Categories
2021-2022

Hearing Extremes 2022

Monday June 6, 2022

Hearing Extremes

Ocean. Earth. Fire. Big Data. Extremes.

Based on ongoing collaborations with Falko Kuester of the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering and Qualcomm Institute (QI), and Emily Chin and Josh Jones of Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the “Hearing Extremes” seminar provides an unusual opportunity for artists and scientists to develop interdisciplinary projects outside the walls of their respective departments, to think of the entire campus as a place for “great learning,” to reconsider what each participant’s role might be in regard to the collaboration and to create works that would not be possible without a fully integrated approach that reflects the knowledge, technology and global issues of our time. The seminar is taught by QI Research Artist in Residence and composer Lei Liang, winner of the prestigious 2021 Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition.

We invite you to enjoy works composed by students Marguerite Brown, Matthew Henson, Jiyoung Ko, Aaron Mencher, Delong Wang, Jacques Zafra and Theocharis Papatrechas, as performed by the award-winning Mivos Quartet (pictured below). Founded in 2008, the Mivos Quartet is devoted to performing the works of contemporary composers and presenting diverse new music to international audiences. They have performed and closely collaborated with an ever-expanding group of international composers representing a wide aesthetic range of contemporary composition.

Mivos Quartet’s residency is sponsored by the Dean of the UC San Diego Division of Arts & Humanities.

Mivos Quartet
Categories
2022-2023

Hearing Extremes 2023

Friday May 26, 2023

Hearing Extremes

In this IDEAS performance in Atkinson Hall (UC San Diego campus), Chicago-based musical ensemble “Dal Niente” visits QI to premier original compositions by graduate students in the “Hearing Extremes” seminar taught by QI Research Artist in Residence and UC San Diego Chancellor’s Distinguished Professor of Music Lei Liang with geologist Emily Chin and oceanographer Joshua Jones.

“Hearing Extremes” compositions are based on ongoing collaborations with scientists from Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The pieces reflect an unusual opportunity for artists and scientists to develop interdisciplinary projects outside the walls of their respective departments, and to create works that would not be possible without a fully integrated approach that reflects the knowledge, technology and global issues of our time.

Musicians: Constance Volk (flute), Katherine Schoepflin Jimoh (clarinet), Ben Melsky (harp)

Participants: Marguerite Brown, Robert Bui, Mitchell Carlstrom, Mingyong Cheng, Andrew Crapitto, Charles Deluga, Yifan Guo, Sergey Kasich, Grace Talaski, Delong Wang, S Whiteley, Haihui Zhang, Han Zhang, Di Fang

Dal Niente
Categories
2022-2023

Pigments of Imagination

May 18, 2023

Pigment of Imagination

By Tim Gmeiner

The Qualcomm Institute’s (QI) IDEAS series presents “Pigments of Imagination,” an interactive virtual reality experience that frames the creative process as a narrative relating the inner-workings of one’s unique imagination to the universe around us. It is an observation on the beauty, fear, adventure, sadness and loneliness of self-discovery and the artist’s ultimate recognition of process as goal, as told through the story of a small child’s journey to the moon.

The installation is designed to reimagine the popular music video in a virtual space as a dynamic, emotionally engaging experience by exploring distinctive relationships between spatialization, audiovisual reactivity and interactivity, which allow for a narrative immersion that maintains a structured arc and conclusion but unique experience with each use.

This piece features musical contributions from UC San Diego Music’s King Britt, Steph Richards and Zach Konick, and vocalist Nick Tolford. Singular virtual reality experiences will be offered in addition to the general presentation.

Bios:
Timothy Gmeiner is a San Diego, California-based interdisciplinary artist and music producer. He has toured internationally under the name “Ill Poetic” and garnered public acclaim for his releases from artists and publications such as Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and Portishead. Through his company SoundRzn Design, he has provided audio and visual services for artists, universities and companies of various industries including the San Diego Symphony, OWN and HBO. He has worked as the Assistant Director at QI’s Audio Spatialization Lab and is currently enrolled in UC San Diego’s Computer Music Ph.D. program, where he focuses on audiovisual relationships in virtual and physical spaces. Current projects and collaborations focus on spatialized and interactive compositions in virtual reality, audiovisual live performance and large-scale real-time reactive installations.

