Author: Bret McCandless

  • Celebrating Rutgers Composers

    View from behind of a darkened audience, with a musical performance taking place onstage
    Robert Grohman and Jonathan Spitz perform Scott Ordway’s composition Prelude (In the Wide Spaces of the Day).

     

    On April 18, in conjunction with the Mason Gross School of the Arts 50th Anniversary Celebrations, Rutgers University Libraries cosponsored a concert of music by composers who have taught and studied at the school since its inception in 1976. The idea for the concert came from Music and Performing Arts Librarian Bret McCandless, who manages the Robert Moevs Collection at Mabel Smith Douglass Library, and was organized with much help from the Music Department’s Associate Director, Maureen Hurd. Robert Moevs was an award-winning composer who taught at Rutgers from 1964-1991, cultivating a generation of composers and musicians.

    The concert, held at Schare Recital Hall on Rutgers–New Brunswick’s Douglass campus, included music by Moevs, former faculty member (and Pulitzer Prize winner) Charles Wuorinen, alumna Courtney Bryan (MacArthur Fellow) and Nkeiru Okoye, current faculty members Scott Ordway and Robert Aldridge, and current students Lily Tang and Alon Nechushtan. In anticipation of the Mason Gross anniversary, McCandless had curated a catalog of music by Rutgers Composers at Rutgers University Libraries. Music by Moevs, Wuorinen, Bryan, and Okoye was sourced and curated from the Blanche and Irving Laurie Performing Arts Library’s collections, and access to Moevs’s compositional sketches provided artistic context for the performance of his piece, Una collana musicale (“A musical necklace”), which has been performed at many Moevs celebrations.

    The event also incorporated materials from Rutgers University Libraries for a display to give context to the composition program over the last 50 years, including a series of concerts held at Carnegie Hall that highlighted the many prominent composers across the three Rutgers campuses in 1976: Gerald C. Chenoweth, Phillip Corner, Noel Da Costa, Daniel Goode, Robert Moevs, Claire Polin, Larry Ridley, Michael Smolanoff, George Walker, and Louie L. White.

  • Douglass Library Hosts Pop-up Concert Stressbuster

    On December 14, Douglass Library hosted a pop-up concert featuring performances by Rutgers Mason Gross School of the Arts Chamber Music Ensembles. More than 30 people gathered in the Mabel Smith Douglass Room to enjoy the finals week stressbuster event. 

    “Sometimes music has the ability to relax and re-energize us, so we were pleased to host this musical stressbuster to help students unwind during finals week,” said Bret McCandless, Music and Performing Arts Librarian at Douglass Library and coordinator of the pop-up concert. “Each performance is a component of the Chamber Music courses offered by Rutgers Mason Gross School of the Arts. We are grateful to the musicians for volunteering their time and talent.” 

    The concert program included the following:

    • Beethoven’s Duo for Violin and Cello No. 1 WoO 27 (Allegro comodo) performed by Janai Vazquez-Diaz (violin) and Kira Harris (cello)
    • Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 18, No. 1 (Allegro con brio) performed by Ana Constantine (violin), Elly Ha (violin), Anzhi Ji (viola), and Oliver Cole (cello)
    • Jan Bach’s “Two-Bit Contraptions” performed by Pavana Karanth (flute) and William Sizemore (French horn)
    • Beethoven’s Duo for Clarinet and Bassoon No. 3 WoO 27 (Aria con Variazioni) performed by Haley Rogers (flute) and Brendan Kopevos (bassoon)
    Douglass pop-up concert featuring a violin and cello duo.
    Beethoven’s Duo for Violin and Cello No. 1 WoO 27 (Allegro comodo) performed by Janai Vazquez-Diaz (violin) and Kira Harris (cello).
    Douglass pop-up concert featuring a string quartet.
    Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 18, No. 1 (Allegro con brio) performed by Ana Constantine (violin), Elly Ha (violin), Anzhi Ji (viola), and Oliver Cole (cello).
    Douglass pop-up concert featuring a flute and French horn duo.
    Jan Bach’s “Two-Bit Contraptions” performed by Pavana Karanth (flute) and William Sizemore (French horn).
    Douglass pop-up concert featuring a flute and bassoon duo.
    Beethoven’s Duo for Clarinet and Bassoon No. 3 WoO 27 (Aria con Variazioni) performed by Haley Rogers (flute) and Brendan Kopevos (bassoon).