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    Notes on the Staff

    Unapologetic energy: Houston musician wins a major international award

    Joel Luks
    Dec 18, 2013 | 12:19 pm

    A few minutes in, the virile whirlwind that's Kris Becker's Piano Sonata No. 1 leaves one breathless, the incessant surge of cascading riffs capturing the dexterity of the Houston-based performer/composer who can't easily be categorized as belonging to only one genre of music.

    The 50-page score reveals writing that resembles the arpeggiated passages found in the Well-Tempered Clavier preludes of J.S. Bach. The first movement, titled What you thought, and what is, opens with a syncopated groove that blossoms with tense sustained melodies floating atop an unsettling rumble — as if the love child of Chopin and Liszt erupted in a spastic, bipolar tempter tantrum. Allusions to heavy metal, experimental jazz and 1970s hard rock abound, but, according to Becker, that wasn't on purpose.

    He just happened to be listening to music by Black Sabbath, the Mahavishnu Orchestra and McCoy Tyner while working on the sonata.

    Listen to What you thought, and what is to below:

    The other three movements — titled Not to keep you waiting, Against all better judgment and Reconciliator — form a subconscious story arc.

    Becker coined his mishmash of classical structures and popular inclinations "nu-classical," but not in the traditional sense of executing one style in another one's framework. Becker's nu-classical is a genuine blend that results in a sound that seems not to be associated exclusively to conventions of the past. Rather, it reinvents what it means to fuse these elements synergistically.

    "Compositionally speaking, I aimed to be intellectually rigorous while viscerally enjoyable and relatable," he says. "Lots of muscularity is required in technique and mind to render a fitting interpretation, and an unapologetic energy."

    "From him, I learned everything that galvanized my musicianship, they way I produce my sound, the way I approach performance, the way I work on my artistry."

    The composition recently earned accolades from the IBLA Foundation, an organization that hosts an annual competition for pianists, singers, instrumentalists and composers in Italy. The 2013 IBLA Grand Prize results ranked Becker as the highest scoring composer. The foundation also awarded Becker with a Most Distinguished Musician title and a special mention for his sonata. The honor comes with a national concert tour, which includes a stop in Carnegie Hall in New York.

    "The recognition is a fantastic boost to my burgeoning career," Becker tells CultureMap. "I've been fortunate to receive national attention for my work, but to receive an international endorsement is a huge confidence booster. It's an indication of how my work comes across, especially when it was evaluated in the company of compositions that are scored for larger musical forces.

    "It validates what I am doing."

    Prior to crafting his four-movement work, which had previously won the 2012 National Federation of Music Clubs Emil and Ruth Beyer Composition Award, Becker had collected hundreds of musical ideas. Voice memo recordings of little snippets and improvisations filled his iTunes library. In 2011, he resolved to make sense of all these concepts in a large-scale piece that was designed to be big and extremely difficult to play. Becker sketched most of the first movement over the course of a couple of weeks in his apartment, but without an acoustic piano. Due to space restrictions and noise concerns from his neighbors, the Piano Sonata No. 1 was conceived on a Yamaha keyboard.

    The rest of the sonata was scored relatively quickly the following year. In 10 days, Becker, influenced by adrenaline and endorphins from a strict exercise regiment combined with some health setbacks — a period he describes as an elevated state with highs and lows — finished his sonata in time to submit it to the National Federation of Music Clubs for consideration. Becker dedicated the piece to his piano teacher Robert Roux, who's a professor at Rice University's Shepherd School of Music.

    "To say that Robert was my piano teacher sounds so dry and childlike," Becker says. "He taught me how to make music. From him, I learned everything that galvanized my musicianship, they way I produce my sound, the way I approach performance, the way I work on my artistry.

    "I don't dedicate any of my works unless the occasion arises. It was fitting to dedicate this early work in my catalogue to the man who brought me to Houston."

    Becker's Piano Sonata No. 1 was commercially released as part of his Expansions album. The score is available online and the music can be purchased on iTunes and CD Baby. In January, Becker plans to release the sonata as a music video.

