Elizabeth Martignetti

Elizabeth Martignetti

 

Elizabeth Martignetti

Hornist Elizabeth Fleming Martignetti has performed chamber music, orchestral concerts, and recitals in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Elizabeth is a dedicated chamber musician, and is hornist with the the horn-organ duo Cor de Nuit with organist Aymeric Dupre la Tour, the Tessera Wind Quintet, and Hellgate Harmonie, and she has performed in chamber music concerts at Carnegie’s Zankel Hall and Norfolk’s acclaimed Music Shed. As an orchestral hornist, she has served as principal horn for Ensemble 212, Ensemble du Monde, Ensemble Polifonica, and the Empire State Sinfonia, among others, performing in notable venues throughout New York, Connecticut, and Asia. Elizabeth has also recently served as instructor of music at Southern Connecticut State University, where she taught music appreciation and world music, and has taught horn at Yale College and at the University of Bridgeport. A native of the Atlanta area, she has also done recording for the Cartoon Network.

Elizabeth holds Master of Musical Arts and Master of Music degrees from the Yale School of Music, where she completed research on the manifestation of nostalgia and tradition in the horn works of Paul Hindemith, and Bachelor of Music degree from the College-Conservatory of Music at the University of Cincinnati.

 

 
 

Jonathan Greenberg

Jonathan Greenberg

 

Jonathan Greenberg

Jonathan Greenberg has served on the low brass faculty of Hunter College, The City University of New York, since 2009 and has held similar positions at The Avenues School and Manhattan School of Music, Pre-college Division.  Jonathan has enjoyed a freelance career in NYC that has spanned several decades and a multitude of musical styles.  He has appeared with the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, American Symphony, American Ballet Theatre, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, and Honolulu Symphony. He is a founding member of the groundbreaking Carnegie Hall LinkUp Orchestra.

Chamber music experience includes performances with the Metropolis Ensemble, Manhattan Brass Quintet, St. Luke’s Trombone Quartet, Absolute Ensemble and with the American Brass Quintet at the Aspen Music Festival. Commercial/Jazz experience includes performances with The Big Apple Circus, Toshiko Akiyoshi Jazz Orchestra, the Mingus Big Band, and tours of Japan with the Manhattan Jazz Orchestra. Jonathan continues to enjoy a prolific Broadway career, playing both trombone and tuba for shows that include Disney’s The Lion King, Wicked, The Phantom of the Opera, and the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, among many others.

 

 
 

Michael Lormand

Michael Lormand

 

Michael Lormand

New York City–based trombonist Mike Lormand is a performer of eclectic contemporary and classical music. He is a member of the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), Deviant Septet, IRIS Orchestra, Riverside Symphony, and Weather Vest. He appears frequently with groups such as Talea Ensemble, Argento Chamber Ensemble, NOVUS NY, Wordless Music Orchestra, Metropolis Ensemble, TILT Brass, and Paragon Ragtime Orchestra. Lormand's love for the orchestral repertoire has led to performances with the Metropolitan Opera, Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra, The Knights, New York City Ballet, New York City Opera, American Ballet Theater, American Symphony Orchestra, New York Pops, Radio City Music Hall Orchestra, and St. Paul Chamber Orchestra.  As a soloist, he has commissioned numerous new works, with notable premieres at the Ojai Music Festival, Lincoln Center Out of Doors Festival, American Trombone Workshop, and International Trombone Festival. He recently performed the long-delayed U.S. premiere of Marius Constant's 1977 trombone concerto, Gli Elementi, with the Riverside Symphony at Alice Tully Hall. A graduate of Manhattan School of Music (MM) and the University of Southern Mississippi (BM), Lormand studied with Per Brevig, David Taylor, Marta Hofacre, and Robert Schmalz.

