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American
Composers Orchestra
Selects
Nation's Top Emerging Composers
for
16th Annual New Music Readings
Nine
Premieres to be Presented
May
8 & 9, 2007 in NYC
American Composers
Orchestra announces the winners of its sixteenth annual Underwood New
Music Readings, one of this country's most coveted opportunities for
emerging composers. The Readings will be held Tuesday, May 8th and
Wednesday, May 9th from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm at New York University's
Skirball Center for the Performing Arts. Nine of the nation's most
promising composers in the early stages of their professional careers
have been selected from over one hundred fifty submissions received
from around the country. This year's winners are Philippe
Bodin, Roshanne Etezady, Chia-yu
Hsu, Amy Kirsten, Xinyan Li,
Clint Needham, Norbert Palej,
Joseph Pereira, and Ryan
Streber.
The
Readings are under the direction of ACO Artistic Director Robert
Beaser. Guest conductors are Paul
Lustig Dunkel and David Alan Miller; mentor
composers are Derek Bermel, Tania León, Yehudi Wyner and
Christopher Theofanides. The conductors, mentor composers and
principal players from ACO serve as liaisons and provide critical
feedback to each of the participants during and after the reading
sessions. Following the Readings, one of the young composers will
receive a $15,000 commission to write a new work to be performed by ACO.
Last year's
winner, Mandy Fang, won the top prize with her work Black and
White. The 2005 winner, Michael Gatonska, heard his
Underwood-commissioned work, After the Wings of Migratory Birds, premiered
by ACO at Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall on October 15, 2007.

Since 1991, the
New Music Readings have provided invaluable career-development
opportunities for emerging composers, and served as a vital resource
to the music field, by identifying a new generation of American
composers. To date, over 100 composers have participated in the
Readings, including such award-winning composers as Melinda Wagner,
Pierre Jalbert, Augusta Read Thomas, Randall Woolf, Jennifer Higdon,
Daniel Bernard Roumain, and ACO's Music Alive Composer in
Residence, Derek Bermel. Since participating in ACO's readings, these
composers have held important residencies and had scores of works
commissioned, premiered, and performed by many of the country's
prominent symphony orchestras. The New Music Readings continue ACO's
emphasis on helping to launch composers careers, a tradition that
includes many of today's top composers, such as Ellen Taaffe Zwilich
and Joseph Schwantner, both of whom received Pulitzer Prizes for ACO
commissions; and Robert Beaser, Ingram Marshall, Joan Tower, Aaron
Jay Kernis, Christopher Rouse, Sebastian Currier, and Tobias Picker,
whom the orchestra championed when they were beginning their careers.

Composers
Selected & Works to be Performed
Philippe
Bodin: Fling
Philippe
Bodin was born in Calais, France, and currently resides in Brooklyn,
New York. His work, recognized with awards from the Lutoslawski
International Competition, Homage to Mozart Competition, and Mario
Bernardo Angelo Comneno Competition, among others, has been performed
by such ensembles as the Da Capo Chamber Players, the Eroica Trio,
the Chamber Orchestra Kremlin, Xtet, the New Zealand Trio, and Brave
New Works; at L.A.'s Monday Evening Concerts, St. Luke's Second
Helpings, the Sonic Boom, Las Vegas, and Asia Pacific festivals. He
has received commissions from the Barlow Endowment, the Argosy
Foundation, the Utah Arts Festival, the Chamber Ensemble Left Coast,
the Eroica, Mannes, Mojave and Kungsbacka trios, and the Orkest de
Volharding, as well as residencies from the MacDowell Colony, the
Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the Banff Centre for the Arts. A
Doctor in Musical Arts from Yale University where he studied with
Martin Bresnick, Jacob Druckman and Nicholas Maw, Philippe has taught
composition at Illinois Wesleyan and Lawrence universities. Prior to
his incarnation as a composer, he studied mathematics, piano, organ,
and architecture in his native France. He also had a career as an
operatic baritone (he holds a Bachelor's in voice performance from
Oberlin College) under the batons of Myung-Whun Chung, Philippe
Herreweghe and Marc Minkovski and was music director of two small
opera companies in Paris. Mr. Bodin's music has been noted for its
"vitality and lyricism in healthy doses."

