Saxophone and piano duo Jenni & Martin join creative forces to premiere the finished works at the world saxophone event. Draving inspiration from their travels performing around the globe.
Event style: contemporary
SOS Saxophone Orchestra
This ensemble composed with pedagogues, soloists, arrangers, composers, jazz and chamber musicians from Slovenia, Croatia and Poland performs without a conductor.
Kriskros + Quatuor de Saxophones Tchèque + David Eben
An unusual combination of 5 saxophonists and 5 vocalists in the neo-baroque-minimalist composition by the contemporary Czech composer Tomas Hanzlik entitled : GLI ARCIERI
NAFA Saxophone Quartet performance
The NAFA Saxophone Quartet is made up of saxophone performance majors at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts. Works by Li, Singelée, Ligeti, Rivier and a transcription of de Orlando de Lasso’s tryptic.
NYKY performance
Demo of combining three very different instruments to show the full array of possibilities they provide and exploring colors and sounds that are unusual in chamber music.
Introducing the Eb Sopranino Saxophone Music: Old and New!
Featuring of one of the earliest pieces written for sopranino saxophone in a chamber setting, and two unique new works composed for Dr. Vernon. One of them is a world premiere written by Dr Johnson.
N. Mandel performance
Nathan Mandel presents music for saxophone and electronics created through collaborations between himself and composers from the professional new music scene in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, USA.
NATO Saxophone Orchestra Performance
The NATO Saxophone Orchestra, formed of eleven representatives from NATO member nations’ military bands conducted by CPT Aaron Morris will perform works by S. Dankner & S. Reich.
Geoffrey Landman and Patrick Stadler performance
This project presents two duo works, D’accord(s) by Swiss composer Dieter Ammann and the world premiere of a new work by Basel-based Paul Clift.
Latitude Sigma
Sigma Project puts into dialogue works of two of the most important european composers: the italian Simone Movio and the spanish composer José María Sánchez-Verdú (National Music Prize in 2003).