·Music Alive Round I Recipients
·Round II Recipients
·Round III Recipients
·Round IV Recipients
·Round V Recipients
ABOUT MTC
·Board of Directors
·Staff
·Contact Meet The Composer
WHAT'S NEW
Announcements and program news
MTC SPOTLIGHT
Interviews with current MTC awardees
ON THE MAP
Features on MTC composers and events
PROGRAMS
APPLICATIONS
PROGRAM CALENDAR
Performance info for MTC sponsored events, including dates and ticket info
COMPOSERS IN CONVERSATION
Archived interviews
LINKS
Links to composers and arts organizations
HOME
|
Music Alive Round III Recipients
· Greater Twin Cities Youth Symphonies/John Mackey
(4-week residency)
 Photo: Preston Schlebusch
|
John Mackey is a respected 28-year old composer whose
rhythmically driven work contains elements of popular/rock
music. Mackey was recently appointed the first Music
Director of the Parsons Dance Company. His works have
been performed throughout the United States and around
the world, and he has received commissions from the Parsons
Dance Company, The Dallas Theater Center, The New York Youth
Symphony, and Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble, among others.
John Mackey holds degrees from The Juilliard School and the
Cleveland Institute of Music.
· Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra/Jeremy Gill
(2-week residency)
Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania in 1975, Jeremy Gill
received his B.M. with high distinction in 1996 from the
Eastman School of Music in NY, and his doctorate in
composition at the University of Pennsylvania in 2000.
After school, he accompanied the University of Rochester
Chamber Orchestra to Jamaica and the Cayman Islands,
helping create the ongoing Cayman Islands Summer Music Camp.
At various times in his career, Dr. Gill has served as oboist,
pianist, baritone saxophonist, conductor, and most recently
as composer in residence with the aforementioned Cayman
Islands Summer Music Camp, which serves children from
several Caribbean Islands. Jeremy Gill currently resides
in Philadelphia, where, shortly after his arrival, he was
invited to join the staff of the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra.
· Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra/Pierre Jalbert
(3-week residency)
 Photo: Mark Klopfer
|
At 33, Pierre Jalbert is already a highly accomplished
composer, having been awarded two BMI Foundation and
three ASCAP Foundation prizes, a Guggenheim fellowship,
and the Rome Prize in composition, among other honors.
He has been commissioned by the American Composers Orchestra,
the Fischer Duo, and violinist Midori. In addition to the
post at the American Academy in Rome, he has also held
residencies at the Copland House and the California Symphony.
Pierre Jalbert is currently on faculty at Rice University.
· National Symphony Orchestra/Cindy McTee
(2-week residency)
Composer Cindy McTee holds degrees from Pacific Lutheran
University (B.M.), Yale School of Music (M.M.), and University
of Iowa (Ph.D.). Her awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship,
Composers Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts,
Goddard Lieberson Fellowship from the American Academy of
Arts and Letters, and a Fulbright-Hayes Senior Lecturer
Fellowship in computer music at the Academy of Music in
Krakow, Poland. She has received commissions from the Dallas
Symphony Orchestra, Northern Arizona University, and the Barlow
Endowment.
· South Bend Symphony Orchestra/Jonathan Bailey Holland
(3-week residency)
Heralded by Newsweek as "one to watch," Jonathan Bailey Holland
has had works commissioned and performed by
the Atlanta, Baltimore, Charlotte, Chicago Civic,
Chicago Youth, Cleveland, Detroit, Florida Philharmonic,
Indianapolis, Minnesota, National, Philadelphia, Richmond,
San Antonio and St. Louis Symphony orchestras, among others.
He has received awards from the American Academy of Arts
and Letters and the Presser Foundation, and earned a
Bachelor of Music from Curtis Institute of Music and a
Ph.D. from Harvard University.
· Tucson Symphony Orchestra/Dan Coleman
(3-week residency)
Born in New York City in 1972, Dan Coleman has lived in
Arizona since 1999. He studied composition at the
Juilliard School, the University of Pennsylvania, and the
Aspen Music School. Recent honors include the 2001 Haddonfield
Symphony Composers Competition, a 2000 Arizona Commission on
the Arts Fellowship, a 1999 Aaron Copland Award, and the 1998
Whitaker Commission from the American Composers Orchestra.
In 1997, Coleman received the Victor Herbert/ASCAP Award for
his Sonata in Two Acts, a work for violin and piano.
Past commissions include Music for a Cold Night for the
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Song at the End of Summer for
the Dallas Symphony, quartetto ricercare for the
Cypress String Quartet, and Sad and Ancient Phrases for
the Arizona Friends of Chamber Music.
· Westchester Philharmonic/Derek Bermel/Ingram Marshall/Tobias Picker/Melinda Wagner
(4-week residency)
 Photo: Tom LeGoff
|
Derek Bermel, just in his 30's, has caught the eye of
colleagues, critics, and audiences across the globe. He has
been hailed for his creativity and theatricality as
a composer of chamber, symphonic, theatre, and pop works,
as well as for his versatility and virtuosity as a
clarinetist, conductor, jazz and rock musician. In May of
2001 he was awarded the Frederic A. Juilliard/Walter
Damrosch Rome Prize Fellowship in Musical Composition.
He has also won many of today's most important prizes,
including a Guggenheim award, Fulbright Fellowship, and
residencies at the Lincoln Center Directors Lab, Tanglewood,
Banff, and Yaddo.
Ingram Marshall has performed his own music widely in the
USA and Europe, concentrating on live-electronic works.
Increasingly, his ensemble music has been performed and
commissioned by a variety of performing organizations-from
symphony orchestras such as St. Louis, San Francisco, and
Los Angeles, to chamber groups such as Kronos Quartet,
San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, and St. Paul
Chamber Orchestra. Awards, grants, and commissions have
come from the Rockefeller Foundation, the National
Endowment for the Arts, the Fromm Foundation,
California Arts Council, the Washington State Arts
Commission, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters,
who honored Marshall with the academy award in music,
citing him as a "composer with his own voice."
 © Xavier Guardans
|
Tobias Picker began composing at age eight.
By age thirty, Picker was the recipient of numerous
awards and honors, including the Bearnz Prize, a Charles
Ives Scholarship, and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship.
In 1992 he received the prestigious Award in Music from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. From 1985-90,
Picker was Composer-in-Residence of the Houston Symphony,
and in 1995 he was named Composer-in-Residence for the
Pacific Music Festival, founded by Leonard Bernstein.
Tobias Picker has composed works in virtually all genres,
including three symphonies, three piano concertos,
concertos for violin, viola, and oboe, numerous songs,
string quartets, and chamber music for various
combinations of instruments.
 Photo: Steve Singer
|
Melinda Wagner was born in Philadelphia and received
graduate degrees in Music Composition from the University
of Chicago and the University of Pennsylvania. Her composition
Concerto for Flute, Strings, and Percussion-commissioned by
Paul Lustig Dunkel and the Westchester Philharmonic-
received its premiere in May 1998 and was awarded the 1999
Pulitzer Prize in Music. Ms. Wagner's works have been performed
by the New York New Music Ensemble, the Society for New Music,
Orchestra 2001, and other leading organizations. Commissions
have come from the Chicago Symphony, Chamber Music Society of
Lincoln Center, Barlow Foundation, the Mary Flagler Cary
Charitable Trust, the Fromm Foundation, and the American Brass
Quintet among others.
|