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Grand Rapids Symphony – EarShot New Music Readings

Emmanuel Berrido, Tyler Eschendal, Jiyoung Ko, and Daniel Leo chosen for September 2018 Readings in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

September 28-29, 2018 (Grand Rapids, MI)

Concerts open to the public:
Friday, September 28, 2018 – 7:00pm, 8:00pm, and 9:00pm [more info]

Saturday, September 29, 2018 – 2:30pm, 3:30pm, 4:30pm, 7:00pm, 8:00pm, and 9:00pm [more info]

The Morton | 55 Ionia Ave NW | Grand Rapids, MI

Presented by EarShot (the National Orchestral Composition Discovery Network), ArtPrize, and the Grand Rapids Symphony

The New Music Readings are the culmination of a series of private readings, feedback sessions, and work with mentor composers Bright Sheng, David Biedenbender, and Margaret Brouwer. The selected composers, chosen from an international candidate pool of 159 applicants, are Emmanuel Berrido (Danza Ritual), Tyler Eschendal (Zarathustra Mixtape), Jiyoung Ko (Remembrances), and Daniel Leo (Blowing Mad Clouds).

 

SELECTED COMPOSERS

Emmanuel Berrido

Emmanuel Berrido (b. 1986) is a Dominican-American composer with a passion for telling stories through sound. His work has been performed by the Amernet String Quartet, cellists Jason Calloway, Megan Chartier, and Craig Mehler; violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved; and the FIU Wind Ensemble. Recent performances have been held at the Indiana State University Contemporary Music Festival, the New Music Miami Festival, the Ball State University Festival of New Music, the SCI Student National Conference, the Ann Arbor Society of Musical Arts, and the Kendal Sound Arts Series. In May 2017, he was awarded the Louis Smadbeck Composition Prize in Ithaca, NY, for Bend the Knee for brass quintet, and in February 2018 he was awarded the Ithaca College Orchestral Composition Prize for Danza Ritual.

Emmanuel’s Sound: Miserere (Peter Sheppard Skaerved, violin)

 

Emmanuel Berrido's Full Bio

Emmanuel has a degree in Music Business from Miami Dade College, and a B.M. in Music Composition from Florida International University where he studied with Orlando Jacinto García. In May of 2018, Berrido completed his M.M. degree under the mentorship of Evis Sammoutis and Jorge Villavicencio Grossmann at Ithaca College, in upstate New York. Other mentors include Bernard Rands, Augusta Read Thomas, and Chinary Ung; violinist Peter Sheppard Skaerved, and clarinetist Lori Freedman.

When he is not composing, performing, or practicing, Emmanuel Berrido creates websites for other musicians and small businesses, draws, and reads non-fiction books about any topic, from history, religion, and philosophy to communication and language. You can find him online at www.emmanuelberrido.com and @EmmanuelBerrido on Twitter.

Danza Ritual
Berrido first began Danza Ritual in 2015, under another name. Recently, Berrido notes, “I was given the opportunity to look back at this piece and re-connect with the impulse that prompted the creation of this work – a need to establish and continue to search for my expression as a Dominican-American composer, and the exploration of elements that make the musical culture of the Dominican Republic beautiful.

“Danza Ritual is inspired by the Afro-Caribbean religious dances that can be found in the “bateyes” (villages next to sugar cane fields) in the Dominican Republic. These musical manifestations feature a heavy use of drums and ostinati that, more than serving a musical function, have the ritualistic purpose of getting participants into a trance of sorts, allowing the participants of these manifestations to come together in praise and celebrate parties dedicated to the saints.”

Photo courtesy Emmanuel Berrido.

 

Tyler Eschendal

Tyler Eschendal (b.1993) is a composer and percussionist originally from the suburbs of Detroit and now resides in Los Angeles, CA. A love for rhythm, pulse, and layering heavily influences his music, as well as an interest in introducing sample-based procedures found in electronic music to acoustic and live instrumentations. Tyler’s music has been performed at institutions across the U.S. including Indiana University, George Mason University, Manhattan School of Music, Boston University, and internationally at Soochow University in China. His compositions have also been showcased at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention (PASIC), Giovani Vecchi Concert Series, New Music Gathering, Nief-Norf Summer Festival, and Sō Percussion Summer Institute (SoSI) at Princeton University.

