Loyola University Hosts Jazz Underground Concert, Weeklong Residency Featuring 9 Horses
Loyola University is pleased to present an intimate night of genre-bending Jazz with the acclaimed string trio 9 Horses, on Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m., in Nunemaker Auditorium.
The trio, led by mandolinist Joseph Brent, bassist Andrew Ryan and violinist Sara Caswell, is known for its exquisite blend of chamber music sophistication, jazz improvisation and cinematic warmth. The concert is part of Loyola鈥檚 Jazz Underground series.
For the first time in several years, Loyola鈥檚 String Area is hosting a resident artist 鈥 9 Horses 鈥 for a week of activities as part of its inaugural Loyola Bayou Orchestra Festival.
As part of its residency, 9 Horses will perform a second, free concert with the Greater New Orleans Youth Orchestra and the Loyola Symphony Orchestra, on Nov. 15, at 7 p.m., in the Louis J. Roussel Performance Hall.
"We are doing something historically important, as well as moving with the times," said Kate Duncan, director of the School of Music and Theatre Professions and the Conrad N. Hilton Chair in Music Industry Studies at Loyola. "Loyola has not played host to a week-long, artist-in-residence, let alone a festival featuring the string orchestra, in many decades.鈥
Featuring Brent鈥檚 original compositions and the incendiary, genre-hopping virtuosity of all three members, the trio represents their vision of a musical future with no barriers between 鈥渇olk art鈥 and 鈥渇ine art,鈥 and as an ensemble are capable of communicating this idea through musical canvases both great and small.
Brent (formerly of Regina Spektor鈥檚 band) plays acoustic and electric mandolin; Ryan (Kaia Kater) will be on the bass; and, Caswell (Esperanza Spalding), a 2018 Grammy nominee, plays violin and Hardanger d鈥檃more.
In addition to playing the two concerts, the three members of 9 Horses will be working with Loyola students, offering masterclasses in jazz, string orchestra, cello and more, as well as meeting with local high school orchestra students.
鈥淲e want to spark our students' imagination with what is creatively possible through groups like 9 Horses,鈥 Duncan said. 鈥淕enres no longer serve as exclusionary boundaries, but are now a call to create and build something very new and all one's own, a credo of Loyola's School of Music and Theatre Professions."聽
Both concerts runs 90 minutes. Tickets to the Thursday night concert featuring 9 Horses only are free for Loyola students with an ID; $9 for non-Loyola students with an ID; $16 for senior citizens, and Loyola faculty and staff with an ID; and, $21 for adults.
For more information or to purchase tickets, visit .
蜜桃视频 the College of Music and Media
The College of Music and Media is comprised of two schools 鈥 the School of Music and Theatre Professions and the School of Communication and Design. Students who choose to study in the college prepare for careers in music, theatre, music industry, graphic design, motion design, UX design, filmmaking, strategy, mass media and more.聽