William Jason Raynovich is co-founder, Artistic Director, and cellist of the MAVerick Ensemble. Involved in the performance of contemporary music for fifteen years, he has premiered over fifty works. Specializing in experimental contemporary music, he presents lectures on the performance practice of the composers of the New York School, John Cage, Morton Feldman, and Christian Wolff, focusing on the relationship between composition, aleatory, and improvisation.
As a composer, Mr. Raynovich has been performed throughout the United States and Europe. He has written works for electronics, solo works, chamber, orchestral, and vocal, focusing on setting the poetry of E. E. Cummings to music throughout his compositional career.
James Baur is part of a musical family: his father is a composer, his mother a flutist. Born in 1976, he was constantly exposed to a variety of musical styles. After beginning his musical studies on the violin, he turned his attention to the guitar at the age of 12. Throughout high school in Memphis, Tennessee he studied with the prominent guitarist Lily Afshar.
In 1999 he received both his Bachelors and Masters degrees from Northwestern University, under the direction of Anne Waller. While at Northwestern, he was selected to perform in the masterclasses of Oscar Ghiglia, Pepe Romero, Manuel Barrueco, Paul O'Dette and Scott Tenant. He will begin his studies in the Doctoral program in Guitar Performance at Northwestern University in September 2005.
He was awarded First Prize in Guitar in the 1998 Society of American Musicians Competition. In 2000 he was selected to perform on both the Chicago Classical Guitar Society's Local Artist Showcase and The Friends of the Windows Second Saturday Concert Series, on which he was invited to perform again in 2001.
In February 2001 he premiered his father John Baur's Etudes for Guitar and Songs of Love for Soprano and Guitar at the Imagine Festival in Memphis, Tennessee, and has performed with Ensemble Noamnesia and Northwestern University's Contemporary Music Ensemble in Chicago. In 2003 he gave World Premiere performances for Chicago composers Bjorn Berkhout and Robert McDonald, and played the electric guitar in Virgil Moorefield's Premiere performance of his ensemble work Things You Must do to Get into Heaven in November 2003. In March 2004 he performed fa/sil by Bjorn Berkhout at the New Music Festival at Western Illinois University in Macomb, Illinois. And most recently he performed a solo guitar concert on the Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concert Series in April 2005.
Recent concert programs include "A History of the Guitar: The Twentieth Century," a series of concerts chronologically exploring significant works from the guitar's repertoire; and an on-going concert project dedicated to the performance of new and previously unheard pieces by Chicago composers. He is also a member of The Avanti Duo, a flute and guitar duo with flutist Kim Sopata, and the MAVerick Ensemble, directed by Chicago composer and cellist William Jason Raynovich. Current projects include two CDs: Made of String, an eclectic blend of styles and composers; and another of works by Chicago-area composers, including Bjorn Berkhout, Alan Cole, Noah Lubin, and Paul Failla.
Also active as a teacher, he is on the faculty of Lake Forest College, The Suzuki-Orff School for Young Musicians, and The Lake Forest Symphony Music School.
Andrea R. DiOrio is the clarinetist and Artistic Administrator for the MAVerick Ensemble. She first became active in contemporary music during her bachelor of music degree at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Andrea is an active freelance clarinetist in the Chicagoland area, and has performed with the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Chicago Opera Theater, Grant Park Orchestra, Elgin Symphony Orchestra, Ravinia Festival Orchestra, and the Quad City Symphony.
Andrea recently became clarinet instructor at North Central College and is enjoying working with all of her new students. She also teaching Music Appreciation for Benedictine University's Moser College of Adult and Professional Studies.
Andrea has studied clarinet with Charlene Zimmerman, J. David Harris, Russell Dagon, and John Bruce Yeh. She earned her Master of Music degree in performance from Northwestern University, and her Bachelor of Music degree with honors, in performance, from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Lisa Goethe-McGinn maintains an active career as a soloist and chamber musician and has performed in many festivals and concert series throughout the U.S. and Europe.
In addition to performing traditional music, Lisa is a much sought after performer of contemporary music and free improvisation. She performs in Ensemble Noamnesia, MAVerick Ensemble and Cherchez la Femme. She has given both U.S. and World premiere performances of numerous compositions and has worked directly with composers such as George Crumb, Helmut Lachenmann, Salvatore Martirano, Yehuda Yannay, and improvisors Jim O'Rourke, Gene Coleman, TV POW, Chao-Ming Tung, Fred Lonberg-Holm and Otomo Yoshihide. Her first feature CD "Uncommon Voices" was released in 2007 on the Vienna Modern Masters label and contains works by Burt Levy, Yehuda Yannay and Ben Johnston.
Lisa received her degrees from the University of Illinois and Millikin University and has studied flute with Alexander Murray, Mary Karen Clardy, and Mary Ellen Poole. She has participated in masterclasses with Robert Dick, Walfrid Kujala and Patricia Spencer.
Lisa is on the faculty of Sherwood Conservatory of Music and Suzuki-Orff School for Young Musicians and mantains a home studio.
Jennifer Leckie performs regularly with the MAVerick Ensemble and Ensemble Noamnesia in Chicago, and is a member of the Elgin Symphony Orchestra. A former member of the Amabile String Quartet, the Society for Chromatic Art, Helix!, and the Mannes Contemporary Ensemble, she has also performed with MusicNow!, NeWorks, the Composers Forum, and Music Under Construction. Ms. Leckie has performed many world and U.S. premieres including works by Salvatore Sciarrino and Ada Gentile, and has worked closely with composers Charles Wuorinen, Lukas Foss, George Crumb, Ornette Coleman and Ursula Mamlok. Third Prize winner of the Crane New Music Festival Solo Competition in 2000 and the Rutgers University Award for Excellence in Performance and Scholarly Writing in 2002, she was also a finalist in the Alliance Chamber Music Festival Competition and a Semifinalist at the Fischoff Chamber Music Competition. Ms. Leckie holds a doctor of musical arts degree from Rutgers University where she studied with Arnold Steinhardt. She holds bachelors and masters degrees from the Mannes College of Music.
Mark Sudeith holds the B.F.A, from the University
of Minnesota, the M.M. in piano from Indiana University, the M.M. in
organ from the University of Minnesota, and the D.Mus. from Indiana
University. His areas of specialization include piano, organ, class
piano, and piano accompaniment.