UCLA Philharmonia

The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music’s Department of Music Performance, Education and
Composition presents:

 

UCLA Philharmonia
Khai-Nien Nguyen, clarinet
Neal Stulberg, conductor

 

8:00 PM Saturday, June 6, 2026
Schoenberg Hall, UCLA

Performers

Neal Stulberg

Conductor, Director

Heralded by the Los Angeles Times as “. . .a shining example of podium authority and musical enlightenment,” NEAL STULBERG has garnered consistent international acclaim for performances of clarity, insight and conviction. Since 2005, he has served as Director of Orchestral Studies at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. From 2014 to 2018, he served as chair of the UCLA Department of Music,  and currently serves as Distinguished Professor of Music Performance and Artistic Director of UCLA’s Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience.

In North America, Mr. Stulberg has led the Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Atlanta, Fort Worth, Houston, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Mexico City, National, New Jersey, New World, Oregon, Pacific, Phoenix, Saint Louis, San Antonio, San Francisco, Utah and Vancouver symphonies, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, and New York City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet. A former assistant conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Carlo Maria Giulini and music director of the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra, he is a recipient of the Seaver/National Endowment for the Arts Conductors Award.

Mr. Stulberg’s European appearances have included performances in Germany with the WDR Rundfunkorchester Köln and the orchestras of Augsburg, Bochum, Dortmund, Freiburg, Herford, Jena, Münster, Nürnberg, Oldenburg and Rostock. In Holland, he has conducted the Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestra at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw and led the Netherlands Ballet Orchestra, Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra, North Holland Philharmonic, Gelders Orchestra and Nieuw Sinfonietta Amsterdam. He has also appeared as guest conductor with the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra (Norway), Warsaw Chamber Orchestra, Klaipeda Chamber Orchestra (Lithuania), Athens State Orchestra, London Royal Ballet Sinfonia, Barcelona Liceu Orchestra and Norwegian National Opera Orchestra.

International engagements have also included the St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra, Moscow Chamber Orchestra, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Taipei Symphony Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic, Korea Philharmonic (KBS), Queensland, Adelaide and West Australian symphonies, Haifa Symphony Orchestra, Israel Sinfonietta and Ra’anana Symphonette.

An acclaimed pianist, Stulberg has appeared as recitalist, chamber musician and with major orchestras and at international festivals as pianist/conductor. His performances of Mozart concertos conducted from the keyboard are uniformly praised for their buoyant virtuosity and interpretive vigor. In 2011-12, he performed the complete Mozart sonatas for violin and piano with violinist Guillaume Sutre at UCLA’s Schoenberg Hall and at the Grandes Heures de Saint Emilion festival in France. In 2018, he performed throughout South Africa on a recital tour with saxophonist Douglas Masek and in 2022, appeared as solo pianist in the world premiere of Inclusion, a new work for pianist and chamber orchestra by Hugh Levick.

Mr. Stulberg has conducted premieres of works by Paul Chihara, Mohammed Fairouz, Jan Friedlin, William Kraft, Alexander Krein, Betty Olivero, Steve Reich, Peter Schat, Lalo Schifrin, Dmitri Smirnov, Earl Stewart, Morton Subotnick, Joan Tower and Peter van Onna, among others, and has also led works by UCLA composers Münir Beken, Bruce Broughton, Kenny Burrell, Mark Carlson, Richard Danielpour, Ian Krouse, David Lefkowitz and James Newton. He conducted the period-instrument orchestra Philharmonia Baroque in a festival of Mozart orchestral and operatic works, and has brought to life several silent movies from the early 1900s, including the Russian classic New Babylon, Shostakovich’s first film score. In August 2022, he conducted the North American premiere of Bas-Sheve, a recently rediscovered and orchestrated 1924 Yiddish-language opera by composer Henekh Kon and librettist Moishe Broderzon, at the Ashkenaz Festival in Toronto. In 2023, Stulberg led acclaimed performances of Dave Brubeck’s cantata, The Gates of Justice (1969) and the West Coast premiere of Lera Auerbach’s Symphony No. 6 (Vessels of Light) (2022) as part of the School of Music’s Music and Justice series, presented in collaboration with the Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience.  And in May 2025, he conducted West Coast premiere performances of Tod Machover’s 2018 opera, Schoenberg in Hollywood, as part of the celebration of Arnold Schoenberg’ sesquicentennial.

