Composer Thomas Simaku in residence this week for lectures, and works will be featured in Wednesday concert at Whalen Center

By Molly Windover, April 11, 2023

The School of Music, Theatre, and Dance welcomes composer Thomas Simaku, the 2022-23 Karel Husa Visiting Professor of Composition, for a series of lectures and performances this week! The IC Contemporary Ensemble will feature two of Simaku’s compositions (one of them a U.S. Premiere) in their concert this Wednesday, April 12, and Simaku will give two lectures discussing some of his recent compositions.

a man sitting at a grand piano with a view of a grassy area through the window behind him

Concert:
Ithaca College Contemporary Ensemble
Christopher Coletti and Jorge Grossmann, directors

Wednesday, April 12, 2023  |  8:15pm  |  Ford Hall, James J. Whalen Center for Music

The Ensemble will perform, among other pieces, Simaku's Soliloquy III (played by Kyle Armbrust, IC Assistant Professor of Viola Performance) and the U.S. Premiere of Soliloquy VI - Hommage à Lutosławski for soprano saxophone, played by IC Assistant Professor Eric Troiano.

Concert is free and open to the public.

Lectures:
"Soliloquy Cycle - Sweet and/or Sour"

Thomas Simaku has been engaged in writing for solo instruments for some 20 years now. Soliloquy Cycle is a series of works for various instruments, which centers on a protagonist who narrates in different languages, as it were, whilst the individual instruments make considerable use of their own musical dialect! The cycle so far consists of nine works - the latest, for Trumpet and Resonant Piano, was commissioned by the Ensemble Intercontemporain and is included in a new CD to be released by the British label NMC in 2023.  In these lectures, Professor Thomas Simaku will discuss the genesis of and processes involved in his cycle, including the award-winning work Soliloquy V - Flauto Acerbo, and more!

Lecture 1: Thursday, April 13, 4:00-6:00 p.m., Whalen Center room 3304 

Lecture 2: Tuesday, April 18, 5:00-7:00 p.m., Whalen Center room 2105  

Described by the British Composer Award judging panel as ‘visionary and entirely original’, the French National Radio as ‘astonishing’, and the German magazine Neue Zeitschrift für Musik as ‘breathtakingly original’, Thomas Simaku's music has been reaching audiences across Europe, the USA and further afield for three decades now, and it has been awarded a host of accolades for its expressive qualities and its unique blend of intensity and modernism. This expressivity has its own idiosyncratic qualities, which integrates aspects of ancient musical aura into contemporary idioms, creating ‘unflinching visceral soundscapes’ (BBC Magazine).

Simaku’s works have been selected by international juries in no less than ten editions of ISCM World Music Days; other international festivals where his music has been performed include Huddersfield, Tanglewood, Miami, Zagreb-Biennale, Weimar, Munich, Rome, Viitassari (Finland), Alea III Boston, Beijing, Innsbruck (Austria), Warsaw Autumn, Moderne Muziek Nijmegen, The Netherlands etc.

Performed by renowned ensembles and orchestras such Quatuor Diotima, Arditti Quartet, Kreutzer Quartet, Klangforum Wien, MusikFabrik, Ensemble Intercontemporain, Estonian Philharmonic Choir, BBC Concert Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra etc., his music has been broadcast worldwide, including radio stations such as BBC Radio 3, Radio France, SWR2, MDR, Deutschlandfunk (Cologne), Amsterdam Radio 4, ORF (Austria), Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), RNE (Spain), RTP (Portugal), etc. His CD released on Naxos 21st Century Classics series in 2008 received much critical acclaim; it reached the best of year list in the USA.

Multi award–winning composer Thomas Simaku (b.1958) graduated from the Albanian State Conservatoire in Tirana (1983) and gained a PhD in Composition from University of York (1996) where he studied with David Blake. Simaku was the Leonard Bernstein Fellow in Composition at Tanglewood Music Centre, USA (1996) studying with Bernard Rands, and a fellow at the Composers’ Workshop, California State University (1998), with Brian Ferneyhough.

Prestigious awards include the coveted Lionel Robbins Memorial Scholarship in 1993, First Prize of the 2004 Serocki International Competition, a two-year Leverhulme Research Fellowship, and a three-year fellowship from Arts & Humanities Research Council in London, PRS Foundation Award, Dora Maar House Residency in France. In 2009 Simaku received a British Composer Award from BASCA for his Soliloquy V - Flauto Acerbo – he represented the UK with this work, at the 2012 ISCM Festival in Belgium. In 2013 Simaku won the first prize of the International Competition for Lutosławski’s 100th Birthday with Concerto for Orchestra, chosen from 160 compositions submitted anonymously from 37 countries.

Two of his latest CDs were released by Naxos and BIS Records in 2019 and 2000 respectively and have received much critical acclaim internationally in prestigious magazines in the UK, France, Germany and USA. A Professor of Composition at the University of York, Thomas Simaku is currently working on a new CD with the soloists of the Ensemble Intercontemporain.

Individuals with disabilities requiring accommodations should contact Michael Stern at mstern@ithaca.edu or 607-274-3717. We ask that requests for accommodations be made as soon as possible.