Cristian Grases

Cristian F. Grases (born December 22, 1973)[1] is an internationally known Venezuelan conductor/composer. He received his Master's Degree with honors in Choral Conducting from the Simón Bolívar University in Venezuela in 2001, where he studied with María Guinand and Alberto Grau and completed his DMA at the University of Miami Frost School of Music in 2009.

Biography

Born December 22, 1973 in Caracas, Venezuela, Grases started his musical studies in the National Conservatory of Music "Juan José Landaeta” at age 11, where he studied music theory, harmony, counterpoint, history, and piano. His musical life started as a chorister and instrumentalist in 1989, and then as composer, assistant conductor and conductor of choral and instrumental ensembles until the present. He has studied composition, arranging, choral conducting and orchestra conducting with national and international music masters. After two “Bach-academie” workshops with Helmuth Rilling in Venezuela, Grases was invited by Rilling under a scholarship to study Choral and Orchestral Conducting at the “Sommerakademie” of Stuttgart, Germany, in 1998.

In 1995 he founded "Cíncopah", a 5 male vocal ensemble that is dedicated to the creation of new music based in vocal and jazz tendencies, working with them until 2002. From 1996 to 2002 he was part of the staff of the project "Pequeños Cantores de la Schola” as the conductor of the Second Level and Cantoría Juvenil. In the same year he received a very prestigious award for the arts in Venezuela: "Orden José Felix Ribas" for artistic merit. He also won the first and second prize in a choral arrangement competition "Estilo Caribeño"; He has been involved in many international concert tours with his former youth choir Cantoría Juvenil of the Schola Cantorum de Caracas (Venezuela), and the Iowa Youth Chorus (USA); earning international prestige and recognition. He has served as guest conductor in concerts and workshops nationally and internationally; has developed himself as the coordinator of the choral activities in the Youth Orchestra Foundation of Caracas under the direction of Jose Antonio Abreu; and has taught choral conducting, history and general music at the graduate and graduate programs in the Simon Bolivar University of Caracas, Central Washington University in Washington State, and University of Miami in Florida, USA. He was selected to be one of the 16 participants of the Swedish competition for young conductors “Eric Ericson Award” in October 2003. In 2004 he was selected by the IFCM (International Federation for Choral Music) as one of the 5-member committee for the Songbridge Project, together with renowned choral masters and chaired by the creator of the project: Erkki Pohjola (Finland)

In 2007, Grases founded Amazonia Vocal Ensemble part of Amazonia Music Corp. (a 501(c)3 non-profit organization), which is one of the first vocal performing arts ensembles in the United States dedicated primarily to the performance and preservation of Latin American choral music. He conducted Amazonia for two years before leaving Miami. He acts now as Amazonia's Artistic Director.

In the fall of 2009, Grases served as an associate professor at The California State University in Los Angeles , teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses, and directing the university ensembles.

Grases currently teaches at the University of Southern California where he conducts the Thornton Concert Choir since 2010.

Conducting Highlights

Grases has had the opportunity to work with many notable choral and orchestral conductors in his extensive musical career, among them: Helmuth Rilling, Alberto Grau Conductor/Composer/Founder of the Schola Cantorum de Venezuela (Venezuela); María Guinand First Vice President for IFCM (International Federation for Choral Music) (Venezuela); Eduardo Marturet Conductor of the Miami Symphony Orchestra (FL, USA); Erkki Pohjola fi:Erkki Pohjola Founder of the Tapiola Choir (Finland); Kari Ala-Pöllänen Conductor of the Tapiola Choir (Finland); Susan Knight Founder and Artistic Director for the Newfoundland Symphony Youth Choir (Canada); Emily Ellsworth Artistic Director, Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus (IL, USA); Joseph Giunta Director of the Des Moines Symphony (IA, USA); Gerardo Rabago Palafox Conductor of Coro de Cámara del CENART (Mexico); Tigram Hekekian Director for the Armenian National Radio Chamber Choir (Armenia); Voicu Popescu Director for the Romanian Radio Children’s Choir (Rumania); Jo-Michael Scheibe Director of Choral Activities, University of Miami.

He has also participated as a guest conductor, clinician, adjudicator, and conducting pedagogue in numerous festivals, workshops, and events in North and South America, Europe, and Asia. Some of them include:

Some of Grases' other career highlights include serving as Conductor and Artistic Director for "Pequeños Catores de la Schola Cantorum de Caracas" (Schola's Little Singers) and for "Cantoría Juvenil de la Schola Cantorum de Caracas" (Schola's Youth Choir) from 1996–2002, Assistant Conductor of the "Orfeón Universitario" for Simon Bolivar University in Caracas, Venezuela from 1996–1998, Artistic Director for the Iowa Youth Chorus from 2003–2005, Conductor for the Women’s Chamber Ensemble of the University of Miami in 2008, and assistant conductor of the Miami Symphony Orchestra in 2008.

Awards and recognitions

Teaching

One of the ways Grases is able to share his knowledge and passion for music is through teaching. He earned a professorship at the Simon Bolivar University in Caracas, Venezuela teaching the History and Evolution of Vocal Music under María Guinand in 2001. More recently, in 2005, he served as the Director of Choral Activities in Central Washington University.

He currently teaches at the University of Southern California as director for the Thornton School of Music Concert Choir where he works with the chair of the Department of Choral and Sacred Music, Jo-Michael Scheibe.

Grases makes a point to have his singers perform a wide range of material from Bach and Britten to spirituals such as "Joyful, Joyful" and "Go Tell it on the Mountain" and many culturally diverse pieces, many of which originate from his Latin heritage. Currently his choir is working on a piece by Alberto Grau titled "Kasar Mie La Gaji" which uses outbursts from the singers as well as clapping to create a sort of desert effect. In the 2010 Fall semester, Grases introduced the Concert Choir to "Zum Gali", a fast-paced piece that he conducted to a level of such excitement that both audience and singers were put into a frenzied state creating an electrifying atmosphere at USC's Bovard concert hall. Grases is working on bringing the Concert Choir to a new level of professionalism and establishing it as one of the University's premier ensembles.

Compositions

Arrangements

Publishers

Grases' music is published primarily by Walton Music Publishing and by Earthsongs Choral Music

Recent Projects

Grases recently complied the most comprehensive catalog of Latin American Choral Music.

He is also the founder and artistic director of Amazonia Vocal Ensemble, based in Miami, which focuses on Latin American repertoire.

References

  1. U.S. Public Records Index Vol 2 (Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), 2010.
  2. http://www.acdacal.org/calendar-of-events/honor-choirs/central-region-honor-choirs/mixed-honor-choir-conductor/

External links

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