Thursday, July 29,1993 9:00 a.m.
South Minneapolis Bassoon QuartetLaine BryceHeather ClarkLaurie Hatcher MerzLaura Preves
Ted Mann Concert Hall
Since the literature for bassoon quartet is fairly limited, we have chosen to play strictly pieces arranged by members(or in some cases friends and relatives) of the SMBQ. As we began choosing pieces, we realized these home grownoriginals are some of our favorites to play and are audience pleasers as well. We will choose from the pieces listedbelow.
Chr i s tmas :Winter WonderlandSanta Claus is Coming to TownMel Torme’s A Christmas SongSleigh RideMarch of the Toys
2 . Pieces appropriate for students:Foggy DewCradle SongOn the HarmonicaSpinning SongPink Panther
3 . Transcriptions of Renaissance music:Fantasia by JenkinsCanzona by Clemens
4. Well-known symphonic works:Symphony #40 by MozartTwo Minuets by BrahmsDance of the Swans by TchaikowskyAir (On a G String) by Bach
5 . Well-known keyboard works:Prelude by GershwinPassacaglia by WittSong Without Words by MendelssohnScarf Dance by Chaminade
6. Popular tunes:IcarusQue Roux VinBare Necessities
Since its founding in 1982, the South Minneapolis Bassoon Quartet has performed at the Walker Art Center, MinneapolisInstitute of Art, Bakken Library, Renaissance Festival, Victorian Christmas, Minnesota Orchestra Sommerfest, MinnesotaComposers* Forum, Minnesota State Fair, Minnesota Public Radio, and in the Ladysmith (WI) Mardi Gras Days Parade.
Laine Bryce presently teaches bassoon at Augsburg. Bethel, St. Catherine’s and St. Thomas Colleges. She earned a BA degreein piano performance from the University of Minnesota and taught there while doing graduate work in music theory. She hasplayed with the Minnesota Orchestra, the Cedar Rapids Symphony, and Waterloo Symphony. She runs a music school in St.Paul, Minnesota.
Heather Clark studied bassoon with David Beadle at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and at Birch Creek Farm inDoor County. After earning a degree in music theory in 1980, she moved to the Twin Cities and has played with the St. PaulCivic, Minneapolis Civic, and Rochester Symphony Orchestras. She has also played in various chamber ensembles and is thefounding mother of the SMBQ.
Laurie Hatcher Merz received her BM degree from the Eastman School of Music and a MM degree from the University ofMinnesota. She freelances in the Twin Cities area, appearing with various groups including the Minnesota ContemporaryEnsemble, Harmonia Mundi, the Picardy Quintet, and toured nationally with the Minnesota Opera’s production of The MagicFlute. In addition to performing, she is self-employed as a Children’s Music Specialist, providing music education for pre-schoolchildren.
Laura Preves, artist representative/publicist, recently started her own business-Preves Artist Management. She has a BM de-gree in performance from the Eastman School of Music and has performed with such organizations as the American Soviet YouthOrchestra, Spoleto Festival, Aspen Music Festival, Minnesota Opera, and the Plymouth Music Series. She recently acted asProject Manager for the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra’s production of the opera L a Caslisto and is completing her first year aspublicist for the Music in fhe Park series in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Thursday, July 29,1993 10:15 a.m. Ted Mann Concert Hall
Jennifer Paull, Oboe d’Amore Sandro Caldini, Oboe d’AmoreAnna Savvas, piano Fulvio Caldini, piano
Abendstück, op. 12 for Solo Oboe d’Amore . .Fulvio Caldini
Breath Control, op. 36a for Oboe d’Amore and PianoIII
Saadro Caldini, Oboe d’Amore
.Fulvio Caldini
Gnossienne No. 1......_.....,
Cantiga Mozarbe, op. 79 . . .
Sleeping Together (1991)*
Dance Prelude (1971) __.._..
Loosin Yelav . . . . . .._._.___....Jennifer Paull, Oboe d’Amore
,: . . . . . . Eric Satie
Leonard Salzedo
. . . . Edwin Carr
. ..John McCabe
*. Luciano Berio
* This work based on a poem by Katherine Mansfield is here receiving its fiit performance. It was commissionedwith funds from the New Zealand Arts Council.
