On Stage Pittsburgh Review of RIGOLETTO: A fine production of a tuneful classic

“Maria Sensi Sellner and the instrumentalists in the orchestra turned in a sterling performance… it easily ranked among the very best orchestral performances of the year…

[Maria Brea’s] voice is gloriously luxurious, well developed and lovely throughout its range, and well suited to the demands of the part… [Sergio] Martinez possesses a bass voice of cavernous resonance and carrying power, and he acted the part with fitting discretion. Ms. Williams sang with a mezzo-soprano voice of excellent quality and quantity, and made the listener wish that Verdi hadn’t saved her vivid character for the last act only.”

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WQED Voice of the Arts Podcast - Back to the Future Preview

Double bassist Jeffrey Turner, and Conductor/Artistic Director Maria Sensi Sellner had the privilege of talking with WQED-FM’s Jim Cunningham about Missy Mazzoli’s brilliant Dark with Excessive Bright, the rest of the Back to the Future program that it inspired, and how they see classical music moving forward.

Listen now to the Voice of the Arts podcast!

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Behind the Music: Dark with Excessive Bright

A program like this weekend’s Back to the Future is created around the spark of an idea. For me it usually comes as the catalytic combination of a musical work, a specific artist, and just the right timing. When I discovered that Missy Mazzoli, one of the most exciting and innovative composers in the world right now, wrote a double bass concerto that premiered less than a year earlier, I immediately emailed Jeff Turner about it, and the match was lit! The pandemic extended the timing bit more than anticipated from that initial conversation back in January 2019, but after a 20-month delay, we now feel even more honored to present Dark with Excessive Bright, making Pittsburgh one of the handful of American cities to experience what the Chicago Classical Review called "the finest double-bass concerto of the past fifty years."

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Back to the Future Preview: Meet the Composers!

Back to the Future features Pittsburgh premieres of works inspired by past musical traditions from around the world by four of today’s most important living composers: Missy Mazzoli, Chen Yi, Jessie Montgomery, and Gabriela Lena Frank. Get to know these amazing creators, and make plans to join us IN PERSON on November 13 & 14 at the Greer Cabaret at Theater Square!

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Introducing Clare Longendyke, our first Executive Director!

We are thrilled to introduce Clare Longendyke as Resonance Works’ first ever Executive Director. Clare comes to us from The University of Chicago, where she served as Artist in Residence and Director of Chamber Music. Clare exudes a contagious passion for inspiring audiences to forge deeper connections to classical music, and we are excited to have her working with us to further the Resonance Works mission!

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NewsMaria Sensi Sellner
On Demand re-release: Julia Perry's Stabat Mater

We are thrilled to re-release our September 2020 performance of Julia Perry’s dramatic Stabat Mater into our On Demand library for the rest of the season!

Our performance features mezzo-soprano Lucia Bradford (who is also a Westminster Choir College alum!) and a quintet of strings from our Resonance Chamber Orchestra - Sandro Leal-Santiesteban, Maureen Conlon Gutierrez, Si Yu, Elise Feagley, and Jesica Sharp Crewe. Maria Sensi Sellner conducts.

Watch through the end of the season with $5 access.

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Maria's blog: A Recital of Romances

As so often happens, some of the best projects come into being as offshoots from other plans. Such was the case with Amor y Corona. Last summer, as I was planning our “March of the Women” series, I chatted with Maureen (electronically, of course) about her performing a couple of short pieces on the series, potentially one of the Romances by Clara Schumann or one or two of the 6 Morceaux by Pauline Viardot García. The timing ended up not being ideal, and the series was already growing beyond our initial scope (with so much great music to include, it was hard to edit things out), so these became the core of a whole other project. Maureen was not familiar with Viardot’s works for violin and had also been looking for an excuse to learn Amy Beach’s Romance, which fit perfectly. And thus a recital program of Romanzas was born...

