Tag: awards

ASCAP Foundation Announces 2012 Morton Gould Young Composer Awardees

ASCAP Foundation President Paul Williams has announced the recipients of the 2012 ASCAP Foundation Morton Gould Young Composer Awards. The award-winning composers share prizes of over $40,000 and receive complimentary copies of Sibelius software. They will be recognized at the annual ASCAP Concert Music Awards at Merkin Concert Hall in New York on May 24, 2012.

The 2012 Morton Gould Young Composer Award recipients are listed with their current residence and place of origin, if different, in parentheses:

David Biedenbender of Ann Arbor, MI (Waukesha, WI)
William David Cooper of Davis, CA (Rocky Mount, CA)
Derek David of Boston, MA (Los Angeles, CA)
Simon Frisch of New York, NY
Michael Gilbertson of New Haven, CT (Dubuque, IA)
Ted Goldman of Rochester, NY (New York, NY)
Peng-Peng Gong of New York, NY (Nanjing, China)
Ross Griffey of Seabrook, TX (Nassau Bay, TX)
Ted Hearne of Brooklyn, NY (Chicago, IL)
David Hertzberg of New York, NY (Santa Monica, CA)
Andrew Hsu of Philadelphia, PA (Fremont, CA)
Emily Koh of Waltham, MA (Singapore)
Michael Lee of New York, NY (Atlanta, GA)
Maxwell J. McKee of Annandale-on-Hudson, NY (Montclair, NJ)
Jared Abraham Miller of New York, NY (Los Angeles, CA)
Eric Nathan of New York, NY
Gity H. Razaz of New York, NY (Tehran, Iran)
Kathryn Salfelder of Fairlawn, NJ (Paterson, NJ)
Nathan Shields of Poughkeepsie, NY (Traverse City, MI)
Mike Sweeney of Bloomington, IN (Albert Lea, MN)
Roger Zare of Ann Arbor, MI (Sarasota, FL)

The youngest ASCAP Foundation composer Award recipients range in age from 12 to 18 and are listed by state of residence:

Miles Jefferson Friday, age 18 (WA)
Tengku Ahmad Irfan, age 13 (NY)
Anna Larsen, age 12 (MA)
Yeeren I. Low, age 15 (PA)
John Peter Redmond, age 12 (NY)
Thomas Reeves, age 17 (NY)
Jonas Tarm, age 18 (IL)
Renata Vallecillo, age 12 (NJ)

The following composers received Honorable Mention:

Anthony R. Green of Boulder, CO (Arlington, VA)
Ian Ng of Long Island City, NY (Hong Kong, China)
Michael Schachter of Ann Arbor, MI (Boston, MA)
Matt Smith of Cleveland, OH (San Diego, CA)
Francisco Castillo Trigueros of Chicago, IL (Mexico City, Mexico)
Clinton J. Wang of New Haven, CT (Toronto, Canada)

Honorable Mention in the youngest category:

Gideon Broshy, age 18 (NY)
Emily Elizabeth Brown, age 17 (MD)
Thomas Feng, age 18 (CA)
Sidarth Jayadev, age 14 (NY)
Jake Landau, age 16 (CT)
Yeeray Low, age 17 (PA)

The ASCAP composer/judges were Samuel Adler, Eve Beglarian, Yotam Haber, Tamar Muskal, Roberto Sierra, Augusta Read Thomas, and Randall Woolf.

(—from the press release)

MAP Fund Awards Over $1.2M to Support 41 Live Performance Projects

Christina McPhee & Pamela Z

For the 2012 Map Fund awarded Carbon Song Cycle, a work which is in part inspired by ongoing changes and upheavals in the earth’s ecosystem, media artist Christina McPhee (left) will create layers of interactive, projected video and Pamela Z (right) will create music for voice and electronics, cello, viola, clarinet, and found percussion.

The MAP Fund, a program of Creative Capital supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, has announced its 2012 grants. The Fund will underwrite 41 new projects in the disciplines of dance, theater and music, all works that in some way explore the boundaries of contemporary performance practices. A panel of peers selected the grantees from more than 800 submissions and the projects will be supported with grants ranging from $10,000 to $45,000. In addition to project grants, each MAP grantee also receives unrestricted general operating support to address their organizations’ day-to-day fiscal health beyond individual productions. Gen-op support—this year in amounts from $2,500 to $12,000—was implemented in 2008 in response to the global financial crisis. The 2012 grantees include: Harvestworks (NYC) for Hans Tammen’s Apheresis, a piece for 15 laptop/electronics performers using a score that’s rearranged every time it’s played; Circuit Network (San Francisco, CA) for the performance of Pamela Z’s Carbon Song Cycle created in collaboration with media artist Christina McPhee, The Educational Alliance (NYC) for the performance of Yoav Gal’s “hybrid opera” 3WEEKS; Music at the Anthology (NYC) for the production of Corey Dargel and Andrew Sean Greer’s music-theatre work The Three Christs; and the Department of Music at the University of California San Diego for Cuatro Corridos, an hour-long multidisciplinary music-theater collaboration between soprano Susan Narucki and writer librettist Jorge Volpi featuring music by Hilda Paredes, Arlene Sierra, Lei Liang, and Hebert Vázquez Sandrin that looks at human trafficking across the U.S.–Mexican border. For a complete list of the 2012 grantees, please visit the MAP Fund site.

“The projects supported this year by the MAP Fund represent an incredible range of topics and formats that will both thrill and challenge audiences,” says Ruby Lerner, President and Executive Director of Creative Capital. “The MAP Fund’s long-standing commitment to supporting such a diversity of projects helps ensure the continued vitality of the field.” Ben Cameron, Program Director for the Arts at the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, added, “The MAP Fund has a long legacy of supporting some of the most innovative contemporary performance projects in the country. We are honored to support the work of this year’s talented roster of artists, and we look forward to seeing their exciting and ambitious projects come to life.”

Tammen Laptops

Hans Tammen conducting an orchestra performing on laptops and other electronic devices. His 2012 Map Fund awarded Apheresis, involving a total of 15 musicians, will use a score that is rearranged every time it’s performed.

