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Performances & Events

Recital | Guest

Hadar Noiberg, flute with Stephen Rush, piano

October 21, 2024 | 7:30 pm

Britton Recital Hall
Earl V. Moore Building
1100 Baits Dr
Ann Arbor, MI 48109

Free - no tickets required

Flutist Hadar Noiberg performs a guest recital accompanied by Stephen Rush, piano. Also featuring members of the flute studio of Professor Amy Porter. Free and open to the public; presented with support from the Sally Fleming Fund.

PROGRAM

Cabaceira Mon Amour – Sivuca (Hadar solo)
Effects Improv (Hadar solo)
Choro pra Merilina – Stephen Rush
Firenze or another original – Hadar Noiberg
Vibrações – Jacob do Bandolim
Lake Michigan in Fall Time – 2 free improv pieces by Hadar and Stephen
Trilhos Urbanos – Caetano Veloso

HADAR NOIBERG is a flutist, composer, arranger, and producer. Originally from Israel, she moved to New York City at the age of 21, where she spent fifteen years performing, recording five albums, and touring internationally with her harmony-less trio. Her music seamlessly blends a variety of styles, including classical, jazz, Brazilian choro, and elements from Latin America and the Middle East.

Collaborating with extraordinary musicians and drawing inspiration from these diverse genres, Hadar has developed a unique musical voice. Her creative journey has taken her across the globe, with performances in the U.S., Canada, Israel, Brazil, Taiwan, and Europe.

Constantly pushing boundaries, Hadar enjoys experimenting with different musical forms. With a particular love for vintage and modern low flutes, her collection includes antique wooden instruments alongside alto and bass flutes, which play a central role in her explorative sound.

In addition to performing, Hadar is deeply committed to teaching. She is the creator of The Self-Sufficient Flutist, a method designed to help flutists from all backgrounds deepen their understanding of melody, rhythm, and harmony. Drawing from her experiences in classical and jazz music, her method bridges stylistic gaps in traditional flute education, offering a more integrated approach.

Currently, Hadar balances touring, performing, and teaching, with a special focus on online education and international workshops. Over the past five years, she has cultivated a global flute community, connecting with flutists from around the world. Through social media, she shares her expertise and strives to foster a supportive community that encourages artistic growth across borders.

STEPHEN RUSH is a Distinguished Faculty Achievement Professor at the University of Michigan, where he has taught for over 35 years. He earned a doctorate at the Eastman School of Music and studied with third-stream pioneer Gunther Schuller, David Liptak and Samuel Adler.

Rush’s extensive body of work includes eight operas, chamber music (some of which is standard repertory), orchestra work and over 100 scores for dancers. His compositions have been recorded and performed worldwide by the Warsaw and Detroit Symphonies and members of the New York Philharmonic and others. As a performer, Rush has presented his multi-media work in Japan, Europe (recently Florence, Berlin, and Budapest), Latin America, and India. His many recordings include over 40 CD’s ranging from electronic experimental music, orchestra performances, chamber music, and jazz.

Rush is the director of the Digital Music Ensemble (DME) at the University of Michigan. With DME, Rush has premiered works by John Cage, Philip Glass, and LaMonte Young, and has recorded with Robert Ashley, Pauline Oliveros and “Blue” Gene Tyranny. DME is widely known for its site-specific work, ‘Gypsy’ Pond Music, which is performed annually at the University of Michigan and elsewhere, and performed telematic (online) music with Elliot Sharp and Pauline Oliveros. Rush teaches classes in music composition, music theory, dance improvisation and jazz, and has taken over 150 students to India for study there (Yoga/Music/Dance) in the last 20 years.

Stephen Rush works frequently as a jazz musician, performing with Roscoe Mitchell, Steve Swell, Eugene Chadbourne, the late Peter Kowald and Henry Grimes. He has recorded with Art Ensemble of Chicago, and his own electronic band, “Crystal Mooncone,” his avante-jazz trios “Yuganaut” and “Naked Dance.”

Rush has written “Better Get It In Your Soul”: discussing radical approaches to liturgy. He published “Free Jazz, Harmolodics and Ornette Coleman,” discussing their theories of improvisation and social justice. He is currently working with Matthew Evan Taylor on a book called “Fundamentals of Our Music” – a music theory book that attempts to decolonize music theory and provide a decolonized lens for the Fundamentals of Music Theory.

He has studied South Indian Classical vocal music for twenty years with Sharada Kumar (Ann Arbor), Sashi Kumar (Varanasi, India) and Kamala Rajalakshmi (Mysore, India). For the last seven years he has taken groups of students (ranging from 7 to 15) to India for one month in the summer to study Classical Indian Dance and Music, as well as Yoga, Philosophy and Sociology. His work in this area is recognized internationally, including frequent requests to speak about Indian Music and Culture in the U.S. and in India, including an invitation to be the keynote speaker at the International Peace Conference in Mysore, India, 2011.

He also has a unique career as an interviewer, having talked with such luminaries as Laurie Anderson, Ravi Shankar, LaMonte Young, Desmond Tutu, Ornette Coleman, the Kronos Quartet, and revered Swami Chinmayananda.

Free Live-stream Option North Campus