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Georgia Tech School of Music Presents:
Concert Orchestra Student Showcase
Georgia Tech School of Music Presents:
Concert Orchestra Student Showcase
Friday, April 12th 2024
7:30pm
West Village Concert Hall
Georgia Tech Concert Orchestra
Andrea Perez Muksdi, Chaowen Ting, conductors
For their season finale, the GT Concert Orchestra explores a captivating journey through diverse themes, opening with Rossini’s L’Italiana In Algeri. Next in the program is Daniela Mercado’s Dos Estados, followed by Claudia Montero’s Rincones de Buenos Aires. The program concludes with Holst’s The Planets.
Program
- 16. Burlesque
- 32. Dance from Maramaros
- 33. Harvest Song
- 36. Bagpipes
- 42. Arabian Song
- 44. Transylvanian Dance
transcr. Bouma
Emma Axelson, viola
Ivy Xue, viola
- I. Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo
- II. Scherzo
Claire Kim, violin
Ivy Xue, viola
Sean Yoshihara, cello
Adrian Cheung, piano
- I. Mars, the Bringer of War
- IV. Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity
Program Notes – L'Italiana in Algeri
The overture of L’Italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers), a two-act opera composed by Gioachino Rossini, successfully debuted in Venice on May 22, 1813. Rossini’s distinctive style of mixing opera seria(serious style of opera) and opera buffa(comic operas) shines through. The opera follows the adventures of Isabella, an Italian woman, who arrives in Algiers in search of her lost lover, Lindoro. Through cleverness and wit, she outsmarts the Bey of Algiers and his court, ultimately reuniting with Lindoro and escaping to freedom.
Program Notes – Dos Estados
“Dos Estados” (Two States) is a work composed of two pieces. The first, "Immersion," is inspired by the movie of the same name by Win Wenders. It has a melancholic character, with slow melodies that seek to immerse us in a watery and immersive mood. It is followed by the work "Delicate but Spicy" which has the rhythm of Tango, very characteristic of Argentine music, and is a purely rhythmic piece in which many resources and phrasings typical of the Tango genre are developed.
Program Notes – Rincones de Buenos Aires
Rincones de Buenos Aires (Corners of Buenos Aires) was originally for string orchestra, and at the request of an orchestra in Taiwan, the composer decided to orchestrate it for full orchestra. The piece is also edited for string quintet and represents one of the most performed works in Montero’s catalog. The piece is organized as a suite, in three movements.
The first is inspired by an iconic square, “Plaza Francia,” and it’s very French harmonies gave Montero the inspiration to fill this number with lyricism. Harmonies that change colors, planes, and textures. The second, "It Rains in Buenos Aires," evokes Baroque writing. Here the composer tried to express the feeling of the city itself when it rains. The raindrops are heard in the pizzicato, alternating with instrumental solos in the woodwinds. The third number, "Microcentro 12:30," presents a more polyphonic writing, where the different families of the orchestra work on various rhythms, as if reflecting the coming and going of a lively metropolitan city, a tapestry of colors that evokes with Tango rhythms, the coming and going of people. It includes a brief interlude full of tenderness.
Program Notes – The Planets
Gustav Holst’s The Planets is a monumental orchestral suite that takes listeners on a cosmic journey through our solar system. Composed between 1914 and 1917, each movement represents a different planet, drawing inspiration from both astrology and mythology. A complete list of movements in Holst’s The Planets follows:
Mars, the Bringer of War
Venus, the Bringer of Peace
Mercury, the Winged Messenger
Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity
Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age
Uranus, the Magician
Neptune, the Mystic

Composer Bio – Daniela Mercado
Pianist, composer, and arranger
Daniela Mercado began playing the piano at the age of eight. In addition to performing varied, Mercado decided to arrange music for others and release her own music.
Her first composition was "Song for Olivia to do what she really wants," dedicated to her newborn daughter. Its title encapsulates the search for freedom from her upbringing, but also her own compositional freedom, influenced by all the music she interpreted, especially urban music, but without imposed fixed forms, in search of her own language.
