On Tuesday, Feb. 28, the quartet Sō Percussion YSM alums Eric Cha-Beach ’07MM, Josh Quillen ’06MM, Adam Sliwinski ’03MM ’04MMA ’09DMA, and Jason Treuting ’01MM ’02AD will perform a program of music by Vijay Iyer ’92BS, Nathalie Joachim, Treuting, Caroline Shaw ’07MM, and Bryce Dessner ’98BA ’99MM. We spoke with Sliwinski about Sō Percussion’s ethos and mission, its connections to Yale, and the repertoire the quartet is working to imagine and build.
Sō Percussion, Princeton's Performers-in-residence, invite you to join as student musicians participate in two large works by Julius Eastman: Stay on It and Gay Guerrilla. These sprawling and electrifying works of 1970s minimalism involve groove, improvisation, and creative decision-making. Sō is: Eric Cha-Beach, Josh Quillen, Adam Sliwinski, and Jason Treuting For twenty years and counting, Sō Percussion has redefined chamber music for the 21st century through an “exhilarating blend of precision and anarchy, rigor and bedlam” (The New Yorker). They are celebrated by audiences and presenters for a dazzling range of work: for live performances in which “telepathic powers of communication” (The New York Times) bring to life the vibrant percussion repertoire; for an extravagant array of collaborations in classical music, pop, indie rock, contemporary dance, and theater; and for their work in education and community, creating opportunities and platforms for music and artist
We recently spoke with legendary actor Jon Voight (Ray Donovan) and director Sean McNamara about Dangerous Game: The Legacy Murders, an edge-of-your-seat twisted family reunion unlike any you've ever seen.
Sō Percussion’s mission is to “create a new model of egalitarian artistic collaboration that respects history, champions innovation and curiosity, and creates an essential social bond through service to our audiences and our communities.”