Williams Department of Music Opens 2010-11 Season
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The William College Department of Music opens the 2010-2011 concert season with a performance by department faculty members of the I/O Music Ensemble on Friday, Sept. 10, at 8 p.m. in the '62 Center on the CenterStage. This free event is open to the public but does require tickets. Call the '62 box office at 413-597-2425.Directed by Steven Dennis Bodner and Matthew Gold, the ensemble presents pieces by faculty members David Kechley and Ileana Perez-Velazquez as well as David Lang, Alex Mincek, and Rebecca Saunders with musicians Thomas Bergeron, trumpet; Steven Bodner, saxophones and conductor, Stephanie Busby, bassoon; Matthew Gold, percussion; David Kechley, double bass; senior Chaz Lee, synthesizer; Nat Parke, cello; Jonathan Salter, clarinet; and Doris Stevenson, piano.
I/O Ensemble, the house band for The Box, kicks off the new season with "Repeat," a program featuring recent works by Williams faculty composers Kechley and Perez-Velazquez, and cutting-edge new music by Lang, Mincek and Saunders.
Kechley’s "Design and Construction" and Perez-Valázquez’s "Light Echoes" are both major new works being given their second performance on this program. Kechley's work is a series of “trialogues” for trumpet, saxophone, and percussion explores an expanded timbral palette for saxophone and trumpet, and employs a drum set made from wooden planks, circular saw blades, wine bottles, and other found and altered objects. "Light Echoes" takes its inspiration from an astronomical event that took place approximately 20,000 light years from Earth involving light from a stellar explosion echoing off dust surrounding the star V838 Monocerotis.
Saunders' "Into the Blue" delves into the sound world beneath the surface of its instrumental palette. Mincek describes the arrested grooves of his "Nucleus," for saxophone and drum set as a Blade Runneresque dystopian soundscape. Repetition is also at play in the asymmetrical grooves of Lang’s "dance/drop," an arrangement of the two instrumental movements of his larger work, "Are You Experienced?"
The Box series was conceived in 2007 by Kechley and Perez-Velázquez to present the music of living composers in a setting more intimate and a performance space more flexible than a traditional concert hall.