Sandro Caldini was born in 1958 in Arezzo, Italy and studied onoe with Frederic0 de Sanctis at the Conservatory of Music inFlorence. From 1982 to 1984 he was solo oboe in the Chamber Orchestra of Florence. In 1984 he studied chamber music atRing Alfred’s College in Winchester and, in the same year, he won, with his brother Fulvio. the third prize at the InternationalCompetition in Stresa and gained first prize for chamber music in 1985. In 1989 he taught oboe and English horn at the FederalUniversity of Rio de Janeiro. In 1989 and in 1991, he received, as a teacher, the “Honoris Causa” Diploma at the NationalCompetition in Genoa. In 1992 he qualified as oboe teacher in the Conservatory of Music in Italy.
Fulvio Caldini was born in 1959 in Arezzo. Italy, and studied piano at the Conservatory of Music in Florence. After graduationin 1982, he studied chamber music with Franco Rossi of the ‘Quartetto Italiano” and John Blakely at Ring Alfred’s College inWinchester, and compostion with Franco Cioci and Sylvano Bussotti. In 1984 he won second prize for piano contemporarymusic and the third prize for chamber music at the International Competition at Stress. In 1988, as a composer, he won the firstprize at “Ennio Porrino” Competition in Cagliari. Since 1987 he has been the pianist of the Orchestra Regionale Toscana.
Jennifer Paull, during her studies with Terence MacDonagh at the Royal College ofMusic in London. first heard the melancholic voice of the oboe d’amore. Since thatvery moment she has focused her entire career on this beautiful and sadly neglectedmember of the oboe family. She has recorded many of Bach’s incomparable obligatifor the BBC with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. After having freelanced inLondon with such orchestras as the English Chamber and BBC Symphony, Paul1abandoned the orchestral scene to further promote the cause of her choseninstrument. Working closely with composers in publishing and management, sheencouraged the use of the oboe d’amore wherever and whenever she could. Includedin the works written for her is a concerto by John McCabe. She has given manyrecitals and broadcasts in Europe and the Middle East and continues her activitiesfrom her home base in Switzerland’s Rhône Valley.
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Thursday, July 29,1993
David Weber, oboe
11:30 a.m. Ted Mann Concert Hall
Elizabeth Starr, English horn
Flowering Prairie (Crocus) for English Horn ..___....._.__...._.......-.....-.-...-.Elizabeth Starr, English horn
Steve Heitzig
Divertissement for English Horn and Piano . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .._..... ..-_.. . . . . . .Elizabeth Starr, English horn
Roderick Kettlewell, piano
,Eugène Bozza
Amalgam I for Oboe and Tape (1986) ,....~.............................David Weber, oboe
Charles Norman Mason
S n a k e . . . . .._._........._...-...... ._..._..._._..._..........Elizabeth Starr, English horn
,Michael Berkeley
Duologue for Oboe and Piano (1985) .*..,I.~........~...........*.........*.........** . ,Paul PattersonDavid Weber, oboeLester Seigel, piano
Omaggio a Bellini (duetto per corno inglese e arpa) ._................_......I.....Elizabeth Starr, English horn
Kathy Kienzle, harp
Antonio Pasculli
Elizabeth Starr, an oboe student at the age of eight, spent her teenage yearsstudying with Louis Rosenblatt, solo English horn of the Philadelphia Orchestra.During that time, she won several competitions, including those held by the ConcertoSoloists Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia and the Haddonfield SymphonyOrchestra. After a semester at the Manhattan School of Music, where she studiedunder Elaine Douvas, Ms. Starr attended the Curtis Institute of Music, where sheobtained a Bachelor’s degree in Music and was a student of John de Lancie. Ms.Starr currently plays solo English horn for the Minnesota Orchestra and is on thefaculty of the University of Minnesota and the College of St. Catherine. She haspreviously played principal oboe with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the ConcertoSoloists Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, the New York Symphonic Ensemble,and the Eastern Music Festival Orchestra. She has participated in the MarlboroMusic Festival and the Blossom Music Festival where she studied with John Mack.