 

 
 

Ben Cassorla

Ben Cassorla

 

Ben Cassorla

Ben Cassorla is an unrepentant hipster that loves to make music and cook. If his music were a dish, it would be a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Simple yet so satisfying. Some might wash that down with a glass of milk, but Ben would probably opt for a beer. Cassorla is Ben's band. A minimalist indie-pop outfit whose songs hear the phone ring but just don't care enough to get up. Cassorla's muted guitars and dry 70's style drums stumble out of your speakers and squint at the sun.

 

 
 

Aleeza Meir

Aleeza Meir

 

Aleeza Meir

Aleeza Meir is the pianist for Brooklyn Youth Chorus’s Concert Ensemble and Junior Ensemble.  Raised as a homeschooler, she pursued her musical studies independently with two beloved mentors: fortepianist Malcolm Bilson and composer Steven Stucky.

Accomplished on piano, organ, and harpsichord, Aleeza began her career as a staff pianist at the Ithaca College School of Music at the age of 16. She has since appeared with artists and groups including the Brooklyn Interdenominational Choir, Cayuga Vocal Ensemble, Bob Chilcott, Edward Carroll, Harolyn Blackwell, Kronos Quartet, Jan Opalach, Orchestra of the Southern Finger Lakes, and the New England Symphonic Ensemble, in venues ranging from Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, to National Sawdust, to St. Olaf’s Church in Balestrand, Norway. She has also performed in the Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, and North America, in a wide variety of venues and capacities ranging from concerto soloist to continuo player. She placed second in the International Piano Masterclass of Bechyne festival competition and was a prizewinner in the Otto B. Schoepfle national organ competition.

Ms. Meir previously served as pianist for the Boys Choir of Harlem and spent ten years as keyboardist for John Rutter in New York City.  Besides her position at Brooklyn Youth Chorus, she is faculty pianist for the Allen-Stevenson School, pianist for Middlebury Language Schools’ German for Singers program, music director for historic Old First Reformed Church in Brooklyn, and founder and artistic director of Baroquelyn.

 

 
 

Michael Repper

Michael Repper

 

Michael Repper

Mr. Repper is the Music Director of the Ashland Symphony Orchestra, Mid-Atlantic Symphony Orchestra, New York Youth Symphony, and the Northern Neck Orchestra of Virginia. From 2020-2022 he was the Principal Conductor of Sinfonía por el Perú, one of South America's most versatile social impact music programs. Recognizing his success at these ensembles, and his growing profile as a guest conductor all over the world and as a past Conducting Fellow of the Baltimore Symphony, Mr. Repper was awarded a Solti Foundation US Career Assistance Award in 2020, 2021, and 2022.

 

 
 

Paul Cornish

Paul Cornish

 

Paul Cornish

Los Angeles-based pianist and composer Paul Cornish strives to inspire freedom and collaboration in his music and community. Hailing from Houston where he was a student at the prestigious High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Cornish was one of seven jazz prodigies worldwide selected to be awarded a full fellowship to attend the esteemed Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz at UCLA.

Cornish received the Los Angeles Jazz Society’s 2020 New Note Commission and recently was awarded First Place in the Jacksonville Jazz Piano Competition and the 18th Street Arts Center’s 2021 Make Jazz Fellowship. Cornish was also awarded the Grand Prize in the 2018 American Jazz Piano Competition. Currently residing in Los Angeles, Cornish has performed extensively across the globe with such notable artists as Herbie Hancock, Louis Cole, Theo Croker, Snoh Aalegra, Terrace Martin, Thumpasaurus and HAIM.

 

 
 

Daniel Castellanos

Daniel Castellanos

 

Daniel Castellanos

Daniel Santiago Castellanos is a composer, tenor, and pianist based in New York City. His composition for mezzo-soprano and piano, Death is nothing at all, won first prize at the 2019 NYC songSLAM competition. Ensembles that have performed his music include the Semiosis Quartet, The Orchestra Now (TŌN), Da Capo Ensemble, and The Saint Thomas Choir of Men and Boys. He graduated from Bard Conservatory of Music in 2018, and is now attending Mannes School of Music to receive a MM in Composition in 2023.