Panelists who served the MAP Fund this year included Rob Bailis (independent consultant, San Francisco); Daniel Banks (DNAWORKS, Santa Fe, NM); Ron Berry (Fusebox Festival, Austin, TX); Georgiana Pickett (Baryshnikov Art Center, New York); Ann Carlson (visiting artist, Stanford University); Kristy Edmunds (UCLA Live, Los Angeles); Okwui Okpokwasili (indpendent artist, New York); Judd Greenstein (composer, curator Ecstatic Music Festival, New York); George Lewis (Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music at Columbia University, New York); and Peggy Monostra (G. Schirmer Music Publishers, New York).

With the exception of the NEA, the MAP Fund is the largest annual open submission grant to support contemporary performance projects in the United States in both applications reviewed and dollars awarded. Since 1989, the Fund has disbursed more than $24 million to upwards of 900 performing arts projects. The program is well known for its broad geographic reach, as well as for its support of cutting-edge performance practices. This year’s grantees represent artistic communities in Minneapolis, San Diego, Austin and Marlboro, VT, among others.

The MAP Fund is supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The program, which was established by the Rockefeller Foundation in 1988, has supported innovation and cross-cultural exploration in theater, dance and music for more than two decades. To date, MAP has disbursed over $24 million dollars to more than 900 projects. Since 2001, the program has been administered by Creative Capital, a national nonprofit organization founded in 1999 which is dedicated to providing integrated financial and advisory support to artists pursuing adventurous projects in five disciplines: Emerging Fields, Film/Video, Literature, Performing Arts and Visual Arts.

(-from the press release)

Eighteen Composers Receive AAAL Awards Totaling $190,000

The American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced the eighteen recipients of this year’s awards in music, which total $190,000. The winners were selected by a committee of academy members: Ezra Laderman (chairman), David Del Tredici, John Harbison, Fred Lerdahl, Tania Leon, Bernard Rands, Gunther Schuller, and Steven Stucky.

The awards will be presented at the academy’s annual ceremonial in May. Candidates for music awards are nominated by the 250 members of the academy.

ARTS AND LETTERS AWARDS IN MUSIC

Four composers will each receive a $7500 Arts and Letters Award in Music, which honors outstanding artistic achievement and acknowledges the composer who has arrived at his or her own voice. Each will receive an additional $7500 toward the recording of one work. The winners are Paul Moravec, Frank Ticheli, Dan Welcher, and John Zorn.

WALTER HINRICHSEN AWARD

Reena Esmail will receive the Walter Hinrichsen Award for the publication of a work by a gifted composer. This award was established by the C. F. Peters Corporation, music publishers, in 1984.

ANDREW IMBRIE AWARD

Louis Karchin will receive the $10,000 Andrew Imbrie Award in Music. This award, being inaugurated this year, is given to a composer of demonstrated artistic merit, and is made possible through a gift from Andrew and Barbara Imbrie.

WLADIMIR AND RHODA LAKOND AWARD

The Wladimir and Rhoda Lakond award of $10,000 is given to a promising mid-career composer. This year the award will go to Christopher Theofanidis.

GODDARD LIEBERSON FELLOWSHIPS

Two Goddard Lieberson fellowships of $15,000, endowed in 1978 by the CBS Foundation, are given to mid-career composers of exceptional gifts. This year they will go to Edmund Campion and Huck Hodge.

CHARLES IVES FELLOWSHIPS

Harmony Ives, the widow of Charles Ives, bequeathed to the academy the royalties of Charles Ives’s music, which has enabled the academy to give the Ives awards in composition since 1970. Two Charles Ives Fellowships, of $15,000 each, will be awarded to Haralabos Stafylakis and Xi Wang.

CHARLES IVES SCHOLARSHIPS

Niccolo Athens, Sean Friar, David Hertzberg, Takuma Itoh, Wang Jie, and Chris Rogerson will receive Charles Ives Scholarships of $7500, given to composition students of great promise.

MARC BLITZSTEIN MEMORIAL AWARD FOR MUSICAL THEATER

Friends of the late academician Marc Blitzstein set up an award, now $5,000, in his memory to be given from time to time to a composer, lyricist, or librettist to encourage the creation of works of merit for musical theater and opera. Chosen by a specially selected committee, the composer John Kander will be awarded this prize.

(—condensed from the press release)

After While, Crocodile!

It’s been almost a week since NARAS, or The Recording Academy, announced the winners of the Grammy Awards for 2012. That the 23-year-old Ms. Adele Laurie Blue Adkins of London, England, would walk away with six awards: Record, Album, and Song of the Year; Best Pop Solo Performance and Pop Vocal Album; as well as Best Short Form Music Video was no surprise. Mainstream media news had been “predicting” (as if newspersons have no inside track on a major media event like the Grammy Awards) that she would be taking away the largest amount of statuary in her purse. I figure that the Best Pop Instrumental award going to the 67-year-old Booker T. Jones (Booker T. and the MGs) and the Best Pop Duo/Group award going to 85-year-old Tony Bennett with the late Amy Winehouse is an indication of the kind of balance such Spring/Winter polarities represent to the American Culture Machine. That both of the female artists mentioned hail from England, while not pertinent in any musical sense, piqued my interest, too. The next biggest sweep was pulled off by the Foo Fighters (Best Long Form Video, Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance and Best Rock Performance, Song and Album), an “alternative” group (according to Wikipedia) founded and led by David Grohl of the iconic grunge band, Nirvana. The Best Alternative Music Album award went to Bon Iver, a folk band (as per Wiki). The Foo Fighters weren’t nominated for an alternative music award. The next biggest take-home tally went to Kayne West with four: Best Rap Album, Performance, Song, and Sung/Collaboration. To be clear, he shared the spotlight on the last three of these awards with: Jay Z; Rihanna, Kid Cudi and Fergie; and Jeff Bhashker, Stacy Ferguson, Malik Jones and Warren Trotter, respectively.

