Live Performance: What's Music Made of?

Live Performance: What's Music Made of?

  • ALL AGES

Join us for an interactive and up-close cello recital featuring baroque music performed by Evan Leslie.

By Italian Cultural & Community Center

Date and time

Wednesday, May 28 · 7 - 8pm CDT.

Location

ICCC Houston

1101 Milford St Houston, TX 77006

Refund Policy

No Refunds

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour
  • ALL AGES
  • Free venue parking

Wood, hair, callused fingers, a seeking spirit, tree sap, and gut…

Join us at the Italian Cultural & Community Center for an interactive and up-close cello recital by Evan Leslie. Follow music back in time, around the world, and into the substances of the earth and the imagination. Be transported to the sunlit sanctuary of Bolognaa’s ancient San Petronio Basilica, 1689. Tackle the riddles of Johann Sebastian Bach. Enjoy a homegrown-Houston sonic meditation, and open your ears to your own memories and visions, as we investigate the question: what is music made of?

This program is offered in promotion of the concerts and educational work of the Texas Music Festival presented by the University of Houston. To learn more about the Immanuel and Helen Olshan Texas Music Festival, click here.


Program

  • Select Ricercari by Domenico Gabrielli (Italian, 1651–1690)
  • Select Preludes and Dances from the Unaccompanied Cello Suites by Johann Sebastian Bach (German, 1685–1750)
  • Plus other songs and musical games


Details

When: Wednesday, May 28, 2025 from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.

Where: Italian Cultural & Community Center, 1101 Milford Street, Houston, TX 77006

Price: $10 ICCC Members | $15 General Admission


About the Performer

Evan Leslie is an arts educator and cellist. He is the Managing Director of the Immanuel and Helen Olshan Texas Music Festival and the Director of the Community Arts at the University of Houston, Katherine C. McGovern College of the Arts.

From 2013 – 2020, Evan was the Artistic Producer at Lincoln Center’s New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, one of the world’s largest repositories of performing arts manuscripts and archives. During his time at the “Lincoln Center Library,” Evan conceived and produced hundreds of music, theater, and dance educational programs and performances, working collaboratively with the Metropolitan Opera, the Juilliard School, The Public Theater, New York City Ballet, WNYC radio, The International Contemporary Ensemble, Carnegie Hall, The New York Philharmonic, Sesame Workshop and many other cultural organizations. In addition to producing more traditional performances, Evan specializes in unconventional, social-learning experiences, such as “Trivia Concerts,” "Sing-Along Show and Tells," social dance experiences, and educational faux-debates, like the Mostly Mozart Festival’s Shakespeare vs. Mozart or WNYC’s The Beatles vs. The Rolling Stones.

Before moving to New York, Evan managed community engagement projects and the Longhorn Music record label at the University of Texas, Butler School of Music. From 2008 – 2011, Evan was the Director of Education at Da Camera of Houston, where he established the Da Camera Young Artist Program, a career-training program for emerging professional chamber music and jazz performers. Evan was also Managing Producer of Public Programs for Museum of Fine Arts Houston from 2020 - 2022.

As a cellist, Evan has performed with the New York Classical Players, New York Chamber Music Festival, The Grand Teton Music Festival, Da Camera of Houston, and in the cello sections of the Austin and Tulsa Symphony Orchestras. An adventurous musician, Evan has recently performed with Catastrophic Theater, Hearts of Animals, and was a guest performer with the "Bad Boys of Cello" (Houston Symphony celli's alter ego). He was an adjunct professor of cello at The University of St. Thomas from 2009 - 2013. He studied cello at the Moores School of Music, and he received his master’s degree in cello from Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, where he studied with Brinton Averil Smith.


Please note: tickets for this event are nonrefundable. If you are unable to attend, you may transfer your ticket to a friend.

Click here to become a member of the Italian Cultural & Community Center of Houston.

This program is funded in part by the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance.

Tickets

Organized by

Experience Italy in the heart of Houston, Texas. The Italian Cultural & Community Center's mission is to advance, celebrate and preserve Italian culture and heritage through educational, cultural and social offerings for everyone: those of Italian descent, Italian expatriates living in Houston and Italophiles, non-Italians who are interested in Italy and its culture. It is our vision to be recognized as the Houston destination for all things Italian. The Italian Cultural & Community Center of Houston is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.