A Far Cry is a Boston-based chamber orchestra. The orchestra is self-conducted and consists of 18 musicians called "The Criers". It was founded in 2007 by a group of 17 musicians in Boston. The orchestra performs in Jamaica Plain and previously served as Chamber Orchestra in Residence at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. A Far Cry has toured across America and undertook their first European tour in 2012. They also collaborate with local students in an educational partnership with the New England Conservatory and Project STEP. The orchestra has released nine albums,[1] two of which have been nominated for Grammy Awards for Best Chamber Music / Small Ensemble Performance: Dreams & Prayers in 2015 and Visions and Variations in 2019.
The Criers
Alex Fortes is a violinist from San Diego and received degrees from Harvard College and Mannes College. His teachers include Mark Steinberg, Peter Zazofsky, Hernan Constantino, Mary Gerard, and Michael Gaisler.[2]
Annie Rabbat is a violinist from Chicago who received her bachelor's degree from Indiana University and her master's degree from the Juilliard School. After a year at Stony Brook University, she went to the New England Conservatory. Her mentors include Miriam Fried, Robert Mann, Pamela Frank, Ani Kavafian, and Phil Setzer.[3]
Caitlin Lynch is a violist whose musical career has led her to perform across the globe in collaboration with artists ranging from Itzhak Perlman to Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood. Caitlin performs on an 18th century viola made by English luthier William Forster.[4]
Celia Hatton is a violist based in New York City. She earned her Bachelor’s Degree with Kim Kashkashian from New England Conservatory receiving a Presidential Distinction Award Scholarship. She obtained her Master’s Degree and Professional Studies Certificate from Manhattan School of Music where she studied with Karen Dreyfus as a recipient of a William Randolph Hearst Scholarship. Hatton’s solos as Principal Viola of Experiential Orchestra can be heard on GRAMMY winning album “The Prison.”
Hannah Collins is a cellist and teaching artist. She earned a B.S. in biomedical engineering summa cum laude from Yale College and also holds graduate degrees in cello performance from the Yale School of Music, the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, and the City University of New York's Graduate Center. Her principal mentors have included Stefan Reuss, Ole Akahoshi, Aldo Parisot, Michel Strauss, Robert Mealy, and Marcy Rosen. Hannah is currently Associate Professor of Cello at the University of Kansas School of Music. [6]
Jason Fisher is a violist who grew up in Seattle. He received his bachelor's degree from Peabody Conservatory studying under Victoria Chiang and his master's degree from Longy School of Music studying under Roger Tapping.[8]
Megumi Stohs Lewis is a violinist from Portland, Oregon. She has appeared as a guest artist with the Landmarks Orchestra in Boston, the Sapporo Philharmonic in Japan, and on tour with Britain’s Jethro Tull. Her teachers include Camilla Wicks, Ian Swensen, Lucy Chapman, Roger Tapping, and Phoebe Carrai.[11]
Michael Unterman is a cellist in the master's degree program at the New England Conservatory. He studied at the New England Conservatory for four years, and in Barcelona, Spain for one year.[12]
Rafi Popper-Keizer is a cellist, currently residing in Cambridge, MA, who received his Masters of Music and Artist Diploma from the New England Conservatory. He is the principal cellist with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Emmanuel Music, Chameleon Arts Ensemble, Monadnock Music, Cantata Singers, and the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra.[14]
Zenas Hsu is a violinist originally from San Jose, California with degrees from Curtis Institute of Music and the New England Conservatory. He is a founding member of California's Chamber Music by the Bay, and concertmaster of the Boston-based Phoenix.[16]
Organization
The Criers take turns leading the ensemble, and are in no particular hierarchy. All members are simultaneously leaders and followers of the group.[17] All members take turns as section leader during rehearsal. With the exception of the cellists, all players stand while performing. The group's goal is "to wrestle the music they love back from the cultural baggage it's accumulated." It has been labeled a "post-classical" ensemble and participated in Judd Greenstein's Ecstatic Music Festival.[18]
Its programs usually combine older works with new works. As part of their ensemble residency at the Isabella Gardner Museum, the group presented a seven-concert series called the Avant Gardner series, which focused on forward momentum and repeating patterns in music, with modern composers Andrew Norman, Christopher Theofanidis, Louis Andriessen, and the Baroque composer Bach.
Performances and tours
A Far Cry has played with cellist Yo-Yo Ma, toured across America, and had its debut tour in 2012 in Europe. It has also played at venues such as Calderwood Hall at the Gardner Museum, New England Conservatory's Jordan Hall and Royale, a nightclub in Boston.