The Strangers’ Case

Friday, November 22, 7:30pm

SANMAN
1109 Providence Street, 77002

$20 general admission

About

The first of two chamber music performances in intimate venues around the city, The Strangers’ Case features a preview performance of a new work for voice and strings by the phenomenal Houston composer Karim Al-Zand. Firecracker performer Alexandra Smither, who last sang with Kinetic in May 2023, returns to sing the Al-Zand premiere, along with selections from Errollyn Wallen’s songbook.

curated by Tonya Burton, violist, and Austin Lewellen, bassist

Program

Andy Akiho: Portal (2023 — Texas Premiere)

Karim Al-Zand: The Strangers’ Case (2024 — Preview Performance)

Errollyn Wallen: Are You Worried About the Rising Cost of Funerals? (1994)

Paul Wiancko: American Haiku (2014)

Featured Artists

The music of Canadian-American composer Karim Al-Zand (b.1970) has been called “strong and startlingly lovely” (Boston Globe). In a wide-ranging catalogue of solo, chamber, vocal and orchestral compositions, his music embraces a variety of interests, issues and influences. It explores connections between music and other media, and draws inspiration from graphic art, myths and fables, folk music of the world, film, spoken word, jazz, and his own Middle Eastern heritage. From scores for dance, to compositions for young people, to multi-disciplinary and collaborative works, Al-Zand’s music is diverse in both its subject matter and its audience. His compositions have enjoyed success in the US, Canada and abroad, and he is the recipient of several national awards, including the “Arts and Letters Award in Music” from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Al-Zand is a founding and artistic board member of Musiqa, Houston’s premier contemporary music group, which presents concerts featuring new and classic repertoire of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In his scholarly work, he has pursued several diverse areas of music theory, including topics in jazz, counterpoint, and improvisation (both jazz and 18th century extemporization). Since 2000 he has taught composition and music theory in Houston at the Shepherd School of Music, Rice University.


Alexandra Smither is a firecracker performer, a creative force to be reckoned with, and, in the words of the New Yorker, “a fast-rising, British-Canadian soprano with a crystalline, agile voice.” Recently, she has sung premieres from Karim Al-Zand, Katherine Balch, Theo Chandler, Wayne Shorter, and esperanza spalding with organizations that include the Kennedy Center, the Boston Symphony, the California Symphony, the Charlotte Symphony, and Houston's own Kinetic Ensemble

Passionate about systems change and advocacy, Smither organized and worked as a communications consultant for grassroots organizing groups. In recent years, she has led a successful city ballot initiative that stands to restructure how federal dollars are distributed in the Houston region; leveraged civil rights complaints and coordinated with eminent domain lawyers to protect Houstonians who face displacement by a 9 billion dollar highway expansion; and tirelessly advocated for equitable protections against environmental health concerns through her role as a consultant with Air Alliance Houston.

Smither is currently Chief of Staff for newly-elected State Senator Molly Cook, and is a doctoral candidate in music performance at the City University New York. Her dissertation explores communal song as a reciprocal tool for deep organizing, with a particular focus on Zilphia Horton and the Highlander Folk School.