Nicholas Phan
Cart 0

 2021 COLLABORATIVE WORKS FESTIVAL:

STRANGERS IN A STRANGE LAND

30.png

 ABOUT

The 2021 Collaborative Works Festival: Strangers in a Strange Land explored themes of immigration and migration in song.

Featuring the works of a wide-range of composers, many of whom immigrated or migrated during the course of their own lifetimes, the festival was presented with three live, in-person performances and one master class in October 2021 followed by delayed broadcasts which aired in October and November 2021.

 

CAIC 21  22 FB Events and Broadcast Slides.png

CRITICAL ACCLAIM

TOP TEN PERFORMANCES OF 2021

The enterprising Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago explored the migrant experience as reflected in classical vocal music from the English Renaissance through Schubert to Ruth Crawford Seeger and the local premieres of absorbing song cycles by Errolyn Wallen and Nico Muhly…Migrant journeys were explored, painful truths lost to history unearthed and timely resonances created, and Phan and friends have brought us no more thoughtful or absorbing a program.”

The closing recital of the Collaborative Works Festival was a stand-out on this year’s calendar…This roster gave superb advocacy to songs in the folk tradition from Bartok, Britten, Gabriela Lena Frank, Ginastera, and others, capping the festival with intelligence and trademark vocal splendor.

Chicago Classical Review

COLLABORATIVE WORKS FESTIVAL RETURNS WITH COMPELLING SONGS REFLECTING IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE

An absorbing, thoughtfully planned, deftly executed program spanning four centuries…In all, a tantalizing start to another Collaborative Works Festival that no one who cares about contemporary art song can afford to miss.”

Chicago Classical Review

CAIC WRAPS FESTIVAL WITH FAR-ROVING SURVEY OF FOLK SONGS

The Collaborative Works Festival, presented annually by the Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago (CAIC), is a gem of the city’s fall concert calendar. Since being founded in 2010 by now-artistic director Nicholas Phan, each autumn CAIC reliably presents compelling art song programing in intelligently curated programs performed by world-class singers and pianists. In its 10th iteration, this year’s festival proved no exception.

Chicago Classical Review

 

28.png

 PROGRAM I:

SONGS OF THE NEW WORLD

The Festival’s opening program, Songs of the New World, showcased songs about the immigrant experience.

Songs by composers Ian Cusson, Missy Mazzoli, Mohammed Fairouz, and Ruth Crawford Seeger features on this program alongside songs by Franz Schubert, who wrote many songs on the themes of wandering and pilgrimage. A highlight of this performance was the Midwest premiere of Nico Muhly’s, Stranger, in which Muhly juxtaposed settings of accounts of immigration through Ellis Island with settings of texts protesting the United States’ Chinese Exclusion policies of the late 19th century, which persisted through the years of World War II.

ARTISTS

Amanda Lynn Bottoms, mezzo-soprano | Nicholas Phan, tenor | Yasuko Oura, piano | Avalon String Quartet

PROGRAM

MISSY MAZZOLI: The World Within Me Is Too Small from Songs from the Uproar

ERROLLYN WALLEN: My Feet May Take A Little While

RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER: Chinaman! Laundryman! from Two Ricercari

MOHAMMED FAIROUZ: Refugee Blues

IAN CUSSON: Where There’s A Wall

THOMAS CAMPION: Never Weather-beaten Sail

NICO MUHLY: Stranger

FRANZ SCHUBERT: Heliopolis I | Pilgerweise | Der Wanderer an den Mond

 

29.png

 PROGRAM II:

STRANGERS

The Festival’s second program, Strangers, featured the music of composers who themselves immigrated to the United States, including Rebecca Clarke, Erich Korngold, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Igor Stravinsky, and Irving Berlin. In addition, the program not only explored the work of composers who immigrated to the US from other countries, but also the songs of Florence Price who migrated to Chicago from Arkansas in 1927 as part of The Great Migration.

​Also featured on this program were songs of the composer, pianist, and actor Robert Owens, who remained in Europe for much of his life after serving in the US army during World War II, completing his musical studies in Paris and eventually settling in Münich, Germany.

​This performance was presented in a special partnership with the Richard H. Driehaus Museum.

ARTISTS

Helen Zhibing Huang, soprano | Amanda Lynn Bottoms, mezzo-soprano | Anna Laurenzo, mezzo-soprano | Nicholas Phan, tenor | Anthony Reed, bass | Ronny Michael Greenberg, piano

PROGRAM

IRVING BERLIN: God Bless America | Supper Time

CHEN YI: Bright Moonlight

REBECCA CLARKE: The Cloths of Heaven | Up-Hill (first known performance)

ERICH WOLFGANG KORNGOLD: selections from Fünf Lieder, Op. 38

ROBERT OWENS: Heart | Havana Dreams

FLORENCE PRICE: Sympathy | Out of the South Blew a Wind

SERGEI RACHMANINOFF: Vocalise

IGOR STRAVINSKY: ​Two Poems of Paul Verlaine

JORGE SOSA: A Letter Home

 

31.png

PROGRAM III:

THE SONGS WE CARRIED

The third performance of the 2021 Festival, The Songs We Carried, examined the ways in which song is both an important method of cultural exchange as well as an art form that many rely on to preserve their cultural identity upon arriving in a new location.

The program featured folk song arrangements by composers such as Benjamin Britten, Béla Bartók, Rebecca Clarke, Percy Grainger, alongside spiritual arrangements by Florence Price, Margaret Bonds and more.

ARTISTS

Helen Zhibing Huang, soprano | Amanda Lynn Bottoms, mezzo-soprano | Nicholas Phan, tenor | Adriane Post, violin | Shannon McGinnis, piano

PROGRAM

arr. BÉLA BARTÓK: Elindultam szép hazámbul, BB. 42, No.1

arr. MARGARET BONDS: He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands

arr. BENJAMIN BRITTEN: The Ash Grove | The Last Rose of Summer

arr. REBECCA CLARKE: I Know My Love | I Know Where I’m Goin’ | It was a Lover and his Lass | Phillis on the New Made Hay | The Salley Gardens

GABRIELA LENA FRANK: Cuatro Canciones Andinas

ALBERTO GINASTERA: 5 Canciones populares argentinas

arr. PERCY GRAINGER: Hard Heartened Barbara (H)Ellen | Irish Tune from County Derry | The Spring of Thyme

arr. JULIA PERRY: I’m a Poor Li’l Orphan in This Worl’

arr. FLORENCE PRICE: My Soul’s Been Anchored in the Lord