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Schedule |
Alvin Singleton, artistic advisor, improvisation

Born in
Brooklyn, New York, Alvin Singleton attended New York University and
Yale. As a Fulbright Scholar, he studied with Goffredo Petrassi at the
Accademia Nationale di Santa Cecilia in Rome. After working for more
than a decade in Europe, Singleton returned to the United States to
become Composer-in-Residence with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra (1985-88).
He subsequently served as Resident Composer at Spelman College in Atlanta
(1988-91), as UNISYS Composer-in-Residence with the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra(1996-97), and was the 2002-03 Composer-in-Residence with the
Ritz Chamber Players of Jacksonville, Florida. In addition, he served
as Visiting Professor of Composition at the Yale University School of
Music.
He has been awarded a 2003 Guggenheim Fellowship, the Kranischsteiner Musikpreis by the City of Darmstadt, Germany, twice the Musikprotokoll Kompositionpreis by the Austrian Radio, the Mayor's Fellowship in the Arts Award by the City of Atlanta, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Singleton has composed music for the theater, orchestra, solo instruments, and a variety of chamber ensembles. His compositions have been performed by the symphony orchestras of Boston, Pittsburgh, Houston, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Detroit, Oregon, Baltimore, Syracuse, Louisville, and Florida, the American Composers Orchestra, the Rotterdam Philharmonic, l'Orchestre de Paris, das Guerzenich-Orchester Koelner Philharmoniker and also the Kronos Quartet, St Luke’s Chamber Ensemble, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Nash Ensemble of London, Asko Ensemble of Amsterdam, Ensemble des 20. Jahrhunderts of Vienna, London Sinfonietta, Trio Basso of Cologne and the Bremer Tanztheater.
Important
international festivals have also programmed Singleton's music. They
include Chamber Music Northwest, Tanglewood, Aspen, Bravo! Colorado,
Music from Angel Fire in New Mexico, Cincinnati May Festival, Cabrillo
Music Festival, Bang On A Can, National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta,
Other Minds in San Francisco, Festival Miami, Vienna Summer Festival,
Pro Musica Nova in Bremen, Styrian Autumn Festival in Graz, Brussels
ISCM World Music Days, Nuova Consonanza, Rome, and IRCAM in Paris. His
Music is published by European American Music Corporation and Musica
Mista and is recorded on the Albany Records, Elektra/Nonesuch, and Tzadik
labels.
Anthony Davis, artistic advisor, improvisation
As
a composer, Anthony Davis is best known for his operas. X,
The Life and Times of Malcom X,
which played to sold-out houses at its premiere at the New York City
Opera in 1986. The recording of X
was released on the Gramavision label in August 1992 and received a
Grammy Nomination for "Best Contemporary Classical
Composition" in February 1993. "[X] has brought new life to
America's conservative operatic scene," enthused Andrew Porter
in The New Yorker. Davis’s second opera, Under
the Double Moon,
a science fiction opera with an original libretto by Deborah
Atherton, premiered at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis in June 1989.
His third opera, Tania,
with a libretto by Michael-John LaChiusa and based on the abduction
of Patricia Hearst, premiered at the American Music Theater Festival
in June 1992. In April 1993, Davis made his Broadway debut, composing
the music for Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Angels
in America: Millennium Approaches.
A fourth opera, Amistad,
about a shipboard uprising by slaves and their subsequent trial,
premiered at the Lyric Opera of Chicago in November 1997.
Reacting to
two of Davis's orchestral works, Maps
(Violin Concerto) and Notes
from the Underground,
Michael Walsh said in Time Magazine: "Imagine
Ellington’s lush, massed sonorities propelled by
Bartók's vigorous whiplash rhythms and overlaid with the
seductive percussive haze of the Balinese gamelan orchestra, and you
will have an idea of what both the Concerto
and Notes
from the Underground sound
like."
Davis's works
also include the Violin
Sonata,
commissioned by Carnegie Hall for its Centennial; Jacob's
Ladder,
a tribute to Davis's mentor Jacob Druckman commissioned by the
Kansas City Symphony; Esu
Variations,
a concert opener for the Atlanta Symphony; Happy
Valley Blues,
a work for the String Trio of New York with Davis on piano; and Pale
Grass and Blue, Then Red,
a dance work for the Limon Dance Company. His orchestral works have
been performed by the New York Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony,
Pittsburgh Symphony, Atlanta Symphony, Orchestra of St. Luke's,
Brooklyn Philharmonic, Kansas City Symphony, Beethoven Halle
Orchestra of Bonn, and American Composers Orchestra. The Chicago
Symphony Orchestra performed Davis's opera X,
The Life and Times of Malcolm X
in concert in November 1992. The Pittsburgh Symphony recently
commissioned a new concert opener from Davis entitled Tales
(Tails) of the Signifying Monkey.
Recordings of
Davis's music may be heard on the Rykodisc (Gramavision) and Music
and Arts labels. His music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer, Inc.
Last updated 3/28/04