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The Knights and Nicholas Phan in Central Park and at Ravinia

The Knights resume their annual two-concert summer collaboration with Central Park’s Naumburg Orchestral Concerts, now in their fifth consecutive season, with a program led by co-founder and artistic director Eric Jacobsen on July 30, featuring the world premiere of the innovative orchestra’s own group composition “…the ground beneath our feet“, and a collaboration with tenor Nicholas Phan. Recently hailed as a “major new Britten interpreter” by the New York Times, Phan joins The Knights and hornist Michael P. Atkinson to honor the Britten centennial with a rendition of the English composer’s Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings, which they will then reprise at Chicago’s Ravinia Festival on September 3. This second collaboration is part of an extended Chicago-based Britten residency for Phan, beginning with the starring role in a Britten church parable, performed with soloists from the Chicago Symphony (Aug 17), then as Artistic Director of Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago’s Britten-centenary themed 2013 Collaborative Works Festival (Sept 11-15), and culminating in a solo Britten recital with The University of Chicago Presents (Oct 18).
 
The Knights launched the 2013 Naumburg Orchestral Concerts season with aplomb last month, prompting the New York Times’ Anthony Tommasini to observe:
 
“Though the weather was sticky and humid, the music was anything but. … Camaraderie and shared enthusiasm for playing music are what drive the ensemble, and those qualities came through on Tuesday in an adventurous program.”
 
For its second appearance in the open-air summer series, the orchestra will debut …the ground beneath our feet, a group composition inspired by Italian Baroque composer Tarquinio Merula’s Ciaccona, which is founded on a ground bass. As Knights bassist Zach Cohen explains,
 
“Listening to The Knights’ …the ground beneath our feet, you will hear musical sections influenced by salsa, Irish reels, gypsy, raga, and free jam all tied together by Merula’s bass line in its different incarnations and variations.”
 
Unlike traditional concert music, Cohen continues,
 
“The Knights’ …the ground beneath our feet is not a fixed composition but will vary as the musicians who are its composers change and evolve. We hope that this collectively composed piece achieves a synthesis of our diverse musical ideas.”
 
The world premiere performance of this new group composition shares the program with Britten’s Serenade, featuring guest vocalist Nicholas Phan; contrasting works for strings by C.P.E. Bach and Stravinsky; and J.S. Bach’s Concerto for Oboe and Violin, with The Knights’ own oboist Adam Hollander and violinist Johnny Gandelsman as soloists.
 
Before rejoining The Knights in September, Phan looks forward to premiering a new commission from Ray Lustig, who was recently awarded the Charles Ives Fellowship by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Partnered by pianist Alessio Bax, First Prize-winner in both the Leeds and Hamamatsu international piano competitions, the tenor will couple Lustig’s new piece with Schubert’s song cycle Schwanengesang on August 24, as the highpoint of his three-concert residency at the Chamber Music Festival of Lexington in Kentucky.
 
In recital with Idaho’s Sun Valley Summer Symphony, Phan – who already has two hit Britten albums to his name – juxtaposes the composer’s Canticle I: “My Beloved is Mine” with arias by Handel and Bach (July 28). Then at New York’s Bard Music Festival, the tenor graces a rare concert presentation of Stravinsky’s little-known first opera, the one-act bedroom farce Mavra, with Leon Botstein directing the American Symphony Orchestra (Aug 11). And for the first of his two engagements at Chicago’s Ravinia Festival, Phan stars as Nebuchadnezzar in Britten’s church parable The Burning Fiery Furnace, with Chicago Symphony soloists led by James Conlon (Aug 17).
 
Finally, to close out the summer, Phan revisits Britten’s Serenade with The Knights at Ravinia on September 3. Besides presenting the Chicago premiere of Chaconne and reprising the Bach and Stravinsky works from their New York concert, the orchestra also undertakes works by two preeminent Americans: Copland’s Quiet City and Steve Reich’s Duet for Two Violins and Strings. The soloists in Reich’s double concerto – violinists Ariana Kim and Guillaume Pirard – will once again be drawn from The Knights’ own ranks.
 
Details of these engagements are provided below, and more information about The Knights and Nicholas Phan is available at www.theknightsnyc.com and www.nicholas-phan.com.
 
 
The Knights and Nicholas Phan: upcoming summer engagements
 
July 28
Sun Valley, ID
Nicholas Phan
Sun Valley Summer Symphony
Bach: “Ich traue seiner Gnaden” from Cantata 97
Britten: Canticle I: My Beloved is Mine
Handel: “Descend, kind Pity” from Theodora
 
July 30 
New York, NY
The Knights and Nicholas Phan
Naumburg Bandshell, Central Park
Naumburg Orchestral Concerts
The Knights / Eric Jacobsen
C.P.E. Bach: Sinfonia in C, WQ 182 No. 3
Stravinsky: Concerto in D
J.S. Bach: Concerto for Oboe and Violin in C minor, BWV 1060
   (with Adam Hollander, oboe; Johnny Gandelsman, violin)
Britten: Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings
   (with Nicholas Phan, tenor; Michael P. Atkinson, horn)
The Knights: …the ground beneath our feet (world premiere)
 
Aug 11 
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY
Nicholas Phan
Bard Music Festival
American Symphony Orchestra / Leon Botstein
Stravinsky: Mavra (The Hussar)
 
Aug 17
Highland Park, IL
Nicholas Phan
Trinity Episcopal Church
Ravinia Festival 
Soloists from the Chicago Symphony / James Conlon
Britten: The Burning Fiery Furnace (Nebuchadnezzar)
 
Aug 23
Lexington, KY
Nicholas Phan
Fasig-Tipton Pavilion
Chamber Music Festival of Lexington
Vaughan Williams: Merciless Beauty
Vaughan Williams: On Wenlock Edge
 
Aug 24
Lexington, KY
Nicholas Phan
Fasig-Tipton Pavilion
Chamber Music Festival of Lexington
Schubert: selections from Schwanengesang
Ray Lustig: world premiere of CMFL commission
 
Aug 25
Lexington, KY
Nicholas Phan
Fasig-Tipton Pavilion
Chamber Music Festival of Lexington
Schubert: selections from Schwanengesang
 
Sept 3
Highland Park, IL
The Knights and Nicholas Phan
Martin Theater
Ravinia Festival
The Knights / Eric Jacobsen
Reich: Duet for Two Violins and Strings
   (with Ariana Kim, violin; Guillaume Pirard, violin)
J.S. Bach: Concerto for Oboe and Violin in C minor, BWV 1060
   (with Adam Hollander, oboe; Johnny Gandelsman, violin)
Britten: Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings
   (with Nicholas Phan, tenor; Michael P. Atkinson, horn)
Copland: Quiet City 
Stravinsky: Concerto in D
The Knights: …the ground beneath our feet (Chicago premiere)
 
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© 21C Media Group, July 2013

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