We’re excited to welcome composer James Romig to the Center
for 21st Century Music at the University at Buffalo next week. Next Wednesday,
October 10, he will offer a masterclass to UB graduate composers as well as give a presentation
on his own music. Romig, who has been on faculty at Western Illinois University in Macomb, Illinois, since 2002, is currently overseeing a dizzying amount of
performances of his pieces across the U.S., South America, and Europe. He
recently had his duet for flute and piano, Leaves
From Modern Trees, performed at the Iowa Composers Forum Festival, and his
percussion trio, The Frame Problem,
is scheduled for performances in Medellin, Columbia, Baylor University,
University of Hartford, and Salle Stengel de Lorentzen, France, throughout the
rest of October. The Frame Problem
will then continue onto another 29 performances across the globe throughout the remainder of
2012. More information on upcoming performances of Romig’s works can be found
on his website.
James Romig |
According to his biography, Romig, "composes music that endeavors to
reflect the intricate complexity of nature, where fundamental structures exert
influence on both small-scale iteration and large-scale design, obscuring the
boundaries between form and content. His work shows the influence of academic
study with Charles Wuorinen and Milton Babbitt, interaction with the natural
world through hiking and photography, and an interest in chaos theory, fractal
geometry, and small-world networks."
Check out this amazing performance of The Frame Problem
being interpretted by the Tak-Nara Percussion Trio:
Below is another outstanding percussion piece by James
Romig, this time a solo work titled A
Slightly Evil Machine, interpretted here by Caleb Herron:
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