David Weber has been Principal Oboist with the Alabama Symphony since 1971,moving from Assistant Principal Oboist in the Atlanta Symphony. He has spent hissummers playing with the Santa Fe Opera, Chautauqua Symphony, substituting onoboe and English horn with the orchestras of Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Minnesota,and was Co-Principal Oboist for the Minnesota Orchestra Sommerfest in 1984. Hehas taught at Auburn University, the University of Alabama, and from 1977-78taught at Oberlin Conservatory of Music as James Caldwell’s sabbaticalreplacement. Mr. Weber received his High School Diploma from the North CarolinaSchool of the Arts, and his Bachelor of Music degree from the Curtis Institute ofMusic, where he studied with John de Lancie.
Charles Norman Mason was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and studied compositionat the University of Miami with Dennis Kalm and at the University of Illinois withBen Johnston, Salvatore Martirano, and John Melby. His compositions have wonseveral awards including a Broadcast Music Inc. Award for Young Composers, thePanoply of the Arts competition, the City Stages Classical Music competition., andhe was a finalist in the International Bourges Electra-Acoustic CompositionCompetition. Dr. Mason teaches composition at Birmingham-Southern College andis Managing Editor of the international journal, Living Music. His music is availablefrom American Composer Editions (NY).
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Thursday, July 29,1993 9:00 a.m. Ferguson Recital Hall
Paul A. LäubinOboe acoustics lecture: “In the Spirit of Compromise”
Born in 1932, Paul Läubin has studied oboe with Frank Stalper at LSU andwith Jean deVagie and Ralph Gomberg of the Boston Symphony and withHarry Shulman of CBS. He played free-lance for nearly 30 years and since1954 has been making or repairing oboes. He has been the head of A.Läubin. Inc. since 1976. In that time he has made over 2000 instruments,most of which are still in use.
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Thursday, July 29,1993 11:00 a.m. Ferguson Recital Hall
Dennis RooneyPageant of 20th Century Bassoon Playing on Records
Pageant of 20th Century Bassoon Playing on Record was first presented in 1989 at the annual Bassoon Symposiumat Towson State University in Maryland. It was most recently repeated there at the 1991 IDRS Conference. In addi-tion to including some of the earliest known recordings of the bassoon, and solos by such notable players asOubradous, Brooke, Weiss, and Kohon, Mr. Rooney has assembled a diverse collection of recordings of several im-portant orchestral solos, performed by the principals of many US and European orchestras, that highlights the devel-opment of contemporary styles of bassoon playing.
Dennis Rooney is a freelance audio producer, broadcaster and writer on musicalsubjects who resides in New York. A record collector for over four decades, hispersonal collection to a great extent documents the evolution of instrumental andorchestral performance in this century.
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Thursday, July 29,1993 10:15 a.m. Ferguson Hall Room 225
Daryl Caswell “Living with the Edge: An Engineering Look at Sharpening”
Producing and maintaining a sharp, consistent scraping edge is the curse of every double reed player. The knifemust take on an extremely fine and consistent scraping edge which must stand up to very abrasive scraping. Thesedemands require the opposing conditions of hardness and flexibility in the steel. In addition, each player has his orher own methods for preparing the edge and scraping the reed. This talk will consist of an overview of the technicaland metallurgical requirements for a reed knife in order to clarify the variables which the reed maker can control(e.g., knife geometry, scraping angles, honing angles and methods, etc.). Mr. Caswell will address a variety ofsharpening practices and myths which may or may not contribute to the fineness, strength and consistency of theburr. In addition, he will share a method of sharpening knives developed for the Landwell reed knife. This methodproduces a fine scraping edge in minutes with a minimum of effort and a maximum of consistency.
Daryl Caswel l i s both a profess ional French horn player and a mechanical engineer . Since leaving the Calgary Phi lharmonicOrchestra, he has made a career of solving musicians’ technical problems. His research projects include sound reflectors to rem-edy acoustical problems in concert halls, bell plates which approximate the sound of large church bells, and the Landwell ReedKnife. Much of his research has been carried out in the engineering department at the University of Calgary where he currently ispursu ing a PhD. His accompl ishments have been recognized wi th nat ional and in ternat ional awards . He cont inues to performand teach in order to maintain contact with professional musicians and their technical needs.
