photo: Dianne Bond

Adrienne Park has extensive experience as a collaborative pianist in chamber, symphonic, and contemporary music settings. She has performed in recital with violinist Joshua Bell, cellists Shauna Rolston and Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, bassist Edgar Meyer, flutists Paul Edmond Davies, Timothy Hutchins, and Tara Helen O’Connor, bassoonist Frank Morelli, saxophonist Nikita Zimin, horn artist Frøydis Ree Wekre, percussion group NEXUS, soprano Mary Wilson, and tenor Telly Leung. 

Park is Assistant Professor of Collaborative Piano at the University of Mississippi. She mentors graduate collaborative pianists, coaches chamber ensembles, and has collaborated with UM students and faculty since 2001. She is the Artistic Director of the UM Music concert series Sonic Explorations which features multimedia performances with music faculty and professional musicians in the region. Themed concerts focus on a genre, region, or set of composers, exploring the sound world of that theme. Central to concert events is the use of multimedia – projected film, art, and poetry — with unique lighting designs and innovative stage positioning. 

Park is also Principal Piano with Memphis Symphony Orchestra, and she performs regularly with Iris Orchestra and Memphis Chamber Music Society. At Crosstown Arts in Memphis, she performs with Blueshift Ensemble, a contemporary chamber music ensemble. She was the Banff Centre’s faculty collaborative pianist for six years, working closely with Isobel and Tom Rolston in the Music and Sound program. She studied with Abbey Simon and Ruth Tomfohrde at the University of Houston and Robert Silverman at the University of British Columbia.

Albums

Lyrical Baritone Album Cover

Lyrical Baritone Vol. 1

Release Date: January 24, 2025
Catalog Number: NV6705
21st Century
Classical
Romantic
Chamber
Piano
Saxophone
Saxophonist Adam Estes and pianist Adrienne Park share transcriptions of master works by Beethoven, Chaminade, Burhans, and Saint-Saëns on their LYRICAL BARITONE, VOL. 1. Borrowed from the flute, bassoon, and cello repertoires, this album celebrates this captivating music reimagined for baritone saxophone and piano duo. While the lowest note of the cello and the baritone saxophone is the same, the common playing range isn’t: the cello’s stretches an entire octave further, rendering literal transcriptions fiendishly difficult to play. This considerable challenge seems to pose no difficulty to Estes and Park at all: with great lightness and delicacy, they navigate calmly and confidently through even the most treacherous musical waters. A virtuosic feat and feast.