Guitarist Adam Levin and violinist William Knuth of Duo Sonidos Young musicians set out to show that classical music is "cool and fun." I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer A dam Levin and William Knuth have experienced the Traverse City, Mich., area surrounding Michigan's Interlochen Center for the Arts. It's not because they studied there; it's because they have performed there as part of a chamber-music series. The musicians in Duo Sonidos (Two Sounds) — Levin as guitarist and Knuth as violinist — are about to experience the Metro Detroit area as they return to Michigan for two distinct concerts announced by the Chamber Music Society of Detroit. They will appear at 8 p.m. Friday, March 14, at the Jazz Cafe of the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts in Detroit and at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 16, at Varner Recital Hall on the campus of Oakland University in Rochester. "On Friday night, we will have a mixed recital of music by composers from the Americas, including Manuel de Falla, Astor Piazzolla, Jorge Muniz, Robert Beaser and George Gershwin," says Levin, 31, in a phone conversation from his home in Massachusetts. "De Falla's Canciones Populares Espanolas were originally for voice and piano and later adapted for every imagin- able combination speaking to the folk music of Spain. Piazzolla's Histoire du Tango reflects his work as the 'King of Tango' from Argentina7 Moving to the music of the United States, they offer Funk by Muniz, a profes- sor at Indiana University South Bend, who fuses a contemporary style into his com- positions. Beaser's Mountain Songs access American folklore while selections from Porgy and Bess enter the realm of modern opera. "We'll be tapping into additional folklore with Sunday's concert; explains Levin, who lists program similarities with works by de Falla, Muniz and Gershwin and dif- ferences with works by Bela Bartok, Karol Szymanowski and Lukas Foss. "We'll perform Bartok's Romanian Folk Dances, Szymanowski's The Dawn and Wild Dances, and Foss' Three American Pieces. We're tapping into Will's Polish heritage with Szymanowski and my Jewish heritage with Foss, Beaser and Gershwin. "I really enjoy the diversity of imagina- tion in all these works. There's so much fantasy and romance in the music that it forces us to explore palettes of color avail- able to us through our instruments and within ourselves:' Levin and Knuth, who have been work- ing together for almost eight years and also appear as soloists throughout the United States and Europe, want to offer fresh perspectives on masterworks that originally were for other instrumental combinations. Early Spanish influences are reflected in their name. "Many of the works we're performing were for violin and piano or flute and gui- tar;' Levin says. "I think a nontraditional combination — guitar and violin — offers interesting repertoire that isn't performed as often on two instruments that are extremely well known. I believe we are pioneers in the field:' Levin, who started playing guitar when he was 7, went years before thinking of a career as a musician. Instruments were part of family recreational pursuits. His dad, David, a clinical psychologist, and sister, Adriane, a medical student, play classical guitar. His mom, Veda, an options trader, prefers piano. The change in academic concentration came after he completed premed require- ments while also taking up psychology and musical performance at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. "In my last year, I went to Italy to study with Oscar Ghiglia, a protege of Andres Segovia; the guitarist recalls. "He believed in me and convinced me that it was worth going into music. I quickly changed courses and went to study with Eliot Fisk, Ghiglia's prized student on the faculty at the New England Conservatory of Music [in Boston]:' Levin, who earned a master's degree in guitar performance, studied in Spain for three years on a Fulbright scholarship to research contemporary Spanish music. He and Knuth, who met while complet- ing chamber-music requirements at the conservatory, had felt a musical chemistry through their work together and went on to perform throughout Spain. "We recorded a piece together on my first album, In the Beginning; Levin says. "That was by an Israeli composer, Jan Freidlin. Our debut album was [the epony- mous] Duo Sonidos." Levin explains that the two — first- prize winners at the 2010 Luys Milan International Chamber Music Competition in Spain — early on focused on the music of Spain because the country is a spiritual homeland for classical guitar. "We branched out to American music, South American music and Western European music," says Levin, who teaches guitar at the University of Massachusetts Boston and Middlesex Community College. "I decided my mission will be to teach the next generation of young classical gui- tarists and advocate for the guitar and its repertoire7 Levin has made four solo recordings. The most recent, titled 21st Century Spanish Guitar, is the first of four volumes to be released on the Naxos label and explores works he commissioned while liv- ing in Spain. Levin and Knuth have organized a pro- gram of music by Jewish composers for requesting presenters. "We are exploring music from Sephardim to secular modern Americans; the guitarist says. "The idea is to present programs that demonstrate the diversity of sounds created by Jewish composers. "We include a few non-Jewish com- posers who were fascinated by elements of Judaism and wrote pieces based on Hebraic or Sephardic melodies. "That's been a profound way for me to reclaim my identity as a Jew and to engage the Jewish community in an educational search through music by Jewish compos- ers7 Although Knuth is not Jewish, he has a strong personal link to the Holocaust. His grandmother survived a concentration camp. When Levin is not working or spending time with his girlfriend, he enjoys running and cooking with his sister. The two collect recipes and get together for cook-a-thons. As Duo Sonidos, we are able to use our instruments as a gateway to classical music; Levin says. "We're excited about the out- reach activities involved with our Michigan performances, and we hope to show that classical music is cool and fun7 ❑ Duo Sonidos will perform at 8 p.m. Friday, March 14, in the Jazz Cafe of the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts, 350 Madison, in Detroit, $30-$40. The duo also will appear at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 16, at Varner Recital Hall on the campus of Oakland University, University and Squirrel roads, in Rochester, $10-$20. (248) 855-6070; chambermusicdetroit.org . March 13 • 2014 55