Friday March 22, 8:00, All Saints Parish, 1773 Beacon St, Brookline, MA 02445
The Vortex Series for New and Improvised Music is proud to present a varied program that will include new vocal music by composer John Heiss featuring soprano Jessica Cooper with pianist Scott Nicholas. The acclaimed New York based percussion duo, Loop 2.4.3 will present original acoustic and electro-acoustic works which blend classical jazz and rock influences. The program will also feature the Black Brunel and Carlson Trio, presenting new works for viola clarinet and piano by Libby Larsen, Gordon Jacob and the world premiere of 'Focal Point' by composer Pamela Marshall. In keeping with the Vortex tradition of musical experimentation, the evening will also feature first time improvised collaborations by featured artists.
Loop 2.4.3 creates
uniquely American music with a rock and roll heart and skills
informed by classical training, jazz, poetry, and experimentalism.
Praised for their “intricate, energetic performances,” (New
York Times) and their “taut compositions with a stunning
improvisational sense,” (Time Out Chicago) virtuosic percussionists
and composers Thomas Kozumplik and Lorne Watson create evocative
narratives using percussion, electronics, voice, strings, and more.
Their “transportive percussion odysseys” (Boston Phoenix) journey
through grounded primal energy to cosmic atmospheric reaches in
“dramatic, layered, colorful, and brilliantly constructed” (First
Coast News.com) compositions most often compared to the music of
Steve Reich, Terry Riley, and Harry Partch. “Kozumplik and Watson
never sound like makers of arbitrary music...It all sounds like part
of a well-thought-out tradition. Only the tradition has never existed
until now.” (Fresh Air, NPR)
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| Jessica Cooper |
Pianist Scott Nicholas is on the faculty of Emerson College and Suffolk University. His affinity for playing the Spanish repertoire has led him to appearances in L’ Antigua, Guatemala at the Mosaico festival, and also a command performance for the President and First Lady of El Salvador. Locally, he has been heard on WGBH Boston, live- radio broadcast, and has appeared with the Borromeo String Quartet, the New England Chamber Orchestra, and the Airforce Band of Liberty Chamber ensemble. He currently performs as a soloist in the Boston Secession.
Violist Anne Black enjoys an active career as
both a musician and visual artist. She performs with the Boston Pops
Esplanade Orchestra, as well as with the Boston Symphony and Boston
Pops as an extra violist. She is principal violist of the Pro Arte
Chamber Orchestra of Boston, and the orchestras of the Cantata
Singers, Concord Chorus, and Metropolitan Chorale. A frequent
performer of contemporary music, Black is violist of the Dinosaur
Annex Music Ensemble. She also performs with Collage New Music and
can be heard on Collage’s Grammy-nominated recording of John
Harbison’s Mottetti di Montale. She appeared as viola
d’amore soloist in Meyerbeer's opera “Les Huguenots” with the
American Symphony in 2009.
Paul Carlson performs frequently in the Boston area both as a
solo recitalist and as a collaborative musician. Freshness
characterizes his programs, which strike a careful balance between the
familiarity of great music of the standard repertoire, and the exciting
discovery of new or neglected works. Beginning with his doctoral work
at Boston University, he has studied the piano performance style of
Claude Debussy, including extensive analysis of early sound recordings
made by pianists close to the composer, as well as by the composer
himself. In addition to performance of Debussy, Dr. Carlson is keenly
interested in the playing of pianists active during the three or four
decades before World War I. His recitals often feature music from this
period, as well as unfairly neglected music from the early
20th-Century. Music of living composers also forms a strong component
of many of his performances, as was shown by his premiers of works by
Hayg Boyadjian, John McDonald and Marti Epstein. He also performs
frequently with the Lexington Symphony, with whom he has played
concertos by Darius Milhaud and Amy Beach. Dr. Carlson’s teachers have
included Tong-Il Han, Raymond Hanson, Maria-Clodes Jaguaribe, Boris
Berman and Fred Broer. He has taught at Gordon College, the Boston
University Tanglewood Institute and the Lexington Music School. He also
serves as President of the Chromatic Club of Boston, a 123-year-old
club dedicated to providing performance opportunities to some of the
most talented emerging musicians in the Boston area.![]() |
| Todd Brunel |
Admission: $15.00 general, $10.00 for students and seniors
All Saints Church is wheel chair accessible.



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