Wytold
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Wytold

Takoma Park, MD | Established. Jan 01, 2011 | SELF

Takoma Park, MD | SELF
Established on Jan, 2011
Solo Alternative Jazz

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"Excited Audience"

Here’s a followup to my last blog post, about music, excitement, and another frontier for classical performance .

The post was about an exciting performance the National Symphony did in a Washington, DC club, for an audience of around 2000 people who don’t normally go to classical concerts. Younger clubgoers, to judge from how they looked.

On the program were classical pieces, and also some marvelous things — which easily held their own with the classical works — aimed at the club audience. One of them was a take on the prelude to the first Bach cello suite, written by and featuring Wytold Lebing, an irresistible electric cellist.

And if you love the thought of an engaged audience, you’ll love what happened at one point in this piece, which was a rising passage taken straight out of Bach, performed exactly as Bach wrote it. It’s this one. (I’ve excerpted the classic old Casals performance, which — for its easy, compelling musicality — still stands for me as one of my touchstones for how music ought to go. I’m talking about all Casals’ cello suite recordings, not just this one.)

When Lebing got to this, the audience cried out in excitement, with a rising cry that mirrored the rise in the music. I loved this, and I think it’s a lesson for all of us. Because, if you walked around in the club, as I did, you might not think people were paying close attention. Some were talking, some were dancing, some were on their phones. But then came the exictement of the rising passage, and the excited shout. There are many kinds of listening.

And so here’s a challenge — a next frontier — for our normal classical performances. Can we make people shout like that? I know we value silent listening, etc, etc., etc. But that — in the long history of classical music — is a relatively recent development. Handel, Mozart, and Verdi would have found the shout from the club audience entirely familiar. And completely welcome. Because, in their world, people who didn’t make noise during a performance would be showing that they didn’t like the music.

I doubt our existing, older audience will shout when it’s excited. But when we get younger people in, shouts will show we’ve really hooked them, and entered their world. - Arts Journal Blog, Greg Sandow (Julliard School)


"NSO Hits the Club and Scores"

The National Symphony Orchestra went clubbing on Friday night. As in, played in one....

Friday, however, found the orchestra playing at Echostage, a big warehouse-like club space that holds 3,000 people, usually to hear electronic dance music or hip-hop rather than Shostakovich. And this time, the NSO got it right.

Fingers of blue-tinged black light strobed out across a dance floor filled to near capacity. Video projections pulsed up and down the back walls...

Therefore, it was savvy of the orchestra’s artistic administrator, Justin Ellis, to recruit the beatboxer and rapper Christylez Bacon, the electric cellist Wytold Lebing, and the DJ: incorporating some other virtuosic local talent with genuine connections to classical music to create a dialogue that made more sense, in this space, than a straight-ahead classical program. Lebing studied classical cello when he was growing up in northern Virginia, and he offered a remix of Bach’s first cello suite, while Bacon, a brilliant and charismatic performer, presented his take on Pachelbel’s Canon. (Both these works involved the other soloists and the orchestra.) For one piece, they were joined on stage by Glenn Donnellan, a second violinist who has become one of the NSO’s most notable ambassadors in outreach programs, playing, very well, his trademark violin he made out of a baseball bat...

But in terms of mission, and expanding the orchestra’s limits, and audience size and excitement, Friday’s program will be hard to top. It’s one of the best efforts I’ve seen from an orchestra at this kind of thing, and it shows a direction the NSO — “in your neighborhood,” or all year round — should continue to explore. - Washington Post


"Wytold"

"…big things are expected of Wytold, an unusual musician who manages to make the cello sound cutting-edge cool…The result is something that often approaches jaw-dropping beauty, while also sounding like it could be part of the score to a David Lynch film… Wytold manages to infuse his all-instrumental compositions with plenty of bounce and light. This is an original, captivating album by a local musician who is bound for stages beyond Washington, DC."
- On Tap Magazine


"Wytold - When Fulvio Finds Celeste"

"…American cellist Wytold…takes the cello and brings into the modern age…there is also a definite dialogue going on between the two cellos, tradition versus the future, and I don't think there is an easy winner. Wytold is a very deft musician, juggling the two sounds, mixing and merging them into something uniquely different…This is an album of sonic exploration as much as it is an album of music and it is encouraging to see someone with a vision of the cello in the future. Excellent album and highly recommended."
- The Borderland UK


"Runner-Up for Wytold's Song "American Dreams""

Wytold's original song "American Dreams" merited a Runner-Up award in the VH-1 Song of the Year Competition, 2007 - VH-1 Song of the Year Contest


Discography

"Fireflies, Fairies, and Squids", 2016 - forthcoming full-length album featuring ensemble accompaniment ranging from gentle, reflective melodies to darker, squid-like danceable energy.  