As a tenor, Castellanos makes his living as a professional choral singer. He started out singing as a boy chorister at St. Thomas Church on Fifth Avenue in 2004, and since then, has sung with several different ensembles, including The Choir at the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, with C4 Ensemble, and most recently, The Salvatones. He has performed as a soloist through other freelance work.

 

 
 

Grace Park

Grace Park

 

Grace Park

Praised by the San Francisco Chronicle as being “fresh, different and exhilarating” and Strings Magazine as “intensely wrought and burnished “,  violinist Grace Park captivates audiences with her artistry, passion and virtuosity. Winner of the the 2018 Naumburg International Violin Competition, she showcases her artistry as a dynamic soloist and dedicated chamber musician.

Ms. Park’s upcoming season includes her Carnegie Hall debut recital, a world premiere performance of Mason Bates’ first violin sonata, concerto debut with the Mexico City Philharmonic, and recitals at the Schubert Club, Krannert Center, and Dame Myra Hess Memorial.

 Ms. Park has appeared as soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician throughout the United States, Europe, Asia, and Canada at venues such as Walt Disney Hall, The Kennedy Center,  The Rudolfinum in Prague, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Jordan Hall  and Tri-Noon at Rockefeller University. She has performed and participated in festivals such as Music @ Menlo, IMS Prussia Cove, Festival Mozaic, Yellowbarn, and Perlman Music Program, where she has performed with many of today's celebrated artists.

 

 
 

Katie Hyun

Katie Hyun

 

Katie Hyun

A winner of Astral Artists’ 2016 National Auditions, violinist Katie Hyun has been described as “a virtuoso by any measure” (The Berkshire Review).  Passionate about incorporating different styles, her recent debut recital with Astral Artists in Philadelphia featured a program that showcased virtuosic works on both the Baroque and modern violins (going back and forth between the two).  Festival appearances include Chamber Music Northwest in Portland, Bravo! Vail in Colorado, Tippet Rise Arts Center in Montana, Mostly Mozart in New York, OBX Chamber Music Series in North Carolina, Crescent City Chamber Music Festival in New Orleans, and New York in Chuncheon in South Korea.  Katie currently serves as the concertmaster of NOVUS Trinity Wall Street, in addition to solo and chamber performances throughout the States.  On Baroque violin, she frequently appears with the Trinity Baroque Orchestra and Seraphic Fire.

Katie is also the founder and director of Quodlibet Ensemble, a collective of string players and creators dedicated to creating musical experiences that engage, entertain, and invite people to invest in their communities. Quodlibet has performed at the Shepherd Music Series in Collinsville, Yale British Arts Center, Drew University in Madison, NJ, Rockefeller University in NYC, and most recently the Baryshnikov Arts Center in NYC. In October 2020, Quodlibet partnered with VOTESart to produce a video performance aimed at raising awareness of voters’ rights which premiered at the Five Boroughs Music Festival.

 

 
 

Hiro Matsuo

Hiro Matsuo

 

Hiro Matsuo

Acclaimed by The New York Times as “striking,” cellist Hiro Matsuo has become one of the great talents of his generation. Matsuo is a member of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. In Cincinnati, he also serves as a co-artistic director of concert:nova, which aims "to transform hearts, minds and communities through thought provoking musical exploration."

An avid chamber musician, Matsuo has collaborated with distinguished artists such as Joshua Bell, David Aaron Carpenter, Roberto Díaz, Christoph Eschenbach, Midori Goto, Ida Kavafian, Alex Kerr, Yo-Yo Ma, Anne-Marie McDermott, Gil Shaham, and Joseph Silverstein, among others. He has served as principal cellist of the Metropolis Ensemble, Salomé Chamber Orchestra, and Solisti Ensemble. He has also performed with A Far Cry and Sejong Soloists.