Eito Murakami is a master’s student at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) at Stanford University. He graduated from UC San Diego with bachelor’s degrees in Interdisciplinary Computing and the Arts Music (ICAM) and Political Science/International Relations. Murakami is an electronic composer, performer, sound designer and virtual reality developer. By combining his classical music training with proficiency in audio and graphics software, he creates digital interfaces and instruments that promote intuitive musical performance. Specifically, he specializes in Unreal Engine to develop audiovisual infrastructure that allows multiplayer interactions in virtual 3D environments. Murakami is a former member of the Sonic Arts Research and Development group at QI.



VIDEO




PHOTOGRAPHY

IDEAS: Pigment of Imagination

Categories
2024

Learning to move, learning to play, learning to animate

June 6, 2024

Learning to move, learning to play, learning to animate

In an upcoming video performance premiere, UC San Diego doctoral students Mingyong Chen and Sophia Sun present “Learning to move, learning to play, learning to animate” with the Qualcomm Institute’s IDEAS series.

“Learning to move, learning to play, learning to animate” is a cross-disciplinary multimedia performance piece that challenges a human-centric perspective and aims to offer a new way of experiencing the world. Inspired by the concept of “the-more-than-human-world” and its conceptual connection to shadow art, this performance features a robot performer constructed from natural materials that learns to interact and perceive the world. 

Along with the robot’s movements and playfulness, the piece highlights its ever-transforming shadows with visual and computational processing. The work invites the audience to explore the unseen connections and interactions that exist between all living beings and the environment we inhabit, and contemplate how we can coexist with nature and technology without overpowering one another.

The video performance will premiere online soon. A trailer to the video performance is available on Vimeo

VIDEO PERFORMANCE TRAILER
Categories
2024

Hearing Extremes 2024

Friday May 24, 2024

Hearing Extremes

On Friday, May 24, the Qualcomm Institute’s IDEAS series presents “Hearing Extremes” with renowned composer and UC San Diego Professor of Music Lei Liang, and New York City-based new music chamber group loadbang.

“Hearing Extremes” introduces original compositions by UC San Diego graduate students in collaboration with researchers from the university’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Jacobs School of Engineering. Through the “Hearing Extremes” seminar, composers and artists work closely with geologist Emily Chin and oceanographer Joshua Jones, to develop interdisciplinary projects outside the walls of their respective departments, to think of the entire campus as a place for “great learning,” to reconsider what each participant’s role might be in regard to the collaboration, and to create works that would not be possible without a fully integrated approach that reflects the knowledge, technology and global issues of our time.

The program features premieres of works by composers Mitchell Carlstrom, Stephen de Filippo, WANG Delong, Gabriel Soberón Nelson, Haihui Zhang, and visual artist Moe Penders Ramos.           

Motion                                          Mitchell Carlstrom

Mammalian Dialogue                        WANG Delong                       

sun moon | ocean earth                   Gabriel Soberón Nelson

Shadow III                                      Haihui Zhang

Home Range                                  Moe Penders Ramos               

Reading Mantle Petrology                  Stephen de Filippo

loadbang will perform the students’ pieces for a live audience.

About loadbang

loadbang is building a new kind of music for mixed ensemble of trumpet, trombone, bass clarinet, and baritone voice. Since their founding in 2008, they have been praised as ‘cultivated’ by The New Yorker, ‘an extra-cool new music group’ and ‘exhilarating’ by the Baltimore Sun, ‘inventive’ by the New York Times and called a ‘formidable new-music force‘ by TimeOutNY. Creating ‘a sonic world unlike any other‘ (The Boston Musical Intelligencer), their unique lung-powered instrumentation has provoked diverse responses from composers, resulting in a repertoire comprising an inclusive picture of composition today. 

loadbang has premiered more than 500 works, written by members of the ensemble, emerging artists, and today’s leading composers. Their repertoire includes works by Pulitzer Prize winners Raven Chacon, David Lang, and Charles Wuorinen; Rome Prize winners Andy Akiho and Paula Matthusen; and Guggenheim Fellows Chaya Czernowin, George Lewis, and Alex Mincek. They are the ensemble-in-residence at Cornell University through the Steven Stucky Memorial Residency for New Music, and through a partnership with the Longy School of Music of Bard College in Boston, they are the ensemble-in-residence at Divergent Studio, a contemporary music festival for young performers and composers held each summer. Visit loadbang’s website for more.

