Terrie Baune,
violinist, in addition to being a member of Earplay, is Associate Concertmaster
of the Oakland-East Bay Symphony, and a member of the Empyrean Ensemble, a professional
new music ensemble in residence at the University of California, Davis. Ms.
Baune's professional credits include concertmaster positions with the Womans'
Philharmonic, Fresno Philharmonic, Santa Cruz County Symphony and Rohnert Park
Symphony. She was a member of the National Symphony Orchestra for four years;
she also spent two years as a member of the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra
of New Zealand, where she toured and recorded for Radio New Zealand with the
Gabrielli Trio, performed with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, and toured
the country as solo violinist with the Concert By Candlelight Orchestra. Ms.
Baune has performed as concertmaster with many of the San Francisco Bay Area's
orchestras, and has been heard in recital throughout Northern California. Her
recording of the Maddalena Lombardini Violin Concerto #5 with the Women's
Philharmonic is available on the Newport Classic label. Ms. Baune has been on
the faculty of Sonoma State University, California State University, Stanislaus,
and UC Davis. She has served as string program coordinator for the Cazadero
Music Camp and taught at Humboldt State University Preparatory Academy. She
is on the coaching staff of the Humboldt and Sequoia Chamber Music Workshops,
and is a frequent performer on the HSU Faculty Artist Series. Ms. Baune graduated
from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 1978, having attended summer festivals
in Aspen and Taos. As a student she won the Oberlin Concerto Competition and
the Marin Symphony Association Award as well as a full scholarship to the Aspen
Festival Orchestra and Grand Prize in the Joseph Fischoff Chamber Music Competition.
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Flutist
Tod Brody grew up in Chicago, where his early studies were with Marie
Moulton, of the Chicago Lyric Opera Orchestra, and Walfrid Kujala, of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra. His collegiate studies were with Paul Renzi at San Francisco
State University, and he later studied with Merrill Jordan and Lloyd Gowen.
He has also worked in master classes with Alain Marion and Jean-Pierre Rampal.
Mr. Brody was a member of the Sacramento
Symphony for many years, where he was frequently featured as a soloist on both
flute and piccolo. A specialist in new music, Mr. Brody is principal flutist
for the San Francisco ensemble EARPLAY, the San Francisco Contemporary Music
Players, and the Empyrean Ensemble. He has performed numerous world premieres,
and has been recorded on the Arabesque, CRI, Capstone, Centaur, Charisma/Virgin,
Magnon, and New World labels. He is also the principal flutist for the Sacramento
Opera and for California Musical Theater, and appears frequently with the orchestras
of the San Francisco Opera and San Francisco ballet. Mr. Brody is on the faculty
of the University of California at Davis, where he teaches flute and chamber
music.
In addition to his activities as
a performer and teacher, Mr. Brody is Director of the San Francisco Bay Area
Chapter of American Composers Forum, an organization dedicated to linking composers
and performers with communities, encouraging the making, playing, and enjoyment
of new music.
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Particularly interested
in opera as well as new music, Mary Chun conducted the Canadian and European
premieres of John Adams's earthquake romance, I was Looking at the Ceiling
and then I saw the Sky at the Festival de Theatre des Ameriques in Montreal,
the Festival d'Automne in Paris, and the Thalia Theater in Hamburg, with the
Finnish contemporary ensemble AVANTI. She was invited by the East Slovakian
State Opera to conduct the European premiere of American composer Martin Kalmanoff's
Insect Comedy, and American Stage Director Peter Sellars and composer
Tan Dun asked for her musical assistance with Dun's latest opera, Peony Pavilion.
Last season she conducted sold-out performances of Puccini's Madama Butterfly
in Honolulu with the Hawaii Opera Theater and was asked by the composer to conduct
the world premiere of Carla Lucero's opera, Wuornos, in San Francisco
in 2001. She was the Music Director for the Texas Shakespeare Festival 2000
where she conducted the world premiere performances of Mort Garson's Revoco.
She has been a member of the conducting staffs of notable opera companies in
the United States and France including the San Francisco Opera, the Los Angeles
Music Center Opera, The Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, the Chatelet Theatre in
Paris and the Opera de Lyon, where she was also the Director of Musical Studies
for Music Director Kent Nagano. Her recording credits include music direction
for two CDs of orchestra works by American composer Peter Allen and a 30 second
commercial for Disney.
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Based in the
San Francisco Bay Area, Peter Josheff maintains a dual career as a composer
and clarinetist. He is a founding member of Earplay, a member of the Empyrean
Ensemble and of the Berkeley Contemporary Chamber Players. He has performed
with most of the new music ensembles in the Bay Area, including the Paul Dresher
Ensemble, the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, Composers Inc., and
the Left Coast Ensemble. He has appeared on many concert series and festivals
devoted to new music, among them, Asian Music Week 2000 (Yokohama, Japan), the
Centro Nacional de las Artes (Mexico City), the Music on the Edge Series (University
of Pittsburgh), the Monday Evening Music Series (LA County Museum of Art), the
Other Minds Festival (SF), the Pacific Rim Festival (UCSC), the Mills College
Concert Series, the Tempo Festival (UC Berkeley), and the Sacramento Festival
of New Music. Josheff performed in a production of Erling Wold's chamber opera
A Little Girl Dreams of Taking the Veil at the ODC Theater, and with the
Lawrence Pech Dance Company at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (SF); and he
recorded music of Richard Felciano with the SF Contemporary Music Players, and
music of Mario Davidovsky with the Empyrean Ensemble. He has had numerous works
dedicated to him by composers. His playing can be heard on recordings by Erling
Wold, D'Arcy Reynolds, Hi Kyung Kim, Richard Festinger, the Empyrean Ensemble,
the Club Foot Orchestra, Beth Custer, Earplay and others, on the Elektra, CRI,
Centaur, Arhoolie, Spooky Pooch, and Rastascan record labels.
