Megumi Masaki | |
---|---|
Born | Tokushima, Japan | 9 September 1963
Genres | New music multimedia and interdisciplinary works |
Occupation(s) | pianist, educator, arts administrator, conductor |
Instrument(s) | piano, audio/visual and computer effects |
Years active | 1993-present |
Labels | Centrediscs |
Website | megumimasaki.com |
Megumi Masaki OM (born 9 September 1963) is a Japanese-Canadian pianist, multimedia artist, educator, researcher, arts administrator, conductor, and curator. [1]
Masaki was born in Tokushima, Tokushima Prefecture, Japan. She began her piano studies in Winnipeg with Alice Nakauchi and continued with Leonard Isaacs. She received her Bachelor of Music (Hons.) in Piano Performance from Western University in London, ON, studying with Ronald Turini and Peter Katin. Her graduate degree in Piano Performance and Literature was also from Western University, and her Master's thesis, A Survey of Toru Takemitsu's Solo Piano Music, was supervised by Dr. Jack Behrens. Post-graduate work was at the Royal College of Music in London, UK, where she received an A.R.C.M. (Associate of the Royal College of Music) Diploma in Piano Performance, and an Advanced Studies Diploma in Piano Performance under the instruction of Kendall Taylor, with Philip Wilkinson as her academic supervisor. [2]
Since 2006, Masaki has been a member of the piano faculty [3] at the School of Music at Brandon University in Brandon, MB, Canada, and she was made a full professor in 2014. [4] In 2007 Masaki founded the educational outreach project "Masaki's Rising Stars of Brandon University" in partnership with rural arts associations, schools, and personal care homes. [5] Masaki received the Brandon University Alumni Association's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2010. [6]
In addition to piano instruction and pedagogy, Masaki directs Brandon University School of Music's New Music Ensemble and its New Music Festival. [7] In 2019, in collaboration with Brandon University Indigenous Peoples' Centre Knowledge Keeper Barb Blind, Masaki founded the BU Indigenous New Music Festival, featuring contemporary classical music by Indigenous composers. [8]
Masaki is also on faculty at the Casalmaggiore International Festival, [9] a solo and chamber music summer school and festival in Casalmaggiore, Italy; the Banff Centre for the Arts and Creativity [10] in Banff, AB, Canada; and Chetham's International Piano Summer School [11] in Manchester, UK. She is artistic director of the Eckhardt-Gramatté National Music Competition. [12] In 2016, she was a Musician in Residence at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, specializing in interactive electronics and video and serving as an installations mentor.[ citation needed ], and in 2022 she served on the faculty [13] of the centre's Evolution: Classical 2022 artist development program.
Masaki is a member of the Advisory Council for the Canadian Music Centre's Prairie Regional Office [14] and the board of the Canadian New Music Network. [15] She has served as a jury member for the Manitoba Arts Council, the Ontario Arts Council, the Canada Council, and was an academy delegate and performer for the Canadian Academy for the Recording Arts and Sciences (the JUNO Awards) in 2016. [16]
In July 2022, Masaki was appointed to the Order of Manitoba [17] and declared a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada [18] as a leading interpreter of new music and as an innovator who reimagines the piano, the pianist, and the performance space.