Photo courtesy of loadbang.
Prof. Lei Liang, composer, Music Department, Lei Lab
Prof. Emily Chin, geologist, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Dr. Joshua Jones, oceanographer, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Charles Deluga, software developer, Lei Lab
Categories
2024

Beyond the Black Box: A Girl and Her Dog

Friday May 3, 2024

Beyond the Black Box: A Girl and Her Dog

On Friday, May 3, the Qualcomm Institute’s IDEAS series presents “Beyond the Black Box: A Girl and Her Dog,” a performative exploration within a series of human robot interactions.

Combining the talents of playwright Hortense Gerardo, director of the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering’s Anthropology, Performance, and Technology (APT) Program, UC San Diego Teaching Professor Amy Eguchi and University of Nebraska-Lincoln Assistant Professor of Emerging Media Arts Robert Twomey, “Beyond the Black Box” explores questions of whether robots can generate a sense of fun defined as “pleasure with surprises.” The work is loosely informed by the story of Eurydice, “The Wizard of Oz,” and “Toy Story,” and will feature six interactive robots and a selection of robots from past research projects conducted at UC San Diego.

“Beyond the Black Box: A Girl and Her Dog” is part of the series “Dances with Robots” and will be informed by data from creative AI research experiments performed by the APT Program. The work is part of On Display Global by Heidi Latsky, commemorating the International Day of Persons With Disabilities.

VIDEO

Coming Soon

Categories
2024

LAMP Presents “Gravebirth”

April 11, 2024

LAMP - Lighting Art Music Projection - Presents "Gravebirth"

“Gravebirth” is a unique performance merging diverse artistic elements to present parallel narratives of social oppression and the spirit of humanity.

The performance features the poetic text “Zendegi (life)” by contemporary Iranian poet Erfan Nazar Ahari, as interpreted by Nasim Khorassani, alongside the novel “Silence” by Syusaku Endo, brought to performative art by Kosuke Matsuda. While rooted in different historical contexts, these texts converge to depict struggles against oppression and the exploration for freedom.

“Gravebirth” intertwines sound, dance, and visual images, including light and projection, to weave a narrative that resonates with the ongoing Woman-Life-Freedom movement in Iran. The sonic landscape includes sampled folksong, noise, drone, and silence, creating a rich tapestry that encompasses both performers and audience members.

Director Kosuke Matsuda, choreographer and lighting designer Elba Emicente Sanchez, and composers/sound designers Janet Sit, Kevin Schwenkler and Timothy Gmeiner, alongside visual designers/video editors Mingyong Cheng and Nasim Khorassani, have crafted a performance that transcends boundaries, aiming to redefine the essence of humanity in the face of hardship. confront social oppression. Referencing “Zendegi (Life)” by contemporary Iranian woman poet Erfan Nazar Ahari and the novel “Silence” by Japanese author Syusaku Endo, Gravebirth aims to create a hopeful and optimistic expression of solidarity for people struggling for freedom. 

Categories
2024

La Lontananza Nostalgica Utopica Futura

February 22, 2024

La Lontananza Nostalgica Utopica Futura

With Marco Fusi, Michelle Helene Mackenzie, and Bobby McElver 

On Thursday, February 22 at 5 p.m., the Qualcomm Institute’s IDEAS series hosts a live performance of composer Luigi Nono’s “La lontananza nostalgica utopica futura,” performed by violinist/violist Marco Fusi, musician, artist and UC San Diego Ph.D. candidate Michelle Helene Mackenzie, and UC San Diego Associate Professor of Sound Design Bobby McElver. The piece will be performed using several hundred loudspeakers in a custom wave field synthesis array built by McElver.

Prior to his passing in 1990, Nono composed avant-garde classical music that mixed traditional instruments with choir and/or electronics. “La lontananza” is one such work that explores an “ever-changing soundscape” blending recordings and improvisation on the performers’ part.

Program Notes:

Before becoming a score, “La lontananza” was a sonic space. 

