Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon will be working with students at this year’s June in Buffalo Festival as one of three senior composers and guest lecturers.Ricardo
Zohn-Muldoon was born in Guadalajara, México, in 1962. Literature inspires
many of his compositions, such as the extended song cycle Songtree, on poetry by Raúl Aceves and
William Shakespeare, the miniature opera NiñoPolilla, on
a libretto by Juan Trigos senior, and the scenic cantata Comala, based on the novel Pedro
Páramo, by the great Mexican author Juan Rulfo. Comala was
selected as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2011.
Ricardo’s compositional voice is also shaped by a steady collaboration
with the particular group of musicians for whom he writes, including
TonyArnold,
Molly Barth,
Stuart Gerber, Dieter Hennings,
Hanna Hurwitz,
Daniel Pesca,
Paul Vaillancourt,
Colin Stokes, and Tim Weiss, among others. This artistic
affinity brought many of these musicians together to co-found with Ricardo the
ensemble Zohn Collective in 2017. Ricardo has also collaborated across artistic
disciplines, with cartoonist José Ignacio Solórzano (Jis), writer / performer
Deidre Huckabay. songwriter Alfredo Sánchez, PUSH Physical Theater, Garth Fagan
Dance, and puppet company La Coperacha.
His works have been performed internationally, and supported by
the
American Academy of Arts and Letters,
Koussevitzky Foundation,
Fromm Foundation,
Barlow Endowment,
Guggenheim Foundation, and México’s
Sistema Nacional de Creadores de Arte, among other institutions in the
U.S. and abroad. Recordings of his music have been released on the Bridge,
Oberlin Music, Verso, CRI, Quindecim, Innova, Ravello, New Focus, and Tempus
labels. He studied at the University of California, San Diego (BA, 1986),
and at the University of Pennsylvania (PhD, 1993), where his principal teacher
was George Crumb. He is currently Professor of Composition at the Eastman
School of Music, having previously taught at the College-Conservatory of Music,
University of Cincinnati, and the Escuela de Música, Universidad de Guanajuato.
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