• HOME
  • About
    • Bio & Team
    • Contact
  • Calendar
  • Trustfall Series
  • archive
    • Currents
    • Mysterium Novum
    • Potential Energies
    • Composed Cocktails
    • In & Around C by Mad Mohre
    • Sweet Lost Pierrot
    • NYFW
    • Sacred-Profane
  • Press
  • Support
    • Donate Online
The Nouveau Classical Project
  • HOME
  • About
    • Bio & Team
    • Contact
  • Calendar
  • Trustfall Series
  • archive
    • Currents
    • Mysterium Novum
    • Potential Energies
    • Composed Cocktails
    • In & Around C by Mad Mohre
    • Sweet Lost Pierrot
    • NYFW
    • Sacred-Profane
  • Press
  • Support
    • Donate Online

Cellist Jillian Blythe and "Item 8"

The 2015-2016 season was our first with cellist, composer, and musician extraordinaire Jillian Blythe. We will perform her piece Item 8, which was written for NCP, at our 2016 Benefit at (le) poisson rouge on September 27th. Before then, read up on Jillian's path to composition, the ideas behind Item 8, and her passion for coffee and improvisation.

Tell us a little about yourself and how you got started with NCP.
Well, I’m a cellist and composer based here in New York City. A few years ago I was living in Bend, Oregon when I felt desperate to come back to a place more fully concentrated in the arts and music. As much as I felt inspired by the surrounding beauty I was lucky enough to experience daily, it was time to move back to NYC. Trust me, it was a difficult choice to leave the mountains and community I enjoyed so much. Anyway, it wasn’t too long before I reconnected with the lovely Mara Mayer (clarinetist of NCP), whom I’ve known for quite some time now, and she mentioned the search for a new cellist was on—things kind of took off from there. I had been looking to join an ensemble that was willing to push the norm and explore new ideas, allowing the creative process to really unfold. I’m grateful that our paths crossed and I’m excited to see how things evolve from here.

Composing is something you began doing recently. What inspired you to go in this direction?
I actually began writing when I was much younger, though I guess I didn’t really think of it that way at the time. I wrote things for myself to play—pieces that used unconventional techniques and bits that I heard in my head over and over again, sometimes graphics that represented shapes I imagined. Some thoughts began as improv and worked themselves into full form ideas, and sometimes the other way around. Lately I’ve been trying to step outside what I know, which is how to translate thoughts straight to the cello, and branch out into other instruments and sounds. Sometimes it is incredibly uncomfortable, but those are also some of the most beautiful moments in the process. These days I write quite a bit of music for fixed electronic track with mixed or solo instruments, sometimes free and sometimes not. Playing with a fixed track can be limiting, but also freeing—I think perhaps my inspiration is more a curiosity, to investigate how something fixed and synthetic can exist in the same aural moment as something free and organic. 

Jillian Blythe and Marina Kifferstein rehearse "Potential Energies"

Jillian Blythe and Marina Kifferstein rehearse "Potential Energies"

How does your experience as a cellist inform your compositions?
It probably isn’t so simple as to say my experience as a cellist informs my compositions. I would say that for me, everything begins on a physical level. You throw a sound and then others come to follow in whatever trajectory that happens naturally. As a cellist, what I pay attention to most is that a piece of music evolves organically, and without force. This is equally important for me as a composer, and it is something I come back to again and again when writing.

What is the inspiration for your piece Item 8? What was your process in creating it?
Sugar approached me about a piece for NCP while we were eating tacos in Texas on a break from our recent collaboration with DJ Spooky. She asked me to write something that could really highlight the whole ensemble and I immediately though to try working with a fixed track and went on my way. In a sense, the players of NCP inspired what the final product of Item 8 has become. In my mind, I chose carefully the material and instructions, dependent on who would be playing and their individual approach and relationship to their instruments. For instance, Laura Cocks, who is an incredible improviser and flutist really inspired quite a bit of the direction in this piece. In a brief technical breakdown, the flute’s (important) role in this piece is to copy, interpret, and then do away with any inkling of the primary musical material. I can’t even really take much credit for this—her first read through nailed exactly what I was hoping to hear, and I don’t think I had to say anything more about it to her. Every time we play it down, things are slightly different, and that’s something I really love about writing music—creating a space for freedom within an otherwise ordered template. Additionally, Item 8 calls on the players to use sustained bouts of vocal vamping, improv, and extended techniques—I’m thankful NCP is such an adventurous and experimental group of people!