Now that NARAS only recognizes 78 categories worth bestowing the coveted Grammy Award on (down from 109), I’d like to look at some of the remaining 63. Besides Tony Bennett receiving another award, Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album (his fifth in that category to go with his six Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance awards, a Best Solo Vocal Performance (Male), a Record of the Year, Album of the Year, and a Lifetime Achievement Award—16 in all, when you count this year’s pop-duo award), several other artists received two golden gramophones. Someone I’d never heard of, Skrillex, was awarded a Grammy for Best Dance Recording and Best Dance/Electronica Album. I went online and learned the work he was recognized for forward and backward, but I’m not sure I’m “down with it” yet. It’s full of heavily processed samples that I really want to analyze. Since I don’t dance very much anymore, I really try to listen as deeply as possible to a piece until I’m sure I have an understanding of it. Taylor Swift also got two: Best Country Song and Solo Performance and Barton Hollow took the Best Country Duo/Group Performance and Best Folk Album (folk is the alternative country?).

I was totally “forgetted up” by Cee Lo Green’s Best Traditional R&B Performance, as well as Best R&B Song Awards. As much as he’s a great singer, even in R&B, traditional doesn’t really do him justice and I thought that Rapheal Saadiq’s “Good Man” and Marsha Ambrosius’s “Far Away” really should have been the takers. But their messages, over-representation of black men in prison and anti-gay violence, were possibly too gritty for the Academy this year. In fact, all the choices for R&B didn’t make much sense to me. While Corinne Bailey Rae can carry a tune, her breathy and somewhat head-voicey delivery is reminiscent of Nora Jones and seems to totally miss the chest-voiced tabernacle technique associated with R&B. I thought Kelly Price’s “Not My Daddy” was a better model, but it’s important to note that these awards are voted for by the rank and file of NARAS and their criteria for picking awardees are not mine. Besides, I’m no expert on R&B, although I grew up playing it and, on occasion, still do. And I’m only slightly better versed in opera, but it was nice to see that the topic of religious hypocrisy—Elmer Gantry by Robert Aldridge and Hershel Garfein—inspired two Grammys: Best Contemporary Classical Composition, as well as Best Engineered Album. What I am well-versed in, though, is jazz and Chick Corea was a two Grammy winner for Best Improvised Jazz Solo and Best Instrumental Jazz Album.

This category, jazz, is where the “restructuring” of the Grammy Awards really became confusing. Just the idea of recognizing a best improvised jazz solo without recognizing a non-improvised one makes my fingernails itch. While guitarist Pat Metheny’s “What’s It All About” took the Best New Age Album award, his performance on the CD, which was fantastic, is really coming out of the jazz-based sensibilities his entire career is steeped in. I can hear almost no resemblance in his playing to George Winston, but I definitely can hear a resemblance to that of Fred Hersch, a runner-up to Corea. Possibly the most damning example of this confusion is found in the absence of the “Best Jazz Vocal Duo/Group Album” award (while the distinction of “vocal duo/group” is offered in other categories). The result this year was that a drummer, Terri Lyne Carrington, took the Best Jazz Vocal Album award over veteran vocalists Karrin Allyson, Kurt Elling, Tierney Sutton, and Roseanna Vitro. While Carrington’s album, The Mosaic Project, features excellent singers—Dianne Reeves, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Nona Hendryx, Cassandra Wilson, Esperanza Spalding, Helen Sung, Tineke Postma, Geri Allen, Patrice Rushen, Ingrid Jensen, Sheila E., and Gretchen Parlato—none are mentioned in the award itself, which reads: “Terri Lyne Carrington & Various Artists.” This is not to take away from the musical integrity of Carrington’s project, but the individuality of the jazz vocalist is obscured and even divorced from the final product vis-à-vis musical industry recognition, which is highly questionable and a direct result of the Grammy Awards categories’ restructuring.

To be brief, the elimination of the Vocal Performance Male, Female, and Duo/Group categories and the Jazz Fusion Performance, Original Jazz Composition, Latin Jazz Album, and Contemporary Album categories will only help to mislead mainstream perceptions of American music, just as the elimination of Best Latin Recording and individual Best Latin Pop, Latin Rock/Alternative or Urban, Regional Mexican, Mexican/Mexican-American, Banda, Norteño, Tejano, Latin Urban, Merengue, Salsa, and Salsa/Merengue Album categories will. On Monday’s Democracy Now!, Amy Goodman interviewed Oscar Hernández and Roberto Lovato, who discussed this as well as the current protest and lawsuit spearheaded by composer/drummer/bandleader/educator Bobby Sanabria. In solidarity with his efforts, I did not watch the Grammy Awards ceremony on television.

While I was composing this blog entry, I took a break for dinner with the Mrs. (among her many talents, she cooks great Alsatian spareribs!) and we saw a special on an underwater archaeological project in the Bahamas. One of the fossils they found was a 1,000-year-old skull of a caiman-like animal that hasn’t been alive there for centuries. One of the theories presented to explain the animal’s extinction from the islands was that the indigenous human population that arrived there 800 or so years ago brought domesticated hunting animals that decimated the population until it died off. When I saw that, I immediately thought of the Grammy Awards categories being decimated by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (especially the Native American category). I also thought about a book mentioned by William Jefferson Clinton as being his inspiration when he was first elected to the presidency of the United States called Leadership Jazz by Max DePree. Depree described leading a group, especially in business, as being more analogous to playing jazz, where one is constantly improvising according to what’s going on in the moment, rather than playing in groups where all the notes are arranged beforehand. It struck me as peculiar that the corporate arm of the music industry would be restructuring the music it offers to the American public in a way that whittles away at how improvisation is included in that musical offering by eliminating those categories where it is most prevalent. Leaving jazz as the sole vehicle for improvisation makes me nervously think of the case of the hunting dogs of the Lucayan Indians. This might be something to keep in mind as we negotiate our various ways through the maze of the mainstream musical milieu we know and love. It’s a jungle out there!

Later, alligator.

The Cycle of Get

The Cycle of Get

Mozart never went to Kinko’s.

