Event is Live
Carnegie Hall Presents

Alisa Weilerstein: FRAGMENTS 2

Tuesday, January 21, 2025 7:30 PM Zankel Hall
Alisa Weilerstein by Scott Suchman
Alisa Weilerstein’s multi-year performance series FRAGMENTS brings together new commissions by some of today’s most compelling composers with the timeless beauty of J. S. Bach’s six suites for solo cello. During Carnegie Hall’s 2024–2025 season, Weilerstein presents FRAGMENTS 2, in which new works by Alan Fletcher, Ana Sokolović, Caroline Shaw, Daniel Kidane, and Gity Razaz are woven together with the Second Cello Suite, responsive lighting, and scenic architecture, inviting audiences into an immersive, multisensory experience.

Performers

Alisa Weilerstein, Project Creator and Cello

Elkhanah Pulitzer, Director
Seth Reiser, Scenic and Lighting Designer
Molly Irelan, Costume Designer
Hanako Yamaguchi, Artistic Producer and Advisor

Event Duration

The program will last approximately one hour with no intermission. Please note that there will be no late seating. 

At a Glance

Each FRAGMENTS performance is approximately 60 minutes of music without pause. With program details made available at the conclusion of each event, Alisa Weilerstein invites audience members to simply immerse themselves in the dramatic power of live performance.

Composers who have been commissioned as part of the FRAGMENTS series are Alan Fletcher, Allison Loggins-Hull, Ana Sokolović, Andy Akiho, Carlos Simon, Caroline Shaw, Courtney Bryan, Daniel Kidane, Gabriel Kahane, Gabriela Lena Frank, Gabriella Smith, Gerard McBurney, Gili Schwarzman, Gity Razaz, Jeffrey Mumford, Jessie Montgomery, Joan Tower, Joseph Hallman, Mathilde Wantenaar, Matthias Pintscher, Missy Mazzoli, Osvaldo Golijov, Paul Wiancko, Reinaldo Moya, Tania León, Thomas Larcher, and Chen Yi.

 

In the Artist’s Own Words

In early December of 2020—during yet another of what seemed to be endless lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic—I started scribbling ideas down on paper, anticipating a time when we would be able to reconvene with one another in the concert hall. I knew I wanted to create a visceral, emotional, and personal concert experience that would embrace the world we live in without sacrificing the intellectual aesthetic qualities that make our art form—concert music—such a singular mode of human expression and communication. I was also searching for a way to strip away our own natural instincts to categorize and contextualize everything we hear and see. I thought, “What would our experience of music be like if we could be given the chance to simply listen first?”

The entire FRAGMENTS project integrates all of J. S. Bach’s cello suites with 27 new commissions in original multisensory productions to make six programs, each an hour long for solo cello. Every program, or fragment, is played without pauses, and the program details are distributed after the performance.

The composers who have been commissioned to write for FRAGMENTS are diverse with respect to compositional approach, race, gender, age, nationality, and ethnic background. There is also an even mix of well-known voices and young composers or composers whose work has heretofore not been adequately appreciated by the wider public. I asked all the composers to write multi-movement pieces for solo cello and to kindly grant me permission to insert the movements at different points throughout the program. That being said, FRAGMENTS is not a project about people who write music, but rather about the music they write. The context and narrative in the sense that we are used to in our art form is far less important than listening to how these disparate voices interact with one another and create an entirely original, unified whole.

Although FRAGMENTS began as a flickering of thoughts and images, it has become something much greater. The remarkable group of artists with whom I am collaborating on this project and their joyful and thoughtful enthusiasm have been nothing short of inspirational to me. At its core, FRAGMENTS is about deep connection—links between disparate compositional voices, between concert music and theater, and most important, between audience and performer. I invite you to embark upon this adventure with us.

—Alisa Weilerstein

Bios

Alisa Weilerstein

Alisa Weilerstein is one of the foremost cellists of our time. Known for her consummate artistry, emotional investment, and rare interpretive depth, she was recognized with a MacArthur ...

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Elkhanah Pulitzer

Elkhanah Pulitzer is a highly esteemed opera director known for her bold, nuanced stage direction that explores the intersection of music and theater through innovation and hybridized ...

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Seth Reiser

Seth Reiser is a New York–based designer who works in theater, opera, dance, and music. Recent work in opera includes Schoenberg’s Erwartung with the San Francisco Symphony ...

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Molly Irelan

Molly Irelan is a Los Angeles–based costume designer. She prides herself on a holistic approach to her work. She holds a bachelor’s degree in costume history and design from the  ...

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Hanako Yamaguchi

Independent arts consultant and artistic producer Hanako Yamaguchi believes that leadership in the arts is grounded in collaboration, curiosity, and a commitment to fostering meaningful ...

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