Students, Faculty and Alumni Help Society for New Music Present 2023-24 Season
Students, faculty and alumni of the (VPA) are helping the Society for New Music (SNM) present its 2023-24 season.
Highlights of SNM鈥檚 52nd season, which features members of VPA鈥檚 , include the world premiere of a score to the 1915 silent drama 鈥淎 Fool There Was鈥 (Sept. 26), an audience-participatory work by former Chicago Symphony Orchestra composer-in-residence Augusta Read Thomas (Oct. 14) and a staged opera about 性视界 folk and blues legend Elizabeth 鈥淟ibba鈥 Cotton (Jan. 21, 2024).
Founded in 1971, SNM is the only year-round new music organization in New York state outside of Manhattan. The 性视界-based nonprofit also is a longtime University partner, with creative and performing artists participating in 30-some concerts and workshops a year.
Regular tickets are $20. Student and senior citizen tickets are $15. Audience members 18 and under are free of charge. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit .
The 2023-24 schedule is as follows:
Tuesday, Sept. 26, 7 p.m.
Screening of the 1915 silent film 鈥淎 Fool There Was鈥 with a live performance of a new score
W. Carroll Coyne Center for the Performing Arts at Le Moyne College (1419 Salt Springs Rd., 性视界)

SNM will screen the 1915 silent classic 鈥淎 Fool There Was鈥 accompanied by the world premiere of a soundtrack by Loren Loiacono, assistant teaching professor in the Sentor School of Music. Based on the Rudyard Kipling poem 鈥淭he Vampire,鈥 the film was risqu茅 for its time and established actress Theda Bara as the quintessential 鈥渧amp鈥 (short for 鈥渧ampire鈥).
Loiacono, whose music is described as 鈥減lush 鈥 elusive鈥 (The New York Times), is the recipient of numerous honors, including the prestigious ASCAP Foundation Morton Gould Young Composer Award. Critics regard her as an emerging orchestral voice as well as a prolific creator of chamber and vocal music.
SNM commissioned Loiacono to write the score via a grant from Onondaga County, administered by CNY Arts with assistance from the Le Moyne College Film Studies Program.
The event is co-sponsored by the Le Moyne College Film Studies Program, SNM and 性视界 International Film Festival. Additional support comes from Le Moyne College鈥檚 music, visual and performing arts, and film studies programs.
Saturday, Oct. 14, 2 p.m.聽
Audience-participatory performance of Augusta Read Thomas鈥 鈥淩esounding Earth: A Sonic Landscape鈥
Thornden Park Amphitheater (Thornden Park Drive, 性视界)
The 2023-24 continues its yearlong look at 鈥淟andscapes鈥 with an outdoor performance of Augusta Read Thomas鈥 鈥淩esounding Earth: A Sonic Landscape.鈥 Scored for percussion quartet, the four-movement work calls for more than 500 bells of different shapes and sizes and from different cultures and time periods. Attendees are invited to bring their own bells, contributing to 鈥渕ini soundscapes鈥 throughout the park before, during and after the piece.
Hailed as a 鈥渢rue virtuoso composer鈥 (The New Yorker), Thomas is the University Professor of Composition and founding director of the Chicago Center for Contemporary Composition at The University of Chicago. The Pulitzer Prize finalist also was the longest-serving Mead Composer-in-Residence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (1997-2006).
Sunday, Nov. 5, 4 p.m.聽
World premiere of Ryan Chase鈥檚 鈥渓ake effects鈥
Park Central Presbyterian Church (504 East Fayette St., 性视界)
Heather Buchman leads the Society Players in the world premiere of 鈥渓ake effects鈥 by Ryan Chase. The National Endowment for the Arts commissioned the Colgate music professor to write the work, which calls for piano, percussion, woodwinds and strings.

