New
Century
Saxophone Quartet
Michael
Stephenson, soprano saxophone
Christopher Hemingway, alto saxophone
Stephen Pollock, tenor saxophone
Connie Frigo, baritone saxophone
The only ensemble of its kind ever to win First Prize of the Concert
Artists Guild Competition, the NEW
CENTURY SAXOPHONE QUARTET is a pioneering and versatile group
winning new-found enthusiasm for the saxophone quartet and its diverse
repertory, ranging from the complete The
Art of the Fugue of J.S. Bach to innovative contemporary
works. The recipient of grants from the National Endowment for
the Arts, the North Carolina Arts Council, Chamber Music America, and
the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, New Century has been heard in major
concert venues in Los Angeles, New York, and Amsterdam; on radio and
television in the United States, Europe, and Central America; in
recordings for the Channel Classics label; and in unusual performance
settings, ranging from two Command Performances for President Clinton
in the White House to a concerto performance with The United States
Navy Band, Washington. The Quartet has commissioned numerous
works, most notably a concerto from Peter Schickele, and has recorded
extensively for Channel Classics Records.
New Century’s 1993 New York debut at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie
Hall earned the group praise for their “virtuosic display of dexterity
and keen ensemble work,” in which the “players handled all the music
with panache” (New York Post).
Upon becoming the first saxophone quartet presented at the Ambassador
Auditorium in Los Angeles, the Los
Angeles Times heralded the Quartet’s West Coast debut: “Tackling
brave new territory in the conservative-leaning realm of classical
music takes a unique blend of conviction, refined talent, and a bit of
damn-the-torpedoes ambition. Those qualities are amply in
evidence with the New Century Saxophone Quartet, not to mention a
finely honed musicality deserving wider acceptance. Other
engagements include Chicago’s Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, Atlanta’s
Spivey Concert Hall, Boston’s Symphony Hall and Gardner Museum, New
York’s Merkin Concert Hall and the Kosciuszko Foundation Townhouse,
Washington, D.C.’s Strathmore Hall, and the Juneau Jazz and Classics
Festival in Alaska.
New Century premiered Peter Schickele’s New Century Suite with the North
Carolina Symphony in September 2000. Subsequent performances
include the Canton, Western Piedmont, Waterbury, Billings, Bakersfield,
and Winston-Salem Symphonies. Over the past decade, New Century
has been responsible for a significant broadening of the repertory of
saxophone quartet. Most recently, the quartet premiered David
Lang’s Revolutionary Etudes
at the Rockport Chamber Music Festival in June 2006. In January
2002, the Quartet premiered a new work from the well-known jazz
saxophonist Bob Mintzer, commissioned by Chamber Music America. A
commission from Lenny Pickett, band leader and lead saxophonist of the
Saturday Night Live Band, had its premiere in 1997 at Merkin Concert
Hall in New York. The Quartet premiered a concerto with wind
ensemble from Benjamin Boone in Carnegie Hall in 1999. Other
premieres include works of Ben Johnston, David Ott, Sherwood Shaffer,
John FitzRogers, Arthur Frackenpohl, Ken Valitsky, and Jacob ter
Veldhuis. Upcoming premieres include new works from Barbara Kolb
and Robert Dick.
Since the 2003-2004 season, the quartet has frequently performed Bach’s
The Art of Fugue in
synchronization with computer-generated animations created by the New
York-based design and animation house, Misha Films. These
performances include Purdue University Convocations in Indiana,
Premiere Performances at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, a
collaboration of North Carolina State University and the Raleigh
Chamber Music Guild in North Carolina, Whittier College in Los Angeles,
Indiana University of Pennsylvania, the University at Buffalo, Southern
Illinois University at Carbondale, the Detroit Institute of Art, and at
the Chamber Music America National Conference.
The Quartet’s newest recording is a second album of works written for
New Century and featuring music of David Lang, Jacob ter Veldhuis, and
Barbara Kolb, released by Alanna Records in the fall of 2008.
Prior recordings, all for Channel Classics Records, include the “The
Art of Fugue,” hailed by the International
Record Review as “a revelation” and “Standards,” an album
of original works for saxophone quartet ranging from Jean-Baptiste
Singelée (his Premier Quatuor
of 1857, commonly considered the first work for saxophone quartet) to
Bob Mintzer’s Quartet No. 1.
“A New Century Christmas,” featuring unusual arrangements by a wide
range of American composers, preceded that, winning enormous critical
acclaim (“the aural equivalent of spiked eggnog,” according to the Chicago Tribune) and was featured
on National Public Radio’s “Weekend Edition.” Earlier in 2000,
Channel released “Home Grown,” an album comprising works commissioned
by the ensemble. New Century’s first recording, “Drastic
Measures,” won acclaim from Fanfare
Magazine for its “elegant musicianship with a wonderful sense
of chamber music.” Their second recording, “Main Street USA,” includes the ensemble’s arrangements of music by
Bernstein, Gershwin, and Morton Gould.
The New Century Saxophone Quartet has appeared on television and radio
across the United States on National Public Radio’s “Performance Today,” the Voice of America, and North Carolina Public
TV. New Century has been the resident ensemble of two radio
stations in North Carolina, WUNC in Chapel Hill (1995) and WHQR in
Wilmington (1996). Outside of the United States, Panamanian TV
aired a documentary and live performance, and in the Netherlands, Dutch
radio presented a live broadcast from the Concertgebouw in
Amsterdam. The ensemble participated in a special performance for
the Chinese New Year in January 1998 that was broadcast to over 100
million people on television throughout the world.
[April 2008]