Roshanne
Etezady: Cereus
Hailed
by the Detroit Free Press as "a promising and confident
composer", Roshanne Etezady is emerging as one of the most
dynamic musical voices of her generation. Her works have been
commissioned by the Albany Symphony, Dartmouth Symphony, eighth
blackbird, Music at the Anthology, and the PRISM Saxophone Quartet.
She has been a fellow at the Aspen Music Festival, the Norfolk
Chamber Music Festival and at the Atlantic Center for the Arts.
Performers and ensembles including Rêlache, Amadinda Percussion
Ensemble, Ensemble De Ereprijs, and the Dogs of Desire have performed
Etezady's music throughout the United States and Europe. Roshanne
Etezady's music has earned recognition from the American Academy of
Arts and Letters, the Korean Society of 21st Century Music, the Jacob
K. Javits Foundation, Meet the Composer, and ASCAP. As one of the
founding members of the Minimum Security Composers Collective,
Etezady has helped expand the audience for new music. Etezady holds
academic degrees from Northwestern University and Yale University,
and she has worked intensively with numerous composers, including
William Bolcom, Martin Bresnick, Michael Daugherty, and Ned Rorem.
She completed her doctorate at the University of Michigan, and
currently resides in Tucson, Arizona.

Chia-yu
Hsu: Fantasy
on Wang Bao Chuan
Chia-yu Hsu was
born in Panchiao, Taipei Taiwan. She won the 2007 International Harp
Competition Composer Contest, ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer's
Awards, the William Klenz Prize, the Prism Quartet student
commissioning Award, the Maxfield Parish composition contest, and the
Renée B. Fisher Foundation Composer Awards. Prior to entering
Duke University to study with Stephen Jaffe, Scott Lindroth and
Anthony Kelley, she studied with Ezra Laderman, Martin Bresnick and
Roberto Sierra at Yale University School of Music, David Loeb and
Jennifer Higdon at Curtis Institute of Music, and Pan-Yen Chan at the
National Taiwan Academy of Arts. Ms. Hsu's works have been praised as
"showing the indelible ink of a real composer."

Amy
Kirsten: Strange
Angel
Hailed
for "original, unusual textures" and "very colorful,
detailed orchestration," Amy Beth Kirsten's Strange Angel has
earned her attention as a promising young composer. Her works have
premiered in Chicago by the New Music Ensemble at Roosevelt
University and by the College of DuPage Chamber Singers; in New York
at the International Fringe Festival; in Baltimore by the Peabody
Opera Workshop and at the Walters Art Museum accompanying the
snowscape paintings of Gustave Courbet from October 2006 through
January 2007. Winner of the 2006-7 Volti Choral Arts Lab
Commissioning and Residency competition, her In the Black premiered
in San Francisco, Berkeley, and Sacramento in March 2007 as part of
Volti's concert season. Ms. Kirsten's 2006 honors include the
Theodore Presser Award and the Randolph S. Rothschild Award for
excellence in composition. Born in East Saint Louis and raised in the
Chicago area, Ms. Kirsten received her Bachelor's Degree in Vocal
Jazz Studies from Illinois' Benedictine University, and her Master's
Degree in Composition from the Chicago College of Performing Arts at
Roosevelt University. Currently, she is a post-graduate student at
Peabody Conservatory of the Johns Hopkins University.