Collaborators have included John Adams; Leonard Bernstein; Chris, Dan and Darius Brubeck; Dee Dee Bridgewater; John Clayton; Omar Ebrahim; Mercer Ellington; Michael Feinstein; Philip Glass; Morton Gould; David Krakauer; Lar Lubovitch; Tod Machover; Peter Martins; Mark Morris; Angel Romero; Cornel West; and Christopher Wheeldon. He has conducted Philip Glass’ opera Akhnaten at the Rotterdam Festival and Thomas Adès’ Powder Her Face with Long Beach Opera in Los Angeles, and has recorded for Naxos, West German Radio, Donemus, Yarlung Records, Sono Luminus and the Composers Voice label.

Mr. Stulberg has maintained a career-long passion for the training of young musicians. He has conducted and taught at the New World Symphony, Indiana University Summer Institute, Juilliard School, New England Conservatory, New Zealand School of Music, Henry Mancini Institute, Los Angeles Philharmonic Summer Institute, National Repertory Orchestra, Interlochen Arts Academy, American-Russian Youth Orchestra, Turkish Music State Conservatory (Istanbul), National Conservatory of Belarus (Minsk), Central Conservatory of Music (Beijing), Capitol Normal University (Beijing), Shanghai Conservatory of Music and National Taiwan Normal University.  In December 2019, he taught and lectured in Israel at the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music, Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance and Haifa University and returned to conduct its symphony orchestra in June 2024.  In March 2026, he conducts the Carlos Chávez Youth Orchestra in Mexico City.

A native of Detroit, Mr. Stulberg is a graduate of Harvard College, the University of Michigan and the Juilliard School. He studied conducting with Franco Ferrara at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome, piano with Leonard Shure, Theodore Lettvin, William Masselos and Mischa Kottler, and viola with Ara Zerounian.

Khai-Nien Nguyen

Clarinet
Performer

Khai-Nien Nguyen is a clarinetist and educator from Southern California currently pursuing a Master of Music in Clarinet Performance at UCLA. He recently completed a Bachelor of Music in Clarinet Performance with a minor in Music Theory at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music.

As a performer, Khai-Nien has appeared with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Akron Symphony Orchestra. He is the winner of UCLA’s 2026 Atwater Kent Concerto Competition, performing Copland’s Clarinet Concerto, and has also performed Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto with the Vietnamese American Philharmonic. Beyond the Western art music tradition, he remains deeply connected to his Vietnamese heritage through performing folk music and community-centered music making.

An active educator, Khai-Nien has served as guest faculty at the Qingdao International Clarinet Seminar and the Tianjin Orchestral Art Music Festival. His principal teachers include Boris Allakhverdyan, Richard Hawkins, Jan Miyake, and Mathieu Girardet, whose mentorship has profoundly shaped his artistic and pedagogical voice. Through performance and teaching, Khai Nien seeks to cultivate compassion and connection within the communities he serves.

UCLA Philharmonia

UCLA PHILHARMONIA
Neal Stulberg, conductor
Gan Xiong and Oliver Chan, assistant conductors
Aria McCauley, manager
Luca Lesko, librarian

 

VIOLIN I
Adam Millstein, concertmaster
Jason Chen
Jonathan Han
Sina Kalkan
Joseph Kim
Makiba Kurita
Jamily Lee
Candice Lee
JJ Liao
Ellie Loya
Lucas Nguyen
Eliana Tang
Erin Tsui

 

VIOLIN II
Kayla Lee, principal
Andrew Dela Pena
Alisa Gukasian
Charlie Hong
Nina Huang
Joshua Kim
Jimin Koo
Aerin Lee
Lyndsey Lipscomb
Lucas Liu
Mana Tatsuki
Helen Wang
Anthony Wang

