Cellist Joshua Roman Performs World Premiere of Mason Bates’s Cello Concerto with Seattle Symphony (Dec 11-13)

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Cellist Joshua Roman Performs World Premiere of Mason Bates’s Cello Concerto with Seattle Symphony (Dec 11-13)

 

“A cellist of extraordinary technical and musical gifts.” — San Francisco Chronicle

 

 

Joshua Roman will take the solo role in the world premiere of Mason Bates’s Cello Concerto on December 11-13 with the Seattle Symphony under Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla. Roman – “a cellist of bold character and poetic grace… who brings curiosity and electrical energy to every note,” according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer – has long been a star in Seattle. He served for two seasons as the principal cellist of the Seattle Symphony, being named to the post at age the of 22 in 2006; now a New Yorker pursuing a solo career, he continues his connection with the city in his eighth season as artistic director of the popular TownMusic chamber music series at Seattle’s Town Hall. The cellist will also perform the new Bates concerto, a Seattle Symphony co-commission along with the Columbus Symphony in Ohio and the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, with the Columbus Symphony under Rossen Milanov on January 30-31, with further performances planned for next season.

 

Roman first worked with Bates when performing a piece by the composer with the Seattle Chamber Players in 2008. The two were also guest artists at the first YouTube Symphony Orchestra concert at Carnegie Hall in 2009, where Roman performed the Sarabande from J.S. Bach’s Suite No. 1 in G major for solo cello. During the same time period, Roman and Bates performed together at the downtown New York club Le Poisson Rouge, where they played an improvisation based on Ligeti’s Solo Cello Sonata, with Bates joining in on electronics. Click here to watch a video of that performance.

 

Of Bates’s 25-minute work, Roman says: “Like a lot of Mason’s music, the Cello Concerto has a fresh sound, as well as a distinctly American character with its sense of modernism, openness and optimism. It has a lyrical feel, with all these beautiful little touches like glissandi that make it fun to play. There’s a blues influence in the harmonies, but you can also hear his experience with electronic music in the score, as there’s a feeling of pulse in the rhythms, a driving beat. And the openness in his harmonies reflects the openness of his personality as a musician. He’s exploratory and optimistic, open to collaboration and to possibilities.”

 

Roman’s activities on YouTube have given him a wide audience. He recently completed “The Popper Project,” a three-year video series on YouTube of unedited performances of etudes from David Popper’s The High School of Cello Playing that has drawn hundreds of thousands of views. He is currently at work on the popular “Everyday Bach” YouTube series, which showcases self-produced videos of the 36 movements from J. S. Bach’s Six Suites for Solo Cello performed in a variety of evocative spaces around the world. He performed the Gigue from Suite No. 1 at the Port of Stockton, CA, combining the optimistic movement with an iconic view from a city recovering from recent hardship. Roman played the Sarabande from Suite No. 4 by the ocean in La Jolla, CA, the last notes dying away as the sun set over the horizon. He most recently filmed himself playing the Prelude from Suite No. 3 in view of the new Freedom Tower in downtown Manhattan, the building suiting the “architectural” qualities of the music, according to the cellist.

 

About the “Everyday Bach” series, Roman says: “It’s an exploration of context and how it changes or underscores the meaning of music. It’s journey for me, and I may film some of the movements more than once, in different places. … YouTube has an appeal in that it’s this simple, free mode of dissemination of projects that otherwise would have a hard time getting out there. Simple and free – that’s pretty powerful for people.”

 

About Joshua Roman

 

Cellist Joshua Roman, a 2011 TED Fellow, has earned a national reputation for performing a wide range of repertoire with absolute commitment to communicating the essence of the music at its most organic level. He’s also recognized as an accomplished curator and composer, particularly in his work as Artistic Director of Seattle Town Hall’s TownMusic series, with a vision to engage and expand the classical music audience.  Recent highlights include concerto performances with the symphonies of San Francisco and Seattle and the LA Philharmonic, the world premiere of Aaron Jay Kernis’s new cello concerto Dreamsongs, recitals and chamber music concerts with top U.S. presenters and festivals, and collaborations with Yo-Yo Ma and Anna Deavere Smith.

 

Upcoming performances

 

Dec 11-13

Seattle, WA

Benaroya Hall

Mason Bates: Cello Concerto (world premiere)

Seattle Symphony Orchestra; Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla, conductor

 

Jan 20

San Francisco, CA

SF JAZZ Center

Lera Auerbach: Trio No. 3

With Daniel Hope, violin; Lera Auerbach, piano

 

Jan 24

Tulsa, OK

Tulsa Community College / Van Trease PACE

Dvorák: Cello Concerto

Signature Symphony; Michael Rossi, conductor

 

Jan 30 & 31

Columbus, OH

Ohio Theatre

Mason Bates: Cello Concerto

Columbus Symphony; Rossen Milanov, conductor

 

Feb 7

Frankfort, IL

Lincoln-Way North Performing Arts Center

Cello + Chocolate: a partnership with Vosges Haut Chocolat

Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra

 

Feb 22

Canton, OH

Umstattd Performing Arts Hall

Dvorák: Cello Concerto

Canton Symphony Orchestra; Gerhardt Zimmermann, conductor

 

April 10 & 12

Tucson, AZ

Tucson Music Hall

Haydn: Cello Concerto No. 1

Tucson Symphony Orchestra; David Danzmayr, conductor

 

April 18 & 19

Des Moines, IA

Des Moines Civic Center

Dvořák: Cello Concerto

Des Moines Symphony; Joseph Giunta, conductor

 

April 24

Bellingham, WA

Bellingham Festival of Music

 

June 14

Purchase, NY

Purchase College Performing Arts Center

Elgar: Cello Concerto
Westchester Philharmonic; Danail Rachev, conductor

 

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www.joshuaroman.com 

 

Joshua Roman on Facebook

 

Joshua Roman on Twitter

 

Joshua Roman on YouTube

 

© 21C Media Group, November 2014

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