Tyler’s Sound: Scraptangle (Norfolk New Music Ensemble, recorded by Sean Tanguay)

 

Tyler Eschendal's Full Bio

Tyler Has worked with such ensembles as the Los Angeles Percussion Quartet, yMusic, the Norfolk New Music Ensemble, and Sō Percussion. He holds a B.M. in music composition from the College-Conservatory of Music at the University of Cincinnati studying with Michael Fiday, and a M.M. in composition from the University of Southern California studying with Ted Hearne, Sean Friar and Don Crockett. Find him online at www.tyler-eschendal.com and on Twitter @T_Woo721.

Zarathustra Mixtape
Of his piece, Eschendal notes, “Zarathustra Mixtape is exactly how it sounds: taking fragments of Richard Strauss’s masterful tone poem Also Sprach Zarathustra from 1896 and splicing, stretching, shifting, layering, reorganizing, and most importantly, re-contextualizing the remains into a condensed form similar to that of a broken playlist. The intent was to rediscover a dirtied and scratched recording of an extremely influential piece—reminiscent of a now defunct disk that was spun too times as a teenager—and further alter the source by means of contemporary sampling techniques. The objective was to toy with memory and assemblance, paying homage to Strauss’s uniquely dense orchestration and form.”

Photo by Hannah Criswell.

 

Jiyoung Ko

Jiyoung Ko (b. 1982) is a Michigan-based composer of orchestral, chamber, and vocal music. One of her compositions was described as a “brilliant study in timbre, tone, and color… a haunting piece.” (AB Newswire). Her music has been performed in the United States, South Korea, Japan, and Germany by various ensembles, including Ensemble Dal Niente, Del Sol String Quartet, New York New Music Ensemble, NEC Honors Ensemble, and KNUA Chamber Ensemble. Ko was selected for the 2018 Civic Orchestra of Chicago New Music Workshop with coaching by the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE) at Chicago’s Symphony Center. In 2017, her orchestral work, Spring Overture, was mentioned as an alternate for the Minnesota Orchestra Composer Institute.

Jiyoung’s Sound: Wayfinding, 2nd Movement (New England Conservatory Piano Quartet)

 

Jiyoung Ko's Full Bio

Other recent honors include winning Honors Ensemble at The New England Conservatory and an award for a String Quartet competition featuring Del Sol String Quartet. Ko has been a fellow at the June In Buffalo Music Festival, Pacific Rim Music Festival, and NONG Music Festival, and participated in master classes with Unsuk Chin, John Harbison, Donald Crockett, Krzysztof Penderecki.

She received her Master’s degree from The New England Conservatory and her Bachelor’s degree from Korea National University of Arts where she studied with Michael Gandolfi, Kati Agocs, and Geonyoug Lee. Read more about her online at www.jiyoungkomusic.com.

Remembrances
“Sometimes my everyday life feels so unremarkable or routine that I may not remember what I did last week. However, in the midst of the ups and downs of life, there are notable moments. In this piece, I describe the emotions I feel when a new experience unexpectedly seizes me. I accomplish this by using two contrasting melodies that merge, yet maintain their individual identities. The second melody demonstrates my attempt to possess the experience as memory. As the piece progresses the memory ripens until it delightfully lingers. This memory is a treasured possession that will not be forgotten.”

Photo by Hyewon Park.

 

Daniel Leo

Daniel Leo (b. 1991), began playing the violin at 5 and composing at 12. His music has been performed at Weill Recital Hall, Carnegie Hall; Symphony Space, New York; Neidorff-Karpati Hall, Manhattan School of Music; and others. His works have been read by the JACK Quartet, the New York Youth Symphony, and the Mannes Orchestra with performances by the Manhattan School of Music Symphony, the Alaria ensemble, and the Las Vegas Academy Symphony and Philharmonic orchestras. Daniel is also an avid conductor of his works as well as the works of other composers and colleagues. He is a recipient of the Carl Kanter Prize in Orchestral Composition, Presser Foundation Scholarship, Jean Schneider Goberman award in composition, winner of the CIRCE competition, and finalist in the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer’s Award 2014-16.

