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	<title>Arts at Harvey Mudd College</title>
	<link>https://arts.hmc.edu</link>
	<description>Arts at Harvey Mudd College</description>
	<pubDate>Sat, 09 Aug 2025 05:39:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Arts at HMC</title>
				
		<link>https://arts.hmc.edu/Arts-at-HMC</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Nov 2020 01:45:42 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Arts at Harvey Mudd College</dc:creator>

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Arts at Harvey Mudd CollegeDepartment of Humanities, Social Sciences, and the Arts





	Concert Series&#38;nbsp;
&#38;nbsp;Jenny Soonjin Kim:
In Celebration of Mozart’s 270th Birthday

&#60;img width="888" height="769" width_o="888" height_o="769" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/007a74a69a70003f682b1086d61c41a34556776d2a24ed9073abda4898f6692a/2025_04_27_kim_announcement.jpg" data-mid="229126577" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/888/i/007a74a69a70003f682b1086d61c41a34556776d2a24ed9073abda4898f6692a/2025_04_27_kim_announcement.jpg" /&#62;
Sunday, April 12, 2026, 7 p.m.Drinkward Recital Hall


Senior Recital:

Yolanda Ba and Nicole Wu, piano






Wednesday, April 29, 2026, 7 p.m.Drinkward Recital Hall

Senior Recital:

Brayden Mendoza, piano



Friday, May 1, 2026, 7 p.m.Drinkward Recital Hall


Student Recital



Thursday, May 7, 2026, 7 p.m.Drinkward Recital Hall







	Visual Arts&#38;nbsp;
Game of Democracy
April 27 - July 31, 2026Sprague Gallery
&#60;img width="640" height="426" width_o="640" height_o="426" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d2b9a2d1379d9f40fb6da116097b047d97043a15191cfb1b4f02fe269b4bbcd0/Kleroterion-_AGMA-_225287.jpg" data-mid="246837031" border="0" data-scale="100" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/640/i/d2b9a2d1379d9f40fb6da116097b047d97043a15191cfb1b4f02fe269b4bbcd0/Kleroterion-_AGMA-_225287.jpg" /&#62;







































Alumni
Weekend Reception and Gallery Talks:



Friday, May 1st
11:00 am – 12:00pm and 3:00pm –
4:00pm






















Presentation
Days Reception:




Wednesday, May 6th, 
12pm - 1:30pm









    
    
    

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		<title>The HMC American Gamelan (Fall 2025)</title>
				
		<link>https://arts.hmc.edu/The-HMC-American-Gamelan-Fall-2025</link>

		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Aug 2025 05:39:44 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Arts at Harvey Mudd College</dc:creator>

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The HMC American Gamelan

Bill Alves, director


with special guests
Jeff Gauthier, violin
Stephen Klein, euphonium
Rachel Rudich, shakuhachi



HMC’s ensemble of metallophones and gongs ring out in performances of works by Lou Harrison and Bill Alves.
Sunday, November 23, 7 p.m.Drinkward Recital Hall

&#60;img width="800" height="533" width_o="800" height_o="533" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ad0fcf9e90493a00a9a5edb8ff9ae41bc2a649e8872f5597673bd8d0020b64eb/MicroFest15-181.jpg" data-mid="240944356" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/800/i/ad0fcf9e90493a00a9a5edb8ff9ae41bc2a649e8872f5597673bd8d0020b64eb/MicroFest15-181.jpg" /&#62;



PROGRAM






















Gending Demeter
	Lou Harrison
(1917-2003)

	


	
















Gending
Vogel Flats

 &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; 
Jeff Gauthier, violin
	&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; Bill Alves
 &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; (1960-)
	




















Gending
Ibu Trish



  
	Harrison





















	


 






	


	
















&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Rachel
Rudich, shakuhachi




	
	


	
















Angel’s
Crest




	Alves
	
&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;








	


















Gus Gil, gendér panerus
Bill Alves, gendér barung
Kenneth Cotich, gongs







	
	

	
















Main
Bersama-Sama




	Harrison
	

	


















Rachel Rudich, shakuhachi
Stephen Klein, euphonium







	
	


	At First Light
	Alves
	

	Rachel Rudich, shakuhachi







	
	





















Gending Demeter (1981): Lou Harrison was
first entranced with the bell-like tones of the Javanese gamelan orchestra as a
young man in the 1930s. Unwilling to wait until he had access to such
instruments, Harrison and his partner Bill Colvig built their American Gamelan
in the early 1970s. Finally, in the summer of 1974, he had the opportunity to
study and play a traditional Javanese gamelan in Berkeley California, and soon
after he met one of the great Javanese masters of this music, Ki K. P. H.
Wasitodiningrat, familiarly known as Pak Cokro. It was Pak Cokro who first
encouraged Harrison that he write for the Javanese gamelan, and Harrison soon
began turning out a large body of works for the ensemble. As Harrison had
always been an enthusiastic reader of Greek and Roman classics, he composed a
series of works named for Greek gods, often reflecting those archetypes in the
musical character of the pieces. Demeter was the Greek goddess of the fertility
of the earth, and by honoring her, Harrison also symbolically reflected his own
environmental concerns.



