School of Music
U N C G
School of Music
U N C G
The UNCG School of Music has been recognized for years as one of the elite
music institutions in the United States. Fully accredited by the National
Association of Schools of Music since 1938, the School offers the only
comprehensive music program from undergraduate through doctoral study in
both performance and music education in North Carolina. From a total
population of approximately 14,000 university students, the UNCG School of
Music serves nearly 600 music majors with a full-time faculty and staff of more
than sixty. As such, the UNCG School of Music ranks among the largest Schools
of Music in the South.
The UNCG School of Music now occupies a new 26 million dollar music building,
which is among the finest music facilities in the nation. In fact, the new music
building is the second-largest academic building on the UNCG Campus. A large
music library with state-of-the-art playback, study and research facilities houses
all music reference materials. Greatly expanded classroom, studio, practice
room, and rehearsal hall spaces are key components of the new structure. Two
new recital halls, a large computer lab, a psychoacoustics lab, electronic music
labs, and recording studio space are additional features of the new facility. In
addition, an enclosed multi-level parking deck is adjacent to the new music
building to serve students, faculty and concert patrons.
Living in the artistically thriving Greensboro—Winston-Salem—High Point “Triad”
area, students enjoy regular opportunities to attend and perform in concerts
sponsored by such organizations as the Greensboro Symphony Orchestra, the
Greensboro Opera Company, and the Eastern Music Festival. In addition,
UNCG students interact first-hand with some of the world’s major artists who
frequently schedule informal discussions, open rehearsals, and master classes at
UNCG.
Costs of attending public universities in North Carolina, both for in-state and out-of-
state students, represent a truly exceptional value in higher education.
For information regarding music as a major or minor field of study, please write:
Dr. John J. Deal, Dean
UNCG School of Music
P.O. Box 26167
Greensboro, North Carolina 27402-6167
(336) 334-5789
On the Web: www.uncg.edu/mus/
Ināra Zandmane
piano
Faculty Recital
Thursday, January 13, 2005
7:30 pm
Recital Hall, School of Music
Program
Fantasia on an Ostinato John Corigliano
(b. 1938)
Six Piano Pieces, Op. 118 Johannes Brahms
No.1 Intermezzo in A minor (1833-1897)
No.2 Intermezzo in A Major
No.3 Ballade in G minor
No.4 Intermezzo in F minor
No.5 Romance in F Major
No.6 Intermezzo in E-flat minor
Intermission
Valses nobles et sentimentales Maurice Ravel
Jeux d’eau (1875-1937)
Five Preludes from Op. 11 Alexander Scriabin
No.5 in D Major (1872-1915)
No.7 in A Major
No.8 in F-sharp minor
No.9 in E Major
No.10 in C-sharp minor
Sonata No.9, Op. 68
_____
The hall is equipped with a listening assistance system.
Patrons needing such assistance should contact an usher in the lobby.
Patrons are encouraged to take note of the exits located throughout the hall.
In an emergency, please use the nearest exit, which may
be behind you or different from the one through which you entered.
Ināra Zandmane, born in the capital of Latvia, Rīga, started to play the piano at the age of
six. Zandmane holds a BM and MM from Latvian Academy of Music, MM in piano
performance from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, and DMA in piano
performance from the University of Missouri at Kansas City. She has been the staff
accompanist at the UNCG since 2003. She also served as the official accompanist for the
MTNA Southern Division competition and the North American Saxophone Alliance
conference in 2004. Zandmane has performed in recitals in St. Paul, Kansas City,
Cleveland, St. Louis, and New York, as well as in many Republics of the former Soviet
Union. In April 2000, she was invited to perform at the Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto.
Ināra Zandmane has appeared as a soloist with the Latvian National Orchestra, Liepāja
Symphony, Latvian Academy of Music Student Orchestra, SIU Symphony, and UMKC
Conservatory Symphony and Chamber orchestras. She has performed with various
chamber ensembles at the International Chamber Music Festivals in Rīga, Vilnius, Tallinn,
Helsinki (Finland), and Norrtelje (Sweden). For a few last years, Zandmane has worked
together with the Latvian composer Pēteris Vasks. She has given Latvian premieres of his
two latest piano pieces, Landscapes of the Burnt-out Earth and The Spring Music, and
recorded the first of them on the Conifer Classics label.
School of Music
U N C G
Ināra Zandmane
piano
Thursday, January 13, 2005
7:30 pm
Recital Hall, School of Music
Program
Fantasia on an Ostinato John Corigliano
(b. 1938)
Six Piano Pieces, Op. 118 Johannes Brahms
No.1 Intermezzo in A minor (1833-1897)
No.2 Intermezzo in A Major
No.3 Ballade in G minor
No.4 Intermezzo in F minor
No.5 Romance in F Major
No.6 Intermezzo in E-flat minor
Intermission
Valses nobles et sentimentales Maurice Ravel
Jeux d’eau (1875-1937)
Five Preludes from Op. 11 Alexander Scriabin
No.5 in D Major (1872-1915)
No.7 in A Major
No.8 in F-sharp minor
No.9 in E Major
No.10 in C-sharp minor
Sonata No.9, Op. 68
_____
The hall is equipped with a listening assistance system.
Patrons needing such assistance should contact an usher in the lobby.
Patrons are encouraged to take note of the exits located throughout the hall.
In an emergency, please use the nearest exit, which may
be behind you or different from the one through which you entered.