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Wednesday,
April 18, 2001, 9:30am - 1:00pm & 2pm - 5pm
Masonic Hall,
71 West 23rd Street, New York City
Whitaker New Music Reading Sessions
Dennis Russell
Davies, Gil Rose, & Jeffrey Milarsky, Conductors; Robert Beaser,
Artistic Director; Jennifer Higdon, Fred Lerdahl, & Michael
Torke, Mentor Composers
PAUL
YEON LEE: Phoenix
LEONARD
LEWIS: Concerto for Orchestra
JOSHUA
PENMAN: As It Is, Infinite
PAOLA
PRESTINI: Blue (Some Souls)
ROGER
PRZYTULSKI: Blitz
THOMAS
TUMULTY: Movement IV from Symphony No. 1
GREGORY
SPEARS: Circle Stories
DALIT
WARSHAW: Tyburne Dance
Admission is
free. Call 212-977-8495 x207 for info/reservations.
American Composers Orchestra
Selects Nation's Top Emerging Composers for 10th Annual Whitaker New
Music Readings
The American
Composers Orchestra announces the winners of what has become one of
this country's most coveted opportunities for emerging composers, the
tenth annual Whitaker New Music Reading Sessions. The Readings, made
possible by a grant from the Helen F. Whitaker Fund, will be held on
Wednesday, April 18th from 9:30 AM to 1:00 PM and 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM
at Masonic Hall (71 West 23d St., NYC). This event provides an
invaluable opportunity for up-and-coming composers to experience a
full orchestral rendering of their work, receive the reactions of
other composers and performers, and obtain a professional quality
tape to assist in their advancement.
This year,
eight of the nation's most promising composers in the early stages of
their professional careers were selected out of nearly 200
submissions received from around the country. The winners are: Paul
Yeon Lee, Leonard Lewis, Joshua Penman, Paola Prestini, Roger
Przytulski, Gregory Spears, Thomas Tumulty, and Dalit Warshaw.
One of these
composers will receive the ACO's Whitaker Commission, a $15,000 award
to write a new work to be performed by ACO at Carnegie Hall. Last
year's winner, Brian Robison, won top prize with his evocative
orchestral work Imagined Corners, which was described by his former
teacher, composer Steven Stucky, as "absolutely first-rate: well
and thoroughly heard, beautifully made, and possessing just the right
amalgam of cogent structure with alluring sound". Mr. Robison is
composing a work entitled In Search of the Miraculous, scheduled for
performance by ACO in the 2002-03 season.
To date, the
Whitaker Reading Sessions have offered a vital resource to the
industry by providing essential career development opportunities to
over 50 composers, including such award-winning composers as Melinda
Wagner, Derek Bermel, and Jennifer Higdon. ACO has helped launch the
careers of many of today's top composers, including Ellen Taaffe
Zwilich and Joseph Schwanter, who both received Pulitzer Prizes for
ACO commissions; and Robert Beaser, Ingram Marshall, Joan Tower,
Aaron Jay Kernis, Christopher Rouse, and Tobias Picker, whom the
orchestra championed when they were beginning their careers.
The reading
sessions will be under the direction of ACO Music Director Dennis
Russell Davies, Artistic Director Robert Beaser, and guest conductors
Jeffrey Milarsky, Music Director of the Columbia University
Orchestra, and Gil Rose, Music Director of the Boston Modern
Orchestra Project. Senior composer advisors, Fred Lerdahl, Jennifer
Higdon, and Michael Torke, will serve as mentors throughout the proceedings.
Whitaker New Music Reading
Sessions Composer-Participants & Works
Paul
Yeon Lee: Phoenix
Currently a
doctoral student in composition at the University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Paul Yeon Lee's music has been performed by ensembles and
orchestras, including Speculum Musicae, Charleston String Quartet,
the University of Michigan Philharmonia Orchestra, and Haddonfield
Symphony. He has received many commissions including Redwood
Symphony; percussionist Anthony J. Cirone, and cellist Stephen
Czarkowski. Mr. Lee's honors and awards include a Charles Ives
Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the
Haddonfield Symphony Young Composers' Competition, SJSU Dean
Scholarship and ASCAP. His principal teachers include Leslie Bassett,
William Bolcom, Bright Sheng, Pablo E. Furman, and Allen Strange, and
is published by Theodore Presser Company.
Leonard
Lewis: Concerto for Orchestra
University of
Missouri at Columbia faculty member Leonard Lewis has won awards,
including ASCAP, BMI, the Joseph Bearns Prize from Columbia
University and from Voices of Change. His works have been performed
by soloists and ensembles such as Symposium 26, and the New Music
Camerata, who premiered one of his works at The Kennedy Center in
Washington DC. He has received commissions from the acting principal
oboist of the Saint Louis Symphony, flautist Christine Gustafson, New
Music Camerata, AURA of the Moores School of Music, and from the
acclaimed pianist James Dick. He has worked with several leading
composers, such as his former teacher Carlisle Floyd, Bernard Rands,
David Del Tredici, Libby Larsen, Morton Subotnick, Shulamit Ran and
William Doppmann.