Daniel’s Sound: Start Over (Lina Bahn, violin; Mak Grgic, guitar)

 

Daniel Leo's Full Bio

He has been an active member of the New York Youth Symphony composition program from 2012-2014. Daniel received his Master of Music degree from the Manhattan School of Music and his Bachelor of Music at Mannes College The New School for Music where his principal teachers were Richard Danielpour and David Tcimpidis, respectively. He has also studied with Derek Bermel, Lowell Liebermann, Martin Bresnick, George Lewis, David Ludwig, Robert Paterson, Ken Ueno, Joan Tower, George Tsontakis, and Steven Stucky. Daniel is currently pursuing his Doctorate of Musical Arts at the University of Southern California under the tutelage of Frank Ticheli.

Blowing Mad Clouds
Leo notes, “Blowing Mad Clouds was written in fulfillment of my master’s thesis at the Manhattan School of Music. My intent in writing the piece was to create a sound world that is both fantastical and bizarre – yet tangible and frighteningly real. This dichotomy resembles the internal struggle within us all. It can manifest itself in the form of desire versus indifference, the ideal versus flawed, or expectation versus reality. This piece ventures through both ends of the spectrum, sometimes unclear of itself, as musical material is developed, juxtaposed, and interrupted.”

Photo by Ron Cohen Mann.

Philadelphia Orchestra – Showcase for Works by Women Composers

Six composers’ works performed by The Philadelphia Orchestra in working session on September 6, 2018

September 6, 2018 (Philadelphia, PA)
Presented by Philadelphia Orchestra and American Composers Orchestra

As part of a collaborative working session, six women composers – all of whom have been commissioned previously through ACO’s programs – had their works read and recorded by The Philadelphia Orchestra in a rehearsal led by Assistant Conductor Kensho Watanabe at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. Composers engaged with the Orchestra’s leadership and Artistic Committee, and received feedback from co-facilitators, ACO Artistic Director Derek Bermel and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer and native Philadelphian Melinda Wagner.

The Philadelphia Orchestra commissioned all six composers for future seasons.

This partnership stems from ACO’s commitment to emerging composers through its EarShot and Underwood New Music Readings programs. In an effort to catalyze gender equity among composers in classical music, ACO serves as a curator for diverse voices in American music.

Press:

“For the time in recent memory, the Philadelphia Orchestra reads through new scores – this time by women” (The Philadelphia Inquirer) [read more]

“A Labor of Love” (The Philadelphia Orchestra Blog) [read more]

 

SELECTED COMPOSERS
Alumnae of ACO’s Underwood, EarShot, and Jazz Composer Orchestra Institute programs

MELODY EÖTVÖS

MELODY EÖTVÖS (2014 Underwood New Music Readings) is a Bloomington IN-based Australian composer whose work draws on both multi‐media and traditional instrumental contexts, as well as substantial extra‐musical references to a broad rand of philosophical topics and late 19th Century literature. Melody has been the recipient of various awards including an APRA PDA (Australia 2009), the Soundstream National Composer Award (2012), and a Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commission administered by the League of American Orchestras, the EarShot Foundation (world premiere: Carnegie Hall October 23rd 2015). Current commissions include an orchestral work for the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra (Australia), Synergy Percussion + Vox (Sydney), the Chou’s composition award commission (China), and a piano and clarinet work for Guy Yehuda (USA). Melody holds a Doctor of Music (2014) from Indiana University Jacobs School of Music USA, and a Master of Music (2008) from the Royal Academy of Music, London UK.

 

HILARY PURRINGTON

HILARY PURRINGTON (2017 Underwood New Music Readings) is a New York City-based composer of chamber, choral, and orchestral music. Her work has been recognized by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP), and the National Federation of Music Clubs (NFMC), among others. In the summer of 2012, she received funding through a Wagoner Foreign Study Grant to study Music Composition and German Language at the Freie Universität Berlin, and in the summer of 2013, she participated as a Fellow at the Yale School of Music Norfolk Chamber Music Festival. Her music was performed at the 2016 NY PHIL BIENNIAL, and has been performed by many distinguished ensembles including the Peabody Modern Orchestra, Yale Philharmonia, American Modern Ensemble, and the ChoralArt Camerata. Recent commissions include new works for the Chicago Harp Quartet, the Musical Chairs Chamber Ensemble, and the Melodia Women’s Choir of NYC. Upcoming projects include commissions from Washington Square Winds, inFLUX, and the New York Youth Symphony. Purrington holds degrees from the Yale School of Music, The Juilliard School, and the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.

