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May 8 | 1991 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT

 

Inauguration to Spotlight MIT Music

4 Premieres
Inauguration to Spotlight MIT Musicians 
By Mary Haller
Office of the Arts 

MIT's rich collection of musicians and composers will make a significant 
contribution to the events surrounding the inauguration of Charles M. 
Vest as MIT's 15th president. 

Launched with a "Showcase Concert" on the eve of the inauguration 
ceremony and concluding with post-inaugural performances by the MIT 
choirs and the MIT Symphony Orchestra, the weekend festivities will 
feature the talents of MIT's student ensembles, student and faculty 
composers, and artists-in-residence.

The Inaugural "Showcase Concert" on Thursday, May 9, at 8pm in Kresge 
Auditorium will present four student groups and music by MIT student 
composers. 

Under the direction of John Corley, the MIT Concert Band will perform 
Thomas McGah's Four Fantasies on Greek Folk Songs, commissioned by and 
dedicated to the group in 1990. The MIT Symphony Orchestra, David 
Epstein, conductor, will perform Schumann's Symphony No. 4 in D Minor 
and the MIT Chamber Chorus, under the direction of William Cutter, 
assistant conductor of the MIT Concert Choir and Chamber Chorus, will 
perform Bach's Lobet den Herrn, alle heiden. Directed by Jamshied 
Sharifi, The MIT Festival Jazz Ensemble, recent winner of the Notre Dame 
Collegiate Jazz Festival and recipient of a 1991 Laya and Jerome B. 
Wiesner Award, will perform music by Sharifi, Duke Ellington and Hoagy 
Carmichael. In addition, the program will feature the premiere of a 
song, Spring, commissioned for the inauguration by Yumi Oshima, '94, as 
well as songs by MIT composition students Alexander P. Rigopulos, '92, 
Cynthia L. Harris, '91, and Charles W. Pokorny, '91. The songs will be 
performed by Karol L. Bennett, soprano, and John D. McDonald, piano, 
artists-in-residence in music and theater arts. Tickets for the 
performance and for the Inaugural Ceremony are available in the 
Information Center (Rm 7-121), the MIT Museum Shop in the Student 
Center, and in Rm A-165 at Lincoln Laboratory. As seating is limited in 
Kresge Auditorium, ticket availability has been restricted to MIT 
faculty, staff, and special guests; students are encouraged to enjoy an 
outside broadcast of the concert from the barbeque area near the Kresge 
Oval (weather permitting), or to view the concert on a large screen at 
the ice rink in the Johnson Athletics Center. The concert will also be 
broadcast live on WMBR.

The Inaugural Ceremony on Friday, May 10, beginning at 9:30am with a 
procession to Killian Court, will feature the premieres of special 
fanfares composed for the occasion by four members of the music faculty, 
John H. Harbison, Peter Child, Edward Cohen, and Evan Ziporyn. 

Harbison's Vest-Pocket Fanfare, and Child's Fanfare will be performed as 
processionals, Cohen's New from Old will precede the presentation of Dr. 
Vest, and Ziporyn's Bossa Nova, (the title a tongue-in-cheek reference 
to MIT's "new boss" rather than an indication of a musical style) will 
be played as a recessional. 

In addition, the Chamber Choir will perform songs by Purcell, Morley, 
and Marenzio and the National Anthem will be sung by Ellen T. Harris, 
associate provost for the arts and professor of music, an accomplished 
soprano soloist. The program will also include  Professor Stephen 
Tapscott reciting his "Poem of Welcome," written for the inauguration. 
MIT students, faculty and staff are invited to the ceremony; tickets are 
available through the sources listed above. 

The MIT Concert Choir and Chamber Chorus will join forces in a post-
inaugural performance of Mendelssohn's Elijah, on Friday, May 10, at 8pm 
in Kresge Auditorium. The concert will be led by noted New York City 
conductor Amy Kaiser, filling in for director John Oliver (who is 
recovering from a recent injury). 

The performance will feature Boston-area professionals: Suzanne Balaes, 
soprano; Mary Westbrook-Geha, mezzo soprano; Paul Kirby, tenor; Paul 
Rowe, baritone; Joseph Hardy, boy soprano; and MIT student soloists: 
Susan Jackson '91, soprano; Alice Lin '89, mezzo soprano; and graduate 
student Kenneth Goodson, baritone. Combined, the two MIT vocal groups 
will number 170 and will be accompanied by 50 professional musicians. 

The concert is dedicated to the memory of Klaus Liepmann, the first 
full-time professor of music at MIT and the founder of the present MIT 
music program, who died last July. Admission is $5 at the door, free for 
MIT students.

MIT Symphony Orchestra clarinetist Paul Green will be featured soloist 
with the MIT Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of David Epstein, 
in a performance of Mozart's Clarinet Concerto on Saturday, May 11, at 
8pm in Kresge Auditorium. A distinguished soloist whose performing 
career began with an invitation at age 13 to play in a New York 
Philharmonic Young People's Concert under the direction of Leonard 
Bernstein, Green recently returned to performing after a 10-year career 
in law. In 1988 he won the Distinguished Artists competition sponsored 
by Artists International, and has received high praise for his recent 
New York City recitals. Also on the program will be Brahms' Academic 
Festival Overture and Copland's Appalachian Spring. Admission is $1 at 
the door. 

Dr. and Mrs. Vest were closely involved in the planning and selection of 
music involved in the inaugural events, and according to Professor  
Harris, felt strongly that the talents of MIT's faculty and students 
should be featured prominently. 

"We were enthusiastic about finding music that was particularly loved by 
the Vests," she said, "and I was delighted by the active role they 
played in making MIT's musicians such a significant part of the 
inaugural activities. Beyond the four premieres [for the inaugural 
ceremony]," she continued, "the music comes largely from the celebratory 
compositions of the Baroque period.

"It is impossible to imagine any kind of significant ceremony without 
the special inspiration provided by music," Harris concluded, "and it is 
wonderfully appropriate to celebrate the investiture of a new president 
with new music by MIT's talented students and faculty."

	 


May 8 | 1991 | Tech Talk | Search | MIT News | Comments | MIT