Joshua
Penman: As it is, Infinite
Joshua Penman,
a senior at Yale University, was the winner of the 1998 BMI Student
Composers awards and the 1999 National Association of Composers, USA
East-Coast Chapter competition, and was selected to compete for the
2000 Gaudeamus prize in the Netherlands. His principal composition
teachers have included Kathryn Alexander, John Halle, and Louis
Andriessen. He has attended the New England Conservatory and the
Koninklijk Conservatorium, as well as the Bowdoin and Music98 summer
festivals. Mr. Penman is currently working on a 75-minute
electroacoustic chamber opera, Samadhi-lila, which will be performed
this April.
Paola
Prestini: Blue (Some Souls)
Italian born
composer Paola Prestini's music has been performed at Lincoln Center,
Merkin Hall, the Clark Studio Theater in NY, the Peabody Institute,
and by the Scottish Chamber Orchestra with Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
conducting. She is the recipient of a Soros fellowship, a Morse
fellowship, and a teaching fellowship in music theory at Juilliard
where she is currently assistant to the Music Theory department and
head of the teaching fellows. While studying at Juilliard, she won
the Juilliard Composers Competition with her orchestral work
Barcarola, which was premiered in Alice Tully Hall. Ms. Prestini is
the co-director and founder of VisionIntoArt, a multimedia group
focused on collaborative interartistic performance for the promotion
of new art. She has studied with Robert Beaser, Samuel Adler, and Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies.
Roger
Przytulski: Blitz
Roger
Przytulski is currently completing a Master of Music in Composition
at the University of Southern California. His pieces have been
performed by the USC Thornton Symphony, CSULB Orchestra and chamber
groups including the Spectrum Saxophone Quartet. Other projects
include several short film scores, music for the theater, and a cello
concerto, Ancient Trees. Currently studying with Donald Crockett, Mr.
Przytulski's previous teachers include composers Martin Herman, Bruce
Miller, John Prince, Stephen Hartke, and Frank Ticheli. He is a
member of Pi Kappa Lambda National Music Honor Society and has
received several honors in composition including the 1999 CSULB
Talent Scholarship and the 2000 Hans J. Salter Endowed Music Award.
Gregory
Spears: Circle Stories
Gregory Spears
received his undergraduate training from the Eastman School of Music
where he studied with Joseph Schwantner, Christopher Rouse, Augusta
Read Thomas and David Liptak. He has recently completed a year as a
Fulbright Scholar at the Danish Royal Academy of Music in Copenhagen
where he worked with composers Hans Abrahamsen and Per Norgard. Mr.
Spears has won two BMI Student Composers Awards as well as prizes
from ASCAP, the MENC, and the Eastman School of Music. A recipient of
a 1999 First Music Orchestral Commission from the New York Youth
Symphony, Spears' Midnight Pictures was premiered in Carnegie Hall in
May 2000. Mr. Spears is currently studying with Ezra Laderman at the
Yale School of Music.
Thomas
Tumulty: Movement IV from Symphony No. 1
Thomas
Tumulty, a finalist in the 1999 Mitropoulos International
Competition, received his Bachelor of Music Degree in Composition
from the Catholic University of America Benjamin T. Rome School of
Music, Washington D.C. Among his teachers were the late G. Thaddeus
Jones, Dr. Conrad Bernier, Dr. Stephen Strunk and Dr. Elaine Rendler.
Selected as one of 20 applicants to enroll in the Advanced Studies
Program for the Music Industry (Film Scoring) at the University of
Southern California, he had the opportunity to work with Bruce
Broughton, Dr. Fred Steiner and Jimmie Haskell. He has also served as
music director for many theater productions, including the
post-Broadway release of "A Chorus Line" which received a
Helen Hayes Award nomination.
Dalit
Warshaw: Tyburne Dance
Dalit
Warshaw's works have been performed by more than 26 orchestral
ensembles, including the New York and Israel Philharmonic orchestras
(Zubin Mehta conducting), the Boston Symphony, the Cleveland
Orchestra, and the Houston Symphony. Ms. Warshaw has also received
commissions from groups ranging from the New York Festival of Song to
the Boston Ballet II. Awards include the Aaron Copland International
Competition for Young Composers, four ASCAP Foundation Grants, the
Juilliard Student Composers Competition, and a Charles Ives
Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1984
she became the youngest person to win the BMI Award for Student
Composers, with her orchestral piece Fun Suite, written at the age of
eight. Past composition teachers include Milton Babbitt, Samual
Adler, David Del Tredici, Fred Lerdahl, Jonathan Kramer, Victoria
Bond, Donald Waxman and Edward Simons. Ms. Warshaw is currently on
the faculty of Juilliard's Evening Division teaching orchestration,
as well as teaching composition privately at the Juilliard pre-college.
Reservations
& Info
The Readings
will occur on April 18, 2001, from 9:30 am - 1pm, and 2-5 pm in the
Grand Lodge of Masonic Hall located at 71 West 23rd Street, NYC. The
proceedings are open to the public at no charge, and reservations are
required. For reservations or further information, please call (212)
977-8495, ext. 207 or click here.
The Whitaker New Music Reading Sessions are made possible with the
generous support of the Helen F. Whitaker Fund. ACO programs are also
made possible with public funds from the National Endowment for the
Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency, and the
New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. |