UPCOMING EVENT

Saturday February 25, 19:30 H.Madrid, Auditorio Nacional, Sala Sinfónica.

50º Ciclo de Grandes Autores e Intérpretes de la Música

Cartel-Concierto

OCURRENS SONUS

Sound Encounters with Graeco-latin antiquity

Camerata Antonio Soler / John Kenny / Letty Stott

ABOUT THE SOLOISTS

John Kenny

John Kenny

Trombonist and composer John Kenny is internationally acclaimed for his interpretation of contemporary music, having performed in over 50 countries to date. He also works extensively with improvisation and early music and is particularly active in collaboration with dance and theater.

In 1983 he began his long collaboration with playwright Paul Stebbings and the TNT Theater Company performing, composing and directing music for productions that continue to tour worldwide, including Cabaret Faust, Tempest Now, The Wizard of Jazz, Moby Dick, Moon Palace, The Taming of the Shrew, Romeo and Juliet, The Mystery of Edgar Allan Poe, etc.

He has also received commissions from the London Contemporary Dance Theatre, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, International Trombone Association, Schottish Chamber Orchestra, among others.

John teaches at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London and at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. He has lectured and performed at many of the world’s leading institutions, including Juilliard, Manhattan, Peabody, and Eastman Universities in the US, and conservatories in Paris, Angers, Angoulême, Bordeaux, The Hague, Moscow, Helsinki, Munich, Berlin, Athens, Madrid, Seville, Tokyo and Beijing.

MORE INFO: http://carnyx.org.uk/john-kenny/

Letty Stott

Letty Stott

Letty Stott is one of the UK’s most exciting and versatile horn players, with a career spanning a wide variety of genres. She has worked with many of the UK’s leading orchestras and opera companies and has performed and toured with a wide variety of artists.

Letty is currently artist-in-residence at Snape Maltings in Suffolk, where she is developing her project “Ancient Horns / New Voices” based on Etruscan, Roman and Greek instruments from the late Iron Age.

MORE INFO: https://lettystott.com/



MORE INFO