Since the early 20th century, avant-garde writers, artists and composers have championed the creative possibilities of the arbitrary and the accidental. Next week, the Department of Music and the Dance Program in the Performing Arts Department (PAD), both in Arts & Sciences, and the Mil-dred Lane Kemper Art Museum will host a concert exploring the use of chance in modern and contemporary music.
The performance — held in conjunction with the exhibition “Chance Aesthetics,” now on view at the Kemper Art Mus-eum — is free and open to the public and begins at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7, in the 560 Music Center’s E. Desmond Lee Concert Hall.
Immediately preceding the concert, at 6:45 p.m., will be introductory remarks by Meredith Malone, Ph.D., assistant curator of the Kemper Art Museum, who organized the “Chance Aesthetics” exhibition; and Bruce Durazzi, Ph.D., assistant professor of music theory.
The performance will begin with “Music of Changes Book IV: New York, December 13,” a piece for solo piano by experimental composer John Cage. Performer will be Peter Henderson of Maryville University.
Next on the program will be “The Oracle,” a new improvisatory work based on a mobile hanging from the ceiling of the E. Desmond Lee Concert Hall. Performers will be guitarist William Lenihan, director of jazz performance; percussionist Henry Claude, teacher of applied music; and cellist Tracy Andreotti.
In addition, the performance will feature three dancers: Mary-Jean Cowell, Ph.D., associate professor and coordinator of the Dance Program; David Marchant, senior lecturer in dance; and Ting Ting Chang, Ph.D., the Andrew Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Dance.
Following intermission, the program will conclude with “In C,” a classic 1964 work by Terry Riley.
Performers for the “Chance Aesthetics” iteration will include Claude, Lenihan and Andreotti as well as cellist Elizabeth Macdonald, director of strings; guitarist Vince Varvel, pianist Amanda Kirkpatrick and saxophonist Adrianne Honnold, all teachers of applied music; violist Laura Reycraft, an instructor at City Academy; and clarinetist Dana Hotle, a faculty member of Webster University’s Community Music School.
A reception will immediately follow the concert in the Music Center’s Ballroom Theatre. For more information, call 935-5566 or e-mail kschultz@artsci.wustl.edu.