In early November, the renowned Ensemble Linea arrives at the Center for 21st Century Music for a residency. The ensemble will perform a concert on November 8 featuring the world premiere of Center artistic director David Felder’s new violin concerto “Jeu de Tarot,” where they will be joined by acclaimed violin soloist Irvine Arditti (of the Arditti Quartet). While in Buffalo, the ensemble will also hold a workshop of new works by Center PhD composers.
Founded in
1998 by pianist and conductor Jean-Philippe Wurtz, the Strasbourg-based
ensemble has quickly risen to become one of the most highly regarded new music
ensembles in the world. Many of the most prestigious new music festivals around
the world have hosted performances by Linea: Musica
(Strasbourg, France, from 2002 to 2017), ManiFeste (Paris, France, 2016),
Darmstadt Ferienkursen (Germany, 2012), Archipel (Geneva, Switzerland, 2008 and
2015), ACMF (Seoul, South Korea, 2009), Budapest Autumn Festival (Hungary,
2009), Aspects des Musiques d’Aujourd’hui (Caen, France, 2009), Ars Musica
(Brussels, Belgium, 2011), Ultraschall (Berlin, Germany, January 2013),
Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (United Kingdom, 2011 and 2013),
Contempuls Festival (Prague, Czech Republic, 2013), reMusik Festival (Saint
Petersburg, Russia, 2015), MATA Festival (New York, USA, 2016), and the
Center’s own June In Buffalo (2011 and 2013). Similarly, the ensemble’s recordings
have received awards such as the coveted Diapason d’Or (given out by the
critics of Diapason magazine), the Orphée
d’Or de la Création Lyrique (given out by the Lyric Recordings Academy), and
the Fonogram prize for Best Contemporary Music album at the Hungarian Music
Awards (the Hungarian equivalent of the Grammies), and their performances have
been broadcast by the national radio stations across Europe, including Deutschland
Kulturradio, France Musique, and BBC Radio 3—who aired a live concert by the
ensemble. As a result of this recognition, leading composers of today have been
inspired to write new works for the ensemble, including Klaus Huber, Ivo Malec,
Younghi Pagh-Paan, Michael Jarrell, Péter Eötvös, and Philippe Manoury.
Also committed to education, outreach, and access, the
ensemble has developed numerous projects to bring performances and instruction
to range of settings worldwide. The ensemble regularly collaborates with student
composers, in residencies at universities like UB, Harvard, and Northwestern,
as well as at festival academies such as Voix Nouvelles (New Voices) at the
Abbaye de Royaumont, Darmstädter Ferienkurse (Germany), the composition academy
of Philippe Manoury at Festival Musica, as well as June in Buffalo. In 2014,
the ensemble set up its own academy focused on the performance of contemporary
music, for both instrumentalists and conductors. The annual academy has
expanded each year, with increasingly international groups of students.
The ensemble’s educational
activities also reach beyond student musicians, bringing contemporary chamber
music to places where it is not readily
accessible. The
ensemble regularly presents free concerts, workshops, and public rehearsals in public libraries, music schools, municipalities, and
cultural centers, often in collaboration with the cultural center of
Vendenheim, the multimedia libraries of Strasbourg and Cernay, and the cultural
department of the city of Saint-Louis. The ensemble often develops innovative
programming for these occasions, such as “Stockhausen for Kids,” a staged
multimedia event developed in collaboration with puppet theater company Flash
Marionnettes, which has been presented across France, drawing a crowd of 4000
at the Musica Festival.
Concurrently, the ensemble aims to be a musical ambassador,
an “active
participant and facilitator in the geopolitical landscape” through worldwide touring. Towards this end, the ensemble has sought
to tour in regions where institutional infrastructures for contemporary art
music are less developed: the Middle East, Russia, and Korea. The ensemble has
also toured the US three times prior to this year’s visit (2011, 2013 and 2016),
sponsored by FACE (French American Fund for Contemporary Music) and anchored by
visits to the Center for 21st Century Music. Linéa’s concerts in the
US have attracted wide notice, including coverage in the New
York Times. At June in Buffalo, their exciting yet polished performances
of challenging pieces by faculty and student composers made strong impressions
on audiences. We greatly look forward to their return!
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