Cellist Hannah Collins is a dynamic performer who uses diverse forms of musical expression and artistic collaboration to build community. Winner of the Presser Music Award and De Linkprijs for contemporary interpretation, she takes an active role in expanding the repertoire for the cello by commissioning new works and co-creating interdisciplinary projects. Resonance Lines, her solo debut album on the Sono Luminus label, is an “adventurous, impressive collection of contemporary solo cello music,” negotiated “with panache” (The Strad), pairing music by Benjamin Britten and Kaija Saariaho with commissioned works by Caroline Shaw and Thomas Kotcheff.
Over the past decade, New Morse Code, her “remarkably inventive and resourceful duo” (Gramophone) with percussionist Michael Compitello, has developed projects responding to our society’s most pressing issues, including The Emigrants, a documentary chamber work by George Lam, and dwb (driving while black), a chamber opera by Roberta Gumbel and Susan Kander, and The Language of Landscapes, a multimedia work by Christopher Stark addressing the urgency of the climate crisis. They were named the winners of the 2020 Ariel Avant Impact Performance Prize.
Solo and chamber music performances have taken Hannah to festivals such as Orford Centre d'arts, Kneisel Hall, Aldeburgh Festival, and Musique de Chambre à Giverny. She performs frequently with A Far Cry, Bach Aria Soloists, Grossman Ensemble, and The Knights. Praised for her “incisive, vibrant continuo” playing (S. Florida Classical Review), Hannah also appears regularly as a Baroque cellist with the Sebastians, Quodlibet Ensemble, and Trinity Baroque Orchestra.
Hannah earned a B.S. in biomedical engineering from Yale and holds degrees in music from the Yale School of Music, the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, and City University of New York. She is also an alumna of Ensemble Connect, a program of Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and Weill Music Institute. She is on the faculty of Greenwood Music Camp and is Associate Professor of Cello at the University of Kansas School of Music. www.hannahcollinscello.com
PC: John Paul Henry