In April 2023, Masaki was appointed Director of Music [19] at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, to lead the vision and implementation of Music programming at the Centre, developing and nurturing emerging artists, and guiding and deepening music programming,
Masaki frequently collaborates with composers, visual artists, writers, computer scientists, and choreographers on interdisciplinary projects involving new technologies.[ citation needed ] She is a member of the Windsor, ON performance collective Noiseborder Ensemble, [20] and of Slingshot-Kidõ, [21] an interdisciplinary collective based at the University of Hartford, CT. The Slingshot Trio and the Noiseborder Ensemble contributed works to Listening Rooms at the Sonorities Belfast Festival in April 2022. [22] [23] Masaki has premiered many works for piano, chamber ensembles, and multimedia. As a solo artist she has commissioned pieces from notable Canadian composers such as Nicole Lizée (Kubrick Etudes for piano and glitch (soundtrack and film); Hitchcock Etudes [24] for solo piano and film), Brent Lee (Immaterial Los Angeles for solo piano; Agency and Structure for piano and fixed video; Ferrovia for piano and interactive video), Keith Hamel (Touch for piano and live electronics [25] ; Corona [26] for piano, interactive electronics and interactive visuals; Piano Games for piano and new computer game), and T. Patrick Carrabré (Orpheus Drones for piano and electronics; Orpheus (2) for piano, electronics and poetry by Margaret Atwood; Orpheus (1) for piano, toy piano, Roli keyboard, video, and text by Margaret Atwood). As a chamber musician she has collaborated with the Penderecki String Quartet, [27] the Gewandhaus Orchestra soloists, Shauna Rolston, and Koh Gabriel Kameda, [28] among others. She has concertized across North America, Europe, and Asia, including such venues as the National Arts Centre Ottawa, London's Royal College of Music, the Dark Music Days Festival in Reykjavik, IS, and Coronet Concert Hall in Okazaki, JP. [29]
Masaki works particularity with the repertoire of Sophie Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté including recording Eckhardt-Gramatté's piano compositions and her works for violin and piano duo (with Oleg Pokhanovski), publishing a critical performance edition of the composer's Piano Caprices, and appearing on film as a historical researcher and pianist in the film “Appassionata: The Extraordinary Life and Works of Eckhardt-Gramatté”, produced by Paula Kelly. [30]
In November 2021, Masaki collaborated with Yellowknife composer Carmen Braden and filmmakers Ben McGregor and Caroline Cox in a project called Hearing Ice that documented the freeze-up of northern lakes, and how climate change is impacting ice. [31] The project produced a multimedia piece entitled ICE IS WATER IS ICE IS, [32] which involves live piano performance, visuals, projections, and sounds of ice. The piece was performed by Masaki, Ken Steen, and Gene Gort at the 27th International Symposium on Electronic Art in Barcelona, Spain in June 2022. [33]
Performers | Title | Album Details |
---|---|---|
Megumi Masaki, piano | Megumi Masaki plays Eckhardt-Gramatté: The Six Piano Caprices and Other Works for the Piano [34] |
|
Megumi Masaki, piano | S. C. Eckhardt-Gramatté: "Piano Caprice No. 1" in Canada's Living Music: The Spirit of Independence/ Musique vivante canadienne: Un air de liberté [35] |
|
Megumi Masaki, piano Oleg Pokhanovski, violin | The Complete Works for Violin and Piano Duo by Eckhardt-Gramatté Volume 1 |
|
Megumi Masaki, piano | Nicole Lizée: "Hitchcock Etudes" in Bookburners [36] |
|
Megumi Masaki, piano | MUSIC 4 EYES&EARS [37] . Compositions by Keith Hamel, T. Patrick Carrabré, Nicole Lizée |
|
Megumi Masaki, piano, multimedia | Transformation: [38] Interactive Works for Piano by T. Patrick Carrabré, Keith Hamel, Bob Pritchard |
|
Role | Title | Details |
---|---|---|
pianist | Stars on Ice: The Piano Bar |
|
pianist, researcher | Appassionata: The Extraordinary Life and Music of Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté [39] |
|
pianist, documentary subject | New Music: The Pianist [40] |
|
Marc-André Hamelin, OC, OQ, is a Canadian virtuoso pianist and composer who has received 11 Grammy Award nominations. He is on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music.
In Canada, classical music includes a range of musical styles rooted in the traditions of Western or European classical music that European settlers brought to the country from the 17th century and onwards. As well, it includes musical styles brought by other ethnic communities from the 19th century and onwards, such as Indian classical music and Chinese classical music. Since Canada's emergence as a nation in 1867, the country has produced its own composers, musicians and ensembles. As well, it has developed a music infrastructure that includes training institutions, conservatories, performance halls, and a public radio broadcaster, CBC, which programs a moderate amount of Classical music. There is a high level of public interest in classical music and education.
