Kurt Weill Festival

The UMD Wind Ensemble, UMD Wind Orchestra and UMD Men’s Chorus share the stage for an exciting performance of Weill works written in Berlin during the Weimar Era.

Program:

Das Berliner Requiem
Mike Hogue, tenor
Collin Power, baritone
Aaron Peisner, conductor

Vom Tod im Wald
Kevin Short, bass-baritone
Edward Maclary, conductor

Concerto for Violin and Wind Orchestra, Op. 12
Irina Muresanu, violin
Edward Maclary, conductor

Ravi Coltrane Quartet

Ravi Coltrane is more than the scion of spiritual jazz’s first family. The son of saxophone bellwether John Coltrane and fusion paragon Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, Ravi was not yet two when his father died. Still, in the subsequent five decades, he has inherited and cherished the call to push jazz ahead, honoring and preserving its past while ever aiming for its next step. In the early 1990s, he began playing with a murders’ row of genre titans, like his father’s longtime drummer Elvin Jones, and restless minds, like progressive jazz force Steve Coleman.

Hamlet Replayed

Hamlet is knee-deep in a personal and political quagmire. His father, the king, has been murdered by his uncle Claudius, who has hastily married his sister-in-law to assume the throne. Seeking to avenge his father’s murder, Hamlet sets off a chain of events resulting in death, destruction and a notable absence of justice.

Opera New Work Reading: Hajar

Elisabeth Mehl Greene's new opera Hajar synthesizes the Jewish and Islamic stories of Hagar/Hajar into a modern tale of a Syrian refugee mother and her son trying to reach safety in America. Hajar confronts the immigration crisis in the United States and worldwide, challenging the acceptance of policies that resist compassion. 

Faculty Artist Series: Strata, A Thousand Whirling Dreams

Strata, an ensemble including violin faculty member James Stern and guest artists Audrey Andrist, piano, and Nathan Williams, clarinet, presents a dazzling recital of music by contemporary American composers.

Selections include the title work by Dana Wilson (inspired by the poem As I Grew Older by Langston Hughes), and music by Paul Schoenfield, Libby Larsen, Margaret Brouwer, and a work written for Strata by celebrated Maryland alumnus Jonathan Leshnoff.

Spring MFA Dance Thesis Concert

Two MFA Dance students present original, compelling works as a part of their MFA Program in Dance Thesis. Ama Law presents Tides and Shawn Stone presents 's (apostrophe s).

Ama Law presents Tides. Where sand meets sea, it rises and falls. Drifting, floating, calls from our ancestors. Join these women on a journey discovering how different and alike we are in this skin.

Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet

For thirty years, the Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet—an outgrowth of one of the world’s great orchestras, inspired by one of the world’s most heralded conductors—has set the international standard for such ensembles. Established in 1988, the Quintet has been the prolific and peerless voice of their instrumental canon, whether playing Mozart’s compositions for wind quintet and piano alongside Stephen Hough, reinterpreting the music of Leoš Janáček, or taking on new works by the likes of Kalevi Aho.

Nederlands Dans Theater

Having wowed audiences last season at the Kennedy Center, Nederlands Dans Theater is one of the world’s most celebrated dance companies, performing its unique brand of breathtaking dance and passionate creativity. Often described as the “young company,” NDT2 is a tour de force in its own right. Working with superlative choreographic talent, these international dancers aged 18-23 fill the stage with breathtaking exuberance, astonishing athleticism and awe-inspiring skill. The future is here!

36th Annual Choreographers' Showcase

Now entering its 36th edition, the Choreographers’ Showcase has become one of the DC/MD/VA dance community’s most celebrated exhibitions of established and emerging choreographic talent. Established in 1983 by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, the Showcase’s featured choreographers now number in the hundreds, and they are teaching and making dance in local communities and on stages across the globe.

Choreographers:

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