Xinyan
Li: Mountain
Sacrifice No. 2
Xinyan
Li is currently a doctoral student studying at University of
Missouri-Kansas City under composers Chen Yi, James Mobberley, Zhou
Long, and Paul Rudy. Miss Li earned her Bachelor's and Master's
degree at the China Conservatory of Music in Beijing in 1999 and
2002, where she studied under composers Jin Xiang and Yang Tong Ba.
Xinyan Li attended Aspen Music Festival and School in 2005 and 2006
as a Susan and Ford Schumann Composition Fellow where she studied with
George Tsontakis. In 2007, she attended Nevada Encounters of New Music,
Midwest Graduate Music Consortium's 11th Annual Conference, and SCI Region
VI Conference. Awards include the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer's
Award, an honorable mention from the Tsang-Houei Hsu International Music
Composition Competition and the Libby Larsen Prize from International
Alliance of Women in Music. Xinyan Li's music has been performed by the
Aspen Contemporary Ensemble, the Bergen Woodwind Quintet, the Shanghai
Symphony Orchestra Principal Woodwind Quintet, the Chengdu International
Contemporary Festival and Composer's Forum, the East Coast Composers Ensemble,
the Chicago New Music Ensemble, and the UMKC Music Nova Ensemble. Xinyan
Li's music is "fresh,
musical and dramatic; it's from her heart."

Clint
Needham: Earth
and Green
Originally
from Texas, Clint Needham received a BM in composition from Baldwin-Wallace
Conservatory and an MM from Indiana University. He is currently a
Jacobs School of Music Doctoral Fellow in Composition at Indiana
University and has studied with David Dzubay, Per Mårtensson,
P.Q. Phan, Sven-David Sandström, Richard Wernick, and Loris
Chobanian. Clint has also studied with Robert Beaser, Christopher
Rouse, and George Tsontakis at the Aspen Music Festival as a Susan
and Ford Schumann Composition Fellow. Recent honors include awards
from the Washington International Competition for Composers, National
Association of College Wind and Percussion Instructors, Brass Chamber
Music Forum, International Trumpet Guild, and an honorable mention in
the 2006 ASCAP/Morton Gould Young Composer Awards. Clint's music has
been performed by the American Brass Quintet, Aspen Contemporary
Ensemble, Cascadian Chorale, Cleveland Chamber Symphony, and the
Oberon Trio. His music has also been performed at various venues
including the Aspen Music Festival, Indiana State University
Contemporary Music Festival, International Trumpet Guild Convention,
Meadowlark Music Festival, Midwest Composers Symposium, Music
Educators National Conference, and the University of Nebraska New
Music Festival. Clint Needham writes "complex and compelling
music where every detail is carefully considered."

Norbert
Palej: Movimento
Sinfonico
Recognized
for his "first-rate and genuinely original" work, Norbert
Palej is currently pursuing a doctoral degree at Cornell University
studying with Steven Stucky and Roberto Sierra. He received his
Master of Music degree from The Juilliard School, and his Bachelor of
Music degree from the New England Conservatory of Music. Previously
he studied at the Academy of Music in Krakow, Poland and at Central
Washington University. He also majored in psychology and philosophy
at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow. Norbert has been a
participant of the Minnesota Orchestra Reading Sessions and Composer
Institute. He has received the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer
Award, the Toru Takemitsu Award from the Japan Society in Boston, the
Benjamin Britten Memorial Fellowship for the Tanglewood 2000 season
and the Susan and Ford Schumann Fellowship for the 2001 master class
at the Aspen Festival of Music. He has also participated in the
Academy for New Music and Audio-Art in Tyrol, Austria, in the
International Workshops for Contemporary Music Krakow/Stuttgart and
in the Treffen Junger Komponisten in Weikersheim, Germany.

Joseph
Pereira: Mask
Percussionist
and composer Joseph Pereira, has been the Assistant Principal
Timpanist/Section Percussionist of the New York Philharmonic since
January 1998. He received his master's degree in percussion from The
Juilliard School and a double bachelor's degree in performance and
composition/theory from Boston University. He currently teaches
timpani and percussion at the Juilliard School. Mr. Pereira conducted
the premiere of his Quintet for Winds in 2005 as part of the New York
Philharmonic Ensembles series at Merkin Concert Hall. The New York
Times said, "it is a restless yet lucidly textured work with an
astringent harmonic language." His music has been performed at
Darmstadt, Merkin Concert Hall, 92nd Street Y, Alice Tully Hall, The
Juilliard School, Manhattan School of Music, Harvard, and Princeton
University. Mr. Pereira has performed with the New York Percussion
Quartet, New York New Music Ensemble, Alea III, Boston Symphony
Orchestra, Robert Shaw Festival Singers, and New Zealand Symphony
Orchestra as principal timpanist. He can also be heard on Telarc,
Teldec, and Deutsche Grammophon recordings. He is an alumnus of both
the Tanglewood and Pacific (Sapporo, Japan) music festivals.