    The 50-page score reveals writing that resembles the arpeggiated passages found in the Well-Tempered Clavier preludes of J.S. Bach

    Kris Becker Piano Sonata No. 1
      
    Courtesy of the artist
    The 50-page score reveals writing that resembles the arpeggiated passages found in the Well-Tempered Clavier preludes of J.S. Bach
    unspecified
    news/arts

    going global

    Houston Ballet leaps into streaming with performance on Marquee TV

    Tarra Gaines
    Mar 12, 2025 | 12:02 pm
    Houston Ballet Principal Karina González and Corps de Ballet dancer Samuel Rodriguez in Disha
    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet
    Houston Ballet Principal Karina González and Corps de Ballet dancer Samuel Rodriguez in Disha Zhang’s Elapse

    The Houston Ballet takes a leap into streaming realms with the just announced premiere of the filmed ballet Elapse on the prestigious Marquee TV global streaming platform for the performing arts. HB first premiered Elapse to audience and critical raves as a part of their celebratory 50th season in 2019. The debut also made dance history as it was the company’s first ballet choreographed by internationally acclaimed Chinese choreographer Disha Zhang, as well as Zhang’s first work in the U.S.

    Featuring a cast of 16 dancers – eight women and eight men – Elapse beautifully explores concepts of aging and time’s passage. Zhang set her dance to a haunting score by Zeng Xiaogang that combines wind and water sounds with the ancient stringed instrument, the guqin. In 2023, the company performed the dance at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC as part of 10,000 Dreams: A Celebration of Asian Choreography and last summer brought the work back to the Wortham Center as part of their Four Seasons program. Now dance lovers around the world will have the chance to see the brilliance of the Houston Ballet dancers as they perform this exquisite and poignant ballet.

    “The filming of Elapse is a significant milestone for Houston Ballet, as it is a meaningful way to share our artistry with a global audience,” said Julie Kent, Houston Ballet artistic director. “Marquee TV’s platform allows us to expand access to ballet and introduce new viewers to the depth and beauty of our work.”

    Along with renowned international opera and theater productions, Marquee TV showcases dance performances from some of the most celebrated ballet companies across the globe, including the Royal Ballet, the New York City Ballet, the Paris Opera Ballet, and the Australian Ballet, so it is about time that the Houston Ballet gets its own place in the streaming spotlight. The subscription-based service costs $10 per month or $100 per year.

    "The team at Marquee TV is very excited to be working with Houston Ballet in our shared mission to introduce the joy of dance to a global audience and to enable that audience to enjoy this wonderful premiere," said Susannah Simons, Director of Performing Arts at Marquee TV.

    Elapse, of course, is not the first filmed production from the Houston Ballet, though it is the company’s first collaborative filming effort since Ghost Dances (1991) and the first to launch on a streaming platform such as Marquee TV. Dance lovers will likely remember that HB was one of the first Houston performing arts institutions to jump into producing filmed content during the pandemic, first with HB artistic director Stanton Welch’s, “Restoration” when the company danced through many beloved outdoor landmarks across the city to the music of the Canadian band, The Dead South. Later Welch choreographed the longer "In Good Company," also to The Dead South’s music, and filmed dancers alone on a stage and then edited the individual dancers together.

    Houston Ballet Principal Karina Gonz\u00e1lez and Corps de Ballet dancer Samuel Rodriguez in Disha
      

    Photo by Amitava Sarkar (2024). Courtesy of Houston Ballet

    Houston Ballet Principal Karina González and Corps de Ballet dancer Samuel Rodriguez in Disha Zhang’s Elapse.

    As they take what they learned from these previous endeavors and now from Elapse, HB aims to expand their digital presence, making high-caliber performances more accessible to audiences around the world. The company plans to continue exploring new opportunities in digital storytelling and streaming to engage dance lovers everywhere.

    houston balletperforming artsmarquee tvtv
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