A pianist inside one of the Music Huts at Banff Centre. Photo Credit: Rita Taylor.
Join us for a Banff Musicians in Residence Open Studios, where music comes alive in personal and intimate settings. Each 15-minute mini-concert takes place in a musician’s studio or hut, transformed into a welcoming space that feels like a “tiny desk concert.” Move from studio to studio, experiencing a variety of unique performances decided the very morning of the event.
Opens Studios Program
Andrew Li & Lifia Teguh
Elise Boeur & Isa Holmgren
Project 23.6°N
KaiChen Cheng, flute
Pin-hui Tsai, cello
Calvin Hu, piano
Pandan Quartet
Sébastien Tsai, Eleanor O’Brien, violin
Holly Bogle, viola
Madeleine Hearn, cello
Miranda Currie
Hiroki Tanaka
Hannah Epperson
Andrew Li is an emerging multimedia artist, composer, musician, and developer whose work seamlessly bridges the worlds of music, technology, and visual storytelling. Originally from Hong Kong and now based in Toronto, Andrew has built a reputation for his innovative approach to creative media.
As the composer, sound designer, and co-developer for the game ‘Meow Tunes’, Andrew played a pivotal role in its Honourable Mention for Technical Innovation at the Toronto Level Up Showcase 2023. His sound design and compositions for animations include award-winning projects such ‘Red’, which won the Digital Creativity award for the 22nd DigiCon6 Asia Animation Competition, and ‘Exit’, which earned an Honourable Mention at the Taiwan International Student Design Competition and the film has amassed over 80,000 views on YouTube.
Beyond his accolades, Andrew’s versatility shines in his live performances, videography, and development. From performing for Thursday @ Three on All Classical Portland Radio to developing music educational platforms like ‘No Need to Vanish’, funded by Canada Council for the Arts, his expertise leaves an indelible mark on every project.
Graduated with a Master in Music Technology and Digital Media from the University of Toronto, Andrew is working on his second album that combines visual media and music.
Andrew Li is generously supported by the Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
Indonesian-born pianist, composer, and producer Lifia Teguh captivates audiences with her inventive fusion of genres, intertwining traditional Indonesian sounds with blues, classical, and pop music. Known for her originality, Lifia’s work has garnered international attention. Her piano quartet, Liber Dangdut, was featured at the College Music Society's National Conference in New York, celebrating her artistry on an international platform.
Lifia’s talent earned her first place in the PSU Concerto Competition, which led to her debut with the Corvallis-OSU Symphony Orchestra in the U.S playing Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G Major. She has also performed live frequently for Thursdays @ Three on All Classical Portland Radio, where her vibrant personality and musicality shine. As a featured composer in Fear No Music’s Locally Sourced Sounds VII, she captivated audiences with Imagine Indonesia, a piece that reimagines piano sounds to mimic traditional Indonesian instruments like the gamelan and rindik as well as capturing the traditional kecak dance of Bali.
Having recently graduated in Music Technology and Digital Media from the University of Toronto, Lifia also holds Master’s degrees in Piano Performance & Collaborative Piano. Lifia is currently working on her second album, a genre-bending fusion of diverse musical styles.
Lifia Teguh is generously supported by the Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
JUNO nominated, Canadian Folk Music Award winning fiddler and violinist Elise Boeur explores the outfields of contemporary folk music with a deceptively light touch. Her music is grounded in aural folk traditions, with a particular interest in the expansive forms and elasticity of time in Norwegian hardingfele music.
As a bandleader, she currently concentrates on her prog-trad quintet Aerialists, using the group as a playground to explore permutations of minimalist, pop, jazz, and post-rock sounds and structures reflected onto traditional celtic and nordic fiddle music. Another current focus is playing for community folk dances in several genres, as a more direct communication of fiddle traditions born out of decades of social music making.
Elise also works as a chameleonic collaborator on stage and in the studio, where her work as a side-person with songwriters and poets has shaped a sonic sensitivity and impressionistic approach to string playing.
Elise Boeur is generously supported by the N. Murray Edwards Family Fund.
Isa Holmgren is a vocalist and dancer working in the field of traditional Swedish and Norwegian folk music and improvised music. With a background in the traditional dance scene, her solo performances revolve around the asymmetrical rhythms and melodies of the fiddle music from the border regions between Sweden and Norway. Her music centres the voice, and rests on astonishingly accurate transcriptions of the sound and characteristics of the fiddle as well as on thorough research of vocal traditions. Her first solo record, the EP Efter Eda , was released in 2019 at Ransäterstämman Festival (SE) and was well received. She also works and collaborates with groups such as Staerna (SE/NO/FI) and Aerialists (CA).
She has a Bachelors degree from the Academy of Music and Drama in Gothenburg (SE) and a Masters degree in Traditional Nordic Folk Music from the Academy of Music in Oslo (NO), where she is regular guest teacher in traditional music and dance. Isa also works with choirs and ensembles focusing on traditional music, both as a conductor and composer.
Her latest album Dans med meg, released in 2024 on the label Melovitten (NO), features dancers and explores the musical and audible connection between the movements and sounds of the voice and the dancers.