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Accolades for the Decameron Opera Coaltion

Named an “ingenious project” by the Wall Street Journal, the inaugural production of the Decameron Opera Coalition, “Tales from a Safe Distance” was acknowledged with several Best of 2020 awards and mentions:

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Resonance Works reinvents its fall 2020 season with a national collaboration, a world premiere, and a celebration of women composers

PITTSBURGH, PA - (09.10.20) - Tickets are now on sale for the three new series in Resonance Works’ reimagined fall 2020 season: The March of the Women, The Decameron Opera Coalition presents “Tales from a Safe Distance”, and the Virtual Resonance Chamber Series, which kicks off this Saturday, September 12. All performances for the rest of 2020 will be presented exclusively online.

Praised for its “innovative streak” and the “infusion of sophistication and diversity” in its programming, Pittsburgh’s 7-year old multi-modal performing arts company has been approaching the difficult circumstances of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic as a time for new approaches and bold collaborations.

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Pittsburgh "Dreamer" postponed, but see the world premiere online this week!

Due to the continuing public health risks of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have had to make the difficult but necessary decision to postpone our production of I Am A Dreamer Who No Longer Dreams by a year to the fall of 2021. We continue our commitment to this powerful and important new work by Jorge Sosa and Cerise Jacobs, which examines the struggles of immigrants and asks important questions about what it means to be American. We feel a responsibility to present it to Pittsburgh as it was intended to be experienced: in a theater with a live audience. We look forward to the time when that will be possible.

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Standing in solidarity against racism and injustice

Music is a temporal art, and one that breathes. I have been thinking so much this week about time and breath - essential elements of life and of music. Eight minutes and forty-six seconds is a long time. It’s about the average length of a performance of Barber’s Adagio for strings, and longer than the second movement of Florence Price’s 3rd Symphony. I have listened to these pieces contemplating time and breath and the last minutes of George Floyd’s life.

We continue to mourn him and the other lives lost - Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and the many others whose names we know and those we don’t know.

Their lives matter.
Prayers and mourning and silent messages in solidarity are not enough.
We must act against racism, brutality, and hate so that millions of people will not need to live in fear.

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COVID-19 Programming update

It is with great sadness that we must postpone our May production of Verdi's Rigoletto, which was to be the finale of our 7th season. It is our intention to reschedule these performances as soon as it is safe for everyone involved, and we still look forward to sharing this masterful score with you. All tickets are fully refundable or transferrable.

While the pandemic has required us to pause our planned programming for the second half of this season, it has not interrupted our mission: to empower artists and engage audiences, to create community through unique musical experiences, and to explore the breadth and diversity of classical music through a variety of repertoire and performing ensembles. Our mission continues. We just have to be a bit more innovative with how we deliver on it!

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COVID-19 Update: All events postponed through April 15, 2020

Dear Friends and Members of the Resonance Works Family,

The health and safety of our patrons, guest artists, musicians, and staff is of paramount importance to us, and our board has been deep in discussions for the past several days about how to proceed in the face of the current pandemic. In the best interest of everyone involved, we have made the difficult decision to postpone all events through April 15th. This includes:

  • ...of dark and bright performances next weekend, March 21 & 22

  • Verdi by Vegetables fundraiser on April 4th

  • Resonance Chamber Series: March of the Women event on April 14th

We are deeply saddened not to be able to share these unique musical experiences with you over the next month. We anticipate rescheduling all three events, and will announce dates as soon as we are able. In the face of this global crisis, we are also exploring creative ways that we can continue to share music with you at a time when we all need its power, healing, and inspiration more than ever.

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...of Dark & Bright Preview: Ruth Crawford Seeger

Did you know that composer Ruth Crawford Seeger is one of the premier voices in American modernism? She was the first woman to win a Guggenheim Fellowship, traveling to Europe, where she composed her most famous work, her string quartet.

Our …of dark and bright program includes her Andante for Strings, which is an expansion of the slow movement of that earlier string quartet.

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