We at the Robert and Carol Morris Center for 21st
Century Music are gearing up for June in Buffalo 2012 and are looking forward
to having Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Steven Stucky on as a
faculty composer. Steven Stucky is remarkably active as a composer and is
having his works performed with increasingly dizzying speed. Last February,
Stucky’s Silent Spring received both
its world and New York premieres by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, where he currently serves as Composer of the Year, and in the upcoming September, Maestro
Gustavo Dudamel will lead the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the world premiere
of a recently-commissioned symphony. Later in 2012, Stucky’s Son et lumière will be performed by both
the New York Philharmonic and
the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Alan Gilbert and Leonard Slatkin
respectively. We are very excited to have Steven in town for a week of master classes,
lectures, workshops, and concerts, which will culminate on Sunday, June 10th,
with a performance of his Jeu de timbres by
the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra,
conducted by JoAnn Falletta.
Steven Stucky |
Steven is ferociously busy: he is a trustee of the American
Academy in Rome, a director of New Music USA, a board member of the
Koussevitzky Music Foundation, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and
Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is also active as a
conductor, writer, lecturer, and teacher. In 2005, he won the Pulitzer Prize
for his Second Concerto for Orchestra,
which was commissioned and premiered in 2004 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic.
The New York Times called the Second
Concerto for Orchestra, “an electrifying piece: three movements that
explore an orchestra’s potential in much the way Bartok’s and Lutoslawski’s
concertos for orchestra do, but in ways that sound fresh and exciting. It
alludes to works by other composers without losing its own focus, … stands
apart from academic disputes about style and language, and strives for direct
communication.”
For over 20 years, Stucky enjoyed the longest relationship
on record between a composer and an American orchestra: in 1988 André Previn
appointed him Composer-in-Residence of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Later, as
the ensemble’s Consulting Composer for New Music, he worked closely with Music
Director Esa-Pekka Salonen on contemporary programming, the awarding of
commissions, and programming for nontraditional audiences. He founded the
orchestra’s Composer Fellowship Program for high-school-aged composers. He also
hosted the New York Philharmonic’s acclaimed “Hear & Now” pre-concert
programs for several seasons, introducing important works and premieres to
Philharmonic audiences. His other residencies include the American Academy in
Rome; Princeton University’s Composition Colloquium; James Madison University;
University of South Carolina; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;
Eastman School of Music; and Grinnell College in the US. Internationally, they
include the Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá, Colombia; the Swedish
Collegium of Advanced Studies; the Central Conservatory of Music, Beijing; the
Shanghai Conservatory; and the Taipei National University of the Arts. In March of 2012, Stucky will take up a residency at the Cleveland Institute of Music, and in
the 2012-13 season, he will be the Music Alive Resident Composer at the Berkeley
Symphony Orchestra.
He has also written commissioned works for many of the other
major American orchestras, including those of Baltimore, Chicago, Cincinnati,
Dallas, Florida West Coast (Sarasota), Minnesota, Philadelphia, St. Louis, St.
Paul, and Washington (National); as well as for Chanticleer, the Boston Musica
Viva, the Camerata Bern, the Raschèr Quartet, the Koussevitzky Foundation, the
Barlow Endowment, the Howard Hanson Institute of American Music, Carnegie Hall,
the BBC, the Aspen Music Festival, the Singapore Symphony, the Percussive Arts
Society; and for such celebrated solo artists as pianist Emanuel Ax, recorder
soloist Michala Petri, guitarist Manuel Barrueco, baritone Sanford Sylvan,
percussionist Evelyn Glennie, and cellist Elinor Frey.
Check out the video below of the LA Piano Quartet offering a
gorgeous interpretation of Steven Stucky’s Piano
Quartet.
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