Isa Holmgren is generously supported by the Isobel and Tom Rolston Fellowships in Music Endowment, and the Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
The Pandan Quartet is a dynamic young string quartet based in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music since 2023. They have been the recipients of Flint Initiative, Shansi, and Oberlin Winter Term Grants. The Pandan Quartet was invited to participate in the 2024 Singapore Chamber Music Festival, where they performed to critical acclaim for local audiences, renowned artists, and various international embassies. They are honored to have had the opportunity to pave the way for more academic, musical, and cultural exchanges between East Asia and Oberlin College. Later in 2024, the Pandan Quartet was invited to be the Artists in Residence for the Off The Hook Arts: Music Spoke Concert Series, located in Ft. Collins, Colorado. Working alongside the Dalí Quartet, the Pandan Quartet performed a range of different concerts, including multiple educational and outreach performances for families and children, various donor events to help support the festival, and more formal concerts. The Pandan Quartet was invited to Banff Center for the Winter 2025 Musicians in Residence where they will work with the Kronos Quartet among other renowned artists. Other quartet projects include learning two of the Kronos Quartet’s “50 for the future” pieces and performing in senior care facilities.
The Pandan Quartet has worked with a host of incredible artists, including Tabbea Zimmerman, the Takacs Quartet, the Dalí Quartet, the AOI trio, the Verona Quartet, Sunny Yang (Kronos Quartet), Kirsten Doctor (Cavani Quartet), Sibbi Bernhardsson (Pacifica Quartet), Bill van der Sloot (Villa Marteau Quintet), Peter Slowik, and Leslie Tan.
The Pandan Quartet is generously supported by the Cyril and Elizabeth Challice Fund for Musicians, and the Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
Miranda Currie is a captivating northern Indigenous singer-songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, living and working among the Dene people in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. She walks in two worlds, with one foot in her Swampy Cree heritage and the other foot in her Euro-Canadian ancestry.
In 2022, she was awarded Indigenous Artist of Excellence by Music NWT. Her solo debut album Up in the Air was nominated for Aboriginal Songwriter of the year by the CFMA’s in 2015.
In 2025, Miranda will be Sub-Arctic Sing-A-Long! This, her third children’s album, introduces listeners to different genres of music, all from a northern indigenous lens. Songs like “My Ribbon Skirt” are up-beat and celebratory while “Do You Know Why?” speaks sensitive truths about why we wear our orange shirts on National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Miranda’s songs are interactive and include indigenous language and stories that will delight family audiences.
Miranda has graced stages of festivals, including Folk on the Rocks, Canmore Folk Festival, and Snowking's Winter Festival, and showcased her artistry at Breakout West. Her performances are infused with passion and authenticity, leaving audiences spellbound with her unapologetic vocals and storytelling prowess. Through her music, Miranda Currie attempts to change the Indigenous narrative in Canada in a positive way
Miranda Currie is generously supported by the Jenny Belzberg Endowment and Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
Hiroki Tanaka, is a Canadian singer, songwriter, and composer. Formerly lead guitarist of YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN, he has embarked on a solo career that infuses elements of his Japanese-Canadian heritage with lyrical, conceptual folk, and indie rock.
His debut solo album, Kaigo Kioku Kyoku, was built from Tanaka’s experience as a caregiver for his grandmother with Alzheimer’s, and uncle with terminal cancer. Kaigo Kioku Kyoku makes music out of meaningful objects, voice recordings of his relatives, and are structured off of hymns and Japanese folk songs.
During the pandemic, he collaborated with Prof. Megan Davies (York University) on Covid In The House of Old, a traveling exhibit meant to shed light on those “who either died or were severely impacted by COVID-19 while living in long-term care”.
His work with YT//ST was nominated for the 2018 Polaris prize, and toured extensively in Canada/US and Western Europe. He continues to write, record and perform his own music while based in Toronto.
Hiroki Tanaka is generously supported by the OK Gift Shop Endowment and Banff Centre Artists' Awards.
b. 1987, Utah
Crossing boundaries is a feature of Hannah Epperson's life and music—from residence in the US and Canada to nearly 400 live performances in North America, Europe and the Middle East. Singled out by Bandcamp as “one of the most stunningly unconventional artists making music today,” renowned musicologist/critic Ted Gioia chose her debut album Upsweep as one of the Top 3 recordings of 2016, calling it “unique, haunting, addictive.” Classically trained, her genre-bending violin looping and singing was enriched by apprenticeships with the fiddler of acclaimed Deseret String Band and studio work and performances with Fleet Foxes, Julianna Barwick and Ry X. A graduate in Human Geography, a member of Canada’s world champion Ultimate Frisbee Team, Hannah embodies music as a bridge, gathering soundscapes and people together in transfiguring moments of live and studio performances.
Hannah Epperson is generously supported by the N. Murray Edwards Family Fund.
Phone (Main Switchboard)
403.762.6100
Address
107 Tunnel Mountain Drive
PO Box 1020
Banff, Alberta
Canada
T1L 1H5
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We recognize, with deep respect and gratitude, our home on the side of Sacred Buffalo Guardian Mountain. In the spirit of respect and truth, we honour and acknowledge the Banff area, known as “Minihrpa” (translated in Stoney Nakoda as “the waterfalls”) and the Treaty 7 territory and oral practices of the Îyârhe Nakoda (Stoney Nakoda) – comprised of the Bearspaw, Chiniki, and Goodstoney Nations – as well as the Tsuut’ina First Nation and the Blackfoot Confederacy comprised of the Siksika, Piikani, and Kainai. We acknowledge that this territory is home to the Shuswap Nations, Ktunaxa Nations, and Metis Nation of Alberta, Rockyview District 4. We acknowledge all Nations who live, work, and play here, help us steward this land, and honour and celebrate this place.