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Winter, 2012 Performances
Jan 18th, 2012

January through early March, 2012 are proving to be a busy time for me. The year began with the official kickoff of the Atlas New Music series and kicks into overdrive on Friday, January 20 and Saturday, January 21, 2012 with two concerts conducting Great Noise Ensemble at the 2012 New Voices Festival at the Catholic University of America.

Sunday, January 29 see the premiere of a brief setting of Langston Hughes’ “Harlem” by Words and Music and the Boston-based Wordsong project at the Lyseum in Alexandria, Virginia.

On February 12 I will be in Eugene, Oregon for the first preview performance of my third symphony, Symphony: Savage Howls with the University of Oregon Wind Ensemble and its director, Robert Ponto. Savage Howls was commissioned by a consortium of bands led by the University of Oregon and this will be the first of several performances of the work during the 2011-12 and 2012-13 seasons. Stay tuned for details on future performances of this piece.

On March 2, 2012, I will be conducting Great Noise Ensemble at the 2012 Intersections New American Art festival at the Atlas Performing Arts Center in Washington. The program includes works by Rob Paterson, D.J. Sparr and Marc Mellits as well as my first symphony, Chamber Symphony: Illusory Airs. The program will be recorded for GNE’s upcoming debut CD.





NEWS & PRESS

Atlas New Music
Jan 18th, 2012

I have been named the new Curator for New Music at the Atlas Performing Arts Center in Washington, D.C. This allows me to bring even more exciting new music to the District of Columbia through what I hope will be an innovative and exciting series of performances by some of the best artists in the business. Stay tuned to Atlas’ web site for details on programs and tickets.

Bayolo Receives Fromm Foundation Commission
Jan 18th, 2012

Armando Bayolo has received a commission from the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University to fund the creation of a new work for solo electric guitar. The work, Little Black Book, will be 13 discreet pieces for solo electric guitar and electronics and will be premiered during the 2012-13 season by guitarist and composer D.J. Sparr. Here is the official press release:

The Board of Directors of the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University is pleased to announce the names of twelve composers selected to receive 2011 Fromm commissions. These commissions represent one of the principal ways that the Fromm Music Foundation seeks to strengthen composition and to bring contemporary concert music closer to the public. In addition to the commissioning fee, a subsidy is available for the ensemble performing the premiere of the commissioned work.
The composers who received commissions are: Marcos Balter, Chicago, IL; Armando Bayolo, Alexandria, VA; Richard Carrick, New York, NY; David Claman, Queens, NY; Kevin Ernste, Ithaca, NY; Ruby Fulton, Baltimore, MD; Lee Hyla, Chicago, IL; Amy Beth Kirsten, New Haven, CT; Felipe Lara, Jersey City, NJ; Jeremy Podgursky, Bloomington, IN; Neil Rolnick, New York, NY; and Laurie San Martin, Woodland, CA.
Founded by the patron of contemporary music, the late Paul Fromm, the Fromm Foundation is now in its fifty-sixth year, having been located at Harvard University for the past several decades. Since the 1950s, it has commissioned well over 300 new compositions and their performances, and has sponsored hundreds of new music concerts and concert series. “I want to know you,” Igor Stravinsky once said to Fromm, “because contemporary music has many friends but only a few lovers.”
Among a number of other projects, the Fromm Music Foundation sponsors the annual Fromm Contemporary Music Series at Harvard.
Applications for commissions are reviewed on an annual basis. The annual deadline for proposals is June 1. Requests for guidelines should be sent to The Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard, Department of Music, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138. website: www.music.fas.harvard.edu/fromm.html

Composer Armando Bayolo Makes Carnegie Hall Debut
Sep 2nd, 2011

08.31.2011– Composer Armando Bayolo will make his Carnegie Hall debut, Sunday October 9 at 7:30pm, with the premiere of Lullabies, commissioned by clarinetist Marguerite Levin for Trio Montage at Weill Recital Hall. Premieres from Valencio Jackson, Jr., Allen Feinstein, Brian Balmages, and Joseph Ness will also appear on the program, entitled “Five Premieres Inspired by Five Decades.” Trio Montage includes Levin and collaborators Phillip Collister, baritone, and R. Timothy McReyolds, piano.

In preparation for this debut, Bayolo reflects on the perspective this brings to his work: “The musicians I’ve had the honor and pleasure to work with in New York have been some of the warmest, most welcoming and supportive musicians I’ve met in my career. I have enjoyed working with the New York music community over the past year and am thrilled, honored and humbled to have my music heard in Carnegie Hall in October.”

Colleagues welcome the opportunity to hear Bayolo’s music in New York. “Armando Bayolo is a tireless advocate for others’ music. His persuasive style as an essayist and esteemed work as the conductor of Washington, DC’s Great Noise Ensemble could easily overshadow his own compositions, if they weren’t so attractive in their own right. Armando’s music combines the audacity of popular music, the verve-filled rhythmic language of Latin America, and the pugnacity of postmodern classicism into a heady, formidable concoction,” according to Christian Carey, composer and senior editor of Sequenza 21.