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Thursday, July 29,1993
Allan Vogel, oboeJane Burris, harpsichord
2:00 p.m. Ted Mann Concert Hall
A master class on
Sonata in G Minor for Oboe and Harpsichord.AndanteSicilian0Presto
,..*..................... J . S. Bach
Mr. Vogel’s appearance is sponsored by Marigaux Oboes
Allan Vogel has appeared with orchestras throughout the United States and hasparticipated in the Marlboro, Santa Fe, Mostly Mozart, Chamber Music Northwest,Aspen, Sarasota, La Jolla Summerfest, Tanglewood, and Oregon Bach festivals. Heis Principal Oboist and frequent soloist with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra andhas been a guest with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, the Orpheus ChamberOrchestra and the Berlin Philharmonic. As a founding member of the MusicalOffering Baroque Ensemble, he has performed at the Frick Museum, 92nd Street“Y” and Carnegie Recital Hall in New York, the Casals Festival, the Library ofCongress, and in chamber series throughout the United States and Canada, He alsotours with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra Winds and has appeared with theMostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center, the Contemporary Music Festival at theKennedy Center, and has toured with Music from Marlboro. Mr. Vogel’s manyrecordings on RCA, Angel, Nonesuch, Andante and Delos include performanceswith the Musical Offering, Tashi, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and theLACO Winds. He can also be heard on a series of Bach Cantata recordings made inGermany with Helmuth Billing.
Thursday, July 29,1993
Potpourri concert
3:15 p.m. Ted Mann Concert Hall
Ronald Klimko, bassoonTina Carpenter, bassoonWilliam Waterhouse, bassoon
Three Bouquets (Bicinium V) for bassoon and contrabass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...*.......*..........*.. ,...._...._.. Allan B l a n kVigorous b = C. 72 (b. 1925)Lento J = C. 46J=c.mo
Tina Marie Carpenter, bassoonDavid Murry, double bass
Sonata #2 (1982) for Bassoon and Piano (in one movement) . . . . . . . . . . . ..*.....-........‘........*......~..-..*. Efrem J. Podgaits
Rondo für Fagott und Klavier (1988) __..._.._. ..-... . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-......... Allan RosenheckRonald Klimko, bassoon
Mary Jo Payne, piano
Chamber Concerto #5 for Bassoon, String Quartet and Pianoforte (1992) . . . . . . . . . ...*......*.......*..-...*..Elliott Schwartz[dedicated to William Waterhouse]
William Waterhouse, bassoonGlenn Donnelan,violinTroy Gardner, violinEric Peterson, violaLaura Sewell, cello
Elizabeth Waterhouse, piano
Tiaa Marie Carpenter, Assistant Professor of bassoon and music theory at WestTexas A & M University, holds the Bachelor of Music Education and the Doctor ofMusic degrees from Florida State University, and the Master of Music inPerformance and Literature from the Eastman School of Music. In’addition to herduties at WTAMU, she serves as principal bassoonist with the Amarillo Symphony,Randel Chamber Orchestra, Amarillo Opera Orchestra, and the chamber ensembleYün, and is an active recitalist and clinician in the southwest. Dr. Carpenter hasbeen heard as a soloist on National Public Radio’s ‘Performance Today” as a part ofthe Cullowhee Chamber Music series. She has studies with William Winstead,David Van Hoesen, Christopher Weait, and Janet Schmidt.
David Murray is Harrington Lecturer in Double Bass at West Texas A 8c MUniversity and principal bassist with the Amarillo Symphony and Randel ChamberOrchestras. He is also bassist with the chamber orchestras of Santa Fe, New Mexicoand Dallas, Texas. In 1988 he won the prestigious International Society of BassistsSolo Competition and presented a Carnegie Hall Debut the following year.
Ronald Klimko holds a Bachelor’s degree in music from Milton College and aMaster’s and Doctorate in Music Theory and Composition from the University ofWisconsin Madison. He has studied composition with Irwin Sonenfield, HilmarLuckhardt and Robert Crane and bassoon with Richard Lottridge, Otto Eifert, PhillipKolker, William Waterhouse and Cecil James. He also has studied French bassoonwith Maurice Allard in Paris and performed with various French orchestras. Klimkois author of Bassoon Performance Practices and Teaching in the United States andCanada [1974] and co-author with Marc Apfelstadt of the revised edition: BassoonPerformance and Teaching Materials, Techniques and Methods [ 1993] He is alsoBassoon Editor of the publications of the International Double Reed Society andProfessor of Music and bassoonist with the Northwest Wind Quintet at theUniversity of Idaho. He is listed in the International Who’s Who in Music.