 

 
 

Ashley Bathgate

Ashley Bathgate

 

Ashley Bathgate

American cellist Ashley Bathgate has been described as an “eloquent new music interpreter” (New York Times) and “a glorious cellist” (The Washington Post) who combines “bittersweet lyricism along with ferocious chops” (New York Magazine). Her “impish ferocity”, “rich tone” and “imaginative phrasing” (New York Times) have made her one of the most sought after performers of her time. The desire to create a dynamic energy exchange with her audience and build upon the ensuing chemistry is a pillar of Bathgate's philosophy as a performer. Dynamism drives her to venture into previously uncharted areas of ground-breaking sounds and techniques, breaking the mold of a cello's traditionally perceived voice. Collaborators and fans alike describe her vitality as nothing short of remarkable and magical for all who are involved.

Bathgate was a member of the acclaimed sextet Bang on a Can All-Stars for ten years from 2009-2019. She is also a member of the chamber music group HOWL, TwoSense with pianist Lisa Moore, and Bonjour, a low-strung, percussive quintet. In 2015 Bathgate gave the world premiere of What Moves You, a collaborative performance project with jookin’ dance sensation Lil Buck at the Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, SC, as well as the world premiere of a new Cello Concerto written for her by Kate Moore for the Gaudeamus Festival in Utrecht, NL. Her debut solo album, Stories for Ocean Shells, featuring a set of works for cello composed by Moore, was released in 2016 on Cantaloupe Music. That year Bathgate also commissioned the ‘composer collective’ Sleeping Giant to write ASH, a six-movement suite for solo cello, which was released on New Amsterdam Records in the fall of 2019. Her forthcoming album, 8 Track, featuring new multitrack works by Alex Weiser and Emily Cooley, as well as a new rendition of Steve Reich’s Cello Counterpoint, is due this season on New Focus Recordings. Her latest project is a new evening length work by Michael Gordon, House Music, which premiered at the 2018 Cello Biennale in Amsterdam, NL. 

 

 
 

Phil Kramp

Phil Kramp

 

Phil Kramp

Originally from Bloomington, IL, Philip graduated in 2009 from the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia where he studied with Michael Tree. Philip studied chamber music with Steve Tenenbom, Pamela Frank and members of the Guarneri String Quartet. Before entering Curtis, Phil was a student of Roland and Almita Vamos in Chicago.

As an orchestra musician, Philip was a member of the Kansas City Symphony for 3 years. While in Kansas City, Philip was on the faculty at the University of Kansas. Phil is a regular substitute musician with the Philadelphia Orchestra and many other notable orchestras. He has been a guest with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, East Coast Chamber Orchestra (ECCO) and A Far Cry.  Phil has toured internationally with the Philadelphia Orchestra and the New York Philharmonic.

 

 
 

Dave Auerbach

Dave Auerbach

 

Dave Auerbach

David is the principal violist of the Minnesota Opera Orchestra, and has performed regularly with the Saintt Paul Chamber Orchestra, as well as many other local orchestral and chamber ensembles. He also frequently performs elsewhere in the country, including with the chamber orchestra A Far Cry, which is based in Boston. A dedicated chamber musician, David has participated in the music festivals of Ravinia, Kneisel Hall, and Norfolk, and he has performed with chamber groups several times in Carnegie's Weill and Zankel Recital Halls. David joined the faculty of the University of St. Thomas in 2012, and also maintains a private teaching studio.

David earned a DMA from Stony Brook University in 2007, where he was a scholarship student of Katherine Murdock. Additionally, he received a Masters Degree from the Juilliard School under the tutelage of Samuel Rhodes, and a Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with majors in Music Performance (studying with Sally Chisholm) and Molecular Biology.

 

 
 

Emma Sutton

Emma Sutton

 

Emma Sutton

Educated at Juilliard, Yale, and Parson’s, Emma is a multi-hyphenate performer and writer. When she isn’t performing on Broadway, she can be found writing editorials and marketing copy. She is deeply passionate about telling a brand's story. Her written work can be found at Rolling Stone, Parents Magazine, The Juilliard Journal, Madewell, thredUP, Macy’s, and more.

