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Classical 101

VIVO Music Festival begins second decade of world-class chamber music in Columbus

New at this year鈥檚 VIVO Music Festival 鈥 a homegrown guitarist, a 鈥済amified鈥 chamber music-meets-beer event and a work by a new composer鈥擜I.

The eleventh season of the is underway through Aug. 31, with chamber music performances and outreach events at venues around Columbus and beyond. Founded and led by co-artistic directors and former Columbus residents John Stulz and Siwoo Kim, the festival this year features novel high-tech programming and a new take on VIVO鈥檚 signature Beer & Beethoven event. And it continues its tradition of presenting world-class performers nurtured right here in central Ohio.

One of those performers, guitarist Jordan Dodson, is a Columbus native now enjoying a dynamic career as soloist, educator and recording artist. He鈥檚 also one of the novel attractions of this year鈥檚 festival lineup.

鈥淲e鈥檝e never had a guitarist join VIVO before, so Jordan Dodson is our inaugural guitarist for VIVO, which will be a lot of fun,鈥 said VIVO Music Festival Executive Director Suzanne Jennison.

As a special treat, Dodson and New York-based soprano Lucy Fitz Gibbon came to 星空无限传媒鈥檚 Performance Studio to perform Joaquin Rodrigo鈥檚 Three Spanish Songs鈥攋ust for you.

Along with Dodson, artificial intelligence makes its VIVO Festival debut this year. Dodson will perform this evening in 鈥淰IVO: Meditation,鈥 a concert featuring improvisations on the work of 20th-century Italian composer and poet Giacinto Scelsi, and with AI-adaptations created in real-time by Tina Tallon, assistant professor of artificial intelligence and music composition at Ohio State University School of Music.

鈥(Tallon) will have some microphones set up throughout the room, and as the musicians play and improvise, the AI system that she鈥檚 trained on the compositional techniques of Giacinto Scelsi, will spit out some ideas for them to improvise on, to change, to play,鈥 said Oliver Pontius, the festival鈥檚 director of development.

Dodson will also be featured in Luigi Boccherini鈥檚 famous Guitar Quintet 鈥淔andango鈥 on Thurs., Aug. 28 at 7 p.m. in the Ohio State University School of Music鈥檚 Timashev Recital Hall. And he will perform in Aaron Jay Kernis鈥 intense and vivid 100 Greatest Dance Hits on the festival鈥檚 final concert, in partnership with Chamber Music Columbus, Sun., Aug. 31 at 3 p.m. in the Southern Theatre.

In between the 鈥淔andango鈥 and the festival finale, two iterations of Beer & Beethoven, featuring off-the-cuff music making and a kick-back-with-a-beer vibe, will take place on Fri., Aug. 29 at 6 and 9 p.m. at Natalie鈥檚 Grandview. Both events are conversational and interactive. The 9 p.m. performance will be led by musicians Isabella Prater and Liam Battle, fellows in the festival鈥檚 New VIVO: Next fellowship program, and will offer a few twists.

鈥淭ech is going to play a role again,鈥 Jennison said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be using features so that the audience can vote for what they want to hear, and they can kind of create their own evening, if you will.鈥

Beyond the concert venues, the festival musicians will continue their partnership with Ohio Living Westminster Thurber in open rehearsals, social events and private performances in the community鈥檚 Neil Avenue space. Under the banner of the festival鈥檚 Access for All Initiative, the musicians will lead master classes at schools at Fairbanks High School and at the Red School of Music, in Union County, and will visit Centennial High School and Fort Hayes, in Columbus鈥攁ll in the name of bringing great chamber music to central Ohio.

鈥淲e鈥檙e all about democratizing classical music,鈥 Jennison said.

The runs through Aug. 31.

Jennifer Hambrick unites her extensive backgrounds in the arts and media and her deep roots in Columbus to bring inspiring music to central Ohio as Classical 101鈥檚 midday host. Jennifer performed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Civic Orchestra of Chicago before earning a Ph.D. in musicology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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