On Saturday, March 20 at 8 PM, the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) at Rensselaer Polytechnic in Troy, NY will host Frederic Rezewski, a monumental figure in new music who is both an instrumental virtuoso and a composer of revolutionary ambition in the tradition of Hanns Eisler and Kurt Weill.

In the late 1960s, Frederic Rzewski left his native U.S. to embark on a 40-year career composing and playing music that addresses not just artistic questions but sociopolitical ones, music meant not just for the conservatory but the street. “It seemed to me,” he explained, “(that) there was no reason why the most difficult and complex formal structures could not be expressed in a form which could not be understood by a wide variety of listeners.”

Today, Rzewski’s compositions display that same audacity, along with a range that encompasses the minimal and the epic. They’re political music in the tradition of Cornelius Cardew, Hanns Eisler, and Kurt Weill. And Rzewski plays them with a mastery that can be nothing less than breathtaking. Baker’s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians calls him “a granitically overpowering piano technician, capable of depositing huge boulders of sonoristic material across the keyboard without actually wrecking the instrument.”

A talk on music and social change will follow the concert with Rzewski, Richard Teitelbaum, Pauline Oliveros, Johannes Goebel, and Micah Silver.

In the mid-1960s, Frederic Rzewski was one of the founders of the MEV (Musica Electronica Viva) group, which quickly became known for its pioneering work in live electronics and improvisation. His compositions include Les Moutons de Panurge, North American Ballads, The People United Will Never Be Defeated, The Price of Oil, Antigone-Legend, De Profundis, and Nanosonatas, which he’ll be performing at EMPAC.

Since 1977, Rzewski has been Professor of Composition at the Conservatoire Royal de Musique in Liege, Belgium.

Tickets are required for this event and available through the EMPAC box office for $15, $10 for students, seniors, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute faculty and staff, or $5 for Rensselaer students (appropriate identification is required for any discounted tickets). Parking for this event is available in the Rensselaer parking lot on College Avenue.

Additional event information can be found on the EMPAC website, http://www.empac.rpi.edu/.

Questions? Call the EMPAC Box Office: 518.276.3921.

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