 

CHEN-HUI JEN

CHEN-HUI JEN  (2012 EarShot Readings San Diego Symphony) is a composer whose music presents an imaginative, spiritual, and poetic space with subtlety and sophistication. Jen writes music for music for orchestra, chamber, and solo, for both Western and Chinese instruments, also vocal and choral works, as well as works with computer and electronics. Since 2010, Dr. Jen has performed piano in a duo with her husband, composer/computer musician Jacob David Sudol. She earned a Ph.D. degree in Composition at the University of California, San Diego, where her mentor was Chinary Ung. Born in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Chen-Hui Jen received her M.F.A. in composition at the Graduate School of Music at the Taipei National University of the Arts and B.F.A. in composition at the Music Department of the National Sun Yet-San University, under the instruction of Prof. Hwang-Long Pan and Dr. Tzyy-Sheng Lee.

 

ROBIN HOLCOMB

ROBIN HOLCOMB (2016 Jazz Composers Orchestra Institute Readings, Naples Philharmonic) has performed internationally as a solo artist and the leader of various ensembles. Following Sundanese gamelan performance studies at UC Santa Cruz and several years spent sharecropping tobacco in North Carolina, Holcomb was active in New York for many years as a composer and performer with deep roots in the downtown avant-garde as one of the original Studio Henry mavericks. She has recorded her music for Nonesuch, Tzadik, Songlines, and the New World labels. Holcomb is a founder and codirector of The New York Composers Orchestra and WACO (The Washington Composers Orchestra), ensembles for which she is also conductor, pianist and a principal composer. Other current performing ensembles include a longstanding duo project with cellist Peggy Lee and The Robin Holcomb Ensemble. Composing instrumental and vocal music for a wide variety of chamber ensembles and soloists, she has been commissioned to create scores for dance, film and theatre.

 

XI WANG

XI WANG (2010 Underwood New Music Readings) has written original concert music, performed worldwide by notable orchestras and ensembles such as the Minnesota Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, American Composers Orchestra, Shanghai Philharmonic, Spokane Symphony, among others. Xi Wang is the recipient of the Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the National Endowment for the Arts award, Meet the Composer, New Music USA, American Music Center, MacDowell Colony residency, as well as seven prizes from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). Xi Wang has received commissions from the League of American Orchestras, World Association for Symphonic Bands and Ensembles, Pi Kappa Lambda National Music Honor Society, Albany Symphony, Shanghai Philharmonic, Voices of Change, Great Dallas Youth Orchestra, Soli Chamber Ensemble, among others. Xi Wang’ received her B.M. from the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, M.M. from the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and D.M.A. from Cornell University. Currently, she is an Associate Professor at the Meadow School of Arts of Southern Methodist University.

 

NINA C. YOUNG

NINA C. YOUNG (2013 Underwood New Music Readings) writes music characterized by an acute sensitivity to tone color, manifested in aural images of vibrant, arresting immediacy. Her projects strive to create unique sonic environments that can be appreciated by a wide variety of audiences while challenging stylistic boundaries, auditory perception, and notions of temporality. Young’s works have been presented by leading cultural institutions such as Carnegie Hall, the National Gallery, the Whitney, LA Phil’s Next on Grand, and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra’s Liquid Music Series. A graduate of McGill and MIT, Nina completed her DMA at Columbia University where she was an active participant at the Columbia Computer Music Center. Nina is an Assistant Professor of Composition and Director of Electronic Music at UT Austin, and a Visiting Composer at the Peabody Institute. She serves as Co-Artistic Director of NY-based new music sinfonietta Ensemble Échappé, a visiting artist at Arts Letters & Numbers, and board member of Qubit’s Harlem pop-up-venue Project-Q.  Peermusic Classical publishes her compositions.