In an often-cited letter to his father, Mozart complained about working all night to transcribe Die Entführung aus dem Serail for winds before less-operatic pirates could claim the royalties. However, Mozart never paced in shops redolent of toner fumes while his scores were prepared the night before a postmark deadline. Similarly, Haydn never submitted a portfolio of major compositions to receive his honorary doctorate from Oxford, but simply recycled a symphony (Hoboken 1/92) previously commissioned by Count d’Ogny.  Beethoven had no transcripts sent to Albrechtsberger in advance of his studies.

The 18th-century composers received training and pursued careers in a small, guild-like network that was considerably less formal than their waistcoats. Modern composers confront a bewildering array of career paths.  Because of the confluence of the concert season and the academic calendar, many of these opportunities begin with an application submitted in the spring.

April is truly the cruelest month, during which established composers anticipate the awarding of the Pulitzer Prize, the Rome Prizes, and the Guggenheim Fellowships.  Emerging composers learn whether or not they have earned one of the ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Awards or have gained a placement in a summer festival or artist colony (knowing they will still contend for the Bearns Prize and the BMI Student Composer Awards, both announced in May). Most composers in higher education will be consumed with admissions or applying for teaching positions.

The first day of May is circled on many calendars because it is both the NACAC-approved deadline for responding to college admissions offers and last day for colleges accredited by NASM to hire faculty teaching at other colleges without negotiation.  In short–and in the sadly more-familiar jargon of sports–May 1 is both the day that students sign letters-of-intent and the faculty trade deadline.  What follows is a denouement of mortarboards and Elgar: that bottomless cup of trio.

THE LONG SHADOWS OF SUCCESSFUL OTHERS

Some composers will thrive in this market of opportunities. For them, spring will seem as orderly as the cadential rhetoric in a sonata, with the supertonic six-five of interviews giving way to the tonic six-four of an obvious choice. A few others may find themselves suddenly ennobled by an unsuspected windfall.  For them, spring is like a perhaps handout, raising the flats of outrageous fortune into a Picardy third. Or so it would seem.

In fact, those who prosper will almost certainly tell their stories differently.  Any accomplishment in music requires sustained and dedicated effort.  When the spotlight of recognition lights upon an achievement–be it an award, a job, or a fellowship–the achiever will often take pains to explain the unglamorous hours spent in pursuit of the goal.

The personal narratives of the accomplished and recognized may be moving and even inspirational, but they are largely disregarded.  Work is not sexy. Luck is sexier. Effortlessness is the apotheosis of sexiness.  Music–even music in the academy–is a world that trades on the fantasy of talent: the divine right and manifest destiny of artistic triumph.

From our earliest encounters with music, we are told tales of extraordinary accomplishment by musicians: stories so magnificent that no musicologist could hope to put them into context. It is absurd to think of Mozart applying for graduate school, but we scarcely question a cinematic portrayal of him dictating the Requiem from his deathbed.

ACCOMPLISHMENT & RECOGNITION

I have been facetious in pursuit of a specific and uncomfortable fact of life:  the ongoing dialectic of accomplishment and recognition.

Accomplishment is a subjective measure of achievement. Given the solitary nature of composition, the sense of accomplishment is largely self-assessment. Others may say, “Wow, that piece was quite an accomplishment,” but the composer is more likely to sense accomplishment months earlier when looking up from the staves and proclaiming, “Wow, that is one sweet-ass lick of counterpoint!” Only the composer can truly make this assessment because only the composer can put the accomplishment in the intertextual context of his or her idiomatically indexed library and inner-iPod.

Recognition is the acknowledgement of accomplishment. As a matter of logic, everything described in the previous paragraph is recognition: the individual recognizes his accomplishment.  However, in our workaday vocabularies, recognition is the observation of the other, where the other may be a performer, teacher, audience, Pulitzer board–even Jaye P. Morgan, mallet in hand, poised to end your appearance on The Gong Show.

The difference between accomplishment and recognition, as here defined, is as obvious as it is fraught with danger.  In short: what the artist values may not be what the other observes.  Indeed, these two observations may be so different as to not even intersect.

Everyone knows that accomplishment and recognition are two different things, but anyone who has achieved accomplishment without recognition forgets the difference.  It creates a wild imbalance to the ego and the sense of aesthetic propriety, and we tend to project the inverse of that imbalance on the individual who is recognized in our stead.  If I have accomplishment without recognition, then clearly the talentless hack that wins the job, commission, prize, or admission offer has recognition without accomplishment.  Whew.  [Mop brow.] Balance is restored.

Projecting our disappointment by challenging the selection process is a first-line defense: easy, natural, and more readily available than bourbon or Mahler. But when the hurt and anger passes, and the last acquaintance says the final reassuring platitude–perhaps accompanied by a graphic that features a kitten Photoshopped into implausible peril–there are things to consider about what may have happened in an elsewhere beyond our ken.

There are significant differences between applying for a degree program, a prize, or a job, much less a summer festival or commission.  Since I am largely concerned with the deliberation and outcome, I have adumbrated these differences.  In what follows, the composer that applies for anything is an applicant or candidate; the people tasked with making a decision are the committee or adjudicators.

THE APPROACH

We apply with a view of the big picture, fearlessly not sweating the small things.  Sometimes score readers–especially young score readers–obsess over details.

For example, when I began teaching orchestration, I insisted my assignments be done with impeccable precision in placing dynamics and a careful measurement of hairpins. As if channeling a Victorian schoolmarm, I wanted every assignment “neatly lettered.”  About a month into this reign of prissy terror, I had an unwelcome epiphany:  notation is easy to grade; evaluating orchestration is difficult and time-intensive.

I lead with this confession to note the difference in the kinds of judgments that inform a selection process: the measurable quantities and the subjective qualities.  We all sneer at rules and guidelines as so much administrival drivel.  But regardless of our private thoughts about recommendations, transcripts, or anonymous submission, anyone applying for anything should take pains to observe the rules.  Whether or not a portfolio of compositions will crown the composer as the voice of a generation is a matter of aesthetic judgment.  Whether or not the portfolio arrives in three bound copies by the postmark date is a simple binary decision.

