Frances-Marie Uitti

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Composer-improviser-cellist Frances-Marie Uitti is a cellist known for her performance of contemporary classical music. She was born in Chicago to Finnish parents.

Uitti is famous for her extended technique using two bows simultaneously in one hand. This technique expands the harmonic and timbral possibilities of the instrument in revolutionary ways: for example, one can play simultaneously 4, 3, 2, and 1 string, with contrasting articulations between the two bows. Non-adjacent strings can also be accessed. One bow can be played near the bridge while the other is near the fingerboard. Frances-Marie Uitti has used over 75 different tunings in her compositions using this technique, each producing new harmonic possibilities and exotic timbres. She was the first to combine singing with the cello[citation needed] and Louis Andriessen's masterpiece La Voce is dedicated to her.

She travels worldwide playing concerts from New York to Mongolia and is regularly seen in the largest festivals in Europe and abroad.

She is finishing a massive book on New Cello Techniques covering music from 1915 Kodaly Sonata, to the present day.

She has collaborated with and is the dedicatee of composers Luigi Nono, Louis Andriessen, James Tenney, Jonathan Harvey, John Cage, Giacinto Scelsi, Elliott Sharp, György Kurtág, double bassists Mark Dresser and Fernando Grillo and has recorded on ECM records, Wergo, Hat Hut Records, CRI, and BvHaast.

[edit] References

  • Zorn, John, ed. (2000). Arcana: Musicians on Music. New York: Granary Books/Hips Road. ISBN 188712327X.

[edit] External links

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