Directed by Paolo Bortolussi, the UBC Contemporary Players ensemble includes graduate and undergraduate students from the School of Music focusing on music and performance of our time. Programs blend masterworks by internationally acclaimed composers with world premieres of works written expressly for the ensemble by UBC composition majors.
Flutist Paolo Bortolussi is a soloist, chamber artist and new music pioneer. Raised in Halifax, NS, he has appeared as a soloist and chamber musician across Canada, the US and abroad. A specialist in contemporary music, Bortolussi is the flutist and co-director of the Nu:BC Collective, a new music and multimedia arts ensemble in residence at UBC. To date he has premiered over one hundred and fifty solo and chamber works. In 2016, Bortolussi released his first solo album, Israfel – music for flute and electronics, on the Redshift label, which includes works by Keith Hamel, Larry Lake, John Oliver and Kaija Saariaho. Currently principal flutist with the Vancouver Island Symphony, Bortolussi has appeared as soloist with the VIS as well as the Albany (NY) Symphony and the Turning Point Ensemble, and has performed with the Aventa Ensemble, the Vancouver Opera Orchestra, the Vancouver Intercultural Orchestra, as well as the Vancouver and Victoria Symphony Orchestras. Bortolussi is on the music faculty of the University of British Columbia, Kwantlen Polytechnic University and Trinity Western University. He holds a BMus in performance from the University of Ottawa as well as Masters and Doctoral degrees from Indiana University. He is currently director of the UBC Contemporary Players.
Sadaka is a Vancouver-based composer, cellist and conductor. His compositional practice deals with the interplay of finely sculpted textures and a harmonic palette that blends diatonic and chromatic elements. Sadaka’s music has been performed internationally at numerous new music festivals, including New Music on The Point, the Sonic Boom Festival, the highSCORE New Music Festival, the University of British Columbia’s Bang! Festival, the Oregon Bach Festival Composers Symposium, the University of Oregon’s Music Today Festival, and The Ohio State University’s New Music Festival. Sadaka is currently pursuing a doctorate in composition under the auspices of a Four-Year Fellowship at the University of British Columbia, where he has studied with Keith Hamel and Dorothy Chang, and serves as a teaching assistant for the university’s Contemporary Players ensemble. Sadaka received a Master’s degree in composition from the University of Oregon, where he studied with Robert Kyr and David Crumb, and served as a Graduate Teaching Fellow in composition and a co-director of the Eugene Contemporary Chamber Ensemble. Sadaka also received a Bachelor’s degree in composition and cello performance from The Ohio State University, where he studied composition with Donald Harris, Jan Radzynski, Thomas Wells, and Marc Ainger; cello performance with Mark Rudoff; and served as an undergraduate teaching assistant and president of the university’s New Music Collective.
Join us for a concert by the UBC Contemporary Players, directed by Paolo Bortolussi and teaching assistant Ramsey Sadaka. The program engages musical encounters with The Willful Plot, extending the exhibition’s invitation to hone our senses of the garden, whatever form they take: private or communal, edenic or fraught, affective or emotional. This concert is part of an ongoing collaboration between the UBC Contemporary Players and the Belkin, inviting composers and musicians in sonic response to the Belkin’s exhibitions each term.
Arvo Pärt, Spiegel im Spiegel, 1978
Alexander Beggs, Viola; Leah Bruno, piano
Jocelyn Morlock, Blue Sun, 1998
Phoebe Cheng, violin; Hyeonbeen Ha, viola
Pallas Loredo, Response Piece, 2023
Yoel Kristian, flute; Annis Lee, violin; Alexnder Beggs, viola; Dana Sullivan, bass trombone
Tosho Hosokawa, Vertical Time Study I, 1992
Kira Pérez López, clarinet; Nathan Kwok, cello; Leah Bruno, piano; Paolo Bortolussi, conductor
Jimuel Dave Dagta, Response Piece, 2023
Isabella Wark, flute; Daniel Hayden, clarinet; Jeremy Ho, violin;
(Jackson Poling, Word of Mouth, 2022
Kira Pérez López, clarinet; Baylie Adams, alto saxophone; Jeremy Ho, violin
Anna Pidgorna, The Stockhausen Menagerie, 2022
Jegan Ganesan, flute; Felix Rowe, clarinet
Directed by Paolo Bortolussi, the UBC Contemporary Players ensemble includes graduate and undergraduate students from the School of Music focusing on music and performance of our time. Programs blend masterworks by internationally acclaimed composers with world premieres of works written expressly for the ensemble by UBC composition majors.
