Continuing through our list of Senior Faculty composers at
June in Buffalo 2012 we arrive at Fred Lerdahl, who is currently a professor of
Musical Composition at Columbia University, and a music theorist well-known for
his writings which describe compositional systems as languages with musical
grammar and syntax, particularly in the influential book, A Generative Theory of Tonal Music, co-authored with linguist Ray
Jackendoff, published in 1983. As a composer, three of his pieces have been finalists
for the Pulitzer Prize for Music, including the recent Arches in 2011. A terrific summary about the relationship between
Fred Lerdahl’s compositions and theoretical writings can be found at newmusicbox.
Fred Lerdahl |
Fred Lerdahl, originally from Madison, Wisconsin, has been
not only prolific as a composer and theorist, but also as a teacher – he has taught
at UC/Berkeley, Harvard, and Michigan, and since 1991 he has been Fritz Reiner
Professor of Music at Columbia University. He is a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Letters, and among his other honors are the Koussevitzky
Composition Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Classical Recording
Foundation’s Composer of the Year Award. Commissions have come from the Fromm
Foundation, the Koussevitzky Foundation, the Spoleto Festival, National
Endowment for the Arts, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the
Library of Congress, Chamber Music America, and others. Among the organizations
that have performed his works are the New York Philharmonic, the Pittsburgh
Symphony, the San Francisco Symphony, the Seattle Symphony, the Cincinnati
Symphony, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the American Composers Orchestra, the
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Orpheus, the Boston Symphony Chamber Players, the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, eighth blackbird, Speculum Musicae,
Collage, Antares, the Juilliard Quartet, the Pro Arte Quartet, the Daedalus
Quartet, Ensemble XXI, Lontano, and the Venice Biennale. He has been in
residence at the Marlboro Music Festival, IRCAM, the Wellesley Composers
Conference, the American Academy in Rome, the Bowdoin Summer Music Festival,
the Yellow Barn Music Festival, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. In 2001, Lerdahl authored
Tonal Pitch Space, which models
musical listening from the perspective of cognitive science, and in 2011, the
Oxford University Press published his article, Art and the Senses.
Below you can find a video of Joanna Chao offering a
beautiful performance of Lerdahl’s Three
Diatonic Studies, for piano solo.
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