November 2024 Concert
Maurice Cohn, conductor
Clancy Newman, cello
Saturday November 16, 2024 at 8:00PM
Good Shepherd-Faith Presbyterian Church
152 West 66th Street, New York, NY
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Gabriel Fauré (1919)
Masques et Bergamasques, Op. 112
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Erich Korngold (1953)
Theme and Variations, Op. 42
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Pyotr Tchaikovsky (1876)
Variations on a Rococo Theme, Op. 33
Clancy Newman, cello
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Ludwig van Beethoven (1801)
Symphony No. 1, Op. 21
About the Artists
Maurice Cohn, conductor
A two-time recipient of the Solti Foundation U.S. Career Assistance Award, Maurice Cohn currently serves as Assistant Conductor for the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. He is a regular guest conductor with the Chicago-based contemporary ensemble Zafa Collective and is also the Assistant Conductor of the Aspen Music Festival for the 2022 season.
Recent and upcoming engagements include the Cincinnati Symphony, Utah Symphony, Amarillo Symphony, Colorado Music Festival, Symphoria New York, and the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra. Highlights of last season also include two world premieres, Mason Bates's Philharmonia Fantastique with the DSO, and Liza Sobel’s chamber opera I DID, DID I? with the Zafa Collective. In September 2022, Maurice was a finalist in the Guido Cantelli Conducting Competition, where he received the Orchestra Award.
Maurice spent two summers as a conducting fellow at the Aspen Music Festival, where he received the Robert J. Harth Conducting Prize (2019) and the Aspen Conducting Prize (2021). He recently received an M.M. from the Eastman School of Music, where he worked frequently with the Eastman orchestras and OSSIA New Music Ensemble. He holds a B.M. in cello performance from Oberlin Conservatory and a B.A. from Oberlin College, where he studied history and mathematics. When not conducting or playing cello, you can find him reading mystery novels, playing tennis, or continually searching for the best podcast app.
Clancy Newman, cello
Cellist Clancy Newman has enjoyed an extraordinarily wide-ranging career, not only as a cellist, but also as a composer, producer, writer, teacher, and guest lecturer. Originally from Albany NY, he received his first significant public recognition at the age of twelve, when he won a Gold Medal at the Dandenong Youth Festival in Australia, competing against contestants twice his age. In the years that followed, he won numerous other competitions, including the Juilliard School Cello Competition, the National Federation of Music Clubs competition, the Astral Artists National Auditions, and finally the prestigious Walter W. Naumburg International Competition.
He has performed as soloist throughout the United States, as well as in Europe, Asia, Canada, and Australia. A recipient of an Avery Fisher career grant, he can often be heard on NPR’s "Performance Today" and has been featured on A&E and PBS. A sought after chamber musician, he is a former member of the Weiss-Kaplan-Newman trio, and he has toured as a member of "Musicians from Marlboro" and performed with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.
He developed an interest in composition at an early age, writing his first piece at seven, a piece for solo cello. Since then, he has greatly expanded the cello repertoire: he premiered his Four Pieces for Solo Cello at the Violoncello Society in New York, his Sonata for Cello and Piano in New York's Weill Hall, and his Four Seasons of Life for cello and string orchestra with Symphony in C in Philadelphia. His "Pop-Unpopped" project, where he writes solo cello caprices based on pop songs, has been ongoing since 2014 and has led to an exploration of cello techniques heretofore unimagined.
Newman has guest lectured on the Golden Ratio Method, a method of composition he invented, and has been featured on series by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Chicago Chamber Musicians. His piano quintet, commissioned by the Ryuji Ueno Foundation, was premiered at the opening ceremony of the National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington DC. His piano trio, Juxt-Opposition, is available on Bridge Records. In December 2023, Palindromic Variations, a string trio commissioned by violinist Tai Murray, was premiered at the Yale School of Music. Newman is currently working on several commissions, including one for the Formosa String Quartet.
An active educator, Newman is on the faculty of Princeton University, teaches at the Maine Chamber Music Seminar, and maintains a small private studio. During the Covid-19 pandemic, the Kingston Chamber Music Festival commissioned him to produce four educational videos to assist school teachers, a project that involved script writing, set designing, video editing, animation, and acting.
In August 2023, Newman and pianist Natalie Zhu released From Method to Madness: The American Sound, an album of all American music for cello and piano, on Albany Records. It is available for purchase and for streaming on all platforms.
Mr. Newman is a graduate of the five-year exchange program between Juilliard and Columbia University, receiving a M.M. from Juilliard and a B.A. in English from Columbia. His teachers have included David Gibson, Joel Krosnick and Harvey Shapiro.