William Waterhouse enjoys a varied career as bassoonist, teacher and
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scholar. Formerly with several London orchestras, he now makesfrequent appearances as soloist. Composers such as Jean Françaix andGordon Jacon have dedicated works to him. He has recorded much ofthe chamber repertory with the Melos Ensemble. He has taught at theRoyal Northern College of Music in Manchester since 1966 and has heldguest professorships abroad and served on several international juries.In 1989 he hosted the IDRS Conference in Manchester adn is formerlywas Vice President of the IDRS. He has contributed articles to The NewGrove Dictionary and is about to publish a new edition of Langwill’sIndex of Music Wind-Instruments Makers and Inventors.
Elizabeth Waterhouse studied piano at the Royal College of Music inLondon with Frank Merrick and in Munich with Friedrich Wührer andHugo Steurer. She is active as a teacher and accompanist. She is also aqualified teacher of the Alexander Technique, which she teaches at theGuildhall School of Music in London.
Elliott Schwartz, born in 1932, currently teaches compostion at Bowdin College and at Ohio State University. A well knowncomposer both in America and abroad, he composed the Chamber Concerto Vfor Bassoon, String Quartet and Piano in 1992 asa commission from De Ijsbreker, a prestigious Dutch new music foundation. The work is dedicated to the memory of the lateNew York bassoonist, Maurice Pachman. The work received its first performance in Amsterdam on May 9, 1992, with Williamand Elizabeth Waterhouse and the Utrecht String Quartet. Todays performance is the US premiere.
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Thursday, July 29,1993 4:15 p.m.
Jean-Louis Capezzali, oboeLaura Ward, piano
Sonate for Oboe and PianoElégiéScherzoDéploration
Sonate for Oboe and Piano,ModéréAndantePresto
Suite ConcertanteNotturnoToccataBercceuseScherzino
Ted Mann Concert Hall
Francis Poulenc
Pierre Sancan
Alexandre Tanzman
Trio for Oboe, Bassoon and PianoPrestoAndanteRondo
Christian Davidsson, bassoon
Francis Poulenc
Mr. Capezzali's appearance is sponsored by Buffet Crampon
Jean-Louis Capezzali studied at the Conservatoire National de Région in Versailleswhere he was awarded first prize in 1977. Soon after he became principal oboe withthe Concerts Lamoureux at the age of 20. In 1982 he won the silver metal in theGeneva competition and in 1986 he won third prize at Praha. In 1984, he wasappointed principal oboe with the Philharmonic Orchestra of the French Radio.Capezzali frequently appears with such European orchestras as Lamoureux, BerlinerOpera, Bordeaux Aquitaine, and Suisse Romande. Since 1988, he has taught at theConservabire National Supérieur de Musique in Paris and contributes to thedevelopment of new models with Buffet Crampon.
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Thursday, July 29,1993 Ferguson Recital Hall
Assisted byKelly Roberts, bassBob Neell, pianoBrad Edwards, percussion
Improvisation Concert/ClinicJan Wiese, oboePaul McCandless, oboe
Jan Wiese is one of the few oboists commanding the realm of jazz improvisationand open-form music, and has received international recognition in this field. W’ththe Wiese-Wello-Waring Trio and with concerts of solo live electronics he hasperformed in Norway, England, Italy, France, Israel, and the United States Hisconcepts of live electro-acoustic music has been met with great interest and he haslectured on this topic at the Norwegian Institute of Technology and the renownedJerusalem Music Centre. Some of the pieces with live electronics were recorded in1990 on the solo CD “STUNT!” Mr. W’established quartet called “Sa ga h
rese is currently performing with a recently
music and theater.om” and does solo presentations that combine
For more than two decades, Paul McCandless has stood in the vanguard ofcontemporary instrumental music - the lyrical, insinuating sound of his reedsweaving through and tying together the myriad strains of what has become known asworld music fusion. Best known, perhaps, as a member of the pioneering PaulWinter Consort and the relentlessly innovative quartet Oregon McCandless hascontributed his vision and virtuosity to ensemble and improvisatidnal aesthetics thathave been both widely influential and widely emulated in the 1980’s and ’90s PaulMcCandless has been recorded on the Windham Hill label. Mr. McCandless will beperforming at the Dakota Club from Friday, July 30, until Sunday, August 1.
