Music of the 21st Century festival at DePauw honors composer Frank

Monday, February 15, 2016

DePauw University's 14th annual Music of the 21st Century festival will recognize the work of composer Gabriela Lena Frank, who travels to Greencastle for a Feb. 15--19 guest residency with the School of Music.

The native Californian's music, which synthesizes her varied ethnic backgrounds, has won her both a Latin Grammy Award for best Contemporary Classical Music Composition in 2009 for Inca Dances and a 2011 Grammy Award nomination for Best Classical Crossover Album.

Composer Gabriela Lena Frank

The five-day festival, underwritten through the support of 1969 DePauw alums Robert A. and Margaret A. Schmidt and coordinated by DPU School of Music professor Carla Edwards, annually brings some of the world's most celebrated composers to the Green Center for the Performing Arts.

Previous composers-in-residence have included John Corigliano, Jake Heggie, Joan Tower, Libby Larson and Roberto Sierra.

Frank will begin her residency with coaching sessions Monday and Tuesday in preparation for three public performances. The first of these events, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Music on the Square (21 N. Indiana St.), will be presented in the venue's popular "Club M2" format and will include a performance of the composer's multi--movement work "Hilos" by the DePauw Chamber Players.

The weekly Student Recital Hour, on Wednesday, Feb. 17 at 10:20 a.m. featuring "A Conversation with Gabriela Lena Frank," will be moderated by composition faculty member Scott Perkins. It also allows an opportunity for audience Q&A.

A 7:30 p.m. Thursday performance in Thompson Recital Hall will focus on Frank's smaller chamber works and feature "Adagio at Dusk," which the composer will perform with faculty pianist May Phang.

For Friday night's gala closing concert, which will be followed by a reception with the artists, the DePauw Orchestra, Band and Choirs will present Frank's compositions for large ensembles, including her choral work "Hombre Errante" conducted by Kristina Boerger.

Born in Berkeley, Calif., Frank studied piano at Rice University followed by studies in composition at the University of Michigan. Her musical style, drawn from her Peruvian, Chinese and Lithuanian ancestry, conveys a deep search for identity.

The Kronos Quartet and the Silk Road Project are among the many major ensembles that have commissioned Frank. She has also served as composer--in--residence for the Aspen Music Festival and the Indianapolis Symphony.

On a previous visit to Indiana in 2008, Frank not only composed "Peregrinos" -- an ISO commission based on stories told by Latino immigrants in the area -- but she also worked with student musicians, including Kevin Salinas '18, now principal bassoonist with the DePauw University Orchestra.

"I was a member of the Latino Youth Collective of Indianapolis, where (Frank) met my brother Irving and me. She ended up writing the second movement of her piece about us, inspired by our Hispanic heritage," the sophomore said.

"My favorite aspect of her music is how she is able to imitate the Latin American instruments she listened to while living in South America," noted Salinas, who looks forward to performing Frank's "Three Latin American Dances" during Friday's gala closing concert.

Festival passes to Music of the 21st Century are available for $10 and include all performances, coachings and panels. Passes may be purchased online (music.depauw.edu) or at the GCPA box office (605 S. College Ave.), which will be open one hour prior to each performance.

For a full schedule of events, all of which are open to the public, visit music.depauw.edu/events/composerfestivals.

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