It was a room, filled with the sounds of moving chairs, laughing and chatting, and microphones and a violin. Luigi Nono was sitting in that space, listening and taking notes, and pasting together sounds and ideas. His fascination with sounds is mixed with respect and appreciation for all of them, from the aristocracy of the violin’s nineteenth century repertoire to the everyday experience of a slamming door.  Such a composite set of elements is equally welcomed within the audio material that Nono assembled for this piece, designing an ever-changing soundscape that allows and demands that performers play along with its heterogeneous components, treading their own path within the hour of sounds that Nono has offered.

When his attention focuses on the violin, Nono sits close to the performer, entering a most intimate and secret space that listeners cannot access. Nono listens with the ears of the violinist, and together with them, explores the stuttering of the bow before the string, the uncertainty of the fingers exploring the fingerboard, searching for a way into the oscillation of the sound before it is heard. It is within these minutiae that the violin utters its first sounds, and the listeners are drawn closer and closer to the strings, within the smallest of the dynamics.

“La lontananza” is conceived as a mental space, and it develops as a real space. The recorded material and the violin explore the unique peculiarities of each room where they perform, moving through islands of sounds and clouds of silence, estranged sounds and enveloping vibrations.

Each performance develops in a different and unforeseeable experience.

 

Performers:

Marco Fusi

Marco Fusi is a violinist/violist, a researcher in music performance, and a passionate advocate for the music of our time.

Among many collaborations with emerging and established composers, he has premiered works by Jessie Marino, Giacinto Scelsi, Yu Kuwabara, Salvatore Sciarrino and Kristine Tjøgersen, among others. Marco has performed with Pierre Boulez, Elena Schwarz, Lorin Maazel, Susanna Mälkki, Alan Gilbert, and frequently plays with leading contemporary ensembles including Klangforum Wien, MusikFabrik, Meitar Ensemble, Mivos Quartet, Ensemble Linea. He has recorded several solo albums, published by Kairos, Stradivarius, Col Legno, Da Vinci, Geiger Grammofon, New Focus Recordings. Marco also plays viola d’amore, commissioning new pieces and collaborating with composers to promote and expand existing repertoire for the instrument. He is currently Professor of Violin at the Conservatory of Alessandria and Fellow Researcher at the Orpheus Instituut of Gent.

Michelle Helene Mackenzie

Michelle Helene Mackenzie is a musician, artist, and researcher who works across electronic, ambient, and noise music. She is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Music at the University of California, San Diego. Mackenzie combines electronics, synthesis, voice, field recording, and amplified objects. She has released music independently and collaboratively with ISLA, Hotham Sound, and Music From Memory’s Second Circle, and has a collaborative forthcoming release with GRM Portraits. She has performed at INA-GRM’s Live Electronics Series, Leaving Records’s Listen to Music Outside in the Daylight Under a Free, Deep Blue (various), New Forms Festival, the Vancouver Art Gallery, Interplay Festival, Polygon Gallery, Sunset Terrace, UC San Diego, and various other events. Her sound works and commissions have been shown with 221A (Vancouver), Active Cultures (Los Angeles), Albertinum (Dresden), Dynamo Arts Association (Vancouver) Buffalo Institute for Contemporary Art (Buffalo), Esker Foundation (Calgary), the Hand (NYC), Kadist Gallery (San Francisco), National Audiovisual Centre of Luxembourg (Dudelange), Patel Brown (Toronto/Montreal), Richmond Art Gallery, SFU Galleries (Vancouver), Unitt/Pitt (Vancouver), and Western Front (Vancouver).

Bobby McElver

Bobby McElver is a sound designer and composer who works in theater, dance, music and spatial audio for the performing arts. As a member of the iconoclastic Wooster Group from 2011 to 2016, he worked closely with founder and artistic director Elizabeth LeCompte on several of their experimental works, including “Early Shaker Spirituals,” “The Room,” “Vieux Carré,” “Hamlet,” “Early Plays,” and more. 