Ryan
Streber: Arcuare
Ryan Streber works
have been performed in the United States and abroad by artists and
ensembles such as The Lucerne Percussion Group, The Juilliard
Orchestra. The New Juilliard Ensemble, Line C3 Percussion Quartet,
Flexible Music, ACME, Gemini Youth Orchestra, Fountain Chamber
Ensemble, percussionist Samuel Solomon, Violist Nadia Sirota, and
many others. Recent projects include a new work for percussion
ensemble, commissioned by the Lucerne Festival Academy and premiered
under the direction of Michel Cerutti in the 2006 Lucerne Festival.
Besides concert music, Ryan has composed two short film scores which
have been heard at various festivals in the US, South America, and
Europe, as well as an original score of continuous incidental music
for a staging of Euripides' Bacchae in Ancient Greek that was
produced by the Columbia University/Barnard College Classics
departments in April 2006. Ryan received his Bachelors and Masters
degrees in composition from The Juilliard School in New York,
studying with Milton Babbitt and Christopher Rouse. He is the
recipient of an ASCAP Morton Gould award and Juilliard's Palmer-Dixon
Prize. He currently lives in Manhattan and works as the coordinator
for the composition department at Juilliard. Streber's Arcuare has
already been praised for being "engaging, detailed, fluid,
intriguing" and possessed of a "clear, strong sense of orchestration."