I do not mean to suggest that a score of unimpeachable brilliance would be summarily dismissed for a breach of protocol. Just as gravity bends light, extraordinary musicianship will scramble the best-laid plans of orderly conduct. Rather, I am suggesting that in matters of application, a poor first impression may prevent unimpeachable brilliance from getting past the first round.

A careful aggregation of statistics from multiple resources has led me to conclude that there is … like … a metric buttload of composers out there. A college teaching job will draw dozens of applicants.  A competition will draw hundreds of scores.  Any application for anything will likely be received by an assistant of unknown musical aptitude. These score-wranglers have the thankless task of making sure the rules are observed, for the sake of good faith and best practices. But even the greatest musical minds and sharpest score-readers may overlook brilliant music in a badly rendered score, considered in haste.  And the early stage of a selection process is often characterized by haste.

THE UNWONDERFUL WINNOW

The adjudicator may enter into a selection process with any number of lofty goals and forward-thinking aspirations, but the moment the process begins, there is one immutable fact:  there is an awful lot of good music on the table surrounded by an awful lot of less-good music.  The sheer volume of applications is daunting.  It is the perfect time to panic.

The first round of evaluating a large sample of applications is typically a cursory scan that results in a binary decision: yes or no. These tend to be snap decisions: the kind of thin-slicing Malcolm Gladwell explores in his book Blink.  Given the urge to purge, any aspect that must be qualified or nuanced with explanations–i.e., any element that slows the process–may result in elimination.

There is an unpleasant irony in considering such snap decisions. The worst-case scenario conjures a situation wherein the extremes of originality are discarded for the comforting heterogeneity of the middle.  In short–and thin-slicing is the epitome of “in short”–it is survival of the safest.  Unfortunately, the history of musical innovation is a record of extremity. One wonders if a committee empaneled in 1942 would have even considered Cage’s “The Wonderful Widow of Eighteen Springs” a song with piano accompaniment.

Brilliance shines through blinders and brilliant adjudicators will bend to accommodate irregularities attending innovation.  But only if they see it.  Thinking outside the box is better saved until one actually gets invited into the box.

DECISION BY COMMITTEE

Berlioz believed that a unison part played by fifteen average violinists sounded markedly better than the same passage played by four first-rate violinists.   While he may have been overly optimistic about the chorusing effect, he was right about one thing: a large sample blends variance and cancels extremity.  A committee considering an application is a small sample: every voice is heard and must be considered.

When three people enter a room to make a decision, they are likely to make a decision that none of them would have made as individuals. The nightmare scenario is well known:  one adjudicator has his heart set on one applicant, while another adjudicator keeps patiently explaining the logic of her choice.  When Twelve Angry Men becomes three adjudicators at an impasse, sometimes the only way forward is a compromise that crowns the candidate acceptable to all parties.  While the expression “compromise candidate” is pejorative, that candidate is not necessarily less worthy or less deserving.  Indeed, a different committee may very well have unanimously selected the compromise candidate. The committee itself may be comprised of compromise selections. For just as the committee may be confined to submitting the top three choices, the overseeing organization may be confined with selecting three judges in an effort to cover a broad cross-section of styles and aesthetics.

THE PLURALITY OF STYLE

In his seminal essay “New Music, Outmoded Music, Style and Idea,” Schoenberg wrote, “It is very regrettable that so many contemporary composers care so much about style and so little about idea.”  In Schoenberg’s formulation, style comprises the elements of a composition that reflect the composer; the composer does not affect this style but is rather concerned with the development of the idea:  the germinal and generating gesture that is mapped-out over the compositional whole.

Of course, Schoenberg was not the first to express concern about varied kinds of music. Indeed his Verklärte Nacht was, by his own admission, an attempt to merge the style of Wagner with the developmental technique of Brahms. (The merger involved an inverted ninth chord: an irregularity that made the score-readers of the Vienna Music Society reject the sextet in the search for safer fare. Accomplishment with recognition deferred.) Similarly, a self-conscious use of style was hardly novel.  Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte is an object lesson in polystylism.  Schoenberg realized that these topics, which had been largely the shop-talk of composers, were increasingly communicated to audiences in an unsophisticated way.  A preoccupation with style became a fashion, and composers were reported to be making style the agenda–the idea–of their compositions.

Policy statements of modern composition departments reflect Schoenberg’s sentiment, if not his taxonomy. Professors are eager to relate that discipline and technique are learning objectives, that they do not admit students or hire (or tenure) colleagues on the basis of style.  Music directors and foundations are similarly tolerant, if less precise, speaking to the transcendence of artistic vision.  From the faculty mixer to the Polar Prize, modern music is a big-tent coalition.

We needn’t tax the angels of our better nature to embrace a variety of styles: our earliest exposure to music was an ad hoc mixtape of the polished and profane.  There are no Darmstadt lullabies, no fight song from dear ol’ IRCAM.  No pianist credits her “mad chops” to hours of drill-it-and-kill-it with a tattered copy of Fluxus Fingerpower!. At every stage of our musical training, and even our basic socialization, we are inculcated with a mesh of musical styles.

A cursory glance at the programs for any ensemble reveals our variegated listening diet. A new music concert might span works from 10 to 100 years (always gerrymandering Webern into the contemporary). An orchestral concert can easily span 250 years back to the middle period of Haydn.  A musician who plays the recorder may have a working repertoire spanning 500 years, including “Stairway to Heaven.”  And then there’s the internet. Spotify is poly-style porn.  One recent evening, I was embarrassed to be caught red-handed, listening to the American Top-40 Countdown from 1979.

The guilty pleasures of our listening habits betray us. But to listen is not to compose.  Composition asks more of us.

Composing music will not bring fame to most. Or riches.  Composition will not make us more attractive or desirable. (At least while we are alive.) In short, but in words too romantic by half, the only reason to compose is to scratch the itch that attends not composing.  We may seek variety in listening. We may support colleagues and students in their choices. But we compose as we think we ought.