As an artist-engineer, McElver’s research focuses on developing new spatial audio technology — specifically Wave Field Synthesis and “sound holograms” — and applying the technology in context of an artistic work. In 2018 he fabricated a Wave Field Synthesis array with 372 loudspeakers based on research at The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (EMPAC). One of the most extensive WFS arrays in the world, it allows him to place sound accurately in 3D space, creating “holophones,” or sounds that float and move in physical space. He is an associate professor of sound design with the UC San Diego Department of Theatre and Dance.

Categories
2024

Miller Puckette

January 11, 2024

QI Compose-in-Residence
Miller Puckette

With Kerry Hagan and Irwin

QI Composer-in-Residence Miller Puckette, renowned for designing and developing two of the most widespread programs for computer music, will perform alongside guests Kerry Hagan and Irwin as part of the 2024 Initiative for the Digital Exploration of Arts and Sciences (IDEAS) series. 

The performance will include select musical compositions by Puckette and Hagan, working together as “the Higgs whatever,” and by Puckette and percussionist Irwin as the duo “øther.”

the Higgs whatever

Kerry Hagan is a composer and researcher who explores both acoustic and computer-based mediums. She focuses on creating real-time techniques for spatialization and employs stochastic algorithms in her musical endeavors. Hagan strives to achieve aesthetic and philosophical goals, drawing inspiration from mathematical and natural processes. Her work uniquely merges art, science, and technology across diverse domains.

In her role as a researcher, Hagan delves into real-time algorithmic methods for music composition and sound synthesis, as well as spatialization techniques for 3D sounds and electronic/electroacoustic musicology. She has showcased her music and research at SEAMUS, ICMC, SMC, EMS, and various conferences and festivals dedicated to electronic and computer music.

Working as “the Higgs whatever,” Kerry Hagan and Miller Puckette have developed a sound installation called Remnant that explores our ability to sense that someone is standing close to us, solely through the way we hear ambient sounds reflecting off them. Remnant has been presented both in Brooklyn and in Birmingham, England. Hagan and Puckette have also collaborated on several musical compositions, of which they will be presenting a sampling in concert on Thursday, January 11, 2024. One such piece, “Who Was That Timbre I Saw You With,” uses Leap controllers to make hand-gesture-to-sound translators. 

øther

Irwin has engaged in the fields of music, production, composition, and sound design since the 1990s. Additionally, he has served as a supporting musician for numerous music tours across various genres along with contemporary solo live electronic performances.

Miller Puckette and Irwin are the duo “øther.” They use a pair of hand-built percussion instruments, each with a piezoelectric pickup, to drive a variety of computer processes, both as control sources and as activation for different types of nonlinear resonators. 

Categories
2022-2023

PERSISTENCE

MARCH 30, 2023

PERSISTENCE

Roger Reynolds, Peter Ko, Jacob Sundstrom, Alexis Descharmes

 

DETAILS:

This IDEAS performance features UC San Diego Professor Emeritus of Music Roger Reynolds, a Pulitzer prize-winning American composer known for blending traditional music with sounds newly enabled by technology. In “PERSISTENCE,” Reynolds; Miller Puckette, UC San Diego Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Music; Peter Ko and Alexis Descharmes, cellists; and Jacob Sundstrom, composer in computer music, showcase a live cello performance in conversation with technology. A six speaker system allows for a more immersive experience in Atkinson Hall’s auditorium. 