Mercado studied at La Colmena School of Musicians and with teachers such as Diego Schissi, Luis Lewin, Nicolás Ledesma, Agustín Guerrero, Victoria Asurmendi, and Octavio Brunetti. She has performed at prominent venues such as the Café Vinilo Pianists Cycle, the "Night of Ideas" organized by the French Alliance, and the "Culture in the Courtyard" series by the Córdoba Culture Agency, among others. In September and October 2021, the Symphonic Band of the Province of Córdoba and the UNC Symphony Orchestra premiered works arranged by her specifically for these ensembles.
Mercado also participated as a pianist and educator at the La Rioja Music Fair in 2018 and 2021, and as a workshop leader at the Eighth Congress of Popular Music of the UNVM. In 2022, the female ensemble "Warmi" premiered symphonic versions of her compositions in Salta and São Paulo (Brazil). She won a 2022 Creation Scholarship awarded by the FNA to write orchestral versions of her Cinematographic Tales as well as third place in the International Composition Contest "Let's Talk About Composers III."
Her music is increasingly requested by different groups, organizations from the United States and France will soon premiere her music. Her compositional work is published by EPSA editorial, and her music by Epsa Music.
Ensemble Members
Violin I | |
Lawrence Ro, Concertmaster | Electrical Engineering |
Joshua Sampson | Computer Science |
Stephen Linder | Computer Science |
Anu Raghavan | Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering |
Wesley Chukumah | Biomedical Engineering |
Yijie Jin | Mathematics |
Pearl Park | Electrical Engineering |
Tanvi Thallapally | Biochemistry |
Katherine Stone | Biology |
Antoine Marin | Aerospace Engineering |
Violin II | |
Joshua Kinoshita, Principal | Music Technology |
John Auckly | Aerospace Engineering |
Christopher Linder | Computer Science |
Arshiya Rahman | Computer Science |
Nishka Soni | Industrial Engineering |
Varsha Jacob | Computer Science |
Sanai Williams | Architecture |
Addison Harmer | Physics |
Alexa Vitti | Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering |
Chengrui Li | Computational Science and Engineering |
Viola | |
Nicole Redder, Principal | Operations Research |
Angela Xu | Computer Science |
Katherine Poch | Environmental Science |
Emma Axelson | Civil Engineering |
Cello | |
Madeline Belew, Principal | Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering |
Roy Mazor | Mechanical Engineering |
Philip Cho | Aerospace Engineering |
Abigail Sim | Biology |
Jamie King | Chemical Engineering |
Sophia Anderson | Materials Science and Engineering |
Klara Kunz | Chemical Engineering |
Bass | |
Iris Smith, Principal | Mathematics |
Matthew Walloch | Biomedical Engineering |
Flute | |
Sieun Kim | Computer Science |
Cindy Wei Zhou | Business Administration |
Oboe | |
Keerthana Kumar | Biology |
Liam Nunn | Civil Engineering |
Raymond Yang | Biomedical Engineering |
English Horn | |
Oliver Long | Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering |
Clarinet | |
Philip Wu | Computer Science and Mathematics |
Jason Zhang | Computer Science |
Bassoon | |
Jesse Bruner | Nuclear Engineering |
Hannah Tourial | Industrial and Systems Engineering |
French Horn | |
Joseph Hardin | Computer Science |
Tristan Laanait | Fulton Science Academy and Georgia Tech, Dual Enrolled |
Catilyn Mize | Aerospace Engineering |
Trumpet | |
Mayson Beyke | Psychology |
Akhil Gundra | Aerospace Engineering |
Alex Kehler | Aerospace Engineering |
Armaan Lala | Computer Science and Mathematics |
Trombone | |
Jonatan Gonzalez | Aerospace Engineering |
Rowan Holcombe | Mechanical Engineering |
Eli Tarr | Computer Science |
Autumn Zerfoss | Civil Engineering |
Tuba | |
Alejandro Martinez | Physics |
Harp | |
Anoushka Scaria | Computer Science |
Timpani/Percussion | |
Alexander Evitt | Aerospace Engineering |
George Ewaskiew | Dodgen Middle School |
Kwanwoo Lee | Computer Science |
Georgia Tech School of Music
Through interdisciplinary degree programs, outstanding performance ensembles, and innovative research endeavors, the Georgia Tech School of Music cultivates a rich legacy of musical traditions and develops cutting-edge technologies to help define music's future. The School serves students in bachelors, masters, and doctoral programs in music technology and offers innovative performance opportunities, courses, and cultural and artistic experiences for students throughout the Institute.