The Center for 21st Century Music is delighted
to welcome star new music violinist Irvine Arditti back to the June in Buffalo festival.
It is difficult to overstate Arditti’s importance in the new music world: he
has played a leading role as advocate for the creation of new works for string
instruments. Between his activities as violin soloist and his role in founding
(in 1974) and leading the Arditti Quartet, he is responsible for commissioning,
premiering, and recording countless important works.
Numerous important violin solos and concerti have been
written for Arditti, who has appeared as soloist with distinguished orchestras
and ensembles such as the Bavarian Radio Orchestra, BBC Symphony, Berlin Radio
Symphony, Royal Concertgebouw, Munich Philharmonic, Orchestre National de
Paris, Philharmonia Orchestra, Ensemble Modern, Asko Ensemble, London
Sinfonietta, and the Nieuw Ensemble. As leader of the Arditti Quartet, he has
received additional accolades. The quartet’s recordings (over 200 albums to
date) have received multiple
Gramophone (“Grammy”) Awards and Deutsche Schallplattenpreisen, and a Coup de
Coeur Prize and Grand Prix from the Academie Charles Cros in 2004; the group
has played at most major new music festivals worldwide, and is the only
ensemble to receive the Ernst von Siemens Prize for lifetime achievement.
Irvine Arditti at June in Buffalo 2015 |
Arditti has
played a crucial role in reviving composers’ interest in string instruments. In
the decades after WWII, interest in strings and in particular the string
quartet waned, due in part because of their (negatively perceived) associations
with “high” Western culture. This medium may have become obsolete were it not
for the advocacy of the Ardittis—alongside the contemporaneous LaSalle, Berner,
and Kronos Quartets—in encouraging living composers to write for the medium.
Today, the string quartet medium is alive and well, with a vibrant scene of
younger string quartets (including June in Buffalo resident ensemble MIVOS
Quartet) and an ever-growing and accomplished repertoire of works by living
composers of a wide range of aesthetic persuasions.
Irvine Arditti and the Arditti Quartet have long been
closely connected to UB and the Center for 21st Century Music. The
Center’s artistic director, SUNY
Distinguished Professor David Felder, wrote all three of his string quartets for
the group (the first one dates from 1987-88), who went on to play them at
prominent new music festivals worldwide. His latest string quartet, Netivot, written for both the Arditti
and JACK Quartets, was premiered by the Ardittis at June in Buffalo 2016.
Thanks to the Center’s support, both Irvine Arditti and his quartet have been
able to visit June in Buffalo with greatly increased frequency—the quartet was
resident ensemble in 2007, 2010, and 2016, while Arditti was guest soloist in
2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2017.
At this year’s
festival, Irvine Arditti will perform a solo recital of works by senior faculty
Roger Reynolds, Hilda Paredes, and Hans Thomalla—all of them long-time Arditti
collaborators—on Thursday, June 7 at 7:30pm in Baird Recital Hall. The recital
also includes a work by the late Portugese composer Emmanuel Nunes. The
following Saturday, June 9, at 7:30pm in Slee Hall, Arditti joins Signal
Ensemble to give the second full performance of Center artistic director David
Felder’s violin concerto Jeu de Tarot
which he premiered at the Center in November with Ensemble Linea.