As a performer, she’s worked with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, American Ballet Theatre, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, The Louisville Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, Lion King, Frozen, and with notable performers such as Springsteen, Rufus Wainwright, John Legend, Florence, and The Machine, Natasha Bedingfield, Michelle Williams, Ben Folds, Natalie Merchant, The Roots, and Michael Feinstein. Emma has recorded a live album and film documentary of Western Stars with Bruce Springsteen. She has recorded the movie soundtracks to The Joker, Girl On The Train, Keeping Up with the Joneses, The Good Liar, Gemini Man, and The Greatest Showman.

When not working, she can be found crafting cocktails, hosting parties, and observing street life in New York.

 

 
 

Elly Suh

Elly Suh

 

Elly Suh

Praised as “a sensitive and absorbing interpreter” (Musical America), Korean-American violinist Elly Suh stands out as a performer whose musical charm, interpretative originality, and unique creative vision breathe fresh life to concert stages around the world.

Suh is celebrated as one of the leading Paganini interpreters of her generation, and is currently undertaking a major recording project of Niccolò Paganini’s 24 Caprices for Solo Violin. Reflecting her modern creative spirit and innovative approach to music, the Paganini Vault project is a narrative audio-visual album – serving as just one example of Suh’s subtle but compelling expansion of the traditional boundaries and expectations of classical music, as we move further into the 21st century.

 

 
 

Miho Saegusa

Miho Saegusa

 

Miho Saegusa

Violinist Miho Saegusa, a versatile chamber musician and orchestral leader, has built a multifaceted career that allows her to cherish the spirit of collaboration. Her passion for chamber music was ignited and nurtured through memorable summers at the Marlboro Music Festival, Ravinia Steans Institute, and Music@Menlo as well as on tours with Musicians from Marlboro. During these summers she had the opportunity to collaborate with venerated musicians such as Mitsuko Uchida, Richard Goode, Arnold Steinhardt, David Soyer, and Miriam Fried. 

 

 
 

Emilie-Anne Gendron

Emilie-Anne Gendron

 

Emilie-Anne Gendron

Violinist Emilie-Anne Gendron, lauded by the New York Times as a “brilliant soloist" and by Strad Magazine for her “marvellous and lyrical playing,” enjoys a dynamic career based in New York City. Ms. Gendron is on the roster of the Marlboro Music Festival and the touring Musicians From Marlboro, as well as acclaimed groups such as A Far Cry, Argento Chamber Ensemble, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, Iris Orchestra (as one of its concertmasters), Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Talea Ensemble, and Sejong Soloists. She is a founding member of Ensemble Échappé, a new-music sinfonietta, and of Gamut Bach Ensemble, in residence with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. A deeply committed chamber musician, Ms. Gendron is a longtime member of the Momenta Quartet, whose vision encompasses contemporary music of all backgrounds alongside great music from the past—currently quartet-in-residence at Binghamton University and most recently serving as Bates College’s 2019-20 Artists-in-Residence in Music. Other regular collaborations include the Melody and Company chamber series with pianist Melody Fader and the longstanding G-Sharp Duo, founded with pianist Yelena Grinberg in 2003.

 

 
 

Sheryl Hwangbo

Sheryl Hwangbo

 

Sheryl Hwangbo

Violinist Sheryl Sul Hwangbo Yu joined the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in 2012. Born in South Korea, Sheryl began her violin studies at age 6. She received her Bachelor of Music degree from the Cleveland Institute of Music, studying with Paul Kantor. She then received a Master of Music degree from the Juilliard School under Ronald Copes, where she also served as concertmaster of the Juilliard Orchestra. Finally, Sheryl received a Professional Studies degree from Manhattan School of Music, studying with Glenn Dicterow and Lisa Kim.

As a passionate chamber musician, Sheryl has performed in the Intensive Quartet Seminar, ChamberFest, Axiom, and was a member of the Carnegie Ensemble and the Ensemble FIRE (Future In REverse). She has studied and participated in master classes with many influential musicians, including the members of the Cleveland Quartet, the Juilliard Quartet, the Guarneri Quartet, the Takács Quartet, the Tokyo Quartet, and the Cavani Quartet.