Two $15,000 Commissions Announced Following 2018 Underwood New Music Readings

ACO has awarded composer Carlos Bandera its 2018 Underwood Commission, bringing him a $15,000 commission for a work to be premiered by ACO in a future season. Chosen from six finalists during ACO’s 27th Underwood New Music Readings on June 21 and 22, 2018, in one of the most coveted opportunities for emerging composers in the United States, Bandera won the top prize with his work Lux in Tenebris.

In addition, for the ninth year, audience members at the Underwood New Music Readings had a chance to make their voices heard through the Audience Choice Commission. The winner this year was composer Tomàs Peire Serrate, for his piece Rauxa. As the winner, Serrate also receives a $15,000 commission from ACO for a composition to be premiered in a future season.

“Carlos Bandera’s orchestral writing speaks with clarity and purpose,” says ACO Artistic Director Derek Bermel. “We were impressed by the expansive, colorful landscape in his tone poem Lux in Tenebris and look forward with great enthusiasm to his new work for ACO.”

ACO President Ed Yim adds, “Tomàs Peire Serrate’s piece Rauxa takes the audience on a visceral ride of arresting rhythms and colors. He harnesses the forces of a large orchestra with such amazing command, and we applaud our audience’s good taste in picking his piece as the Audience Choice Commission. The commission that goes with the audience favorite vote puts a high value on the input of our listeners in the discovery of the future of orchestral music.”


Carlos’ Sound: Lux in Tenebris
(Peabody Symphony Orchestra, Jisoo Kim conductor)

 


Tomàs’ Sound: Toccata 
(for piano, premiered by José Menor)

 

Click here to view the full press release.

Photos by Maitreyi Muralidharan (Bandera) & Jason Buchanan (Serrate) available upon request.

2018-2019 Concerts at Carnegie Hall

American Composers Orchestra’s 2018-2019 Concerts at Carnegie Hall
featuring major premieres by

2017 Pulitzer Prize-winner Du Yun

Imani Winds’ Valerie Coleman

Exploring the Syrian Refugee Crisis and Iconic 21st Century Women

Friday, November 2, 2018, at 7:30pm
Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall | 57th St. and 7th Ave., NYC
Tickets & Information: www.carnegiehall.org
Subscriptions now available. Single tickets available August 20, 2018.

George Manahan, music director and conductor
Imani Winds (Valerie Coleman, flute; Toyin Spellman-Diaz, oboe; Mark Dover, clarinet; Jeff Scott, horn; Monica Ellis, bassoon)
Meaghan Burke, voice
Amber Treadway, director
Storm Garner, costume designer

VALERIE COLEMAN: Phenomenal Women Concerto for Wind Quintet and Orchestra (World Premiere, co-commissioned by ACO and Carnegie Hall)
JOAN TOWER: Chamber Dance (2006)
ALEX TEMPLEThree Principles of Noir (World Premiere, commissioned by ACO)

ACO’s concert at Zankel Hall on November 2, 2018, features the world premiere of Valerie Coleman‘s Phenomenal Women, inspired by Maya Angelou’s poem and book, Phenomenal Woman. The concerto for wind quintet and orchestra will be performed by the Imani Winds with ACO, with each member featured in a solo interlude influenced by a different phenomenal woman – activist Malala Yousefai (oboe serenade), Brazilian Olympic Gold medalist Rafaela Silva (clarinet in choro style), athlete Serena Williams (bassoon virtuoso cadenza), Michelle Obama (flute with urban/jazz elements) and Hillary Clinton (horn fanfare). The concert also features the world premiere of Alex Temple‘s Three Principles of Noir, a piece with a time-traveling science fiction narrative centered around a Chicago historian who travels back in time to the 1893 World’s Fair. Joan Tower‘s Chamber Dance, written in 2006 for the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, completes the program.

Thursday, April 11, 2019, at 7:30pm
Zankel Hall at Carnegie Hall | 57th St. and 7th Ave., NYC
Tickets & Information: www.carnegiehall.org
Subscriptions now available. Single tickets available August 20, 2018.

