2018年9月3日

【Embodied Practice and Historical Aspectuality in Ken Ueno’s “Person-Specific” Concertos】Ken Ueno


Embodied Practice and Historical Aspectuality in Ken Ueno’s “Person-Specific” Concertos



主講人:Ken Ueno







日期:2018年09月10日(一)
時間:13:30~15:10
地點:音樂系一館M102
北藝大作曲組必到
歡迎有興趣者前往聆聽



Ueno sees the history of American music as a Whitmanesque trajectory of embodied practice, wherein the intricacies of performance practice is brought into focus in the technical achievements of a specific individual fused, inextricably, with that performer’s aura. Analyzed in this way, for example, the expressiveness of a Coltrane or a Hendrix (distinctly American heroes), stems from the intertwinedness of their technical achievements with the charismatic projection of their aura. Ueno seeks to transpose the “person-specificness” of American Jazz and Rock into contemporary classical music by composing “person-specific” concertos, in which the unique technical virtuosity of his soloists are highlighted. A scaffolding of temporalities is created with the embodied presence of the soloist in counterpoint with the orchestrational framework of those sounds created with the aid of spectral techniques (Ueno prefers to showcase the thing itself, rather than use spectral modeling to create proxies of an original). Temporal richness is further enhanced by the poetics emanating from aspectual elements of historicity and presentness. Two representative works will be examined: On a Sufficient Condition for the Existence of Most Specific Hypothesis (2008), a vocal concerto featuring the composer himself as soloist, and Zetsu (2015), a chamber concerto written for violinist Gabriela Diaz. Ueno’s temporal negotiations are considered in light two important philosophical influences: Walter Benjamin and his notions of the aura and technology and the somaesthetics of Richard Shustermann.


BIO:

A recipient of the Rome Prize and the Berlin Prize, Ken Ueno, is a composer/vocalist/sound artist who is currently an Associate Professor at UC Berkeley, where he holds the Jerry and Evelyn Hemmings Chambers Distinguished Professor Chair in Music. Ensembles and performers who have played Ken’s music include Kim Kashkashian and Robyn Schulkowsky, Mayumi Miyata, Teodoro Anzellotti, Aki Takahashi, Wendy Richman, Greg Oakes, BMOP, Alarm Will Sound, Steve Schick and the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, the Nieuw Ensemble, and Frances-Marie Uitti. His music has been performed at such venues as Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, MusikTriennale Köln Festival, the Muziekgebouw, Ars Musica, Warsaw Autumn, Other Minds, the Hopkins Center, Spoleto USA, Steim, and at the Norfolk Music Festival. Ken’s piece for the Hilliard Ensemble, Shiroi Ishi, was featured in their repertoire for over ten years, with performances at such venues as Queen Elizabeth Hall in England, the Vienna Konzerthaus, and was aired on Italian national radio, RAI 3. Another work, Pharmakon, was performed dozens of times nationally by Eighth Blackbird during their 2001-2003 seasons. A portrait concert of Ken’s was featured on MaerzMusik in Berlin in 2011. In 2012, he was a featured artist on Other Minds 17. In 2014, Frances-Mairie Uitti and the Boston Modern Orchestra premiered his concerto for two-bow cello and orchestra, and Guerilla Opera premiered a run of his chamber opera, Gallo, to critical acclaim. He has performed as soloist in his vocal concerto with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project in New York and Boston, the Warsaw Philharmonic, the Lithuanian National Symphony, the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra, and with orchestras in North Carolina, Pittsburgh, and California. Ken holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University. A monograph CD of three orchestral concertos was released on the Bmop/sound label. His bio appears in The Grove Dictionary of American Music.

www.kenueno.com