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Chamber Project St. Louis grows from upstart to institution

Chamber Project St. Louis founders, from left, Laura Reycraft (violist and artistic director), Dana Hotle (executive director and clarinetist) and Jennifer Gartley (flutist and artistic director), along with Adrianne Honnold (not pictured) on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022, outside of The Chapel, a live music venue in Wydown Skinker. The group alongside Adrianne Honnold (not pictured) started the ensemble in 2008 to bring non-traditional chamber music into new spaces around the region.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
From left: Chamber Project St. Louis founders Laura Reycraft, violinist and artistic director; Dana Hotle, executive director and clarinetist; and Jennifer Gartley, flautist and artistic director on Tuesday outside the Chapel, a live music venue in the Wydown Skinker area. The group, alongside Adrianne Honnold (not pictured), started the ensemble in 2008 to bring nontraditional chamber music into new spaces around the region.

began as the solution to a simple problem.

A group of musicians were hanging out one night when one of them mentioned she鈥檇 love the chance to play Mozart鈥檚 Quintet in G minor, but the piece is rarely programmed because it calls for unusual instrumentation. Then the musicians realized they had all the necessary personnel right there in the room.

A new classical music organization was born.

Chamber Project St. Louis launches its 15th season Thursday at the Chapel in University City, featuring Latin American composers.

Its founders sought to scribble over some of the inherited rules about how chamber music concerts are supposed to operate.

鈥淭here are elements of that concert format that are useful and good and helpful,鈥 said clarinetist and co-founder Dana Hotle, the organization鈥檚 executive director. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 elements that I think feel a little bit like you have to go through some sort of initiation process to understand them. We wanted to get rid of as much of that as we could.鈥

From left: Jennifer Gartley, Jo Nardolollo, Jane Prince, Marta Simidtchieva, and Laura Reycraft rehearse Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022, at The Chapel, a live music venue in Wydown Skinker.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
From left: Jennifer Gartley, Jo Nardolillo, Jane Prince, Marta Simidtchieva and Laura Reycraft rehearse Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday at the Chapel, a venue in St. Louis' Wydown Skinker neighborhood.

The organization seeks out venues where people already gather for reasons other than music 鈥 libraries, the World Chess Hall of Fame, the Schlafly Tap Room. The practice makes for more work than setting up shop in the same concert hall every time but reflects a commitment to the social aspect of chamber music, which developed in the 18th century out of gatherings at European aristocrats鈥 homes.

Some unconventional venues work out better than others. The founders learned the hard way that the need for a quiet space is one piece of the traditional concert model that still holds up. When they tried performing in a bar without the benefit of a closed-off room, the audience had trouble hearing the music.

鈥淗aving a place where you can come early and hang out, or stay a little bit after, in a place that鈥檚 designed for people to socialize, is really important,鈥 Hotle said. 鈥淪ometimes our intermissions are as long as the bar line takes to clear out. There鈥檚 no bell that gets rung that sends you back to your seat at our concerts.鈥

Flautist Jennifer Gartley rehearses Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022, at The Chapel, a live music venue in Wydown Skinker.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Flautist Jennifer Gartley rehearses Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday at the Chapel in Wydown Skinker.

Fellow founders Jen Gartley, who plays flute, and violist Laura Reycraft serve as the organization鈥檚 artistic directors. Original member Adrianna Honnold has since moved on to other pursuits.

The core trio brings in rotating guest musicians for each program. Most are women, and each concert this season features at least one composition by a female composer. Almost all of the performing in the 15th season are women.

鈥淲omen have been egregiously left out of European classical music,鈥 Gartley said before getting to work in a rehearsal studio at Washington University鈥檚 560 Center. 鈥淚 went to music school for a long time, and I didn鈥檛 really get to play music by women or by people of color. There鈥檚 so many composers out there that were left out of my own musical tradition that I am so excited to explore now.鈥

found that women composed only 5% of the pieces that the world鈥檚 top 100 orchestras performed that season. Only a bit more than 1% of compositions were written by Black or Asian women; Black and Asian men contributed less than 2.5% of the pieces these orchestras performed. St. Louis Symphony Orchestra was not included in the study.

鈥淭he art form has a long history, as many do, of excluding everybody but white men,鈥 Hotle said. 鈥淔rom the beginning our idea was that we want our concerts to reflect where we live, which of course includes women and people of color and all kinds of different people.鈥

Hotle, Gartley and Reycraft are white women; their broader circle of collaborators has more ethnic diversity. So too does the roster of composers whose work they perform.

Violinist Jo Nardolollo rehearses Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2022, at The Chapel, a live music venue in Wydown Skinker.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Violinist Jo Nardolillo rehearses Efrain Amaya鈥檚 piece 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 on Tuesday at the Chapel.

The season-opening program includes work by Teresa Carre帽o, a Venezuelan musician known best as a virtuoso pianist, and pieces by two living composers that draw overt connections with Latin American culture.

鈥檚 鈥淓l Sentir de Maria Lionza鈥 links a historical legend from his native Venezuela with the political unrest roiling the nation today. 鈥淪ubmerged,鈥 by Uruguayan-born composer, is a musical adaptation of a work by Argentine poet Alfonsina Storni.

脕guila calls in his score for musicians to subvert their instruments鈥 typical purposes within European-sourced chamber music. So Reycraft, the violist, plays her instrument with a guitar pick to suggest the sound of the charango, an Andean lute. Harpist Megan Stout strikes the body of her instrument like a drum, in a way that鈥檚 similar to Paraguayan harp technique. And the prominent flute lines that Gartley plays sound at times like a transcription of birdsong.

The composers on the opening program are not as well known in the U.S. as many from Europe and Russia, though Chamber Project St. Louis does perform some work by composers with names like Ravel, Beethoven and Mozart.

But the organization has grown a loyal audience that is willing to hear something new. The upstart ensemble founded in a casual conversation among friends has grown into an institution.

鈥淚t just allows us to take even more risks in terms of programming and performance and venues and all of that,鈥 Reycraft said. 鈥淪o I feel like we have a little freedom to try new things, and that鈥檚 exciting.鈥

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Jeremy is the arts & culture reporter at 漏 2024 外网天堂.