PEDALING FOR POINTS

Thus far, I have treated applications to school, jobs, and competitions from a safe, ironic distance, as if they were the occasional pursuit of some people, unsatisfied with accomplishment and desperate for recognition.  In fact, submitting scores is the constant work of the professional composer.  Some people who compose may sell insurance, conduct the Wiener Hofoper, or even be an Associate Dean, but the composing profession, in the inglorious abstract, is the acquisition of opportunities.

For most composers, this will involve successive roles in academic life, from graduate student to emeritus.  In a fantastic article in The Musical Times–which everyone should read if only to learn how composition may be a “FUBU discipline” (#respect)–Jonathan R. Pieslak writes about the measure of composers as professors.  Professors advance through the tenure ranks by publications and research grants, but:

…because these criteria are not immediately apparent aspects of music composition, academic administrators seem to have been forced into developing different norms to evaluate the quality of a composer’s work. Books and articles are now commissions and performances, and an increased emphasis is placed upon awards, recognitions and honours. A steady stream of performances, high-profile commissions and honours from reputable professional associations symbolises success, and this means that the music itself is seldom evaluated on its own terms. A work is only as good as the commission that funded it, the group who performed it, the reviewer who acclaimed it and the professional organisations who awarded it.

The Musical Times, Vol. 146, No. 1890 (Spring, 2005), 51.

That sounds suspiciously like work. Unsexy work.  We may imagine Beethoven strolling down a country lane pondering the rise of Napoleon and the subversion of E-flat major with a C-sharp, but the modern composer must seek such insights in spare moments of the Cycle of the Get:  get into school, get a prize, get a job, get another performance, etc.  And each acquisition, while a momentary rush, is little more than an opportunity: a berth to compose in the service obtaining the next opportunity.

These are high stakes, and the stakes increase with each success.  The big tent of modern music begins to narrow.  I might like my colleague.  I might respect his work ethic and technique. But when my colleague is selected for the opportunity I sought, my thoughts become uncollegial and complicated.  The great irony of these situations is that the conflict is real and visceral: a threat to future success and even one’s livelihood.  But the conflict is expressed in terms of aesthetics:  They hired that guy?  Dr. G-flat ninth chord? Not even inverted?  Our accomplishment without recognition makes us doubt the accomplishment of the recognized.

Most composer-on-composer crime in the university happens in private meetings.  These are personnel issues in which the participants are sworn to confidentiality.  Sometimes these ethical bonds are so strong, it takes both gin and tonic to dissolve them. We’ve all heard the stories, spread with suspicious annotations like the fingerings in cheap editions of Mozart’s sonatas.  But when these matters do not concern employment, public speculation and second-guessing is only inhibited by tact.  And tact, it turns out, is a poor inhibitor.

Consider the Pulitzer Prize.  The amount of ink and kerfuffle attending the annual announcement from Columbia seems wildly disproportionate to the actual cash prize: a mere fraction of the amount awarded for the other prizes, but given the broader exposure in the mainstream media, specialist publications like NewMusicBox are obliged to chronicle the “hum near Harlem.” The sudden rush of colloquy and calumny rapidly floods the narrow channels we frequent for community and advocacy.  Feedback and hullaballoo ensues.

The “problem” with the Pulitzer Prize–and may we all have such problems–is the problem with every prize: there is only one to give. In any given year, a committee might find “distinguished musical composition” in five pieces in three different styles by ten different measures. Somehow, the committee must find a way to relate the achievement in one style with the achievement in another style. The metrics of that comparison are idiomatic: one doubts they are truly shared by all members of the committee. But the committee does share the burden of making a decision that will have significant implications.

Uncomfortable questions follow. Should the committee consider the results of previous years? Has the award historically privileged one style over others? Does the list of prior laureates show an awkward homogeneity in gender, or race, or the pedagogical lineage of Roger Sessions? And if so, should the current committee make amends?

These are awful questions, the very asking of which presumes an inequity. That these are necessary questions may be inferred from the fact that too many readers are now too carefully considering which Pulitzer recipients may have studied with Sessions and his students.

Such are the high stakes of a solitary recognition. Given the broad colloquy about the Pulitzer and routine expressions of dismay, the winner is often put in the awkward position of minimizing the importance of what should be a crowning professional recognition.  Why would anyone consent to join a committee tasked with making such a decision? And how is the final decision made?

UNCONSONANT CONSENSUS

Otto von Bismarck famously observed that people shouldn’t see how laws or sausages are made. We might add that people should not see how final decisions about admissions, applications, and prizes are made. (Unfortunately, there’s no evidence that von Bismarck ever said his famous bon mot. John Godfrey Saxe wrote it in the Daily Cleveland Herald, 29 March 1869: accomplishment without recognition.)

Let’s take the segno to the coda: the last stage of adjudication.  Fade in on the weary committee at a shabby table. The easier work of thin-slicing the applications into a more-manageable group must seem like ages ago.  In each subsequent pass, the decisions are more difficult for each individual and far more difficult for the entire group.  In the periphery of each exchange between committee members, there is a meta-conversation, a subtle give and take about what might be ideal and who might be acceptable.  Nothing is too adversarial, and there’s undoubtedly a genuine sense of respect among the adjudicators.  And yet, the committee also has skin in the game.

An admissions committee will reflect the interests of the individual faculty. Naturally, teachers want to place students into situations where they will succeed, but students define the working life of a teacher.  Perhaps the teacher wants variety. Perhaps the teacher wants ease.  But whatever the case, the teacher recognizes the commitment that comes with a student and the degree to which the student/alumnus will reflect on the teacher in an increasingly interconnected network of schools and performers.

A faculty search committee, at its best, will reflect the needs of the students.  Unfortunately, the “needs of the students” is a moving target.  Students will come and go; their needs will change.  But the hired colleague will likely be around for some time to come.  Once again, the working lives of individual teachers are at issue. A faculty search committee would be foolish not to consider the collegiality of a candidate.

The prize jury is the most difficult group to read. Their motivation is ideological.  Sometimes judges agree to serve because of their commitment to an institution.  Sometimes judges are eager to contribute to the musical discourse of society. But ultimately, judges agree to judge–and are probably cajoled to judge–as a way to pay it forward.  The sense of obligation we feel to our teachers, we owe to our students. What we learned from the past, we share with the future. The Cycle of the Get is recursive at the Cycle of Intergenerational Debt.