Bios 

Roger Reynolds is known for his integration of diverse ideas and resources, and for seamlessly blending traditional musical sounds and those now enabled by technology. His work responds to texts both poetic (Beckett, Borges, Stevens, Ashbery, Dickinson) and mythological (Aeschylus, Euripides, Heraclitus). He is noted for “wizardry in sending music flying through space: whether vocal, instrumental, or computerized”[ TheVillage Voice]. In 1969, Reynolds accepted a tenured appointment at UC San Diego and helped establish its Music Department as a destination program. Reynolds won early recognition with Fulbright, Guggenheim, and National Institute of Arts and Letters Awards, and also grants from the Rockefeller Foundation, and a Fellowship from the Institute for Current World Affairs. In 1989, Reynolds won the Pulitzer Prize in Music for the string orchestra composition, Whispers Out of Time. His over 150 compositions are published by Edition Peters, New York; several dozen CDs and DVDs of his music have been commercially released; and he is author of five books and numerous journal articles and chapters, some of them the result of collaborations with American, Canadian, and French scientists. Other collaborators have been choreographers Lucinda Childs and Bill T. Jones, as well as theater directors Tadashi Suzuki (Shizuoka, Japan) and Tina Parker (Massachusetts and London). His performer partners have included Irvine Arditti (London), The Arditti Quartet, Steven Schick (San Diego), Yuji Takahashi (Tokyo), Alexis Descharmes (Burgundy), Pablo Gómez Cano (Encinada), Anthony Burr (San Diego), Eric Huebner (Buffalo/New York), and Jacqueline Leclair (Montréal). In 2009 Reynolds was appointed University Professor — the first artist to be so honored in the University of California system’s history. In 1998, the Library of Congress established a Special Collection of his work. His scores and correspondence are also included in the Paul Sacher Collection in Basel, Switzerland. Reynolds has held guest appointments at Harvard, Yale, Amherst, University of Illinois, Darmstadt, Sibelius Academy, and CUNY.  Reynolds has received commissions from the Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Diego, and National Symphony orchestras, the French Ministry of Culture, the Suntory Foundation, The BBC Proms Festival, the British Arts Council, and the Siemens Foundation. Reynolds will be inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters in May.

Miller Puckette is a UC San Diego Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Music and former associate director of the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts. He was a member of MIT’s Media Lab from its inception until 1987, and then a researcher at IRCAM (l’Institut de Recherche et de Coordination Musique/Acoustique), founded by composer and conductor Pierre Boulez. At IRCAM he wrote Max, a widely used computer music software environment, released commercially in 1990 and now available from Cycling74.com. Puckette is also the author of Pure Data (Pd), a real-time performing platform for audio, video and graphical programming language for the creation of interactive computer music and multimedia works, written in the 1990s with input from many others in the computer music and free software communities. Puckette obtained a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from MIT (1980) and a Ph.D. in Mathematics from Harvard (1986), winning a National Science Foundation graduate fellowship and the Putnam Prize Scholarship. 

Peter Ko is a cellist, active performer and teacher pursuing his Doctor of Musical Arts at UC San Diego. As a performer, his training and projects have taken him across the United States, Mexico, Canada and Europe. His collaborations with other renowned musical artists include work with Mark Fewer, the Dover String Quartet, Steve Schick, Aleck Karis and Charles Curtis. Ko has performed at the soundSCAPE music festival in Italy, with the Palimpsest ensemble, and currently serves as principal celllist for the La Jolla Symphony and Chorus. He holds a Master of Music from Memorial University of Newfoundland, and a Bachelor of Arts from UC San Diego.

Jacob Sundstrom is a composer and UC San Diego Ph.D. candidate whose work has branched out into several mediums and fields including new media, installation and data-driven art. His musical work has been performed by ensembles including Inverted Space, the JACK Quartet and the Seattle Chamber Players. It has been performed or played in places as diverse as Radiophrenia in Scotland, art galleries and underground venues in Seattle, and the National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C). As a researcher, Sundstrom has helped develop brain-computer musical interfaces for use in performance settings and novel spatialization algorithms. His work has been published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience and his spatial work in IEEE. 

Alexis Descharmes is an active ambassador of numerous cello repertoires and one of about eleven members of his generation to be selected by “Diapason” magazine as a representative of the French cello. Born in 1977, and trained at the Paris Conservatoire, Descharmes was the winner of the Valentino Bucchi (1997) and Avant-Scènes (1999) competitions. He has been supported by various foundations (Fondation Jean Brizard, Fonds Instrumental Français, Fondation Meyer, Mécénat Musical Société Générale and Fondation Natexis), and worked in the Ensemble Intercontemporain, Ensemble Alternance and Ensemble Court-circuit. He collaborates regularly with IRCAM on many projects. The dedicatee of some fifty contemporary works, concertante and solo alike, Descharmes’s discography consists of some twenty recordings, in solo or with ensembles with which he has appeared at numerous festivals and in some thirty countries. Descharmes joined the Orchestra of the Paris National Opera in 2006. Since 2004, he has collaborated regularly with the French Embassy in Washington, D.C. for the Contemporary Music Series of La Maison Française. He became a member of the NGA New Music Ensemble in 2010.