This season is also the beginning of Common Ground, a three-year initiative that will unveil six new pieces that tell stories of life in America. It will begin this summer with On Trac|<, a dance piece composed by Nicolas Lell Benavides and choreographed and performed by Amanda Castro, that looks at the intersection of human and machine in rural America.
Read MoreMusic of Remembrance will receive a $20,000 Art Works grant to support the commission of “Tres Minutos,” a new chamber opera by composer Nicolas Lell Benavides and librettist Marella Martin Koch.
Read MoreDolores selected as finalist for West Edge Opera’s Snapshot. https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/music/west-edge-opera-names-8-finalists-for-crowdsourced-commissioning-project
Read MoreWelcome to SFCV’s year-end roundup of recordings released in 2020 by local artists — our first roundup for the Los Angeles area. Every year we’re amazed at the musical riches from the cultural scenes we cover, and this year more so than ever. Despite the strictures of the lockdown, artists managed to create a lot of brand-new music and find creative ways to record it, while many organizations scoured their archives for great, unreleased music that deserved a fresh listen.
Read MoreEarly in the process, Saltzman, along with the three mentors, matched the singers with commissioned composers, building on the recital programs that were taking shape. Riley’s recital is bookended by two new pieces from L.A. composer Nicolas Lell Benavides (Oct. 2). Birchell debuts a song cycle by Michael Welsh (Oct. 10). And on the program for Metzler: a premiere from pianists Sarah Gibson and Thomas Kotcheff (Oct. 16). That’s in addition to music by Samuel Barber, Alexander Zemlinsky, William Grant Still, Jake Heggie, and more.
Read More“Nicolas Lell Benavides’s score, prepared for soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor, and bass, along with a chamber orchestra, is light, fun, and full of playful moments. Sonorous, rich, with sweeping moments in the brass and string sections, bring a lush, open, and stirring touch. Benavides composed a memorable sonic experience that complements and augments [Martin] Koch’s libretto. The score, though whimsical, is not frivolous.”
Read MoreI was invited by Gabriela Lena Frank to be part of her #GLFCAMThruCOVID and Joshua Kosman through the SF Chronicle interviewed me about my experience working with Alex Anest.
https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/music/composer-marshals-a-commissioning-project-for-beleaguered-performers
Read MoreRead my interview on I Care If You Listen (.com), where interviewer Gemma Peacocke asks me about my opera Pepito, interdisciplinary collabs, allyship, & more: https://icareifu.li/2U0n4Qb
Read More…”The piece avoids the painfully cutesy, while scoring winning points about commitments and priorities. Making it click is the jaunty score by Nicolas Lell Benavides, who cooks up a clever stylistic mix with touches of cabaret, musical theater and Latin dance.”
- Tim Smith, OPERA NEWS
Read MoreSo “Pepito” got pride of place. It wasn’t just because dogs and children tend to steal the show. It was because Nicolas Lell Benavides, the composer, and Marella Martin Koch, the librettist, found a way to sketch complete characters in swift sure lines.
Read MoreThe most entertaining show of the fledgling trio of operas was Pepito, in large part, no doubt, because the titled character was a big, shaggy dog, — a role sung, howled and barked effectively by Samuel Weiser. But what started as what I thought might be a gimmick demonstrated as it went on a growing understanding of methodical approach and material by the young creative team.
Read More“Of the three twenty-minute operas, the Dresser's favorite was the comic opera Pepito about a somewhat mismatched couple who shows up last minute at an animal shelter wanting to adopt a dog, preferably a puppy... The music, especially the duet about "the right dog" that is between Camila (soprano Alexandra Nowakowski) and Pepito, lingers in memory.”
Karren LaLonde Alenier, Scene4
”A lighter comic tone distinguished the third world premiere, Pepito, with music by Nicolas Lell Benavides and libretto by Marella Martin Koch. The title character is a dog abandoned in a shelter, whose first lines are barks and whines, eventually becoming words. …
Benavides achieved the greatest variety of textures and sounds in this accomplished score, with hints of Latin percussion and an affecting love duet between a girl and her dog-to-be.”
Charles T. Downey, Washington Classical Review
The San Francisco Conservatory of Music's newsroom recently did an interview and write up with me and Matt Boehler about our upcoming operas with the Washington National Opera's American Opera Initiative at the Kennedy Center in January. Matt and I were two of the three composers chosen to participate, and we are both alumni of SFCM, having studied under David Conte.
https://sfcm.edu/newsroom/alumni-receive-commissions-washington-national-opera
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The evening also featured the world premiere of Nicolas Lell Benavides’s Rinconcito for guitar, violin, viola, and cello. The title comes from the song “Rinconcito En El Cielo” (A Little Piece of Heaven) by the Mexican composer, singer, and accordion virtuoso Ramón Ayala. Benavides did not quote the musical material of the song, instead using the title to evoke his own childhood memories and also to serve as a stimulus to explore his own Mexican roots for the first time in his music. The result was an evocative serenade that created a particularly striking use of the guitar and string trio combination.”
Anyone who thinks classical music is going the way of the telephone booth needs to be kidnapped by the Guerrilla Composers Guild (GCG) and taken to the Center for New Music holding pen, indented into the side of the Golden Gate Theater building just off Market Street on Taylor. Thursday night, dozens of new-music lovers crammed into the concert space to hear the evolving group Phonochrome and friends play six new chamber works by as many worthy composers. Almost everyone — performers, composers, and, most significantly, audience members — was apparently under 30. I can now die in peace knowing art music will continue to prosper.
…Next came the sadly reflective moods of GCG founder Nick Benavides’ “…none of us were overly concerned” “elegy for past and present victims of chemical warfare,” for flute cello and piano. Not a note was wasted in its seven-minute length.
Read MoreUno de los planes a futuro para ellos es crear una obra que involucre a los jóvenes que han capacitado durante años en el proyecto. El músico y compositor estadounidense, Nicolás Benavides visitó Chinandega y asegura que el talento que ha encontrado en Nicaragua es muy especial.
“Estoy componiendo una nueva obra y ahora me he dado cuenta que una cosa que es muy importante para mí es que ellos puedan ayudarme a hacer la obra, y es una obra muy larga entonces quiero colaborar con otras personas”, manifiesta Nicolás.
Read More...It, along with Nick Benavides' wonderfully structured and harmonically imaginative setting of e.e. cummings i thank you God for most this amazing day, were the most arresting pieces of the evening... The judge’s tastes were well aligned with mine.
Read MoreInspired by Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite, Benavides aimed to create whimsical music, which would nonetheless appeal to adults. While the piece does adopt techniques, including thick embellishments, that conjure Baroque music, the harmonies and resultant musical portraits sound diverse and modern. My favorite was the fourth — an unmeasured, quasi-improvisatory prelude motivated by a tale about a sad guard dog.
https://www.sfcv.org/reviews/elevate-ensemble/elevate-ensemble-and-the-return-of-the-harpsichord