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Thursday, July 29,1993 3:15 p.m.
Wendal S. Jones “Profiling Cane by Computer”
Ferguson Hall Room 225
This clinic will illustrate how cane can be profiled using a computer driven profiling machine. Those attending thesession can learn how such a machine may be programmed to profile oboe, bassoon, English horn, or contra-bassooncane. Inasmuch as this kind of hardware is much larger than the well-known table-top profiling machines used bymany double reed players, the session will center around a visual presentation filmed on location. A basic dis-cussion of the principles of automation and motion control relating specifically to woodwind reed manufacture willbe included as well as some attention to the way special computer programs are created to control the machinery.
Wendal Jones is Professor of Music at Eastern Washington University where he hastaught woodwinds, composition, and theory since 1967. He was conductor of theEWU Symphony for 14 years during which time he conducted over 300 worksincluding several world premieres. Before coming to Eastern WashingtonUniversity he was Associate Professor at the University of Arizona for six years. Heearned a PhD in Composition at the University of Iowa and has written compositionsfor orchestra, band, chorus, solo works and chamber ensembles. Dr. Jones has wonseveral awards and grants including a fellowship from the American SymphonyOrchestra League, Composer of the Year from the Washington Music TeachersAssociation, American Music Center Award, and the Trustees Medal from EasternWashington University. He has presented clinics at locations such as Austria,Edinburgh, Interlochen, the Mid-west International Band and Orchestra Clinic. Heperformed a recital at the IDRS Conference at Graz. He is principal bassoonist withthe Spokane Symphony Orchestra and his company, Jones Double Reed Products, isknown world-wide for its products.
Thursday, July 29,1993
Lazzlo Hadady, oboePascal Gallois, bassoon
7:30 p.m. Ted Mann Concert Hall
assisted byMary Jo Payne, pianoHe Kun Wu, cello
Hopi for Solo Bassoon ,Philippe Hersant(b. 1948)
Sonatine for Oboe and Bassoon . .._..._._..._._._...-.....-.“...-...................................-......................... André Jolivet(19051974)
Asahi for Oboe and Electronic System* . . . . . . Paul Mefano(b. 1937)
Pastorale for English Horn and Piano _............ Elliott Carter(b. 1908)
Music for for Shô and Cello, opus 77 **. Maki Ishi
*American premiere ** World premiere
Mr. Hadady’s appearance is sponsored by De GourdonMr. Gallois’s appearance is sponsored by Fox Products Corp.
Laszlo Hadady was born in 1956 and obtained his diploma at the Franz LisztAcademy of Music at Budapest. From 1976 to 1980 he was soloist with the NationalHungarian Symphony. In 1979 he received his diploma in oboe and chamber musicteaching. His teachers included Heinz Holliger, Maurice Bourgue, and HaroldGomberg. In 1980 he joined the Ensemble Intercontemporain, directed by PierreBoulez, at Paris. Since 1987 he has also been a member of the Quintet à ventNIELSEN.
Besides his various activities as soloist and his teaching at the Conservatory, heschedules master classes at the Périgold Noir Festival every summer. He hasperformed as soloist in Germany, England, Hungary and France. He has recorded oncompact disc the Six Brandenbureer Concertos of J.S. Bach and, in 1987, receivedthe “Grand Prix Laser d’Or” awarded by the Academic Française de Disque. He wassolo oboist in “Chemin IV” of Luciano Berio, staged by Pierre Boulez. LaszloHadady play a F. Lorée Royal oboe.
Pascal Gallois studied bassoon with Maurice Allard at theConservatoire National Superior de Musique in Paris where heunanimously obtained the Premier Priz. In 1981, Pierre Boulezasked him to join as a soloist in the Ensemble InterContemporain.He currently is also teaching bassoon at the Ecole NormaleSupérieure de Musique in Paris.
In Freundshaft, by Karlheinz Stockhausen, was first performed inLisbon and Paris by Mr. Gallois. He also gave the premiere per-formance of Campana’s Involtura Sonora. He is currentlyworking with Pierre Boulez on developing a version for bassoonsolo of Domaines and Dialogue de I’ombre double.
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