"They have established standards of chamber music performance equal to any in the world," in the words of the Washington Post. And The New York Times said, "They appealed to the heart and the head, offering a warm, seductively luxurious sound and an impressive precision and unity of purpose."
Among today's most exciting and innovative chamber music ensembles, *The American Chamber Players* were formed in 1985 by Miles Hoffman from a core group of artists of The Library of Congress Summer Chamber Festival. The six members of the ensemble perform repertoire ranging from familiar masterpieces to neglected gems to newly commissioned American works, and their fascinating and delightful programs with varied instrumental combinations have been as enthusiastically praised as their extraordinary, dynamic performances.
They have toured throughout North America, engaged and re-engaged by prestigious concert series from Florida to British Columbia, and they have traveled to Paris for a series of special gala concerts at the Paris Opera and the Bibliothèque Nationale. They have also been heard countless times on National Public Radio's /Performance Today/ and on local radio stations throughout the United States, and they are the resident ensemble of the June Chamber Festival at the Kreeger Museum, in Washington, DC.
The American Chamber Players have recorded music of Mozart, Bruch, Bloch, Stravinsky, Harbison, and Rochberg for a series of compact discs and cassettes distributed internationally on the Koch International Classics label.
Violist Miles Hoffman
is founder and artistic director of The American Chamber
Players, and Dean of the Petrie School of Music at Converse College in
Spartanburg, South Carolina. Winner of prizes in the National Arts Club and
Washington International Competitions, he made his New York recital debut in
1979 at the 92nd Street Y and has since appeared frequently around the
country in recital, as chamber musician, and as soloist with many orchestras.
In 1982 he founded the Library of Congress Summer Chamber Festival, which he
directed for nine years, and which led to the formation of the American
Chamber Players. His musical commentary, “Coming to Terms,” was heard weekly
throughout the United States for thirteen years – from 1989 to 2002 – on
NPR’s /Performance Today/, and now, as Music Commentator for National Public
Radio’s flagship news program, /Morning Edition/, he is regularly heard by a
national audience of nearly 14 million people./ /Mr. Hoffman is the author of
/The NPR Classical Music Companion: Terms and Concepts from A to Z
A founding member of the American Chamber Players, *Loren Kitt* has been principal clarinetist of the National Symphony Orchestra since 1970. A native of Washington State and graduate of the Curtis Institute, he is a frequent soloist with the National Symphony, and has been a featured artist of the Casals Festival and the Spoleto Festival and a guest artist of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. He has performed often in Washington, DC with the Theater Chamber Players, the 20th Century Consort and as guest artist with the Emerson String Quartet. Mr. Kitt is currently professor of clarinet at the University of Maryland at College Park.
Born and raised in Colorado, violinist *Joanna Maurer *has performed as orchestral soloist and recitalist throughout the United States, as well as in Germany, Austria, and the Czech Republic. After initial studies with her parents, she received her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at the Juilliard School, where she studied with Dorothy DeLay and Robert Mann. She has won first prizes in a number of competitions, including the E. Nakamichi Violin Competition, the Denver Young Artist Orchestra Competition, the Young Musicians Foundation Competition, and the National MTNA Selmer Competition. Now a resident of New York City, Ms. Maurer performs regularly with the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, and she is a member of the Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra, with whom she has appeared as soloist and concertmaster. She also served as concertmaster of the Prometheus Chamber Orchestra for their final two seasons. A versatile artist with a broad repertoire, Ms. Maurer has collaborated with fiddler/violinist Mark O’Connor in, among other projects, performances of his Double Violin Concerto.
Born in Italy, cellist *Alberto Parrini* has performed throughout the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Europe and Asia. He spent the 2002-03 season as cellist of the St. Lawrence String Quartet, in residence at Stanford University. Prior to that he was Assistant Principal cellist with the Richmond Symphony. He has toured extensively with Mikhail Baryshnikov and the White Oak Dance Project and performed with Continuum, Lenape Chamber Ensemble and the Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra. His festival appearances include Evian, Tanglewood, Taos, Verbier, Montreal, San Miguel de Allende, Spoleto U.S.A., and the Piatigorsky seminar. Mr. Parrini’s principal studies were with Timothy Eddy, Joel Krosnick and David Soyer. He is a graduate of the Curtis Institute and the Juilliard School.
Flutist *Sara Stern* leads an active and varied career as a recitalist and chamber musician. As solo flutist of the 21st Century Consort, in residence at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., she has premiered countless important new works and made many recordings. She has presented solo recitals in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Carnegie Recital Hall, and at many other concert halls around the country, and she has appeared as guest artist with the Emerson String Quartet and other distinguished chamber ensembles. Ms. Stern has also toured both here and abroad as one half of the duo "Stern and Levalier," with harpist Dotian Levalier, and she is a founding member of the Eastwind Consort, a critically acclaimed woodwind ensemble.
As the 2007-08 season begins, Bulgarian pianist *Anna Stoytcheva* joins the American Chamber Players. Since winning the prestigious Ettore Pozzoli International Piano Competition in Milan, Italy, at age seventeen, Ms. Stoytcheva has performed throughout North America, Europe and Japan. She has appeared as soloist with the Orchestra del' Angelicum in Milano, the Juilliard Orchestra, the New World Symphony, and the Bulgarian National Radio Orchestra, among many others, and she has been the subject of several documentaries on Bulgarian National Radio and Television. In New York City, where she now makes her home, she has graced the stages of Avery Fisher Hall, Carnegie Weill Recital Hall, Alice Tully Hall, and Merkin Hall, and her extensive chamber music experience includes performances at the Marlboro Music Festival, the Banff Center for the Arts, the Music Academy of the West, Kneisel Hall, and the Bowdoin Music Festival. She has also recorded two solo albums, distributed internationally on the GEGA NEW label, and she is a co-founder of the concert series “Bulgarian Concert Evenings in New York, which takes place at the Consulate of Bulgaria. Ms. Stoytcheva holds Bachelor and Master of Music Degrees in Piano Performance from the Juilliard School, where among her many honors were the Vladimir Horowitz and William Petschek scholarships and the Rockefeller Award, the Peter Jay Sharp Award, and the Helen Fay Prize.
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