Gending Vogel Flats (2002). Vogel
Flats is a beautiful area in the Angeles National Forest, and “gending”
is a generic Indonesian word for gamelan piece. This particular marriage of
Asian gamelan with European violin is cast in a non-traditional and rather
mysterious mode of the Javanese pelog scale.



Gending
Ibu Trish (1989). One
of Lou Harrison’s devoted gamelan musicians was Trish Nielsen, who led Gamelan
Kembar of San José, California. This piece dedicated to her was written for
that ensemble, a “chamber” gamelan from West Java called a gamelan degung. It
is known for its distinctive scale and its use of a bamboo flute, which plays
bird-like elaborations on the main melody. Tonight’s version is an arrangement
for the Central Javanese-style gamelan.



Angel's
Crest (2007) is a
piece in the slendro tuning system featuring the génder metallophone
instruments. Unlike traditional gamelan music, it explores constantly shifting,
expanding, and contracting cycles of time.



Main
Bersama-sama (1978)
is one of Lou Harrison's several marriages of the Indonesian gamelan with
Western solo instruments, this one written for Scott Hartman, then at San Jose
State University. The title means “playing together” in the Indonesian
language, a reflection of Harrison's ideal of a cross-cultural musical
community. This spirit is also reflected in the alternation between the Western
euphonium and the Asian bamboo flute.



The music and
video animation in At First Light (2012) were composed in tandem.
The visual images were created in non-real-time with POV-Ray rendering software
to correspond to changes in pitch sets and tonality in the electronic and
gamelan sounds. The symmetrical patterns of the images often reflect the
numerical patterns of the musical tuning systems you hear. 



Lou Harrison (1917-2003) was one of the great American composers of
the twentieth century and a pioneer in art of cultural hybrids and alternate
tunings. As a young man in California he studied with Henry Cowell and Arnold
Schoenberg and with his friend John Cage established the first concert series
devoted to new music for percussion. In 1943, Harrison moved to New York, where
he made a name for himself as a composer, critic, and conductor, premiering the
Third Symphony of Charles Ives. However, &#38;nbsp;to &#38;nbsp;escape
 the stress and &#38;nbsp;noise of the city, &#38;nbsp;he moved
 back to












California in 1953, where his relative isolation was the perfect
environment to study his interests in Asian music and just intonation. In the
1960s he traveled to Asia, studying Korean and Chinese music. In the 1970s, he
began studying and performing Javanese gamelan music and would produce a
remarkable body of nearly 50 pieces for the orchestra, often in combinations
with Western instruments. By the 1990s, the world began to catch up with Lou
Harrison, who by the time of his death was recorded on dozens of CDs and was
the subject of many festivals and tributes. In 2001 he was the guest of honor
at the MicroFest conference here in Claremont.


























Bill Alves studied the music of Java and Bali during a
1993-94 Fulbright fellowship and is now the director of the HMC American
Gamelan. He is the co-author of Lou Harrison: American Musical Maverickand author of Music of the Peoples of the World is now in its third
edition from Cengage/Schirmer. His recordings include The Terrain of
Possibilities, Imbal-Imbalan, Mystic Canyon, and Guitars
and Gamelan. His work with computer animation pioneer John Whitney inspired
his abstract computer animations with music, now released by the Kinetica Video
Library as Celestial Dance. He has extensively explored non-standard
tunings in his work and is a co-director of MicroFest, the Southern California
festival of microtonal music.



Rachel
Rudichis a western flute player whose music can be explored on more than forty
published CDs. Her forty-five-plus year career specializing in contemporary
music opened her eyes to extended techniques, Japanese music, and eventually to
the shakuhachi. Rudich performs often with her shakuhachi and koto duo, Hana
Hibiki with koto player Kozue Matsumoto, and has recorded shakuhachi for TV and
video games, as well as diverse genres such as horror movies and even country
western bands. Some highlights have been recording sessions for the TV series
Kobra Kai, and the video game League of Legends. In addition to shakuhachi,
Rudich also enjoys playing suling. She has attended and performed
internationally at the World Shakuhachi Festivals, as well as the Rockies
Shakuhachi Camp in Boulder, Colorado. In 2018 Rudich also performed a solo
concert in Tokyo of pieces for shakuhachi and electronics by American
composers.


As an improvising violinist Jeff Gauthier has performed and recorded with Nels Cline, Alex Cline, Yusef Lateef, Adam Rudolph, Nicole Mitchell, Mark Dresser, Myra Melford, Vinny Golia, Todd Sickafoose, and many others. His own ensemble, The Jeff Gauthier Goatette has recorded six albums for Cryptogramophone Records.&#38;nbsp; He currently performs, records and writes music for his improvising duo “The Smudges” with his wife, ‘cellist Maggie Parkins.&#38;nbsp; In the world of classical music, Jeff performed regularly with the Los Angeles Music Center Opera, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Long Beach Symphony, Oregon Bach Festival, Carmel Bach Festival, and most recently with Bang on a Can All Stars for the celebration of Terry Riley's 90th birthday. 


















HMC is deeply grateful for the generous support that created The Ken Stevens ’61 Founding Class Concert Series.

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