David Teie
Lecturer in Cello
B.M., M.M., Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University
Davie Teie began studying composition with Bruce Wise in Wisconsin when he was seventeen. He devoted the next twenty years to the study of the cello and only returned to composition in his thirties, working with John Corigliano in New York. In his career as a cellist he studied with Stephen Kates and Berl Senofsky at the Peabody Conservatory where he received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees and the Wertheimer award for cellists, and with William Pleeth in London on a Fulbright scholarship. He joined the National Symphony Orchestra in 1984 and was invited by the legendary cellist Mstislav Rostopovich, to study with him, allowing David to be one of a few cellists in the past twenty years to study with the great master. David played fifteen concerto performances with the National Symphony, twelve of them with Maestro Rostopovich conducting, including performances on three U.S. tours. He was a member of the Amadeus Trio and spent the 1999 - 2000 season as acting principal cellist of the San Francisco Symphony. In 1991 he embarked on a USIA-sponsored recital tour of China, and in August of 1995 completed a similar tour of Brazil. Lately Mr. Teie has been busy with concerto, recital, and chamber music performances and shared a highly praised recital of solo Bach Suites with Carter Brey in February of 2004.
While attending the Peabody Conservatory, Mr. Teie also began his conducting studies, following in the footsteps of his father, who is a conductor as well. David continued these studies at the Pierre Monteux school in Maine, and at the Paul J. Christianson choral school in Minnesota, and worked privately with Maestro Leonard Slatkin in Washington, D.C.
He recently returned to composing as his primary focus. He wrote the string music for the recent CD by the group Echobrain founded by Jason Newsted, formerly the bassist in Metallica. His works include three collections of songs, a theater piece for mime and string quartet, a set of "Radio Songs" for Cello and Piano, a setting of four poems by Walt Whitman for Chorus and Piano, a Violin concerto, a Flute concerto, and a concerto for Viola and Violoncello. He was commissioned by Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony to write "Fuga Eroica" which received its premiere with the NSO in February of 2004. In November of 2005 he premiered his Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra with the Anchorage Symphony.
Kenneth Slowik
Lecturer, Cello
Artistic Director of the Smithsonian Chamber Music Society, Kenneth Slowik first established his international reputation primarily as a cellist and viola da gamba player through his work with the Smithsonian Chamber Players, Castle Trio, Smithson String Quartet, Axelrod Quartet, and with Anner Bylsma's L'Archibudelli. Conductor of the Smithsonian Chamber Orchestra since 1988, he became conductor of the Santa Fe Bach Festival in 1998, and led the Santa Fe Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra from 1999-2004. He is now devoting increasing amounts of time to conducting orchestral, oratorio, and operatic repertoire with modern- and period-instrument ensembles on both sides of the Atlantic.
Slowik has been a featured instrumental soloist and/or conductor with numerous orchestras, among them the National Symphony, the Baltimore Symphony, l'Orchestre Symphonique de Québec, the Vancouver Symphony, and the Cleveland Orchestra. A frequent guest artist with prominent chamber groups as well as with most of the leading U.S. early music ensembles, he enjoys providing the organ or harpsichord continuo for performances of large-scale baroque works at various festivals in the United States and abroad, and appears in recital both as harpsichord soloist and fortepiano collaborator for duo sonatas and Lieder.
Slowik's impressive discography comprises over sixty recordings featuring him as conductor, cellist, gambist, baryton and keyboard player for music ranging from the Baroque (Marais, Corelli, Bach) through the Classical (Haydn, Boccherini, Beethoven, Schubert) and Romantic (Mendelssohn, Gade, Spohr) to the early twentieth century (Schöenberg, Mahler, Richard Strauss). Of these, many have won prestigious international awards, including France's Diapason d'Or and Choc, the "British Music Retailers' Award for Excellence," Italy's Premio Internazionale del Disco Antonio Vivaldi, two GRAMMY® nominations, and numerous "Record of the Month" and "Record of the Year" prizes.
As an educator, Dr. Slowik has presented lectures at colleges and universities throughout the United States and has contributed to a number of symposia and colloquia at museums throughout the United States and Europe. He serves on the faculty of L'Académie Internationale du Domaine Forget in Québec, and was named Artistic Director of the Baroque Performance Institute at the Oberlin College Conservatory in 1993.
Eric Kutz
Assistant Professor, Cello String Division Cellist Eric Kutz has captivated audiences across both North America and Europe. He comes to the University of Maryland School of Music from Luther College, where he served on the faculty from 2002-2015. He is active as a teacher, a chamber musician, an orchestral musician, and a soloist. His diverse collaborations cut across musical styles, and have ranged from cellist Yo-Yo Ma to jazz great Ornette Coleman. Mr. Kutz is also a founding member of the Murasaki Duo, a cello and piano ensemble that will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2016. The Murasaki Duo, which consists of Mr. Kutz and Canadian pianist Miko Kominami, toured Scandinavia in 2005. Advocates for new music, the Duo actively commissions new works, in addition to performing the classics. The Duo’s second CD, “Duo Virtuoso,” was recently released on the Delos label and features several show pieces as well as Brahms E minor Sonata. The Duo’s debut compact disc appeared on the Centaur Records label; this disc was reviewed by the Journal of the Atlanta Audio Society as “ebullient” and “brilliant throughout.” The Duo’s next recording project, entitled “The Commissions,” will include five works commissioned and premiered by the Murasaki Duo, all written during 2007-2012.
The Duo has performed at leading festivals, such as the Niagara International Chamber Music Festival, the Icicle Creek Music Center, Malibu Friends of Music, and Lutheran Summer Music, and it has repeatedly been broadcast on Iowa Public Radio’s program, “Know the Score.” Hailed by New York Concert Review as having “an easy virtuosity, and an unusually high level of ensemble playing,” after its Weill Hall debut, the Duo regularly performs on chamber music series throughout the nation.
Prior to his appointment at Luther College, Mr. Kutz was the cellist of the Chester String Quartet for four years. The Quartet, called “one of the best and brightest of the country’s young string quartets” by the Boston Globe, was in residence at Indiana University South Bend. The Quartet gave two tours of Europe during Kutz’s tenure, and performed from coast to coast.
As an orchestral musician, Mr. Kutz summers in Chicago as a member of the Grant Park Orchestra’s cello section. He has also appeared in the section of the New York Philharmonic, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. He has been principal cellist of the Houston Grand Opera Orchestra and the Juilliard Orchestra, and he has performed under the batons of Sir Georg Solti, Kurt Masur, and Seiji Ozawa.
In 1997 Mr. Kutz traveled to the Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow as a visiting artist, performing new chamber works by American composers. Other performance highlights include a tour of Germany and a concert in New York’s Avery Fisher Hall as part of Lincoln Center’s Mozart Bicentennial celebration. Mr. Kutz has premiered over two-dozen works, and has been broadcast live on WQXR and WNYC, both of New York City, WFMT Chicago, as well as nationally on PBS television’s Live from Lincoln Center.
Mr. Kutz received his Bachelor of Music degree magna cum laude from Rice University; his Master and Doctoral degrees are from the Juilliard School in New York City. He performs on a cello by Raffaele Fiorini (Bologna, 1877), and a bow by F.N. Voirin (Paris, 1880).
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