September 6, 2013
Lera Auerbach, a composer/virtuoso & artist reflects on modern culture
For the very first time internationally, this year鈥檚 Mixon Hall Masters Series is gathering artists who are both virtuosic performers and innovative composers of works reflective of the time, culture and community in which they live. And, it begins on Tuesday, Sept. 17 at 8pm with 39-year-old pianist , who epitomizes her generation both through influence and execution.
An artistic multi-tasker, Auerbach has made a name for herself through a prolific body of musical work as well as her interdisciplinary pursuits that include and creating . At xxxx视频鈥檚 Mixon Hall she will perform a work of her own, as well as Mussorgsky鈥檚 Pictures at an Exhibition.
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This year鈥檚 Mixon Hall Masters Series heralds the implementation, starting fall 2013, of the new program for the Composer/Virtuoso at the xxxx视频. The repertoire for the 21st century will depend upon the musician who can reach a new young audience and Lera Auerbach has proven to engage current classical music audience as well as the next generation. Her compositional catalogue contains nearly 100 works, including 2 operas, 8 concertos and 28 chamber pieces, but her artistic expressions don鈥檛 stop with those prolific notes on the page. One of her most recent and highly acclaimed works is a ballet telling the story of 鈥淭he Little Mermaid.鈥 In addition to composing the piece, Auerbach has collaborated in imaginative and colorful stagings of it, such as a 2012 production by the .
She has also taken her work to another level of musical experience in what some might call performance art with a new production of 鈥淭he Blind,鈥 an acappella opera written for 12 voices. A new staging of the work premiered in New York recently during which all of the audience members were blindfolded. Based on Maeterlinck鈥檚 symbolist play of the same name, it is one of Auerbach鈥檚 earliest works. An interview with Auerbach about this and her creative life was featured in this past July.
鈥淭he message is that we are the blind,鈥 she explained to Times reporter Vivien Schweitzer. 鈥淲ith all our means of communications, we see each other less and connect less. We have less understanding and compassion for other people. We have this screen between us.鈥
Off stage, Auerbach continues expressing herself artistically鈥攎aking , and creating . She refers to her exploration of the visual arts as a 鈥渃oping technique鈥 for dealing with stress and 鈥渃reative procrastination鈥 when compositional deadlines are looming.
Of course, her recital in the Mixon Hall Masters Series will focus on her as a composer/virtuoso鈥攁 masterful concert pianist who is helping to build the next great repertoire for the 21st century. As it is a solo performance, it will not include either of the aforementioned ballet or opera, but will feature Auerbach鈥檚 Twenty-Four Preludes for Piano, Op. 41 as well as her personal interpretation of Mussorgsky鈥檚 Pictures at an Exhibition.
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