FOUR WOMEN COMPOSERS THE DOWNTOWN CHAMBER TRIO

NJIT CAMPUS CENTER ATRIUM MARCH 28, 3:00 – 4:30 P.M.

Insights into the nature of our society and significant social change can be gained from many sources — including music. With a philosophy which resonates strongly with that of NJIT’s Technology and Society Forum, The Downtown Chamber Trio’s performance at the university on March 28 will feature music created by four exceptional women. In a socially relevant program that entertains, educates and challenges, the group will offer selections by Nadia Boulanger, Rebecca Clarke, Fanny Mendelssohn, and Clara Schumann. Spanning a century of aspiration and accomplishment in music, these women soared creatively in a cultural context that too often honored their male artistic peers with greater recognition.

Forming The Downtown Chamber Trio are violinist Rieko Kawabata, cellist Daniel Barrett and pianist Mimi SternWolfe, who is also artistic director of Downtown Music Productions. Born in Japan, Kawabata made her debut with the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra at the age of ten and won the Ana Ono Memorial Prize, becoming the youngest performer to win the competition. Barrett is a performer, composer and conductor whose work encompasses international festivals, popular TV shows like SaturdayNightLiveand documentaries such as Ric Burns’ TheWayWest.

A graduate of the School of Performing Arts, Queens College, SternWolfe earned a master’s degree from New England Conservatory. She has worked with pianists Ray Lev, Cecile Ruef and Leonid Hambro, and in Paris studied with Nadia Boulanger, one of the composers who will be featured on March 28.

Cosponsored by the Murray Center for Women in Technology, NJIT ADVANCE Program, NJIT Technology and Society Forum Committee

Technology and Society Forum information and presentations on the Web: http://tsf.njit.edu


in the NJIT Technology and Society Series:

Tuesday, April 3       WILLIAM A. WULF:
      “Rising Above the Gathering Storm: The Challenges of Global Competitiveness”

Monday, April 9       JAMES E. WEST:
     A special dual presentation: “Where Credit is Due: The Black Heritage in Technology”, “Noise Can Make You Sick”

For More Information: Contact Jay Kappraff, kappraff@adm.njit.edu or 9735963490

NJIT welcomes attendees from Essex County College, RutgersNewark, the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and Sigma Xi