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Peter Chatterjee in Conversation with Christian Baldini

This season, the UC Davis Symphony Orchestra presents the world premiere of When the Alarm(s) Stopped by composer and conductor Peter Chatterjee, a graduate student in conducting at UC Davis. Peter’s work, written for the Taproot New Music Festival, reflects both his intellectual curiosity and emotional insight—qualities that also define his approach to conducting. This will be premiered on Saturday, October 25, 2025 at the Mondavi Center in Davis, in a program that also includes Barber’s Adagio for Strings, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5. We spoke about his creative process, the balance between composition and conducting, and his evolving artistic vision. Here is also a comment from my esteemed colleague, Professor Nicolás Dosman: “Peter, a gifted composer, began the master’s program in conducting two years ago. His experience was limited to instrumental works as a composer and conductor. Throughout his studies Peter has not only composed beautiful choral music but has grown into a conductor that can communicate effectively with choirs and orchestras with a composer’s insight.”

Christian Baldini: Peter, you wear two hats: composer and conductor. How do these two disciplines feed each other, and how do you balance them in your daily life?

Peter Chatterjee: I find that the two build on and inform one another quite well. As a composer, I find that having a background in communicating with ensembles, both in the written score and in person, has been extremely helpful. On the conducting side, knowing the types of behind-the-scenes work that composers put into their pieces helps me bring a unique perspective to the music that I wouldn’t have without that other side.


CB: Let’s talk about When the Alarm(s) Stopped. What inspired this piece, and how did your vision for it evolve during the writing process? In your program notes you indicate that “Throughout all of the circumstances of the piece — the building climactic points, uncanny recurring moments, and shifting, melting — the strings function as a sort of plane from which winds and brass emerge and come into conflict.” – How would you expand on the emotional, aesthetic and philosophical dimension of this work?

PC: I had originally started with this concept around the doomsday clock and how we have been nearing closer and closer to the midnight point, the point at which humans have induced an irreparable global catastrophe. Over the time I was working on the piece, my focus shifted a bit to the way in which certain warning systems for social and natural disasters have been eroded in recent decades.


CB: You conduct both orchestras and choirs at UC Davis. How would you describe the main differences between these two worlds? What do you find most rewarding—and most challenging—about working with these different ensembles?

PC: The two worlds are so different but equally rewarding. Overall, the similarities are the most important for me, developing community through music, experiencing what it’s like to learn and perform the standard repertoire, and exploring music of our own time. Most of what I have conducted with the UC Davis ensembles has been music by living composers, so bringing my own compositional perspective has been helpful at times, especially when working with composers in real time. This has been especially with the sinfonietta, premiering new works that don’t have recordings yet, and translating between a live composer and the ensemble.


CB: In your conducting studies, what have been some of the most transformative lessons or experiences?

PC: The idea of knowing a score down to the smallest detail and still being able to have an open mind to what an interpretation by another musician can bring. So much of large ensemble is finding this balance point between what you imagine while studying a score and what the musicians bring with them to the music in experience, personal sounds, etc.


CB: Who are some of the conductors you most admire, and what qualities in their leadership or musicianship resonate with you?

PC: There are so many that I admire, but most recently I’ve been finding most resonance with the work of Marin Alsop. Not only is she a fantastic and groundbreaking conductor, but one whose career has embraced the rich traditions of orchestral music alongside work raising the profiles of so many contemporary composers and young conductors. Salonen and Dudamel are also constant inspirations, especially with the degree to which they brought new music to Los Angeles and San Francisco during their tenures there.


CB: And on the composition side—who are your greatest musical influences, past or present? What draws you to their work?

PC: Color, both instrumental and vocal, is one of my biggest draws to composers like Messiaen and Ellington. The full list would take up way too much time, but when a composer can capture a certain space or color in a visceral way, I’m hooked.


CB: When you compose, what are you seeking to achieve? Is there a particular atmosphere, narrative, or emotional truth that you want your music to evoke?

PC: It very much depends on the piece. For a while I was relating most of my music to nature and the shifts between seasons or atmospheric phenomena. Lately I have been writing music that attempts to explore sonic spaces that relate to unsettled feelings and embracing the lack of clarity that manifests in such situations. I am actually working to push this as far as I can in a chamber opera I’m working on for my dissertation.


CB: Many young musicians today blur the lines between genres and disciplines. How do you see yourself within that landscape? Do you identify with any particular aesthetic, school, or movement?

PC: I’ve found myself traveling in and in between so many different types of musical practice, starting with jazz, then new music, now adding conducting formally into the mix. I think that the blending that’s happening can lead to many exciting places that we didn’t think were possible, and the encouragement that exists for the work right now is incredible.


CB: How has your time at UC Davis so far shaped you as an artist? Are there mentors, courses, or experiences that have been especially pivotal?

PC: On the compositional side, I could not have done as much as I have without the support and advice of the wonderful faculty here. They have all helped so much, but I would especially like to mention Kurt Rohde and Laurie San Martin for their support. On the conducting side, both you and Professor Dosman have been wonderful, as have the members of the choirs and orchestra. Additionally, the UCD choirs’ tour of Vienna and Salzburg in the summer of 2024 was a turning point for me, introducing a side of opera and of musical community that I had not experienced in that way before.


CB: What are your next steps after graduation? (NB: in addition to completing a Master’s in Conducting, Peter is also completing a Ph.D. in Composition) Are there particular projects, collaborations, or long-term goals you’re excited to pursue?

PC: Well, I still have almost two years left, so many paths may still show themselves that I haven’t yet come across, but my goal would be to continue working with ensembles as composer, conductor, or both, and continuing to teach music.


CB: What advice would you give to younger musicians, conductors or composers who are just starting to find their voice?

