Category - Alternative Ensembles

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2015 Paul R. Judy Center Grant Awards
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Spinning Plates, Entrepreneurship, and the Social Relationships of Ensemble Residencies
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Have Bass, Will Travel. Nervously.
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Third Coast Percussion’s “Currents”: Branding in Support of an Artistic Mission
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PRJ Grant Recipient Quince Contemporary Vocal Ensemble Reflects on May 2015 Concert
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Are You a Musical Code-Switcher?
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Hidden Messages: New Vintage Baroque’s Second Season
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PRJ Grant Recipient Hotel Elefant Reflects On “speakOUT” Concert
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Grants Available! Apply for a 2015 Paul R. Judy Center Grant!
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Why Are People Starting New Orchestras?

2015 Paul R. Judy Center Grant Awards

The Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research at the Eastman School of Music recently held its second annual call for grant proposals for projects relating to the concept of innovative ensembles. This year, fifty-eight proposals from individuals and groups were submitted for consideration. Below is a list of projects that have been awarded funds[…]

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Spinning Plates, Entrepreneurship, and the Social Relationships of Ensemble Residencies

Over the last few decades, many American schools of music have embraced the repertoire and missions of new music ensembles. Boundaries are broken, venues explored, students challenged, and new sounds ring out. What a change from the 1980s, when musicologist Susan McClary argued that “both popular and postmodern musics are marked as the enemy, and[…]

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Have Bass, Will Travel. Nervously.

Whatever airline horror story you have about lost or mishandled luggage, I’m pretty sure Robert Black can top it. Robert, as many of you around here know, is a brilliant, nationally recognized double bass player and teacher. He is perhaps best known for being a founding member of the avant-garde music ensemble, the Bang on a[…]

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Third Coast Percussion’s “Currents”: Branding in Support of an Artistic Mission

As a touring percussion quartet, devoting an entire concert to new works for our group sometimes seems like a luxury. The logistical pressures of unfamiliar venue layouts, small stage sizes, and traveling with instruments, combined with the musical demands of presenters and unfamiliar audiences, means that we often stick with what we know while we[…]

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PRJ Grant Recipient Quince Contemporary Vocal Ensemble Reflects on May 2015 Concert

Quince Contemporary Vocal Ensemble’s Season Closer Concert for the 2014-15 season: Spatial Palettes took place on Sunday, May 17, 2015 at 8:30pm at Constellation Chicago. We commissioned 3 new pieces with the generous support of The Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research. One from Monte Weber, another from Levy Lorenzo, and another from Eliza[…]

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Are You a Musical Code-Switcher?

Do any of these scenarios sound familiar? 1. You perform with the symphony in the afternoon, then change out of your formal black, throw your music stand in the trunk, and head straight to a gig with your rock band. 2. On Sunday morning, you accompany a gospel church service, then have an intense chamber[…]

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Hidden Messages: New Vintage Baroque’s Second Season

It seems counterintuitive: how is it that so many musicians dedicate their lives to the study and practice of repertoire written so long ago by composers who no longer walk the earth? Look deep into the music, however, and one will find within it a vitality that is ripe for the harvest. This vitality is[…]

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PRJ Grant Recipient Hotel Elefant Reflects On “speakOUT” Concert

Hotel Elefant’s “speakOUT” spring 2015 concert by was hosted by the downtown New York venue SubCulture on International Women’s Day, representing female artists who utilize music to reflect on issues both personal and political. The generous funding from the Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research helped present cutting-edge works by women, with works specifically[…]

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Grants Available! Apply for a 2015 Paul R. Judy Center Grant!

Paul R. Judy Center for Applied Research Grant Program Apply for a 2015 Grant by September 1, 2015 This grant program is intended to provide funding for research, events, and new initiatives related to innovative ensembles. Applications for funding will be accepted on an annual basis; grants will range from $500-$2,000. The total amount awarded[…]

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Why Are People Starting New Orchestras?

In “today’s arts climate,” which is often characterized by tales of diminishing audiences, revenue, and interest, why would anyone start a new orchestra? That is a question that Jennifer Melick considers in an intriguing article in the recent Symphony Magazine.  Melick spotlights eight recent orchestra startups and looks at the goals and creative ideas behind[…]

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