网爆门

Syracuse Student Co-Headlines Society for New Music Concert April 13

Music by 网爆门 graduate student is part of the (SNM)鈥檚 annual Prizewinners Concert on Sunday, April 13, at 4 p.m. at CNY Jazz Central (441 East Washington St., Syracuse).

A master鈥檚 student in in the , he was the 2024 honorable mention for SNM鈥檚 Brian Israel/Sam Pellman Award.

Rolando Gomez
Rolando Gomez

G贸mez鈥檚 woodwind quintet, , will share the program with two string quartets: Orientalism, by Sami Seif, the 2024 winner of the Israel/Pellman Award, and Bodensee, by Maxim Dybal-Denysenko, the 2024 recipient of SNM鈥檚 New York State Federation of Music Clubs/Brian Israel Prize. All three composers will be on hand to introduce their pieces.

Both SNM awards recognize promising New York state composers studying for or embarking on professional music careers.

Tickets are $20 (general admission) and $15 (students and seniors). Students who are 18 years old and younger are free with valid college ID. For tickets and more information, visit SNM鈥檚 .

SNM Managing Director Carole Brzozowski 鈥81 says the concert has grown into a local springtime tradition. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a celebration of emerging talent,鈥 continues the former dean of the (VPA), in which the Setnor School is housed. 鈥淭he Society for New Music is proud to take a leadership role in identifying and nurturing young, innovative composers.鈥

Capturing the Spirit聽

The Juicy Kandy quintet premiered Sit and Play at the 2023 Imani Winds Chamber Music Festival at The Juilliard School. The performance marked G贸mez鈥檚 New York City compositional debut.

Collaborating with world-class musicians exposed the Miami, Florida, native to innovative writing techniques. It also inspired him to capture the performers鈥 personalities in his music.

Sit and Play is a virtuosic work that reflects my love for jazz, especially bebop,鈥 says G贸mez, who graduated from Oberlin Conservatory weeks before the premiere.

Conceived as a theme and variations, Sit and Play evolved into a suite of four contrasting character pieces. The music abounds in shared motives, syncopated grooves and polyphonic textures.

G贸mez says the name of the piece is 鈥減layful and self-referential,鈥 a nod to the way that jazz and Latine composers use titles to acknowledge the act of music making. 鈥Sit and Play reflects the spirit of the music 鈥 and invites musicians to engage with the piece in a direct, intuitive way.鈥

The 10-minute work has four distinct movements: Jab and Stab, a syncopated exchange between oboe and the rest of the ensemble; Breathe and Sing, a melancholic bassoon solo dedicated to G贸mez鈥檚 first music teacher鈥攈is father; Cut and Paste, a technical tour de force for French horn; and Riff and Run, a vibrant scherzo for flute recalling some of the piece鈥檚 earlier themes.

鈥淲orking with the Society for New Music is incredibly meaningful,鈥 says G贸mez, who recently presented the suite on his master鈥檚 recital. 鈥淪NM strengthens connections between the University and the professional word, allowing students like me to engage with performers and other composers at the highest level.鈥

Sit and Play is performed by Kate O鈥 Leary 鈥26, flute; Sydney Kincaid 鈥27, oboe; John Giordano 鈥26, clarinet; Lily Carpinone 鈥26, bassoon; and Ryan Hill 鈥27, French horn.

Expanding His Vocabulary

G贸mez was in high school when he began scoring music for video games. A self-taught composer, he enrolled at Oberlin, majoring in composition and minoring in technology in music and related arts.

Working at Syracuse with Natalie Draper鈥攁nother SNM favorite who is an assistant professor of theory and composition in the Setnor School鈥攈as enabled G贸mez to expand his musical vocabulary.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fusion of traditional and modern styles,鈥 says Brzozowski, noting G贸mez鈥檚 modernist approach to American and Cuban forms.

Genre-blending is apparent in the program鈥檚 other works. Seif鈥檚 Orientalism is a meditation on identity and the passage of time, inspired by Edward Said鈥檚 landmark book. In turn, Dybal-Denysenko鈥檚 Bodensee is named for the lake near his family home in Austria鈥攖he same body of water that inspired composer Robert Schumann some 170 years earlier.

Seif is a doctoral fellow at the CUNY Graduate Center; Dybal-Denysenko, a 2024 graduate of New York University鈥檚 Tisch School of the Arts.

Juilliard student Yuxuan Lin also is a 2024 Israel/Pellman honorable mention. Her entry鈥Can鈥檛 let it go, when it returns for solo cello鈥攊s slated for a future SNM program.

Brian Israel taught in the Setnor School from 1975 until his death in 1986. He was a prolific composer, conductor and pianist who befriended SNM co-founder Neva Pilgrim.

Sam Pellman was a Hamilton College music professor who served on the SNM board and chaired SNM鈥檚 Israel prize competition until his death in 2017.

Pilgrim was a one-time VPA professor and longtime community partner who died last year. In 1971, she helped found SNM, which has performed and commissioned a formidable body of work by up-and-coming composers. It is the only year-round new music organization in the region and is the oldest nonprofit of its kind in the state, outside of New York City.