NYC Soprano Adrienne Pardee Performs at Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar

Local Artist Takes Part in Inaugural Music Festival Featuring Stephanie Blythe at SUNY Potsdam's Crane School of Music

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Soprano Adrienne Pardee will perform at the inaugural Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar in Potsdam, N.Y.

POTSDAM, NY (05/07/2012)(readMedia)-- Adrienne Pardee, a soprano from New York City, is among only 10 rising musicians chosen to take part in an ambitious new music festival in Potsdam, N.Y.

The Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar will feature local artist Pardee during its premiere season from May 21 to May 26 at The Crane School of Music at The State University of New York at Potsdam.

Stephanie Blythe '93, the mezzo-soprano with the "once-in-a-generation" voice, decided to bring her artistic vision back to her alma mater, SUNY Potsdam, for this program.

The inaugural season of the Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar is aimed at reinvigorating individual artistry through the American art song by energizing up-and-coming young singers from across the United States and Canada. North Country audiences will be able to take in world-class recital performances throughout the week.

Participants this season were selected from a competitive national audition. This distinguished group of artists includes:

  • Steven Brennfleck, a tenor from Ewing, N.J.
  • Carola Emrich-Fisher, a mezzo-soprano from Boston
  • Zachary Finkelstein, a tenor from Toronto
  • Matthew Gemmill, a pianist from Wheaton, Ill.
  • Bridget Hough-Meynenc, a pianist from Santa Barbara, Calif.
  • Grant Knox, a tenor from Newport, Calif.
  • Ryan McCullough, a pianist from Toronto
  • Lauren Michelle, a soprano from Los Angeles
  • Adrienne Pardee, a soprano from New York City
  • Jason Weisinger, a tenor from Baldwin, N.Y.

The Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar embarks on its inaugural season realizing a dream that SUNY Potsdam alumna Stephanie Blythe shared with her former undergraduate opera director, Dr. Carleen Graham.

The seminar was founded as a venue for emerging singers and collaborative pianists between the ages of 23 and 35, to promote individual artistry through the art song genre. The Metropolitan Opera star is joined by Dr. Graham and their former vocal coach, Alan Smith, a prominent collaborative pianist, vocal coach and composer.

"Coming back to Potsdam is like completing a circle for me. SUNY Potsdam and The Crane School of Music put me on a road to self-discovery as an artist and a person. This place gave me the courage to search out my dreams and succeed, and now it will be a place where I can share what I can with the next generation of musical interpreters," Blythe said. "Being an artist is about finding a voice, about discovering how to get your point of view across to an audience by taking risks in interpretation, saying something real with music and poetry, giving voice in a personal way to great composers and poets. I took my first steps in musical interpretation here at The Crane School of Music, and I am thrilled to be developing this exciting seminar in this wonderful place."

They have developed an intensive week of music making for the 10 invited participants that will incorporate related aesthetics and what it means to be a performing artist in today's society. All music will be performed in English and will feature a number of living composers, many of whom Blythe has professionally collaborated with. The participants will be treated to a full week of masterclasses, coachings, discussions and recitals led by Blythe, Smith and Crane School of Music Professor Dr. Gary Busch.

"Poetry and art song often find a way to connect with us through images in nature, creating sensory memories that evoke very personal responses from their audiences. When Carleen and I were discussing what we wanted to call this vocal seminar, we searched to find that same kind of connection with a name. Fall Island seemed a natural fit. Providing Potsdam with one of its most picturesque views, the island surrounded by the beautiful waters of the Raquette River has a special significance. To anyone who has weathered a Potsdam winter, watching the trees and water spring to life as the cold fades away brings a sense of renewal and beauty that makes everyone a poet. Fall Island is a perfect symbol for an artistic endeavor," Blythe said.

About the local artist:

Described as "vibrant" by the Boston Globe, soprano Adrienne Pardee has been praised for her "lovely tone, impressive control, and rapt attention to the score's myriad details" by Chamber Music Today. Pardee recently returned from a second summer as a Vocal Fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center, where she performed the title role in Milhaud's opera "L'enlèvement d'Europe" directed by Mark Morris, the First Priestess in excerpts from Gluck's "Iphigénie en Tauride" with Susan Graham and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and Milton Babbitt's chamber work "No Longer Very Clear," for which the New York Times praised her ability to sing the work's "athletic soprano line ... with an urbane charm." Recent operatic engagements include performing Zerlina and Barbarina in New York Lyric Opera Theater productions of "Don Giovanni" and "Le Nozze di Figaro." Pardee was also seen as Zerline in the Bronx Opera's production of "Fra Diavolo," and Adina/Giannetta in Donizetti's "L'elisir d'amore" as a Young Artist with Tulsa Opera. Also an experienced performer of contemporary music, Pardee recently appeared with Boston's Callithumpian Consort singing composer Nicholas Vines' "Economy of Wax" at Jordon Hall in Boston, a recording of which will be released on Parma Records in 2012. She also performed Schoenberg's "Pierrot Lunaire" and Carl Schimmel's "4 Nocturnes from the Oblivion Ha-ha" with the Con Vivo Ensemble, and appeared with the Washington Square Contemporary Music Society at Merkin Concert Hall as the soprano soloist in Bernard Rands' "Fragments from Sappho." Pardee is a great lover of art song and concert repertoire, which she has been privileged to study and perform at in music festivals such as Tanglewood, Songfest and the Aspen Music Festival. On the concert stage, she recently appeared as the soprano soloist in Händel's Messiah with the Canadian Chamber Orchestra of New York. In June 2012, she will present several recitals during New York's third annual Chelsea Music Festival under the direction of Ken-David Masur. Pardee was awarded a Master of Music degree in voice from the Manhattan School of Music. She has also earned both a Bachelor of Music degree in vocal performance and a Bachelor of Arts degree in German language and literature from Northwestern University.

For more information about the Fall Island Vocal Arts Seminar at SUNY Potsdam's Crane School of Music, visit www.potsdam.edu/fallisland.

Founded in 1886, SUNY Potsdam's Crane School of Music has a long legacy of excellence in music education and performance. Life at Crane includes an incredible array of more than 300 recitals, lectures and concerts presented by faculty, students and guests each year. The Crane School of Music is the State University of New York's only All-Steinway institution, and is celebrating its 125th anniversary in 2011-12.

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