
July 27, 2024
GENESIS
program notes

Technical note on tonight’s instruments:
All instruments used in the first half of the program are modeled after period instruments or designs from the 17th-18th century.
The tuning of the first half is in A=415 Kirnberger III temperament.
The harpsichord is a single-manual French instrument built by Frank Hubbard, circa 1971.
All instruments (with exception to harpsichord) used in the second half of the program are modern models,
tuned in A=440 equal temperament.
about the artists
Chinese-American keyboardist Yunyi Ji commands a broad repertory that overlooks five centuries of musical tradition. Through his contrasting passions in early and modern music, Yunyi explores beauty’s ability to transcend time, style, and society, and embodies each finding in performances of his own. He has appeared as solo pianist with Eastman Philharmonia and been named an Emerging Artist by the Berkeley Piano Club. Yunyi obtained his BM and MM Piano Performance at the Eastman School of Music and the SF Conservatory of Music, studying under pianists Rebecca Penneys, Paul Hersh, Jon Nakamatsu, and harpsichordist Corey Jamason. Yunyi is pursuing his Masters in harpsichord in The Juilliard School’s Historical Performance division, studying with Peter Sykes and Béatrice Martin under full scholarship.
Hasan Marwan Abualhaj is a Palestinian cellist based in San Francisco, CA. As a specialist in historical cello and Baroque repertory, Hasan has worked with period ensembles including the California Bach Society, the Bloomington Bach Cantata Project, Albany Consort, and the Portland Baroque Orchestra. Hasan was spotlighted in Faces of Early Music America as a featured artist, in which he expressed his artistic goal in humanizing and diversifying Western music through the understanding of its socio-historical contexts.
Bryan Lin is a Taiwanese-American conductor and composer known for his versatility across genres and finds himself equally at home with choral and instrumental music while being a champion for new works. He is currently on faculty at Mannes Prep at The New School’s College of Performing Arts where he directs the Senior Chorus, and is a conductor and singer in C4: The Choral Composer/Conductor Collective in New York City. He was previously Assistant Conductor for The Dessoff Choirs under the direction of Malcolm Merriweather.
Taylor Joshua Rankin (b. 1991) is a filmmaker and composer based in Los Angeles, CA. Taylor’s music exists draws upon influences such as minimalism, avant-rock, experimental, micropolyphony, and tintinnabulation. Taylor’s joy in making music is to express emotional zenith with sounds of a dense and undulating world, existing in a space between gossamer and cacophony. Taylor's music has been programmed by organizations such as Grammy award winning ensemble Third Coast Percussion, The San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, Friction Quartet, Eastman School of Music, New York University, the University of Michigan, University of North Florida, University of Kentucky School of Music, Pittsburg State University, Composers Inc., the Presidio Club, The San Francisco Conservatory of Music Orchestra, Cal State East Bay, PoP Up Magazine’s 2018 season, and the Hot Air Music Festival. Taylor studied with Mason Bates at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and with renowned choral composer Dr. Frank La Rocca.
Erin Graham (they/them) is a composer of contemporary classical music and a PhD Candidate in Composition at UC San Diego. Erin has worked with highly-regarded artists such as Lamnth duo, King Britt, Stalina Villarreal, Lee Vinson, Amy Williams, the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, and the Houston Symphony. Erin’s chamber work, Manual, was performed at the Tanglewood Institute’s Seiji Ozawa hall by Elana Bell, Benjamin Fryxell, and Dominic Aragon in August 2022. In 2021, Erin was a composition fellow at the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra’s Edward T. Cone Composition Institute, where they worked with Steven Mackey and Ludovic Morlot. Erin received Rice University’s Paul and Christiane Cooper Prize in Music Composition for their orchestra piece, Increase in 2019. In 2015, Erin won an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award for their chamber work, Five Poems of Edward Lear.
SF-based flutist Jessie Nucho (she/her) is passionate about sharing traditional and contemporary music as a chamber musician, soloist, and educator. Jessie performs regularly with new music ensembles After Everything and Ninth Planet, serving also as Artistic Director. As a soloist, Jessie has performed at the National Flute Association Convention, SF's Center for New Music, the Berkeley Arts Festival, the Hot Air Music Festival, and the Legion of Honor. Jessie is a member of Stolen Time Ensemble and the eclectic genre-crossing band Love Can't Save You, Padmé; she appears as substitute flutist with the new music ensembles SF Contemporary Music Players, Empyrean Ensemble, Eco Ensemble, Earplay, and Opera Parallèle. Jessie was a founding member of Siroko Duo, a flute duo dedicated to commissioning and presenting new works in creative spaces. Jessie holds a MM from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where she studied with Tim Day. Previous instructors include Alberto Almarza and Jeanne Baxtresser at Carnegie Mellon University.
Andrew Friedman is a San Francisco-based clarinetist, composer, and educator devoted to performing music new and old, large and small. Particularly in demand as an opera clarinetist, he has performed with companies across the Bay, including the operas of San Francisco, San Jose, Livermore, Modesto, and West Bay. He is also a dedicated performer of contemporary music and has performed new works with Eco Ensemble, Left Coast Ensemble, and as a founding member of Stolen Time. Friedman graduated with honors from the University of Puget Sound with degrees in Music Performance and English and holds an MM from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music; his teachers included Carey Bell, Dr. Kelly Burke, and Jennifer Nelson.
