Jennifer Hymer Explained

Jennifer Hymer is an American pianist, currently living in Hamburg, Germany.

Education

Jennifer Hymer was trained as a pianist for classical and contemporary music at the University of California at Berkeley and Mills College studying with Bay Area pianist Julie Steinberg. She also studied privately with James Avery and Bernhard Wambach and participated in summer courses at Szombathely, Darmstadt and Avignon.

Career

In 1996, she co-founded the ensemble WireWorks in the Münster, Germany, as well, in 2008, the Hymer-Fograscher piano duo, based in Hamburg, Germany. Hymer is noted for her projects expanding the possibilities of piano playing by focussing on extended techniques (inside piano), the use of electronics as well as performance on miniature pianos such as the toy piano or the African thumb piano also known as kalimba or m'bira. Her musical projects include the multimedia piano program Handscapes,[1] Piano, Kalimba, Gadgets, Toy Piano,[2] Karlheinz Stockhausen's Mantra for two pianos and electronics[3] as well as Kalimba!Kontained for which she featured, for the first time in contemporary music, the kalimba as a solo instrument in a full evening program.

She has worked with numerous composers who have written pieces for her repertoire such as Alvin Curran, Roberto Morales, Helmut Oehring, Peter Michael Hamel, Silvia Matheus, Hanna Kulenty, Maria de Alvear, Matthias Kaul, Manfred Stahnke, Georg Hajdu, Dror Feiler, Annea Lockwood,[4] Annie Gosfield, Karlheinz Essl, Reinhard Flender, Sascha Lino Lemke, Chris Brown, Oliver Schneller, Lukas Ligeti, Anthony De Ritis, among others. She performed at Musica Viva festival in Portugal, the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest, the Ought-One Festival in Vermont,[5] [6] CCRMA (Stanford University), UC Santa Barbara, CNMAT (UC Berkeley), the Interpretation Series in Merkin Hall (New York), Laeiszhalle (Hamburg), Mills College (Oakland), Alte Feuerwache (Cologne), Schloss Moyland, Klangart Festival (Leipzig), Festival Neue Musik Lüneburg. Bang on a Can marathon (NY) as well as additional concerts in Mexico, Estonia, Tel Aviv and South America.

In 2010 she released her CD Ce n'est pas un piano with pieces by Tan Dun, Manfred Stahnke, Georg Hajdu, Cathy Milliken, Annie Gosfield, Annea Lockwood and Sascha Lemke produced by German label Ambitus.

She is a member and musical director of the Hamburg branch of GEDOK, a German/Austrian women's art organization.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Multimediales Klavierkonzert . Hamburger Abendblatt . 17 September 2005 . 29 June 2010.
  2. News: Exotische Klänge im Wachgebäude . Hamburger Abendblatt . 18 August 2009 . 29 June 2010.
  3. News: Junge Musiker und ein neues Publikum gehen zur Schule . Neue Musikzeitung . Gerhard Rohde . March 2010. 29 June 2010.
  4. News: Annea Lockwood – From Burning Pianos to sound-mapping the Danube . MusicWorks . Jennifer Hymer . Fall 2002 . 29 June 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100413143634/http://www.musicworks.ca/backissues1998.asp . 13 April 2010 .
  5. News: Ought-One Festival . Computer Music Journal . Jennifer Hymer . August 2001. 29 June 2010.
  6. News: We Will, We Will Nonpop You . The Village Voice . Kyle Gann . 11 September 2001 . 29 June 2010.