PC: I would encourage them to embrace their own curiosity and to follow where it leads. There are so many paths to building a life with music that finding a way to keep your own creativity and motivation will help lead to a successful path.


CB: Finally, how do you hope audiences will feel when they hear When the Alarms Stopped for the first time?

PC: There are certain moments of tension, others of release, but rarely if ever relaxation. I hope this comes through.

Peter Chatterjee is a Bay Area-based composer, arranger, and conductor.  He holds degrees from Berklee College of Music and California State University, Northridge. His primary composition mentors were Marti Epstein, Bob Pilkington, Ayn Inserto, Liviu Marinescu, and A.J. McCaffrey.

Peter’s recent compositions have included several works for orchestra, large jazz ensemble, and chamber ensembles centered around the ways that experience and memory and time are altered by heightened emotional contexts. His music has been performed by the Mojave Trio, Emily Thorner, Hrabba Atladottir, UC Davis Sinfonietta, UC Davis Chamber Singers, and the Esterhazy Quartet. His work has also been read and recorded by the Pacific Chamber Orchestra and by the SF Contemporary Music Players. Peter is currently a PhD candidate at UC Davis, studying composition with Mika Pelo and Kurt Rohde, orchestral conducting with Christian Baldini, and choral conducting with Nicolás Dosman.

Anibal Troilo, Tango

Diego Schissi en Diálogo con Christian Baldini

El próximo 5 de Agosto (de 2022) tendré el placer de dirigir la Orquesta Nacional de Música Argentina “Juan de Dios Filiberto”, en un programa que presenta obras de Victor Lavallén y de María Laura Antonelli. “Lavallén Sinfónico” es una especie de Suite con 11 tangos de este gran músico que ha tocado con todos los grandes, incluído Osvaldo Pugliese, con quien Lavallén tocó el bandoneón y realizó arreglos para su orquesta por más de 10 años. El encargado de realizar estos arreglos sinfónicos para la ONMA es nada más y nada menos que Diego Schissi, pianista, compositor y arreglador, quien además estará tocando dentro del Quinteto Lavallén como solista al frente a la orquesta. Nos hemos sentado a conversar con Diego para charlar sobre este interesantísimo proyecto y música en general. Debajo están las respuestas.

Christian Baldini: Querido Diego, has tenido en tus manos un proyecto enorme, y lo has realizado con grandísima calidad. Contame, cómo comenzó tu relación con el Maestro Victor Lavallén? Y como fue el proceso de arreglar estos 11 temas suyos para el quinteto solista y la orquesta? Hubo algunos desafíos? Algunas sorpresas?

Diego Schissi: A Víctor lo conozco desde hace tiempo, pero nos acercamos mucho en los últimos años. Tuve el enorme privilegio de que me invitara a acompañarlo en este proyecto de llevar su música al lenguaje sinfónico. Los desafíos eran muchos porque era importante conservar el lenguaje de Víctor y a la vez hacer algo idiomático para la orquesta y que funcionara con su música. Esperamos haberlo logrado. Por otro lado, la idea de hacer una suite de 11 de sus tangos también generó un montón de preguntas acerca de cómo ordenar el material para darle un sentido integral a la obra. A tal fin, “Lavallén sinfónico” está organizado en tres movimientos, el primero y el último con tangos más energéticos y el movimiento central con obras más lentas, replicando el modelo rápido/lento/rápido de tantas obras sinfónicas. 

CB: Cómo es tu relación con el tango? Además de ser compositor y pianista, también sos arreglador y a su vez muy respetado en el ambiente del jazz. Cómo coexisten en vos todas estas diferentes disciplinas? 

DS: Mi relación con el tango es de continuo asombro, nunca dejo de aprender. Esta experiencia con Víctor ha sido un regalo hermoso que me dio la vida, de estar cerca y conocer de primera mano cómo piensa la música un hombre de tango, una leyenda viva. Escribir música y hacer arreglos forman parte de lo que más disfruto hacer y tocar el piano es más bien una obligación de la que no consigo librarme ya que va asociada a las actividades de escritura y no consigo quien toque lo que escribo en mi lugar. El jazz, por otra parte, quedó un poco en el camino para mí, aunque siempre se disfruta y aparece de una forma o de otra, porque es una música maravillosa.

CB: Contanos acerca de la fundación y el desarrollo del Diego Schissi Quinteto. ¿Cómo se fueron dando las cosas?

DS: El quinteto se formó en 2009. Trece años después, todavía estamos los miembros originales: Guillermo Rubino, Juan Pablo Navarro (ambos solistas en este concierto), Ismael Grossman y Santiago Segret. Nos mantenemos siempre con la intención de hacer nuestra música, intentando tomar la fuerza de la tradición, la herencia simbólica de nuestros mayores. Nuestro mayor deseo es hacer una música sincera, que cuente nuestro mundo musical, que es el tango y sus alrededores, que son muchos.

CB: Qué le dirías el público acerca del proyecto “Lavallén Sinfónico”, que van a escuchar este viernes en el Auditorio Nacional del CCK con el Quinteto Lavallén y la ONMA? Qué les dirías que se van a llevar a su casa?

DS: Se van a llevar en el alma y en los oídos parte del legado de un gran maestro, como lo es Víctor Lavallén que nos regala, no sólo su talento, sino también su fuerza, sus inagotables ganas de hacer música y su enseñanza de que el tango es un tesoro que se comparte.


CB: Muchas gracias Diego, va a ser muy especial realizar este concierto juntos!

DS: Gracias a vos y también a los solistas y a la orquesta por la entrega y el entusiasmo para darle vida a este repertorio.

Diego Schissi al piano

Ver también:

Diego Schissi: “Spinetta es la primera imagen que tengo de músico admirable”