Zizi
Mueller, flutist, studied at the Juilliard School and while
still a student, she appeared at the major theatres and festivals
throughout Europe and the United States and won the Artists International
Competition as soloist. Ms. Mueller has worked extensively in theater,
acting as Musical Director for the LaMama ETC Company under the
direction of Wilford Leach, Musical Director and composer for Leonard
Cohen's Sisters of Mercy, Musical Director for Joseph Papp's Midsummer
Night's Dream and many other theatrical productions.
Ms. Mueller has played recitals and chamber music throughout the
US and gave her New York debut at Merkin Hall to enthusiastic reviews.
Ms. Mueller has produced collaborations that include one with MOSAIC,
Donald Byrd/the Group and video artist Star Reese which was premiered
in 2001 at Symphony Space in New York and is currently producing
Cabaret Schoenberg, a work directed by celebrated artists Hans Peter
Cloos and Jean Kalman which will premiere in the US in the 2005/2006
season. Ms. Mueller’s productions also include a collaboration
with video artist Vibeke Sorensen and composer Rand Steiger to be
premiered in the spring of 2005 as well as a new recording of Margaret
Brouwer’s orchestral works, featuring soloist Evelyn Glennie.
Ms. Mueller has recorded for the Vanguard, CRI, Newport Classic,
Naxos, Nonesuch and New World companies and released a CD for Premiere
Records entitled The American Flute, Volume I . Ms. Mueller has
produced a new recording of Steven Mackey's chamber works released
by New World Records and is also Executive Producer of a recording
of Margaret Brouwer's orchestral works with Gerard Schwarz and Evelyn
Glennie. She has been on the faculties of Fairfield University and
SUNY Purchase as well as on the Faculty of the Chamber Music Conference
and Composers' Forum of the East.
Cellist
Edward Arron is rapidly gaining recognition worldwide
for his elegant musicianship, impassioned performances, and creative
programming. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Mr. Arron made his New
York recital debut in 2000 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Earlier
that year, he performed Vivaldi’s Concerto for Two Cellos with Yo-Yo
Ma and the Orchestra of St. Luke’s at the Opening Night Gala of
the Caramoor International Festival. Since that time, Mr. Arron
has appeared in recital, as a soloist with orchestra, and as a chamber
musician throughout the United States, Europe and the Far East.
The 2005-2006 season marks Mr. Arron’s third season as the Artistic Director of the Metropolitan Museum Artists in Concert, a chamber ensemble created in 2003 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Museum’s prestigious Concerts and Lectures series. Each performance of the MMAinC is broadcast live on New York’s classical radio station, WQXR. Mr. Arron is also the artistic coordinator of the Caramoor Virtuosi and is the artistic director of the Alpenglow Chamber Music Festival in Summit County, Colorado. For four seasons, he was the artistic administrator and resident performer for WQXR’s “On A-I-R” series, a weekly radio program dedicated to chamber music.
Recent highlights of Mr. Arron’s career include guest appearances with the Tokyo and Shanghai Quartets, as well as collaborations with Renee Fleming, James Taylor, and the Persian singer, Shahram Nazeri. Mr. Arron has performed numerous times at Carnegie’s Weill Hall, Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, New York’s Town Hall, and the 92nd Street Y, and is a frequent performer at Bargemusic. Past summer festival appearances include Ravinia, Salzburg, BRAVO! Colorado, Tanglewood, Bridgehampton, Piccolo Spoleto, Santa Fe, the North Country Chamber Players, the Chamber Music Conference of the East, and Isaac Stern’s Jerusalem Chamber Music Encounterseen on the faculties of Fairfield University and SUNY Purchase as well as on the Faculty of the Chamber Music Conference and Composers' Forum of the East.
Pianist Emma Tahmizian's international career was launched when she won the First Prize in the Robert Schumann International Competition. Within the span of three years, she won prizes in the Tchaikovsky, Leeds, and Van Cliburn competitions. She has appeared with the Moscow, St. Petersburg, Halle, and Brooklyn Philharmonics, and the East Berlin Radio Symphony. Ms. Tahmiziàn tours throughout the United States and Europe in wide variety of appearances. Her affinity for broad repertoire dates in her formative years, as early as in her first performances where she often included new music in her programs, and at eleven was chosen to represent her native country in Moscow, performing twenty six pieces by contemporary Bulgarian composers in less than a week. She has premiered and recorded numerous new works, several of which written expressly for her. Ms. Tahmiziàn spends her summers at the Bowdoin International Music Festival which she joined eighteen years ago. Featured at MIDEM Classique in Cannes with her recording of Beethoven's Sonatas Op.31 No.3 and Op.111 and in live broadcasts, she has recorded for New World Records, Koch International, Balkanton, Premier Recordings, and Classico.
Daniel Druckman, percussionist, is active as a soloist, chamber and
orchestral musician and recording artist, concertizing throughout
the United States, Europe and Japan. He has appeared as soloist
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the American Composers Orchestra,
the New York Philharmonic's Horizons concerts, the San Francisco
Symphony's New and Unusual Music series, and in recital in New York,
Los Angeles, San Francisco and Tokyo. A member of the New York Philharmonic,
Speculum Musicae and the New York New Music Ensemble, Mr. Druckman
has also made numerous guest appearances with the Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln Center, the Da Capo Chamber Players, the Group
for Contemporary Music, Steve Reich and Musicians, and the Philip
Glass Ensemble, among others.
Mr. Druckman is currently coordinator of the percussion department
and Director of the percussion ensemble at the Juilliard School.
He has recorded for the Columbia, Angel, Teldec, DGG, CRI, Nonesuch,
Bridge and New World labels. Daniel Druckman was born and raised
in New York City. He attended the Juilliard School where he was
awarded the Morris A. Goldenberg Memorial Scholarship in 1977 and
1978, and the Saul Goodman Scholarship in 1979. Additional studies
were undertaken at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood, where
he was awarded the Henry Cabot Award for outstanding instrumentalist.
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