Maureen Yuen, violin professor |
Maureen Yuen, violin
Sean Duggan, piano
“The Complete Works of Beethoven for Violin and Piano,” concert 2 of 4
Wednesday, Nov. 11, 8 p.m.
Rosch Recital Hall – SUNY Fredonia
Free and open to the public
In the second of this four-concert series, “The Complete Works of Beethoven for Violin and Piano,” violin professor Maureen Yuen joins forces with piano professor Sean Duggan to perform Beethoven’s Sonata No. 4, Op. 23, the Sonata No. 8, Op. 30, No. 3, and Zwolf Variationen, WoO 40.
Artist Biographies:
Maureen Yuen, violin:
Maureen Yuen graduated from the University of British Columbia at the age of 21 with a Master of Music Degree in Violin Performance. Her primary teachers were Andrew Dawes, Nancy Di Novo and Gerald Stanick. She has also worked with members of the Emerson, Fine Arts, Orford, St. Lawrence, and Tokyo string quartets. As a founding member of the English Bay String Quartet, Ms. Yuen has toured North America, and has also performed as a soloist and chamber musician in the United States, Canada, Norway, and Italy. She has played with the Victoria Symphony, Wichita Symphony and the National Academy Orchestra of Canada. She is also a member of the Bellingham Festival Orchestra, whose recordings can often be heard on NPR's Performance Today. Currently, Ms. Yuen is on faculty at the School of Music at the State University of New York at Fredonia where she maintains a full studio of undergraduate and graduate violin students and several chamber music ensembles. She is also on the faculty of Schlern International Music Festival and Competition in Italy as well as Music, Meadows, and Mountains Retreat on Orcas Island, WA. Ms. Yuen was formerly on faculty at Mercyhurst College in Erie, PA as Instructor of Violin and Viola. Her active schedule includes solo and chamber music recitals and masterclasses throughout North America, including appearances at Brock University, University of Buffalo, Cleveland State University, Ohio University, Northern Ohio University and the University of Minnesota at Duluth. She is a string adjudicator with Kiwanis Music Festivals in Canada and a member of the College of Examiners of the Royal Conservatory of Music.
Sean Duggan, piano:
FATHER SEAN BRETT DUGGAN, O.S.B., was born on October 11, 1954 in Jersey City, New Jersey. He attended Loyola University in New Orleans and received a Bachelor of Music degree in piano performance. Upon graduation he also received the University's Male Student of the Year award and the College of Music's Most Valuable Graduate award. After obtaining a Master of Fine Arts degree at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh in 1979, he was employed by the Pittsburgh Opera Company for three years as pianist and assistant chorus master. He also taught piano at Carnegie Mellon and was a member of the Carnegie Mellon Trio. In 1982 he entered the Benedictine order at St. Joseph Abbey near Covington, Louisiana. He graduated summa cum laude with a Master of Arts degree in Theology from Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans and was ordained to the priesthood on April 16, 1988. He served as Spiritual Director at St. Joseph Seminary College where he taught courses in music, religion and Latin, and as Director of Music and principal organist at St. Joseph Abbey.
In September 1983 Father Duggan won first prize in the Johann Sebastian Bach International Competition for pianists in Washington D.C. which entitled him, among other honors, to various concerts around the country and a two-month tour of Germany. In the "Bach Year", 1985, he gave complete performances of Bach's The Well-tempered Clavier in New Orleans, Pittsburgh and Birmingham to critical acclaim. In 1991 he participated again in the Bach Competition in Washington D.C.; this time he was one of three first-place winners, which entitled him to another round of concert engagements and a second tour of Germany.
Father Duggan has studied piano with Barbara Heartz, Maryanne Nagy, James Bastien, Joan Purswell, Nelson Whitaker, William Masselos and Paul Maillet. He has appeared with various orchestras including the Pennsylvania Sinfonia Orchestra, New Orleans Philharmonic and the American Chamber Orchestra. Guest performances at numerous summer festivals have included piano and chamber music festival in La Gesse, France, the Villa Chopin near Malaga, Spain, the Taubman Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts and Lecce, Italy. Throughout the year 2000, which was the 250th anniversary of Bach's death, Father Duggan performed the complete cycle of Bach's keyboard works eight times in a series of fifteen recitals entitled Bach On the Threshold of Hope. The series was repeated in Marseilles, France, Rome, Italy and across the United States. For five weeks during July and August, Father Duggan performed his series in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to "standing room only" crowds at Wesley Church, to high critical acclaim and extraordinary enthusiasm of audiences that totaled over 5,400 people.
Father Duggan's liturgical compositions have appeared in hymnals published by The Liturgical Press and G.I.A. For five years he was the host of a weekly two-hour radio program entitled "Bach on Sunday," broadcast on the New Orleans' NPR station WWNO-FM. He has just completed a three-year residency as Visiting Professor of Piano at the University of Michigan and has accepted a position on the piano faculty at the State University of New York at Fredonia. Father Duggan is in the midst of recording the complete (non-organ) keyboard works of Bach for commercial release.
For a complete list of upcoming events, visit www.fredonia.edu/music