Daniel Pesca Livestream Presentation

Location

Online

Date & Time

September 25, 2020, 7:30 pm8:30 pm

Description

Daniel Pesca, pianist and composer, is both a passionate advocate for contemporary music and a committed performer of the classical repertoire.

Dr. Pesca has played the world premieres of over one hundred solo and chamber works, many of which were composed for him. In the process, he has shared the stage with many leading new music ensembles, including Ensemble Signal, the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble, and Ensemble Dal Niente. In recent years, Daniel has performed at the Library of Congress, the Kennedy Center, Columbia University’s Miller Theatre, twice on Chicago’s Dame Myra Hess Concerts, at June in Buffalo, and at other festivals devoted to contemporary music in Spain, Italy, Greece, and Vermont.

Since fall 2019, Dr. Pesca is Assistant Professor of Piano at University of Maryland Baltimore County. Prior to his appointment at UMBC, Dr. Pesca was Artist-in-Residence, Director of the Chamber Music Program, and Lecturer in the Department of Music at the University of Chicago from 2016–2019. At UChicago, Dr. Pesca collaborated frequently with faculty and student composers, including Sam Pluta, Augusta Read Thomas, Aaron Helgeson, and Tonia Ko. He also performed with ensembles-in-residence Imani Winds and Spektral Quartet, and presented duo recitals with Paul Dwyer (assistant principal cellist, Lyric Opera of Chicago Orchestra).

His world premiere recording of Augusta Read Thomas’s solo work Two Thoughts about the Piano appeared in April 2020 on a Thomas portrait album from Nimbus Records, The Auditions. Dr. Pesca’s world premiere recording of Bernard Rands’s Four Impromptus for solo piano is also forthcoming on Nimbus, and the premiere recording of Matthew Schreibeis’s solo work Inner Truth will be released on Albany Records. In June 2020, Dr. Pesca gave the video premiere of Aaron Travers’s Olcott Park for the Library of Congress’s Boccaccio Project, an exploration of American music produced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Among Dr. Pesca’s recent works are a sextet commissioned by the American Wild Ensemble, which was performed over a dozen times at national parks across the country and is recorded on the ensemble’s debut album; a song cycle commissioned in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the first manned lunar landing, which was premiered under the Saturn V rocket at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama; another song cycle for tenor Zach Finkelstein, setting poetry by Irving Feldman; a piece for cellist Audrey Q. Snyder, created in collaboration with video artist Xuan; and a solo work for Paul Dwyer, part of his project COVID-19: Contagious Solitude. These projects have been supported by grants from New Music USA and the NEA, among others.

Dr. Pesca holds a doctorate from the Eastman School of Music, where he led a class on contemporary keyboard music for four years, played a leading role in the new music collective OSSIA, and studied piano with Nelita True. He also studied piano with Logan Skelton and Rita Sloan. He counts Robert Morris, David Liptak, and Betsy Jolas among his composition mentors, and he has taken lessons and masterclasses with Hans Abrahamsen, Chaya Czernowin, and Louis Andriessen. In addition to his appointments at UMBC and UChicago, he has held teaching positions at Ithaca College, Syracuse University, and Northeastern Illinois University.

This livestream presentation is closed for public attendance. 

Program

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