John Metcalf MBE is a Welsh-Canadian composer. He has worked in many forms, including large-scale operas, choral and orchestral works, and chamber music, both instrumental and vocal. His music is tonal, and is often rhythmically complex, with much use of polyrhythms.
Sophie Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté was a Russian-born Canadian composer and virtuoso pianist and violinist.
Jasper Wood is a Canadian concert violinist.
Hermann Emil Alfred Max Trapp was a German composer and teacher. A prestigious figure in the Berlin cultural scene during the 1930s, Trapp, amongst others in the Nazi-influenced scene, was regularly invited to contribute to concert programs and competitions.
Denis Brott, SMOM is a Canadian cellist, music teacher, conductor and founder and artistic director of the Montreal Chamber Music Festival.
Jocelyn Morlock was a Canadian composer and music educator based in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her piece My Name is Amanda Todd won the 2018 Juno Award for Classical Composition of the Year.
Paul Steenhuisen is a Canadian composer working with a broad range of acoustic and digital media. His concert music consists of orchestral, chamber, solo, and vocal music, and often includes live electronics and soundfiles. He creates electroacoustic, radio, and installation pieces. Steenhuisen's music is regularly performed and broadcast in Europe, Asia, Australia, and North America. He contributes all audio content and programming to the Hyposurface installation project, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Gordon Fitzell is a composer, concert organizer, and professor of music. His catalog consists of solo, chamber, and electroacoustic music, including open and improvisatory works.
Taylor Brook is a composer of contemporary classical music who currently resides in New York City.
Vivian Fung is a JUNO Award-winning Canadian-born composer who writes music for orchestras, operas, quartets, and piano. Her compositions have been performed internationally.
Leilehua Lanzilotti, in full Anne Victoria Leilehua Lanzilotti, bynames Anne Leilehua Lanzilotti and Anne Lanzilotti,, is a Kanaka Maoli composer, sound artist, and scholar of contemporary classical music.
Nicole Lizée is a Canadian composer of contemporary music. She was born in Gravelbourg, Saskatchewan and received a MMus from McGill University. She lives in Montreal, Quebec. At one time, she was a member of The Besnard Lakes, an indie rock band from Montreal.
Emily Lenore Doolittle is a Canadian composer, zoomusicologist, and Athenaeum Research Fellow and Lecturer in Composition at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland based in Glasgow, Scotland.
Cassandra Miller is a Canadian experimental composer currently based in London, England. Her work is known for frequently utilising the process of transcription of a variety of pre-existing pieces of music.
Andrew Staniland is a Canadian composer and guitarist. He is currently a professor of Composition and Electronic Music at the Memorial University of Newfoundland.
Martin Arnold is a Canadian composer of experimental music. His music has been widely performed and commissioned by ensembles including the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Quatuor Bozzini, the pianist Eve Egoyan, the violinist Mira Benjamin and the cellist Anton Lukoszievieze.
Arielle Twist is a Nehiyaw (Cree) multidisciplinary artist and sex educator based in Halifax, Nova Scotia located in Canada. She is originally from George Gordon First Nation in Saskatchewan. and identifies as a Two-Spirit, transgender woman She was mentored in her early career by writer Kai Cheng Thom and has since published a collection of poems in 2019 in her book Disintegrate / Dissociate, began working as a sex educator at Venus Envy and become an MFA candidate at OCAD University Graduate Studies in the Interdisciplinary Art, Media and Design (IAMD) program. Twist has also expanded her artistry past poetry into visual and performance art. Over her time as an artist, Arielle Twist has had her work featured in Khyber Centre for the Arts, Toronto Media Arts Centre, La Centrale Galerie Powerhouse, Centre for Art Tapes, Art Gallery of Mississauga, Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, and Agnes Etherington Art Centre. Twist has also won the Indigenous Voices Award for English poetry and the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for emerging LGBTQ writers in 2020.
Diedre Allison Irons is a Canadian-born concert pianist who has been based in New Zealand since 1977.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help)