The varying agendas and responsibilities I have suggested are most manifest in the large middle of a selection process, spanning from “this is going well” to “how will we ever decide?” The very last work of the committee is profoundly mysterious. There have been various studies of musicians adjudicating performance competitions.  That method of judging is easier to evaluate because the individual judges make an independent evaluation in real time.  A collective decision is very difficult to study.

I once took minutes for the final meeting of a faculty search that was about to implode.  The report of that final meeting is an amazing document: it reads like the transcript of a basketball game. Without officials.  In a prison yard.  I make the comparison to a basketball game in part because the participants were sweaty and cellblock-indelicate in their choice of vocabulary.  But mostly I refer to the fact that, like many basketball games, you only really needed to see the last five minutes.  Nothing in the preceding ninety minutes predicted the outcome of the final vote.

I don’t mean to suggest that hours of work were negated by the random outcome of a final vote.  Rather, I think that the final minutes of that committee’s deliberations–of any committee’s deliberations–involves a kind of decision-making that is ineffable. And even if those decisions were effable, the participants might be unwilling to eff them: the decisions might be inconsistent with their personal preferences and professional postures.  The unrepentant serialist might go secretly gooey for a well-placed D-flat major seventh chord.  The pedantic professor might be enlightened by the genius who is too ecstatic to follow the lesson plan.  In the end, we plan for the good; the great we can only behold.

After the detailed and principled work of each successive stage, the committee is reduced to the highly cultivated intuition of artists.

REGRETTING TO INFORM YOU

Independent of a commitment to composition, a commitment to the composing profession includes a lot of applications.  All that applying will get you a lot of big fat “no.” Get cozy with rejection: it is the baseball card clicking the spokes on the wheel of the Cycle of Get.

Many of these rejections can be taken in stride. Some are potentially devastating. When your current teachers do not accept you for a graduate program, it hurts.  When your colleagues do not select you for the teaching job you are occupying on an interim basis, it is embarrassingly disappointing. At such times, we are not ourselves. Even the proud and private should seek advice while carrying on with dignity. Public rejections cripple the ego.

At such times in my own career, I try to return to the work I have done with fresh ears.  Often, what I find is that my aspiration was based on a self-assessment that was inaccurate. Sometimes I gave insufficient attention to a quality I considered a strength only to find that it was a liability. Perhaps, in retrospect, that sweet-ass lick of counterpoint might need some textural space to bloom. Perhaps my glib answer to a question about remedial studies did not reveal my extensive experience in this area and offended the committee member committed to outreach in at-risk communities.  In either case, and in many others, what I prized as accomplishment was poorly presented and thus, not recognized.  Difficult and unproductive hours follow, with satisfaction hard to come by.  But those schools that did not hire me? They are never getting their staplers back.

I note one last time that throughout this piece, I have treated the issue of applying for schools, jobs, and prizes at a cool, ironic distance.  These are weighty matters.  Even the idea of “a career in music” is fairly abstract.  The topic I have been discussing–the topic to which we should address ourselves–is nothing less than the way we will spend most of our waking lives.  Will we compose on a cycle of semesters or in the five-to-nine complement of a nine-to-five job?

Hard work attends such questions, work that will drag through a summer of Sundays and into the next year. And as one works through those questions, it is useful to separate the practical need for recognition from the immaterial appreciation of accomplishment.  Recognition may be beyond our grasp.  Recognition may require work we do not care to do.  But the sense of accomplishment is always nearby.  You may have begun a composition with visions of recognition, but what has sustained you through hours and hours of work is the sense of accomplishment.

*

Footnotes:

Berlioz, Hector. 1948. Treatise on Instrumentation. Enl. and rev. by Richard Strauss. New York: Kalmus. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3303374.

Gann, Kyle. 1998. “Breaking the Chain Letter: An Essay on Downtown Music.” Kyle Gann. http://www.kylegann.com/downtown.html.

Ginsburgh, Victor. 2003. “Awards, Success and Aesthetic Quality in the Arts.” The Journal of Economic Perspectives 17 (2) (April 1): 99-111. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3216859.

Gladwell, Malcolm. 2005. Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. New York: Little, Brown and Co. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55679231.

Hartke, Stephen. 2004. “And the Pulitzer Prize for the Best Apple of the Year Goes To—an Orange!” NewMusicBox (July 1). http://www.newmusicbox.org/articles/And-the-Pulitzer-Prize-for-the-best-apple-of-the-year-goes-to-an-orange/.

Kaplan, Fred. 2006. “Sour Note.” Slate, April 19. http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/music_box/2006/04/sour_note.html.

Kosman, Joshua. 2004. “VIEW / Pulitzer Board Will Regret Changing Eligibility Rules for Music Prize.” San Francisco Chronicle. http://search.proquest.com/docview/411656186?accountid=11752.

Kozinn, Allan. 1992. “A Pulitzer Dispute: Should Music Prize Be Left to Experts?” New York Times. http://search.proquest.com/docview/428472108?accountid=11752.

Pieslak, Jonathan R. 2005. “The Challenges of Plurality Within Contemporary Composition.” The Musical Times 146 (1890) (April 1): 45-57. http://www.jstor.org/stable/30044068

Reich, Steve. 2008. “Comments by Steve Reich, Judge.” OperaCity.jp. http://www.operacity.jp/en/concert/topics/080525.php.

Sandow, Greg. 2004. “Pulitzer Follies.” NewMusicBox (July 1). http://www.newmusicbox.org/articles/Pulitzer-Follies/.

Schoenberg, Arnold, and Leonard Stein. 1975. Style and Idea: Selected Writings of Arnold Schoenberg. New York: St. Martins Press. http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1543041

Shaw, David. 1980. “Generalists Judge the Arts Amid Doubt.” Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File). http://search.proquest.com/docview/162638521?accountid=11752.