What are your interests outside of music?
Well that’s a tough question… not. I love coffee, climbing all over rocks, poems, puppies, and biking—pretty much anything that gives me the opportunity to hang upside down, from a rope, or on the side of a mountain is my thing. Also, did I mention I love coffee?

tags: the nouveau classical project, cellist, werk
categories: NCP Stuff
Tuesday 09.20.16
Posted by The Nouveau Classical Project
 

Meet 2016-17 Artistic Associate, Mara Mayer!

 
Photo credit: Kholood Eid

Photo credit: Kholood Eid

 

At NCP we've created a new position of seasonal Artistic Associate. Each season, a different member of our ensemble will take on this role and get a more hands-on experience on the organizational side. Our clarinetist Mara Mayer will serve as our 2016-17 Artistic Associate. Mara is an incredible musician, producer, curator, yogi, and cat lady, and we could not be more pleased that she will be offering up her sage wisdom this season.

We think you'll love Mara as much as we do, so we asked her a few questions to introduce her to the NCP audience!

How did you get started with NCP?
I got started with NCP due to my love of the bass clarinet. They needed someone to play bass clarinet in Pierrot Lunaire and I was super excited to be involved in that work. I had been introduced to Sugar at a Composer’s Forum event at Exapno (back in 2011?!) and then Isabel, NCP’s regular clarinetist who had been my classmate at Eastman, recommended me for playing bass clarinet. I also started filling in for Isabel when she was too busy doing other awesome things. 

Photo credit: Gabrielle Herbst

Photo credit: Gabrielle Herbst

What are you looking forward to as the NCP Artistic Associate?
As NCP’s Artistic Associate I am looking forward to getting my curatorial paws on NCP’s programming for a couple of events at the end of 2016, and helping to facilitate communication with composers writing new pieces for us in 2017. As curator for the interdisciplinary experimental performance series Home Audio for the past five years, I’ve developed a sense of how to program events that showcase brand new adventurous work. Sugar and I have discussed expanding NCP’s repertoire to include more experimental composers’ work, and I’m happy to help bring that music to new audiences. I’m really excited for our 2017 season because we’ll be playing a bunch of new music written specifically for the group by composers including Gabrielle Herbst, Isaac Schankler, Nina Young, David Byrd, Olga Bell, and will be revisiting Vincent Calianno’s piece written for us last year.   

What is your favorite NCP memory?
My favorite NCP memory is getting to spend a week in New Hampshire at a residency with Sugar, Marina, and Gabi (Gabrielle Herbst), working on material for Gabi’s new piece for us and canoeing around a magical lake.

What have you been working on lately? 
I have been working on planning upcoming Home Audio events for this fall. You can check out the series at homeaudioseries.com. I’m also starting to develop some solo material on bass clarinet as performer/composer/improviser. Here’s a little taste of what that sounds like.

How do you like to spend your time outside of music?
I also practice and teach yoga. Right now I teach at a lovely little community studio in Crown Heights called Shambhala and at two senior living communities where I teach chair yoga to older adults. 

tags: clarinetist, the nouveau classical project, werk
categories: NCP Stuff
Tuesday 09.13.16
Posted by The Nouveau Classical Project
 

Practice then Party at de la Prada

This is mostly going to be a picture post. It's been a long day, but a good one: we had a rehearsal for a fashion show that we're playing tomorrow, where we were joined by the super stylish Dario Calmese (details to be revealed later!) and then a shindig at the Agatha Ruiz de la Prada store in TriBeca. We're working on a lil' something with Agatha for later this spring. Agatha's store is the brightest thing on the corner of Watts and Greenwich, even on the grayest day. We New Yorkers can definitely use a break from our black uniform! Agatha Ruiz de la Prada inspires us to wear more color and to remember to have fun with fashion. Be one of the first to get the scoop on tomorrow's fashion show by following us on Twitter.

tags: agatha ruiz de la prada, werk, rehearsal, dario calmese
categories: Fashion, Werk, the arts council
Friday 02.12.16
Posted by Sugar Vendil