Bayolo’s Lullabies, for baritone, clarinet/bass clarinet and piano, ca. 15 minutes, consists of 6 movements, alternating between songs and dances that depict scenes of early fatherhood. “Each song in the cycle treats with the various anxieties, fears, uncertainties and, most of all, joys of having young children and the ruminations that leads to. The dances, meanwhile, present musical portraits of my own children in sound.”

Armando Bayolo
LULLABIES
For baritone, clarinet (doubles bass clarinet) and piano

1. Nocturne, with text by Gennady Aygi
2. Dance 1
3. New Tooth, with text by Thomas Lux
4. Dance 2
5. Father’s Song, with text by Gregory Orr
6. Dance 3

World Premiere: Sunday October 9, 7:30pm
Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall
154 West 57th Street New York, NY

Trio Montage
Marguerite Levin, clarinet
Phillip Collister, baritone
R. Timothy McReyolds, piano

Tickets $30 General Admission through the Carnegie Hall Box Office; Carnegie Charge 212-247-7800 or online ticket service carnegiehall.org.

ARMANDO BAYOLO

Born in 1973 in Santurce, Puerto Rico to Cuban parents, composer Armando Bayolo began musical studies at the age of twelve. He holds degrees from the Eastman School of Music (B.M. 1995), where his teachers were Samuel Adler, Joseph Schwantner and Christopher Rouse; Yale University (M.M. 1997), where he studied with Roberto Sierra, Jacob Druckman, Ingram Marshall and Martin Bresnick; and the University of Michigan D.M.A. 2001) where he studied with Michael Daugherty, Bright Sheng and Evan Chambers.

Mr. Bayolo’s music, which The Washington Post hailed as radiant and ethereal, “full of lush ideas and a kind of fierce grandeur (which unfold) with subtle, driving power,” encompasses a wide variety of genres, including works for solo instruments, voices, chamber and orchestral music. His music has been commissioned by the Aspen Music Festival, the National Gallery of Art, the Syracuse Society for New Music, Duo 46, The Percussion Plus Project, and the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra, among others, and has received performances at venues including the Aspen Music Festival, the Library of Congress, the National Gallery of Art and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Galapagos Art Space and Symphony Space, and, in 2011-12, Barge Music and Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall.

Mr. Bayolo has been featured on Public Radio International’s Studio 360 broadcast on WNYC, on the NPR’s Fresh Ink broadcast, The Washington Post, The New York Times Opinionator Blog, and has contributed to New Music Box and Sequenza21, where he is a contributing editor. He has served on the faculties of Reed College and Hamilton College, where he served as a Consortium for a Strong Minority Presence Fellow from 2006-2008, as well as the music theory faculty of the Peabody Conservatory of Johns Hopkins University. Mr. Bayolo is the recipient 2008 Brandon Fradd fellowship in music from the Cintas Foundation, and has received awards from Hamilton College, the Minnesota Orchestra Composers Institute, and the American Composers Forum.

A tireless advocate for new music, Mr. Bayolo is the founding Artistic Director and conductor of Great Noise Ensemble, which in just six seasons has become one of the most important forces in contemporary music in the Washington, D.C. region and the Curator for New Music for the Atlas Performing Arts Center in Washington, where he directs a 6-9 concert new music series. He lives outside Washington, D.C. with his wife and two daughters.

Twitter Pitch
Composer @ArmandoBayolo Makes Carnegie Hall Debut October 9 on Trio Montage Recital at Weill

News Facts
  • Five Premieres Inspired by Five Decades was commissioned and inspired by Marguerite Levin.
  • The first piece on the program is by Valencio Jackson, Jr. “Jumping and Rolling Around” for Clarinet and Piano
  • Brian Balmages’ “Dream Sonatina” is a 3movt work for Clarinet and Piano. Brian’s influence for this piece come from his experience as a father of young children
  • Works by Allen Feinstein and Joseph Ness are TBA.
Resource Links
Allen Feinstein
Armando Bayolo
Brian Balmages
Joseph Ness
Marguerite Levin
Phillip Collister
R. Timothy McReynolds
Valencio Jackson, Jr.
Tags
Armando Bayolo, Marguerite Levin, Phillip Collister, R. Timothy McReynolds, Valencio Jackson, Allen Feinstein, Brian Balmages, Joseph Ness, composer, new music, Carnegie Hall, Sequenza 21, Sequenza21, Great Noise Ensemble, Lullabies, Weill Recital Hall, chamber music, Trio Montage, clarinessence
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American Modern Ensemble plays Action Figure
Nov 30th, 2010

The American Modern Ensemble, under the direction of Artistic Director Robert Paterson, will perform Armando’s 2002 sextet, Action Figure on Monday, December 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Galapagos Art Space in Brooklyn, NY.  This marks Armando’s New York debut, so you don’t want to miss this fantastic ensemble’s performance of this very challenging early work. 

More information about this concert and the rest of AME’s amazing season can be found here: http://www.americanmodernensemble.org/schedule.htm

For tickets: http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&eventId=3272045

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