George Manahan, music director and conductor
Helga Davis, vocalist
Ali Sethi, vocalist
Shayna Dunkelman, percussion
Khaled Jarrar, videographer

MORTON FELDMAN: Turfan Fragments (1980)
GLORIA COATES: Symphony No. 1, “Music on Open Strings” (1973)
DU YUN: Where We Lost Our Shadows (N.Y. Premiere, co-commissioned by ACO, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, Southbank Centre, and Cal Performances)

On April 11, 2019, at Zankel Hall, ACO will give the N.Y. premiere of Du Yun‘s Where We Lost Our Shadows, a new multidisciplinary work for orchestra, film, and vocalists, co-commissioned by ACO, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, Southbank Centre, and Cal Performances. Du Yun is composing Where We Lost Our Shadows in response to film captured by Ramallah-based Palestinian visual artist Khaled Jarrar, which documents the refugee crisis in Europe. The piece will be performed by ACO with singer Helga Davis, Pakistani Qawwali singer Ali Sethi, and percussionist Shayna Dunkelman, with visuals by Jarrar. The concert also includes Gloria CoatesSymphony No. 1, “Music on Open Strings,” from 1973, and Morton Feldman‘s 1980 work Turfan Fragments, inspired by a series of fragments of knotted carpets from the third and sixth centuries which were discovered in the Silk Road region.

 

About Valerie Coleman
Described as one of the “Top 35 Female Composers in Classical Music” by critic Anne Midgette of The Washington Post, Valerie Coleman is among the world’s most played composers living today. The Boston Globe describes Coleman as a having a “talent for delineating form and emotion with shifts between ingeniously varied instrumental combinations,” and The New York Times has praised her “skillfully wrought, buoyant music.” With works that range from flute sonatas that recount the stories of trafficked humans during Middle Passage and orchestral and chamber works based on nomadic Roma tribes, to scherzos about moonshine in the Mississippi Delta region and motifs based from Morse Code, her body of works has been highly regarded as a deeply relevant contribution to modern music. Coleman is the founder, composer, and flutist of the Grammy-nominated Imani Winds, one of the world’s premier chamber music ensembles. She is perhaps best known for UMOJA, a composition that is widely recognized and was listed by Chamber Music America one of the “Top 101 Great American Ensemble Works.” Coleman is regularly featured as a performer and composer at many of the world’s great concert venues, series and conservatories: Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, The Kennedy Center, Walt Disney Hall, DaCamera Houston, Boston Celebrity Series, Krannert Center, Wigmore Hall, Montreal Jazz Festival, North Sea Jazz Festival, Paris Jazz Festival, The Juilliard School, The Eastman School, Curtis, Peabody, Mannes, The Colburn School, and more. She has received awards and/or honors from the National Flute Association, The Herb Alpert Awards, MAPFUND, ASCAP Concert Music Awards, NARAS, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund, Artists International, Wombwell Kentucky Award, and Michelle E. Sahm Memorial Award, to name a few. Her works are published by Theodore Presser, International Opus, and her own company, V Coleman Music, and can be heard on Cedille Records, BMG France, Sony Classics, eOne (formerly Koch International Classics), and Naxos.

Valerie Coleman’s piece for ACO, Phenomenal Women, is a concerto for wind quintet and chamber orchestra, to be premiered by ACO with the Imani Winds, and is inspired by Maya Angelou’s poem and book Phenomenal Woman. The multi-movement work travels through varied sound worlds including atonality, urban, classical, Brazilian choro, bebop, swing and Afro-Cuban jazz. Coleman says of the new work, “Musical motifs will be extracted from Angelou’s sensuous and peppery verses. Each movement will carry emboldened harmonies and improvisational-stylized riffs from the soloists, evolving into virtuoso exchanges between forces. Phenomenal Women is about celebrating women’s efforts to overcome adversity, no matter where you are.”

Listen to Valerie Coleman’s Work.

 

About Joan Tower
Joan Tower is widely regarded as one of the most important American composers living today. During a career spanning more than 50 years, she has made lasting contributions to musical life in the United States as composer, performer, conductor, and educator. Her works have been commissioned by major ensembles, soloists, and orchestras, including the Emerson, Tokyo, and Muir quartets; soloists Evelyn Glennie, Carol Wincenc, David Shifrin, and John Browning; and the orchestras of Chicago, New York, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Washington D.C., among others. In 1990, Tower became the first woman to win the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for Silver Ladders. She was the first composer chosen for a Ford Made in America consortium commission of sixty-five orchestras. The Nashville Symphony and conductor Leonard Slatkin recorded that work, Made in America, with Tambor and Concerto for Orchestra, for the Naxos label. The top-selling recording won three 2008 Grammy awards: Best Contemporary Classical Composition, Best Classical Album, and Best Orchestral Performance. Nashville’s latest all-Tower recording includes Stroke, which received a 2016 Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Classical Composition. Tower’s tremendously popular five Fanfares for the Uncommon Woman have been played by over 500 different ensembles. She is currently Asher Edelman Professor of Music at Bard College, where she has taught since 1972. Joan Tower’s music is published by Associated Music Publishers.