The program includes the second performance of 鈥淓volutions,鈥 a three-movement work for Pierrot ensemble by Natalie Draper, assistant professor of music composition, theory and history in VPA; the world premiere of Marc Mellits鈥 鈥淒avid,鈥 composed in memory of David Stam, 性视界 University librarian emeritus and a longtime SNM executive committee member; and the American premiere of 鈥淪outhern Air鈥 by Jin Ping G鈥92, a professor at the China Conservatory of Music.
Buchman is Symphoria鈥檚 education and outreach conductor as well as director of the Hamilton College Orchestra and Chamber Music Program.
Sunday, Jan. 21, 2024, 4 p.m.
Staging of the opera 鈥淟ibba Cotten: Here This Day鈥
CNY Jazz Central (441 East Washington Street, 性视界)

Librettist Kyle Bass, a longtime affiliate of and VPA鈥檚 , reprises his 2021 chamber opera about local music legend Libba Cotten. With a score by SNM-commissioned composer Mark Olivieri, the work celebrates the life and legacy of Cotten, a self-taught, Grammy-winning folk and blues artist who recorded the landmark song 鈥淔reight Train.鈥 Buchman conducts the nine-piece Society Players.
Friday, Feb. 16, 2024, 7:30 p.m.
鈥淰ision of Sound: An Evening of Music and Dance鈥
Palace Theater (2384 James St., 性视界)
SNM presents the 18th edition of 鈥淰ision of Sound,鈥 celebrating new music and dance throughout Central New York. Buchman conducts the Society Players in music by SNM-commissioned composers Nicolas Scherzinger, associate professor and chair of 性视界鈥檚 music composition program, and former 性视界 music professor Sally Lamb McCune.

Other SNM-commissioned composers on the program are Octavio Vazquez and Paul Leary, music professors at Nazareth University and SUNY Oswego, respectively. Composers Daniel Thomas Davis and Ivan Malcolm round out the bill.
The program will be repeated at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York, on Saturday, Feb. 17, at 4 p.m. and at Nazareth University in Rochester on Sunday, Feb. 18 (2 p.m.).
Sunday, May 5, 2024, 4 p.m.
Music by winners of the Brian M. Israel/Sam Pellman Competition
St. Paul鈥檚 Episcopal Church (220 East Fayette St., 性视界)
Another SNM springtime tradition, this concert features music by winners of the Brian M. Israel/Sam Pellman Competition. Co-sponsored by SNM and the New York Federation of Music Clubs, the competition honors the memory of SNM-commissioned composers Israel and Pellman鈥攚ho died in 1986 and 2017, respectively鈥攂y providing opportunities for young, New York-based composers.
Buchman conducts the Society Players in music by 2023 Israel/Pellman winners Daniel Reza Sabzghabaei and Benjamin Rieke. Other prize-winning composers on the program are David Fulmer, Christopher Auerbach-Brown and Armando Bayolo.
鈥淭he success of the Society for New Music is a testament to not only the hard work of many people, but also the growing popularity of contemporary classical music,鈥 says Neva Pilgrim, longtime host of 鈥淔resh Ink鈥 on WCNY-FM, who also has served as artist-in-residence at Colgate and 性视界 universities.
SNM鈥檚 connection to 性视界 University, she explains, has resulted many collaborations, notably with the 鈥檚 性视界 Symposium and Hendricks Chapel鈥檚 .
鈥淪NM is a creative laboratory for students and faculty alike,鈥 Pilgrim adds.
Case in point: Samuel Evans, a master鈥檚 student of composition, has served on SNM鈥檚 board with flutist and composer Jaclyn Breeze G鈥23. When they鈥檙e not helping provide direction for the organization, they often can be found participating in SNM events, like the Young Composers鈥 Pop-Up concerts at University United Methodist Church.
Other SNM regulars include past or current VPA professors Jim Abbott G鈥16 (sound recording technology), Rob Bridge (percussion), Janet Brown G鈥93 (soprano), Kelly Covert (flute), Julia Ebner 鈥04 (soprano), Laura Enslin (soprano), Zeke Leonard (design), London Ladd 鈥06, G鈥22 (art), Ken Meyer (guitar), Spencer Phillips (bass), John Raschella (trumpet), Sar Shalom-Strong G鈥98 (piano) and Greg Wood (cello).
鈥淭he Society for New Music helps shapes鈥攁nd is shaped by鈥攖he region鈥檚 cultural landscape,鈥 Pilgrim continues. 鈥淲e seek to inspire collaboration, which, in turn, fosters a sense of community.鈥