 

VIOLA
Stefan Kosmala-Dahlbeck, principal
Zara Amendt
Isaac Chan
Johannes Eberhart
James Renk
Jerry Wang

 

CELLO
Sarah Clark, principal
Kayson Chen
Leon Cho
Isaac Fromme
Annabelle Lo
Nao Nadahara
Candice Oh
Dylan Renk
Aiden Woodruff

 

DOUBLE BASS
Brian Slack, principal
Luca Lesko
Terence Molloy
Aidan Neuman
James Shogren
Leon Simmans

 

FLUTE
Amanda Lee*
Ksenia Mezhenny
Aaron Ng
Sohee Park
* = Piccolo

 

OBOE
Rishi Iyengar
Adelle Rodkey*
Amelie Yap*
* = English Horn

 

CLARINET
Daniel Hernandez
Esther Kim
Aria McCauley
Alec Rodriguez*
* = Bass clarinet

 

BASSOON
Aaron Colon
Adam Gilberti*
Matthew Rasmussen
*= Contrabassoon

 

ALTO SAXOPHONE
Austin Hailey

 

HORN
Bryan Chiu
Em Ellis
Nathan Jones
Kazuki Limura
Cameron Rhees

 

TRUMPET
Macrae Eckelberry
Caroline Volmer
Sean Zender

 

TROMBONE
Madison Berchtold
Kenny Tran
Raphael Yap

 

BASS TROMBONE
Sebastian Martinez

 

TUBA
Bradley Stires

 

PERCUSSION
Demitrius Alleyne
Justin Barker
Madison Bottenberg
Alexa Clawson
Trey Tappan

 

HARP
Brian Molina
Jillian Risigari-Lopez

 

PIANO./CELESTA
Isabelle Ragsac

Repertoire

Valses nobles et sentimentales (1911–12)

Maurice Ravel (1875–1937)

I. Modéré
II. Assez lent, avec une expression intense
III. Modéré
IV. Assez animé
V. Presque lent, dans un sentiment intime
VI. Vif
VII. Moins vif
VIII. Épilogue. Lent

 

Clarinet Concerto (1947–49)

Aaron Copland (1900–1990)

I. Slowly and Expressively
II. Cadenza
III. Rather Fast

Khai-Nien Nguyen, clarinet
(Co-Winner, UCLA Atwater Kent Concerto Competition)

 

INTERMISSION

 

Symphonic Dances, Op. 45 (1940)

Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943)

I. Non allegro
II. Andante con moto (Tempo di valse)
III. Lento assai – Allegro vivace

This event is made possible by the David and Irmgard Dobrow Fund. Classical music was a passion of the Dobrows, who established a generous endowment at The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music to make programs like this possible. We are proud to celebrate this program as part of the 2025-26 Dobrow Series.

Program Notes

UCLA PHILHARMONIA is the flagship orchestra of the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, and one of Southern California’s premiere training orchestras. Focusing on both the core symphonic and operatic repertoire, and the best in contemporary and rarely-performed works, Professor Neal Stulberg has led the group since 2005.

 

2025-2026 highlights include the North American premiere of “Borealis” (2020) by Tomàs Peire Serrate (UCLA Ph.D.; 2019), Mozart’s Symphony No. 38 (“Prague”), and Prokofiev’s Symphony No. 5. Winter and Spring 2026 highlights include the 20th annual All-Star Concert in January, a March 7 all-Mozart chamber orchestra program with Opera UCLA in March, a March 15 Royce Hall performance of Handel’s “Israel in Egypt,” with UCLA Chorale and Chamber Singers, and Philharmonia’s fifth biennial appearance as the featured orchestra at the April 2026 “Hear Now Music Festival.”

 

UCLA Philharmonia’s CDs are available on iTunes, amazon.com, Naxos Music Library and other retail outlets. If you wish to receive information about Philharmonia’s activities, please contact us by email at uclaorch@gmail.com, or visit us at www.uclaorchestras.com.