Tower describers her Chamber Dance, written for Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, as chamber music. She writes in her note for the work, “It is chamber music in the sense that I always thought of Orpheus as a large chamber group, interacting and ‘dancing’ with one another the way smaller chamber groups do. Like dancers, the members of this large group have to be very much in touch with what everyone else is doing, and allow for changing leadership to guide the smaller and bigger ensembles.”

Listen to Joan Tower’s work.

 

About Alex Temple
As someone who loves both the Western classical tradition and the world of pop culture, Alex Temple has always felt uncomfortable with stylistic hierarchies and the idea of a pure musical language. She prefers to look for points of connection between things that are not supposed to belong together, distorting and combining iconic sounds to create new meanings – often in service of surreal, cryptic, or fantastical stories. She is particularly interested in reclaiming socially disapproved-of (“cheesy”) sounds, playing with the boundary between funny and frightening, and investigating lost memories and secret histories. Temple’s work has been performed by a variety of soloists and ensembles, including Mellissa Hughes, Timo Andres, Mark Dancigers, American Composers Orchestra, Chicago Composers Orchestra, Spektral Quartet, Fifth House Ensemble, Cadillac Moon Ensemble, and Ensemble de Sade.

Temple received her B.A. from Yale University in 2005, where she studied with Kathryn Alexander, John Halle and Matthew Suttor, and released two albums of electronic music on a micro-label that she ran out of her dorm room. In 2007, she completed her M.A. at University of Michigan, where she studied with Erik Santos and visiting professors Michael Colgrass, Tania León and Betsy Jolas, as well as collaborating with a troupe of dancers and playing in an indie bossa-nova band. She recently completed a DMA at Northwestern University, where she studied with Hans Thomalla and Jay Alan Yim.

Alex Temple’s new work for ACO, Three Principles of Noir, explores a narrative that tells the story of a time-traveling Chicago historian. The piece delves into the universal themes of morality, motivation, and the consequences of one’s intentions – whether or not action is taken. Temple outlines the “three principles of noir” in her note for the new work: “1. It doesn’t matter how well you plan it. You won’t get away with it. / 2. It doesn’t matter whether you did it or not. You won’t get away with it. / 3. It doesn’t matter whether you did it or not. You’re a bad person anyway.”

Listen to Alex Temple’s work.

 

About Morton Feldman
Morton Feldman was born in New York in 1926 and died there in 1987. Just like Cage, a close friend, he was an American composer – an American artist – an American in the true sense of the word. Feldman identified himself by differentiating his views on composition from those of his colleagues in Europe. He was proud to be an American because he was convinced that it enabled him the freedom, unparalleled in Europe, to work unfettered by tradition. And, he was an American also in what may have been a slight inferiority complex in the face of cultural traditions in Europe, something he proudly rejected and secretly admired. Like any true artist, Feldman was endowed with a sensitivity for impressions of a wide variety of sources, literature and painting in particular. His affinity to Samuel Beckett has enriched music literature by a unique music theatre piece, Neither, and two ensemble works. His friendship with abstract impressionist painters gave birth to a range of masterpieces, Rothko Chapel in particular.

But even the knotting of oriental rugs gave Feldman musical ideas, exemplified in the work ACO will perform, Turfan Fragments. A series of archaeological expeditions to East Turkestan, conducted by Sir Aurel Stein in the early part of the 20th century, unearthed several fragments of knotted carpets dating from the third and sixth centuries. Feldman writes, “Though these fragments were too small to indicate either its design or provenance, they did convey a long tradition of carpet weaving. This is to a large degree the extended metaphor of my composition: not the suggestion of an actual completed work of ‘art,’ but the history in Western music of putting sounds and instruments together.”