"Positive Eyes EP", 2015 - collection of pieces written for short documentary films on the AIDS epidemic, commissioned by UCLA Global Art and Heath Center.

"My Regards", February 2013 - released at sold-out show at the Strathmore Performing Arts Center, featuring GRAMMY-nominated progressive hip-hop artist Christylez Bacon.  Several pieces have been performed with the National Symphony Orchestra.

"When Fulvio Found Celeste", 2011 - Two songs are featured in Blood Brother, a documentary film nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Music and Sound, and winning Best Documentary and Audience Choice awards at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.

Photos

Bio

Wytold plays an electric cello with two extra strings, allowing him to capture the depth and power of a stand-up bass, the rich tonal timbre of the acoustic cello, and the bright crispness of violin solos and harmonies. Wytold creates his own rock-orchestral accompaniment through live-looping, often accompanied by bass, viola, violin, flute, saxophone, guitar, banjo, and/or percussion.


Wytold performed his original compositions with the National Symphony Orchestra (NSO) and GRAMMY-nominated progressive hip-hop artist for a sold-out audience of 3,000 at Echo Stage, which the Washington Post hailed as "virtuosic" and "hard to top", and recently collaborated with the NSO again at the Kennedy Center Concert Hall.  Two of his songs are featured in the Sundance award-winning documentary film, Blood Brother, which received an EMMY-nomination for Outstanding Music and Sound.  Wytold was selected to study and collaborate with Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble in their 2015 Global Musician Workshop and recently gave a TEDx performance discussing the relationship between classical and popular music that is displayed in his six-string electric cello compositions. Wytold is also actively composing and performing several commissioned works with the contemporary dance company, Christopher K Morgan & Artists (CKM&A).  Wytold was in residence with CKM&A at the Maui Cultural Center in Hawaii to create Pohaku, a piece that explores historical and current interactions between western and native Hawaiian cultures.    When not on national tour with CKM&A, Wytold regularly performs and leads workshops at Walter Reed Military Hospital, helping Wounded Warriors heal through creating art and music at local USOs.  Wytold is an NS Design featured artist, former Strathmore Artist in Residence, and recipient of several grants from the Maryland State Arts Council, the Montgomery County Council on the Arts and Humanities, and the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.   As an educator, Wytold teaches both classical and exploratory cello lessons and frequently travels throughout DC, VA, and MD offering 'Classical Hip-Hop' educational programs to elementary, middle, and high school students with Christylez Bacon.  He also performed at the Sundance Film Festival, the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the French Embassy, the National Geographic Museum, the Strathmore Performing Arts Center, the Levine School of Music, the Phillips Collection, Sydney-Harman Hall, the DC Jazz Festival, the Clarice Smith Center for the Performing Arts, the Atlas Performing Arts Center, and the National Cherry Blossom Festival, among many other venues. 



Wytold (William Wytold Lebing) began private lessons in classical cello repertoire at age 10 and participated in school and regional youth orchestras throughout Northern Virginia, often as principal chair. Wytold always dreamt of going to college to study cello performance but was held back by carpal tunnel syndrome, caused by an over-zealous and technically unsound approach to the instrument. After a 1.5 year hiatus, Wytold reintroduced himself to playing music by learning folk songs on the acoustic guitar. Guitar strumming and finger-picking gradually reintroduced Wytold's fingers and wrists to the motions involved in performing and also instilled a new soul and passion for heart-felt musicianship and the musical experience. 

Shortly thereafter, Wytold translated to the cello the techniques he learned on guitar, such as strumming chord progressions, finger-picking, playing improvised solos, and writing songs that incorporate contemporary grooves with a verse-chorus format.  Just before studying Philosophy of Science at Pitt and moving to DC, Wytold taught himself to play the shoulder-strapped six-string electric cello with live-looping.  His mathematical studies helped him visualize and manipulate his different cello layers when composing and performing, often inspired by outdoor rock climbing and hiking trips in West Virginia and California.  Energized by DC's cultural and musical diversity, Wytold quickly became immersed in many different non-classical collaborations that in turn influence his own playing and compositions, including classical Hindustani, middle eastern percussion, hip-hop, go-go, folk, indie rock, americana, and jazz.  Through performance, composition, and education, Wytold continues to learn from and synthesize these various influences while encouraging budding strings musicians to explore non-traditional musical styles and techniques.