestras around the country, you know? I wish we could see a bigger increase in diversity in orchestras! We know the players are out there!
Yes, this is the 14th Sphinx Competition starting in a couple weeks, so the effort has been made for more than a decade, almost a decade and a half now, and I agree with you, we don't seem to have moved the needle very far!
No, they're not really reflecting that, so that's something that we need to kind of look at more deeply, and just keep pushing in the right direction!

Monday, May 24, 2010

Anthony Elliott: 'I am enjoying tremendously my time with the DCO' (Dexter Community Orchestra)

[Anthony Elliott]

John McLaughlin Williams, the prolific conductor and recording artist who received a Grammy award in 2007, and was subsequently nominated again, has updated us on the conducting activities of cellist and conductor Anthony D. Elliott: "Hi Bill, Anthony Elliot conducted the Dexter Symphony Orchestra yesterday. He's a candidate for music director there.
Best,
JMW

A local newspaper wrote of the May 23, 2010 concert in advance:

“Dexter Leader
May 5, 2010
By Sean Dalton, Heritage Newspapers
The Dexter Community Orchestra performs its final concert for the 2010 season with 'Quest for the Romantic' under guest conductor Anthony Elliott at 4 p.m. May 23 at Dexter High School. The program features Tchaikovsky’s orchestral fantasy 'Francesca da Rimini,' the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto performed by Pioneer High School senior Jacob Joyce, and Howard Hanson’s second symphony 'The Romantic.'

“'The theme refers to the subtitle of the romantic symphony by Howard Hanson,' Elliot said. 'The work is unabashedly romantic by nature, as are the two Tchaikovsky works. Many will recall hearing the second theme of the first movement featured as the lead-in on those radio broadcasts, leading some to call it the “Interlochen theme.”'

Elliott is a professor of cello at the University of Michigan, a frequent soloist with major symphony orchestras, and the conductor of the Michigan Youth Orchestra. The concert concludes the DCO’s search for a new music director. The new music director will be introduced in the fall. Should Elliott become the next music director of the DCO, it is his hope that the orchestra continues to grow its relationship with the community.

“'Certainly the DCO exists to be a performance outlet for its musicians, but it also has a role in terms of education and engagement that is potentially very powerful in its ramifications,' Elliot said. 'I am enjoying tremendously my time with the DCO and sincerely hope it works out to be a long-term relationship.'

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

'Music For Cello And Piano by African-American Composers'


[Music For Cello And Piano by African-American Composers; Anthony Elliott, cello; Toni-Marie Montgomery, piano (2003)]

Cellist Anthony D. Elliott is Professor of Music at the University of Michigan School of Music. AfriClassical posted a biographical profile on November 18, 2007: “Anthony Elliott, African American Cellist and Conductor.” The liner notes for Music For Cello And Piano by African-American Composers read: "Anthony Elliott is in great demand as a soloist, chamber music performer, conductor, and teacher.” Dr. Toni-Marie Montgomery is Dean of the School of Music, and Professor of Piano, at Northwestern University. The liner notes tell us: “In April of 1984, Toni-Marie Montgomery became the second recipient of the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in piano chamber music and accompanying from the University of Michigan.”

CDBaby.com says of the recording: “A wide variety of music written by black composers, much of it recorded here for the first time.” It opens with: “Spirituals, Five Negro Folk Songs,” arranged by Lawrence Brown. The liner notes give this information on Lawrence Brown (1893-1972): “Pianist Lawrence Brown was perhaps best known in his capacity as accompanist to legendary performers Roland Hayes and Paul Robeson.” The spirituals are: “Nobody knows de trouble I've seen”, “Ev'ry time I feel de spirit”, “Sometimes I feel like a motherless child”, “I know de Lord's laid his hands on me”, “Swing low, sweet chariot”.

Chad E. Hughes (b. 1977) is a native of Detroit who has studied both composition and conducting. His work on the CD is “1st Suite for Solo Violoncello”, consisting of “Minuet”, “Courante”, “Gigue”. It is followed by “Three Ways (for Cello and Piano)” by Augustus O. Hill, a composer and conductor who earned a Ph.D. in composition and music theory at the University of Michigan, according to VanguardVoices.org. Next is the “Lento” movement of “Dirge” from “Suite for Violoncello and Piano” by Howard Swanson (1907-1978). The liner notes say of Noel Da Costa, “Noel Da Costa was born in Lagos, Nigeria, lived in Kingston, Jamaica and in the West Indies.” “Five Verses With Vamps” is dedicated to Evalyn Steinbock, who premiered the work with pianist David Garvey in 1970.” The program concludes with “Sonata for Cello and Piano” by David Baker, whose website reads: “Hello and welcome to the Official Website of Dr. David N. Baker, world-renowned composer, multi-instrumentalist, educator, writer, clinician, pedagogue, and Chair of the Jazz Studies Department at Indiana University's Jacobs School of Music.” The three movements are marked “Fast”, “Slow”, “Fast”. The CD is one of seven listed at Anthony Elliott's personal website.