Flutist Paolo Bortolussi is a soloist, chamber artist and new music pioneer. Raised in Halifax, NS, he has appeared as a soloist and chamber musician across Canada, the US and abroad. A specialist in contemporary music, Bortolussi is the flutist and co-director of the Nu:BC Collective, a new music and multimedia arts ensemble in residence at UBC. To date he has premiered over one hundred and fifty solo and chamber works. In 2016, Bortolussi released his first solo album, Israfel – music for flute and electronics, on the Redshift label, which includes works by Keith Hamel, Larry Lake, John Oliver and Kaija Saariaho. Currently principal flutist with the Vancouver Island Symphony, Bortolussi has appeared as soloist with the VIS as well as the Albany (NY) Symphony and the Turning Point Ensemble, and has performed with the Aventa Ensemble, the Vancouver Opera Orchestra, the Vancouver Intercultural Orchestra, as well as the Vancouver and Victoria Symphony Orchestras. Bortolussi is on the music faculty of the University of British Columbia, Kwantlen Polytechnic University and Trinity Western University. He holds a BMus in performance from the University of Ottawa as well as Masters and Doctoral degrees from Indiana University. He is currently director of the UBC Contemporary Players.
Sadaka is a Vancouver-based composer, cellist and conductor. His compositional practice deals with the interplay of finely sculpted textures and a harmonic palette that blends diatonic and chromatic elements. Sadaka’s music has been performed internationally at numerous new music festivals, including New Music on The Point, the Sonic Boom Festival, the highSCORE New Music Festival, the University of British Columbia’s Bang! Festival, the Oregon Bach Festival Composers Symposium, the University of Oregon’s Music Today Festival, and The Ohio State University’s New Music Festival. Sadaka is currently pursuing a doctorate in composition under the auspices of a Four-Year Fellowship at the University of British Columbia, where he has studied with Keith Hamel and Dorothy Chang, and serves as a teaching assistant for the university’s Contemporary Players ensemble. Sadaka received a Master’s degree in composition from the University of Oregon, where he studied with Robert Kyr and David Crumb, and served as a Graduate Teaching Fellow in composition and a co-director of the Eugene Contemporary Chamber Ensemble. Sadaka also received a Bachelor’s degree in composition and cello performance from The Ohio State University, where he studied composition with Donald Harris, Jan Radzynski, Thomas Wells, and Marc Ainger; cello performance with Mark Rudoff; and served as an undergraduate teaching assistant and president of the university’s New Music Collective.
The Willful Plot brings together artists' practices to expand the notion of the garden as a site of tension between wild and cultivated, temporal and perpetual, public and private, sovereign and colonized. Here, the garden is considered by the artists not only as a delineated patch of earth, but as a story and a will to drive that story to complicate the way in which cultures and individuals see themselves in relation to ecology, sociality, belief and possibility. It is an opportunity to look at human relationships with land, flora, fauna and their interrelatedness. In its willfulness, the resistance garden is a counter-site, a heterotopia for alternative cultivation and potential transformation.
[more]Join us for a series of lectures at the Belkin. We invite Jane Wolff, Desirée Valaderes and Sara Jacobs to address The Willful Plot.
[more]The Willful Plot brings together artists’ practices to expand the notion of the garden as a site of tension between wild and cultivated, temporal and perpetual, public and private, sovereign and colonized. This online Reading Room includes texts expanding on different notions of the garden and more-than-human relationships, as well as the political implications of thinking willfully, with and alongside.
[more]Join Glenn Lewis for a discussion of his work in The Willful Plot along with curator Melanie O'Brian. Over five decades, Glenn Lewis has photographed and created gardens in an investigation of paradisial symbolism.
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