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April 15–19: Gateways Music Festival debuts in Chicago

(March 2024) — The Gateways Music Festival in association with Eastman School of Music
makes its long-awaited Chicago debut with a weeklong spring residency (April 15–19). After
opening with a chamber program featuring special guest narrator Phylicia Rashad, this
culminates with a full orchestral concert led by Anthony Parnther, with a set by vocal sextet
Take 6. Representing the final chapter of Gateways’ milestone 30th anniversary celebrations,
this landmark debut highlights the organization’s success in rewriting the classical music
narrative by connecting and supporting professional classical musicians of African descent, while
enlightening and inspiring audiences through the power of performance.

The Chicago residency builds on Gateways’ recent Kennedy Center debut and its achievements in
New York last fall. After launching in Rochester, the festival came to New York City for four days of
events, crowned by the Gateways Chamber Players’ sold-out Carnegie Hall debut at Zankel Hall,
where the New York Times found their program “characteristic of a festival that has
consistently emphasized the contributions of Black composers.” Citing the “camaraderie
and visibility” Gateways promotes, the New York Times noted “the festival’s transformative
power.” Small wonder that outgoing Gateways President & Artistic Director Lee Koonce has just
been awarded the League of American Orchestras’ Gold Baton and was recently named among
Musical America’s “Top 30 Professionals” of 2023; as the magazine observed, Koonce has helped
ensure the health of the artform and its essential value in our lives, now and for
generations to come.”

Koonce is now succeeded by Alexander Laing, who inaugurated his appointment as Gateways’
incoming President & Artistic Director at the beginning of January. Himself named one of Musical
America’s “30 Movers and Shapers” of 2017, Laing says:

“Chicago has a vibrant heartbeat within the rich tradition of Black classical music; it’s a city where
the legacy and innovation of this genre intersect and amplify each other. As Gateways Music
Festival marks its debut here, we’re not just celebrating our 30th anniversary; we’re honoring the
spirit of a city that has been a cradle and a catalyst for Black musicians and composers for
generations. Gateways is a testament to the enduring power and evolving story of Black classical
music, and we are excited and honored to contribute to this narrative in a place that resonates so
deeply with our mission.”

When the recently formed Gateways Chamber Players made their sold-out first appearance at
New York’s Carnegie Hall earlier this season, it was with a pairing of The Soldier’s Tale Suite by
Igor Stravinsky and A Fiddler’s Tale by Wynton Marsalis. Now this same program is the vehicle
for Gateways’ upcoming Chicago debut at Northwestern University. As in New York, both works
will feature violinist Tai Murray, a musician of “exceptional assurance and style” (Philadelphia
Inquirer), and TV and stage legend Phylicia Rashad will make a special guest appearance as the
narrator in A Fiddler’s Tale (April 15).

Now in their first season, the Chamber Players represent some of the nation’s leading classical
musicians. The spring 2024 roster comprises award-winning conductor Damien Sneed, Imani
Winds bassoonist Monica Ellis, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra trumpeter Billy Hunter,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra trombonist Weston Sprott, former Los Angeles Philharmonic
percussion fellow Wesley Sumpter, Columbus Symphony double bassist Patricia Weitzel and
new Gateways’ President and former Phoenix Symphony clarinetist Alexander Laing.

The Chamber Players’ Northwestern concert launches a weeklong spring residency in Chicago.
This culminates with a full performance hosted by Symphony Center Presents, the presenting
arm of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. At that ensemble’s home in Orchestra Hall, the
Gateways Festival Orchestra will perform under the baton of Anthony Parnther, who
previously led its sold-out Carnegie Hall debut in 2022. “A conductor for the future” with “a
flourishing career” (New York Times), Parnther recently made debuts with the New York
Philharmonic, in the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s subscription series, and at London’s BBC
Proms. Now he helms the Gateways Festival Orchestra’s accounts of Edward Elgar’s iconic
“Enigma” Variations and works by two African American composers with Chicago connections.
Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson, who served as Artistic Director of the Center for Black Music
Research at the city’s Columbia College, is represented by his concert overture Worship (2001)
and Chicago native Margaret Bonds by her Montgomery Variations (1964). Depicting Black
resistance to segregation in the Jim Crow South, Bonds’s programmatic variations are dedicated
to Martin Luther King, Jr. Together with these orchestral works, Gateways’ program features a
special set by eight-time Grammy-winning vocal sextet Take 6, whom legendary producer Quincy
Jones considers the “baddest vocal cats on the planet.” After the concert, there will be a
reception hosted by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s African American Network (April 19).

