WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO’S NEALE-SILVA
YOUNG ARTISTS’ COMPETITION
WINNERS’ RECITAL
WISCONSIN UNION
THEATER
April 30, 2008
Michael Smith, Piano
Chromatic Fantasy by
Johann Sebastian Bach
Sonata No. 3 Op. 14: Mvt. 1 –
Allegro Brilliante by Robert Schumann
Brian Viliunas, Clarinet
Accompanied by
Christina Lalog
Set: Mvt. 1 & 2 by Donald
Martino
Premiere Rhapsodie by Claude
Debussy
Amy Lauters, Piano
Sonata in C Major No. 60 Hob.
XVI/50: Mvt .I by Franz Joseph Haydn
Nocturne in C# minor, Op. 27, No.1 by Frederic Chopin
Jeux D’eau
by Maurice Ravel
INTERMISSION
String Quartet – violinists: Danielle Simandl
& Katie Ekberg; violist: Sarah Bellmore & cellist: Max Hero
String Quartet No. 8, Op. 110 by Dmitri
Shostakovich
Mvt. I --
Largo
Mvt. II – Allegro Molto
Mvt. III – Allegretto
William Martin,
Piano
Accompanied by
Anthony Padilla
Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin
Michael Smith, 19, is a sophomore studying with Michael Kim
at Lawrence University and has been playing piano
since the age of five. Originally from Davis, California,
he has won awards in numerous competitions, including first prize in the
California Association of Music Teachers Honors Competition and first prize in
the Music Teachers Association of California Memorial Scholarship
Competition. Michael is also an
accomplished collaborative pianist, and has toured Europe with a Children’s
choir, accompanied voice studios, and currently holds an Accompanying
Fellowship at Lawrence
University where he plays
for the University Choral. Aside from
piano, Michael runs the Intramural Soccer League at Lawrence, and is a Residence Advisor.
Twenty-six year old clarinetist Brian Viliunas has given
performances in seven states and seven countries. He has played with orchestras in Houston, Racine, and Waukesha, and also the Bergen Philharmonic in Norway,
while living there for the past year as a Fulbright Scholar. While in Norway, Brian gave solo recitals
and appeared as guest soloist with the Lignum Clarinet Ensemble of
Holland. He was also active as an
educator and clinician for bands in Bergen
and Voss, and frequent guest conductor and performer with the 2007 Norwegian
Grand Champions, Dragefjelletmusikkorps. Brian is a member of the Youth Orchestra of
the Americas,
and accompanied them on their first European tour, where he was principle
clarinet on their DVD recording of Verdi’s Requiem
with conductor Placido Domingo. He has also performed with Lorin Maazel, Benjamin Zanber, and Andrew Litto and has
been able to study with excellent teachers, most notably Russ Dagon, Danny
Granados, Haakon Nilsen, Dan Roberdeau,
and Michael Webster. A native of Greendale, Wisconsin,
Brian has been successful in numerous competitions ranging from the Milwaukee
Youth Symphony Orchestra’s concerto competition in 2000 to being the furthest
advancing American in the 2005 Carl Nielsen Clarinet Competition in Odense, Denmark. Brian holds degrees from Northwestern University
and Rice University
and is currently a free-lance musician and teacher in southeastern Wisconsin.
Amy Lauters has been playing piano
for twelve years. She is a graduate of
the Interlochen
Arts Academy
in Michigan
where she studied with Yoshikazu Nagai and Thomas Lymenstull. She also attended the Interlochen
Arts Camp and performed in a master class for Olga Kern. She was on the Dean’s High Honors List and
served as an ambassador during the school year and returned in the summer to do
an internship. Amy was chosen to perform
in the Interlochen Honors Recital and also
accompanied many vocalists and instrumentalists. She is a freshman at Lawrence University
and studies with Anthony Padilla.
Danielle Simandl is currently a
junior pursing her B.M. violin performance with Wen-Lei
Gu at Lawrence
University. She is the co-concertmaster of the Lawrence
Symphony Orchestra and also a member of the Fox Valley Symphony and the
Marquette Symphony. She won honorable
mention at the Concord Chamber Orchestra Concerto Competition this past
December. She has attended the following
music festivals: Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp, Interlochen,
Green Lake Chamber Music Festival, Meadowmount School
of Music, and the Beijing International Music Festival.
Katie Ekberg, a junior at Lawrence University
is pursuing her B.M. Violin Performance with Wen-Lei Gu. Other primary
instructors have included Anthea Kreston
and Carolin Johnson.
She is the Principal Second Violin of the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra.
Sarah Bellmore, a senior at Lawrence University,
is a student of Matthew C. Michelic and is a
candidate for the Bachelor of Music degree in viola performance and
instrumental/general music education.
While at Lawrence,
Sarah has been active in Sigma Alpha Iota, serving as President during the
2007-2008 school year, and has worked with students as
a viola and violin teacher through the Lawrence Academy of Music and the ASTA
String Project. In 2007, she was named
as ArtsBridge scholar and teaches geography and music
to fifth graders at Edison Elementary School in Appleton.
Sarah is also a member of the Fox Valley Symphony Orchestra and the
Lawrence Symphony Orchestra. Former
teachers include Roland Vamos and Kin Chau.
Max Hero is a sophomore at Lawrence University
pursuing a cello performance/physics double degree, and is studying with Janet
Anthony. He has attended the green
Mountain Chamber Music Festival and the Milwaukee Chamber Music Festival.
Will Martin is a
sophomore at Lawrence
University and studies
under the direction of Anthony Padilla.
He is currently working on a Bachelor of Music in piano performance and
a Bachelor of Arts in English literature, and hopes to continue study in both
areas. Will has performed live on
WFMT-FM 98.7, Chicago’s classical radio station,
for the Impromptu series; and at the
Harris Theater of Millennium Park in Chicago
for the Coffee Talk series. He was also the featured performer at An Evening with James Conlon presented
by Sherwood Conservatory of Music in Chicago,
where he studied under Ivana Bukvich
and Gerald Rizzer.
Will has participated in master classes with Cliff Colnot
and Pawel Checinski, and
last March he toured with Andrew Mast and the Lawrence University Wind Ensembe for the College Band Directors National Association
concert in Omaha, NE.
Wisconsin Public Radio wishes to thank the three final
judges: Pianist Frances Karp from Madison, Flutist Timothy Lane, Profesor of Music at the University of Wisconsin-Eau
Claire, and Allan Naplan, General Director of the Madison Opera; the two
preliminary judges: Conductor Tom Buchhauser from
Madison and Pianist Dan Lyons from Madison; and the competition accompanist
Christina Lalog.
Thanks to the sponsors: the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Music, JW Pepper & Sons, SprintPrint, Inc; and the Lowell Center.