Josheff has an active interest in
popular and improvised music and has taken part in multimedia collaborations
at many of San Francisco's best-known performance spaces, including Intersection
for the Arts, New Langton Arts, the Marsh, Radio Valencia, and Bruno's. He has
performed and recorded with the Club Foot Orchestra and Beth Custer's Clarinet
Thing. Joseheff's music has been performed locally by the Berkeley Symphony
Orchestra, the Oakland Civic Orchestra, Earplay, the Empyrean Ensemble, City
Winds, Schwungvoll, and on many concert series; and nationally at the Manhattan
School of Music, the University of Vermont, the University of Illinois, the
University of Wisconsin, and the University of Pittsburgh. He has been the recipient
of a grant from Meet the Composer and has been in residence at the MacDowell
colony.
Josheff teaches clarinet at San Francisco
State University.
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Thalia Moore,
cello, is a native of Washington D.C. She began her cello studies with Robert
Hofmekler, and after only 5 years of study appeared as soloist with the National
Symphony Orchestra of Washington at the Kennedy Center Concert Hall. She attended
the Julliard School of Music as a scholarship student of Lynn Harrell, and received
her Bachelor's and Master's Degrees in 1979 and 1980. While at Juilliard, she
was the recipient of the Walter and Elsie Naumberg Scholarship and won first
prize in the National Arts and Letters String Competition. Since 1982, Ms. Moore
has been Associate Principal Cellist of the San Francisco Opera Orchestra, and
in 1989 joined the cello section of the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra. She
has continued to concertize extensively, appearing as soloist at Avery Fisher
Hall, (Lincoln Center), Carnegie Recital Hall, Kennedy Center Terrace Theater,
Herbst Theater, (San Francisco), and San Francisco Legion of Honor, among others.
She has also performed as guest artist at the Olympic Music Festival, (Seattle,
Washington), the Lake Tahoe Summer Music Festival, and the Music in the Vineyards
Chamber Music Festival, among others. In 1991, Ms. Moore appeared in the last
episode of the TV series, Midnight Caller, and in 1993 was featured as soloist
with the San Francisco Chamber Symphony under the direction of Roger Norrington.
In 1996, she performed one of the first Bay Area performances of the composer's
version of Tchaikovsky's Rococo Variations with the San Francisco Chamber
Orchestra. She has performed with the Dunsmuir Piano Quartet, and is a member
of the Empyrean Ensemble, with which she has recorded works by Mario Davidovsky
and Maria Niederberger. Recently, she was named a Cowles Visiting Artist at
Grinnell College, Iowa, and in 1999 won election to the Board of Governors of
the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.
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Pianist Karen
Rosenak is an almost-native of the San Francisco Bay Area. She is particularly
interested in the contrast between early fortepiano music, especially of C.P.E.
Bach, and the most recently composed piano and chamber music. She was a founding
member and pianist for many years with the San Francisco-based new music ensemble
EARPLAY and the Davis-based Empyrean Ensemble, and has performed in countless
premieres with these and other new music groups. She studied fortepiano with
Margaret Fabrizio at Stanford University, and has participated in master classes
with Malcolm Bilson. She studied modern piano with Carlo Bussotti and Nathan
Schwartz. She is on the faculty at University of California, Berkeley, where
she teaches musicianship and contemporary chamber music.
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Violist Ellen
Ruth Rose relocated in 1998 to the San Francisco Bay Area after having spent
several years in Cologne, Germany, where she first became immersed in the music
of our times. As a member of the experimental ensembles Musik Fabrik and ThŸrmchen
Ensemble and frequent guest with Frankfurt's Ensemble Modern, she toured throughout
Europe, premiering and recording countless works. She has performed as soloist
with the West German Radio Chorus and appeared at the Cologne Triennial, Berlin
Biennial, Salzburg Zeitflu§, Brussels Ars Nova, Venice Biennial and Budapest
Autumn festivals.
Continuing her role as an avid interpreter
of new music, she is currently a member of EARPLAY, the San Francisco-based
contemporary ensemble, and Empyrean Ensemble, the new music ensemble in residence
at the University of California at Davis. Critics have praised her recent solo
appearances with these groups as "beautifully performed" and having "real fire."
Ms. Rose also appears often with other Bay Area ensembles, including Left Coast
Ensemble, the Berkeley Contemporary Chamber Players and Santa Cruz New Music
Works. In collaboration with Empyrean Ensemble, Ensemble Modern, Musik Fabrik,
ThŸrmchen Ensemble and others, Ms. Rose has appeared on numerous recordings
on the Sony Classical, RCA, Arabesque, CPO, Wergo, Capriccio, and Soundspell
labels. A Wergo CD of the chamber music of German composer Caspar Johannes Walter,
including several pieces written for her, won the German Recording Critics'
new music prize in 1998.
She has also interpreted more traditional
chamber music repertory in several international settings, including the Marlboro
Music Festival, the International Musicians Seminar in Cornwall, England, the
Banff Center for the Arts, and at chamber music festivals in Italy and Finland.
Ms. Rose holds degrees in
viola performance from the Juilliard School and the Northwest German Music Academy
in Detmold, Germany, and a degree in English and American history and literature
from Harvard University. She teaches viola and chamber music at UC Davis. Her
own viola teachers have included Heidi Castleman, Nobuko Imai, Marcus Thompson
and Karen Tuttle.
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