Paul
Lustig Dunkel, conductor
Paul
Lustig Dunkel, Music Director and Conductor of the Westchester
Philharmonic since its founding in 1983, enjoys a multi-faceted
career as conductor, flutist, arranger and writer. His work with the
Westchester Philharmonic has been recognized by the American Symphony
Orchestra League, the American Society of Composers and Publishers
(ASCAP), the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council
on the Arts and the Westchester Arts Council. He also is the
recipient of the American Symphony Orchestra's Leopold Stokowski
Conducting Award, a Grammy nomination, awards from the Martha Baird
Rockefeller Fund, Harriet Ditson Fund, New York State Council on the
Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, as well as the Silver Jubilee
Award for outstanding alumni from Queens College and many regional
and local awards for his work in the community. His achievements as a
creator and founder of musical institutions and as an advocate for
American composers was noted by ASCAP in 2002 in ceremonies at
Lincoln Center honoring him and his co-founders for their
contributions to American music in establishing and building American
Composers Orchestra. Mr. Dunkel also serves as co-founder of Music
from Copland House, a chamber music ensemble dedicated to the
advocacy of American music. He has been Music Director of the Denver
Chamber Orchestra, Principal Conductor of the Vermont Mozart
Festival, and has appeared as guest conductor with the Denver,
Baltimore, Buffalo, New Jersey, Oakland, Syracuse, Richmond, and
American Symphonies, Brooklyn Philharmonic, and Orchestra of St.
Luke's, the Washington Opera, New York city Ballet Orchestra, at the
Kremlin and in Taiwan. His recordings for Bridge, Nonesuch, Summit,
CRI and New World Records have received wide critical acclaim, and
his recording of The Early Music of Elliott Carter was
selected as one of the Top 10 recordings of the year by Time and
Newsweek. Mr. Dunkel grew up in New York City and attended
the High School of Music and Art. He began his conducting career as a
fellow with the National Orchestral Association under Leon Barzin,
and with Erich Leinsdorf and Kresimir Sipusch at the Aspen Music Festival.
David
Alan Miller, conductor
David
Alan Miller has been Music Director of the Albany Symphony Orchestra
since 1992. Frequently in demand as a guest conductor, he has worked
with most of America's major orchestras, including the orchestras of
Philadelphia, New York, Los Angeles, Detroit, Pittsburgh, San
Francisco, Houston, Baltimore and Indianapolis, as well as the New
World Symphony and the New York City Ballet. He has developed
especially close relationships with the Minnesota Orchestra and the
Chicago Symphony. Internationally, Mr. Miller has also conducted
major European orchestras in Turin, Berlin, Barcelona, Prague,
Dresden, Hanover, Halle and Mainz. He has appeared with the Adelaide
Symphony, Hong Kong Philharmonic, and Singapore Symphony; and the
National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa. Mr. Miller is highly
regarded as a champion and interpreter of American music, new and
old. His extensive discography includes recordings of the works of
Todd Levin with the London Symphony Orchestra for Deutsche
Grammophon, as well as music by Michael Daugherty, Kamran Ince, and
Michael Torke for London/Decca. His recordings with the Albany
Symphony include discs of music by John Harbison, Roy Harris, Morton
Gould, Don Gillis, George Lloyd and Peter Mennin, all on the Albany
records label: for which he recently received Columbia University's
2003 Ditson Conductor's Award. His most recent disc on Albany Records
features two major never-before-recorded symphonies, Roy Harris'
Second and Morton Gould's Third. He also led the Los Angeles
Philharmonic in its recording of Mel Powell's music, including Duplicates:
Concerto for Two Pianos, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for
Music. A native of Los Angeles, David Alan Miller holds a bachelor's
degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and a master's
degree in orchestral conducting from The Juilliard School.
Reservations
and Info
The Underwood New
Music Reading Sessions are presented by New York University's
Skirball Center for the Performing arts, and take place on Tuesday,
May 8 and Wednesday, May 9, 2007 from 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM. The
Skirball Center is located at 566 LaGuardia Place (Washington Square
South) in Manhattan. The Readings are open to the public at no
charge; no ticket is required. For further information, please call
(212) 977-8495, or email readings@americancomposers.org.
Lead support for
the Underwood New Music Readings comes from Mr. Paul Underwood, The
Helen F. Whitaker Fund and the Fromm Music Foundation. ACO's emerging
composers program is supported by The Alice M. Ditson Fund of
Columbia University, Francis Goelet Charitable Lead Trusts, The
Greenwall Foundation, The Henfield Foundation, Jerome Foundation, the
National Endowment for the Arts and ACO's Inner Circle.
Major support of
American Composers Orchestra is provided by ACO Inner Circle,
American Symphony Orchestra League, Amphion Foundation, Arlington
Associates, ASCAP, ASCAP Foundation, Bay and Paul Foundations, BMI,
BMI Foundation, NY City Council Member Gale A. Brewer, Mary Flagler
Cary Charitable Trust, Citigroup Foundation, Edward T. Cone
Foundation, Consolidated Edison, The Aaron Copland Fund for Music,
The Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University, Fidelity Foundation,
Fromm Music Foundation, Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation, Francis
Goelet Charitable Lead Trusts, Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, The
Greenwall Foundation, The Irving Harris Foundation, Victor Herbert
Foundation, Jephson Educational Trust, Jerome Foundation, The J.M.
Kaplan Fund, John and Evelyn Kossak Foundation, Manhattan Borough
President Scott Stringer, Neil Family Fund, The New York Community
Trust, The New York State Music Fund established by the New York
State Attorney General at Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, The Rodgers Family Foundation, Fan Fox &
Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, The Susan and Ford Schumann Foundation,
Emma A. Sheafer Charitable Trust, the Virgil Thomson Foundation, Paul
Underwood Charitable Trust, The Sonata and Watchdog Charitable
Trusts, The Isak and Rose Weinman Foundation and The Helen F.
Whitaker Fund. ACO programs are also made possible with public funds
from the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on
the Arts and New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.
The residency of
Derek Bermel is made possible through Music Alive, a program of the
American Symphony Orchestra League and Meet the Composer. This
national program is designed to provide orchestras with resources and
tools to support their presentation of new music to the public and
build support for new music within their institutions. Funding for
Music Alive is provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and The
Aaron Copland Fund for Music.
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