The Gateways Festival Orchestra’s Orchestra Hall debut concludes a full week of events in
Chicago. “Virtuoso pianist” Artina McCain (New York Times) and Global Music Award-winning
bass trombonist Martin McCain curate a program of chamber music at St. Mark United Methodist
Church (April 16). The Gateways Brass Collective, the nation’s only all-Black professional brass
quintet, blends traditional chamber repertoire with jazz and more in the Dame Myra Hess
Memorial Concert series in downtown Chicago (April 17). Stewart Goodyear, recognized as “one
of the best pianists of his generation” (Philadelphia Inquirer), gives a solo piano recital at
Northwestern University, with a program combining works by J.S. Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven,
and Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-George, with one of his own (April 17). Gateways
completes the residency with two events at Chicago’s South Shore Cultural Center: a Paul J.
Burgett lecture & community conversation and a chamber concert showcasing Chicago-based
musicians of African descent (April 18).

About Gateways Music Festival

The mission of Gateways Music Festival is to connect and support professional classical musicians
of African descent and enlighten and inspire communities through the power of performance.
Founded in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in 1993 by noted concert pianist Armenta Hummings
Dumisani, the festival was brought to Rochester, New York in 1997 when Hummings Dumisani
joined the Eastman School of Music faculty. Approximately 125 musicians – comprising players in
major symphony orchestras, faculty from renowned music schools and conservatories, and active
freelance artists – participate in each festival. In 2016, while remaining an independent non-profit
organization, Gateways formalized its longstanding relationship with Eastman and the University
of Rochester. Among other mutual benefits, this deepened relationship provided much of the
infrastructure and resources necessary for Gateways to increase its programming capacity,
appoint its first paid staff position and broaden its impact in and beyond Rochester. In addition to
the annual full-orchestra festival held each spring, other Gateways initiatives include a yearly
chamber music festival each fall; the Gateways Showcase, a social media campaign designed to
shed light on the extraordinary stories, artistic achievements and indelible impact of Black
classical musicians; the Gateways Brass Collective, the only all-Black professional brass quintet in
the country; the Gateways Residency, by which renowned Gateways artists are presented
nationwide throughout the year in recitals, masterclasses and community-based activities; the
Gateways Chamber Players, an all-star touring ensemble featuring some of the nation’s most
renowned classical musicians; and, since January 2023, Gateways Radio, a one-hour syndicated
radio program featuring Black classical artists on radio stations across the United States.

For high-resolution photos, click here.

www.gatewaysmusicfestival.org
www.facebook.com/gatewaysmusicfestival
https://www.instagram.com/gateways_music_festival/?hl=en
www.youtube.com/c/GatewaysMusicFestival

Gateways Music Festival: Chicago debut

April 15–19
Chicago, IL

Mon, April 15
Northwestern University (Pick-Staiger Concert Hall)
Gateways Chamber Players / Damien Sneed, conductor
Tai Murray, violin
Igor STRAVINSKY: The Soldier’s Tale Suite
Wynton MARSALIS: A Fiddler’s Tale (with Phylicia Rashad, special guest narrator)

Tues, April 16
St. Mark United Methodist Church
Chamber Music Concert I
Curated by Artina McCain, piano; Martin McCain, bass trombone

Wed, April 17
Seventeenth Church of Christ, Scientist
Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert series
Gateways Brass Collective

Wed, April 17
Northwestern University (Mary B. Galvin Recital Hall)
Stewart Goodyear, piano
Stewart GOODYEAR: Acabris! Acabras! Acabram!
Joseph BOLOGNE: Adagio in F minor
Johann Sebastian BACH: French Suite No. 5 in G, BWV 816
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN: 33 Variations on a Waltz by Anton Diabelli

Thurs, April 18
South Shore Cultural Center (venue TBA)
Paul J. Burgett Lecture & Community Conversation
Details TBA

Thurs, April 18
South Shore Cultural Center (Paul Robeson Theatre)
Chamber Music Concert II
Featuring Caitlin Edwards, violin, and other Chicago-based classical musicians of African descent

Fri, April 19
Orchestra Hall (debut)
Gateways Festival Orchestra / Anthony Parnther, conductor
Take 6, guest artist
Edward ELGAR: Variations on an Original Theme (“Enigma”), Op. 36
Margaret BONDS: Montgomery Variations
Coleridge-Taylor PERKINSON: Worship: A Concert Overture
Selections by Take 6: TBA

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© 21C Media Group, March 2024

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