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"Cello Celli!"
Brave new cellos
As a musician, Derek Snyder wears at least three hats: performer,
teacher, and arranger. The Cleveland-based cellist will be wearing
all of them when he hosts the second annual "Cello Celli!"
concert at Kerrytown Concert House on Sunday, April 13.
The founder and education director of the Cleveland Cello School,
Snyder is a nationally known and highly respected chamber musician
who has created numerous arrangements, primarily of the music of
Dave Brubeck and stor Piazzolla, for cello ensembles. Locally
he's also known as the driving force behind the annual Oblivion
Project concerts, featuring the Phoenix Ensemble playing Snyder's
arrangements of Piazzolla's nuevo tango music. Snyder is
passionate about the cello, how it's used in classical music,
how it sounds in genres not often associated with it, and its
potential with new techniques and technologies not found in
cellists' traditional training.
Bach's Suite for Solo Cello no. 3 is the only classical
piece on the "Cello Celli!" program. Juxtaposed with it
is Massachusetts-based composer-cellist Stephen Katz's Bitterroot
Suite for Solo/Looped Cello. The combination ideally demonstrates
the striking contrasts and underlying similarities between the two
works. Bach's music requires that the cello simulate simultaneously
the melody, inner voices, and bass lines, while the different dance
rhythms of the suite provide its rhythmic underpinning. Katz
accomplishes the same thing with looping. Looping, where a musician
records a brief phrase and then plays it back while creating other
layers of music above it, is commonly used in rock and jazz but is
rarely found in classical music. Katz combines looping with his
innovative strumming and pizzicato styles, many of them borrowed
from guitar techniques. His compositions also incorporate African
and Brazilian rhythms, and several other pieces on the program
feature these influences and unusual techniques, independent of
looping.
The other "Cello Celli!" cellists are Mike Karoub of
the Royal Garden Trio, who's also played bass in James Dapogny's
Chicago Jazz Band, and two local teenage wunderkinder, Eric Tinkerhess
and Nathaniel Pierce. Snyder calls Karoub an "underknown
treasure" who manages to make the cello sound right at home
playing jazz: "What he does with the cello makes it sound like
it's always been a part of that music." Tinkerhess and
Pierce are young virtuosos, capable of absorbing all that their
mentors can teach them and of expanding the possibilities
and quite likely the audiences for the cello.
In a concert of many low notes, one of the high notes, literally,
will be the only noncellist, violinist Gabe Bolkosky. Snyder's
arrangement of Tom Waits's "Little Drop of Poison"
of Shrek 2 fame talk about varied genres will feature
the low range of the violin, its deep, dark sonority blending
perfectly with the rich tones of the four cellos.
Sandor Slomovits
[Review published April 2008]
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