Listen to Morton Feldman’s work.

 

About Gloria Coates
An American composer who has made her career for the most part in Germany, Gloria Coates was born in Wisconsin in 1938. From rural Wisconsin, she headed to New York City to attend Columbia University for undergraduate studies in music; she then earned a master’s degree from the University of Louisiana in 1965. She returned to Columbia for post-graduate work, studying under American composer icons Jack Beeson and Otto Luening, and then moved to Salzburg to take lessons from Alexander Tcherepnin at the Mozarteum there. She established a second residency in Munich in 1969. Coates has been instrumental in bringing American concert music to Germany; the reverse has been far more common over the centuries and Coates is among those who feel it is time to return the favor. She organized and developed the German-American Contemporary Music Series concerts in Munich in the early 1970s and, as an influential member of the International League of Women Composers, has helped bring American women composers in particular to a wider European audience.

Coates has written sixteen full-scale symphonies, eleven string quartets, several orchestral works, and a number of song cycles. The 1978 premiere in Warsaw of her Symphony No. 1, “Music for Open Strings” brought her acclaim; the work was among the finalists for the 1986 International Koussevitsky Award. Symphony No. 1 “Music for Open Strings,” was written in 1973 and is scored for a string orchestra playing entirely on retuned open strings. The work opens with the strings tuned to a minor pentatonic scale (B flat, C, D flat, F, G flat), which are returned to their normal tuning movement by movement.

Listen to Gloria Coates’s work.

 

About Du Yun
Du Yun, born and raised in Shanghai, China, currently based in New York, is a composer, multi-instrumentalist, performance artist, and curator, working at the intersection of orchestral, opera, chamber music, theatre, cabaret, pop music, oral tradition, visual arts, electronics and noise. Hailed by The New York Times as a leading figure in China’s new generation of composers and often cited as a key activist in New York’s “new movement in new music,” she was selected by the National Public Radio as one of the 100 composers under 40. Known as chameleonic in her protean artistic outputs, her music is championed by some of today’s finest performing artists, ensembles, orchestras and organizations. In addition, Du Yun has also made works in the art world, including the 4th Guangzhou Art Triennial, Sharjah Biennial (UAE), Auckland Triennial, and Istanbul Biennial. Du Yun is on the composition faculty at SUNY-Purchase. She was a founding member of the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), and currently she serves as the Artistic Director of MATA, a pioneering organization dedicated to commissioning and championing young composers from around the world. In 2017, Du Yun was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Music for her opera Angel’s Bone.

In the 2018-19 season, ACO will work with Du Yun as she creates a new orchestral work titled Where We Lost Our Shadows, in response to film captured by Khaled Jarrar, which documents the refugee crisis in Europe. The work is being co-commissioned by ACO, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, Southbank Centre, and Cal Performances. Du Yun writes, “At the heart of this project lies the footage that Khaled documented following a Syrian family migrating across the Aegean sea (the mother of the family was a Palestinian refugee, who first sought refuge in Syria when she was an eight-year-old girl herself). The concerto-orchestral work, while showing only some of the footage, will mostly focus on the perpetual movement of human procession and migration, and the question of Exodus. The musical language is to take the Qawwali of Raga Aiman Kalyan (a type of devotional music) and explore its provenance (13th century Muslim India, according to legend); its subsequent migration through space and time (Central Asia, Bengal, the global South Asian diaspora); and its migration through genres, forms, techniques. The text for the work is from the poem Vehicles In The Dark, by the Palestinian poet Ghassan Zaqtan. The work, to some degree, explores both cold hard reality and transcending unifying moments. As the piece progresses, the narrative, music and video will shift away from depicting reality as it is, to exploring symbolic, poetic, and allegorical depictions of the central themes of migration and exodus.”

Listen to Du Yun’s work.

 


Special project support for Valerie Coleman’s Phenomenal Women is provided by the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation. Special project support for Alex Temple’s Three Principles of Noir is provided by the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation and the MAP Fund supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Special project support for Du Yun’s Where We Lost Our Shadows is provided by Morgan Stanley and the Howard and Sarah D. Solomon Foundation.

Photo: ACO at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall, December 2017. Photo credit: Jennifer Taylor