French-born violinist Pauline Kempf enjoys a freelancing career performing on both modern and baroque violins and is the co-founder of the early music band Ensemble Affect. A graduate from the Geneva and Vienna universities, Pauline obtained her doctorate degree from Northwestern University. Based in San Francisco since 2020, she studied baroque violin at SFCM and currently teaches at the Pre-College division of the SF Conservatory.
Gail Hernández Rosa is a Puerto Rican violinist, violist, vocalist, composer and the first violinist from her island specializing in historical performance (HP). Gail’s love for music started at a young age, singing before speaking. Her career has taken her all over the world, performing with groups such as Gabrieli Consort & Players, Florilegium & Scottish Chamber Orchestra. Her interest in period instrument performance led her to London where she gained a Master’s degree from the Royal Academy of Music. Thanks to her cultural immersion and Scottish roots, her love affair with Baroque/Celtic folk music further blossomed, inspiring her to co-found Beneath A Tree. Gail has an active career as a soloist, leader and chamber musician and is faculty at Sonoma State University.
Caitlin Keen is Violinist, Violist, and Viola D’Amoreist and educator on both modern and baroque instruments. She is the founder of String Assembly, which aims to correct inclusion and representation in western classical music through education, performance, and other projects. She holds degrees in Violin from Peabody Conservatory, Viola from San Francisco Conservatory, and Exercise and Sport Studies from Smith College.
Justine Preston is a musician based in San Francisco since 2014, when they graduated from San Francisco Conservatory of Music. As a violist they frequently perform in a variety of styles, from classical to hip hop, and writing and recording music with their experimental chamber pop band, Love Can’t Save You Padmé. Justine has enjoyed collaborating with dancers, touring and local bands, visual artists, poets, and circus performers. They also have a large studio of violin, viola, and composition students throughout the Bay Area.
Jamael Smith is a San Francisco-based bassoonist and educator. A dedicated performer of contemporary and chamber music, they are a member of the San Francisco Contemporary Players and Eco Ensemble; as a chamber musician, they perform as a member of Quinteto Latino and the Avenue Winds. They also serve as a core member of the conductorless chamber orchestra One Found Sound. Smith performs frequently with San Francisco Symphony, Opera Parallèle, and Santa Rosa Symphony among others. A passionate educator, Smith serves as the Director of Wind Chamber Music at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and the instructor of bassoon at San Jose State University. Primary teachers include Stephen Paulson and Seth Krimsky.
Cellist Kyle Stachnik is a recent graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music where he graduated with his masters in chamber music. He has gone on to establish his career around the Bay Area playing with groups such as the New Century Chamber Orchestra, Opera San Jose, Vallejo Festival Orchestra, and Insight Chamber Players. Kyle also is the artistic director of his own chamber music festival in Northern Michigan each summer, Viridian Strings.
Bassist and multi-instrumentalist Daniel Turkos enjoys a varied career as a performer, producer, composer and arranger. His passion for baroque historical performance began in 2008 while studying with Rob Nairn, leading to frequent engagements with American Bach, Handel and Haydn Society, Philaharmonia Baroque Orchestra, and Tempesta di Mare. He is the co-founder of the mixed genre ensemble Beneath A Tree and lead engineer and producer at Agrestic Sound. Dan lives on the Russian River and enjoys the rustic serenity.
Timothy Sherren (he/him) is a guitarist and “lowercase c” composer who specializes in contemporary electric guitar. Besides Stolen Time, he plays with the composer collective Love Can’t Save You, Padmè, and indie rock band Böyfriends. Padmè and Böyfriends are both releasing albums in the coming year. His solo electric guitar album is also due in 2025. He lives in San Francisco with his ceramicist partner and their cat named Cheese.
Mika Nakamura is a bay-area based percussionist, educator, and arts administrator passionate about connecting audiences to the concert experience. An avid orchestral and chamber musician, she has collaborated with various artists including the Magik*Magik Orchestra, yMusic, Sō Percussion, and eighth blackbird. She has also performed with New Century Chamber Orchestra, the Mainly Mozart All-Star Festival Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony among others. Ms. Nakamura is a graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.
special thanks
Martin Strickland
Foundation Director, Saint Joseph’s Arts Society
Madison Frilot
Program Coordinator, Saint Joseph’s Arts Society
Emma Markowitz
Video/Sound Recording Engineer
Auguste Fallon
Cameraperson
A very special thank-you to Saint Joseph’s Arts Foundation for their generous assistance, passion, and camaraderie in making this show possible. To support the Foundation in their mission of uplifting emerging and interdisciplinary arts projects in the Bay Area, please follow the link below.

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Thank you for attending tonight’s concert Genesis — We are touched to have your incredible enthusiasm for our official launch performance and look forward to bright futures ahead!
As an seedling organization bearing its first leaves, your support will be critical for the feasibility of our vision as an ongoing series. If you enjoyed our show, please consider giving a tax-deductible contribution through our fiscal sponsor, Fractured Atlas.
We hope to see you again soon!