Silverman, Adam. 2000. “Keep Your Ears on the Prize: A Hyperhistory of American Composition Awards.” NewMusicBox (June 1). http://www.newmusicbox.org/articles/Keep-Your-Ears-on-the-Prize-A-Hyperhistory-of-American-Composition-Awards/.

Suzuki, Dean. 2003. “View From the West: New Hope for the Pulitzer.” NewMusicBox (August 1). http://www.newmusicbox.org/articles/View-From-the-West-New-Hope-for-the-Pulitzer/.

The Pulitzer Prize Board. 2004. “The Pulitzer Prize for Music: It’s Time to Alter and Affirm.” http://www.pulitzer.org/files/musicchanges.pdf.

Mellon Funds 3-Year, $450K eighth blackbird Residency at Curtis

8bb

Photo by Luke Ratray

On the heels of their Grammy win, word comes that eighth blackbird will take up a 3-year residency at the Curtis Institute of Music, funded by a $450,000 grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. According to the press release, the residency is “designed to prepare students to enter today’s challenging classical music world” and “will support the school’s aim to shape artistic leaders who find creative new ways to engage audiences while maintaining the highest artistic standards.” The sextet will visit for four weeks each year beginning in October 2012.

“A multi-year residency at the Curtis Institute of Music is both a great honor and a huge responsibility,” said eighth blackbird’s Tim Munro. “We aim to fill Curtis’s hallowed halls with eighth blackbird’s unique blend of musical curiosity, intelligence, flexibility, theatricality, entrepreneurial spirit, and humor. With any luck we will start and stoke a few artistic fires along the way.”

The ensemble’s residency activities include:

• collaboration and side-by-side performances with the Curtis 20/21 ensemble
• chamber music coachings
• readings of works by composition students
• seminars with student conductors
• leadership discussions
• world premieres of new works by annual composer-in-residence
• involvement in artistic planning of the annual All-School Project
• work with the community engagement program

(—condensed from the press release)

The 54th Grammy Award Winners You Didn’t See on TV

When Bon Iver frontman Justin Vernon accepted the Best New Artist award during the 54th Grammy Awards telecast, he offered a shout out to “all the non-nominees who have never been here and never will be here,” acknowledging all those music makers working outside the channels of the mainstream music industry who weren’t on display at Los Angeles’ Staples Center last night.

Indeed, though Milton Babbitt got his four seconds of Grammy love during the “In Memoriam” portion of Sunday’s CBS broadcast, even many of the artists who were recognized by the Academy received that acknowledgement away from the network’s cameras during a pre-telecast ceremony. Winners in 68 categories celebrated in the afternoon at the Los Angeles Convention Center, including:

Eighth Blackbird

@eighthblackbird snaps the view from the pre-telecast stage to share with their followers.

Best Opera Recording
John Adams: Doctor Atomic
Alan Gilbert, conductor; Meredith Arwady, Sasha Cooke, Richard Paul Fink, Gerald Finley, Thomas Glenn & Eric Owens; Jay David Saks, producer (Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; Metropolitan Opera Chorus)
[Sony Classical]

Best Choral Performance
Eric Whitacre: Light & Gold
Eric Whitacre, conductor (Christopher Glynn & Hila Plitmann; The King’s Singers, Laudibus, Pavão Quartet & The Eric Whitacre Singers)
[Decca]

Best Small Ensemble Performance
Steven Mackey: Lonely Motel – Music From Slide
Rinde Eckert & Steven Mackey; Eighth Blackbird
[Cedille Records]

Best Classical Instrumental Solo
Joseph Schwantner: Concerto For Percussion & Orchestra
Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Christopher Lamb (Nashville Symphony)
Track from: Joseph Schwantner: Chasing Light
[Naxos]

Best Contemporary Classical Composition
Robert Aldridge: Elmer Gantry
Robert Aldridge & Herschel Garfein
[Naxos]

Best Improvised Jazz Solo
“500 Miles High”
Chick Corea, soloist
Track from: Forever (Corea, Clarke & White)
[Concord Records]

Best Jazz Vocal Album
The Mosaic Project
Terri Lyne Carrington & Various Artists
[Concord Jazz]

Best Jazz Instrumental Album
Forever
Corea, Clarke & White
[Concord Records]

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album
The Good Feeling
Christian McBride Big Band
[Mack Avenue Records]

Best Instrumental Composition
“Life In Eleven”
Béla Fleck & Howard Levy, composers (Béla Fleck & The Flecktones)
Track from: Rocket Science
[eOne Music]

Best Engineered Album, Classical
Robert Aldridge: Elmer Gantry
Byeong-Joon Hwang & John Newton, engineers; Jesse Lewis, mastering engineer (William Boggs, Keith Phares, Patricia Risley, Vale Rideout, Frank Kelley, Heather Buck, Florentine Opera Chorus & Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra)
[Naxos]

Best Musical Theater Album
The Book Of Mormon
Josh Gad & Andrew Rannells, artists; Anne Garefino, Robert Lopez,
Stephen Oremus, Trey Parker, Scott Rudin & Matt Stone, producers; Robert Lopez, Trey Parker & Matt Stone, composers/lyricists (Original Broadway Cast)
[Ghostlight Records]

Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media
The King’s Speech
Alexandre Desplat, composer
[Decca]

Pauline Oliveros Winner of $50,000 John Cage Award

Pauline Oliveros

Pauline Oliveros – Photo by Gisela Gamper

Foundation for Contemporary Arts has named Pauline Oliveros the winner of the John Cage Award for 2012. The $50,000 prize is made biennially in recognition of outstanding achievement in the arts for work that reflects the spirit of John Cage.

The John Cage Award was established in 1992 in honor of the late composer, who was one of FCA’s founders. The selection is made by FCA’s directors from invited nominations. The current directors of the Foundation are: Brooke Alexander, Frances Fergusson, Agnes Gund, Jasper Johns, Julian Lethbridge, Glenn Ligon, Kara Walker, and T.J. Wilcox.

Oliveros is the founder of the Deep Listening Institute. Since the 1960s, she has worked with improvisation, meditation, electronic music, myth, and ritual. Oliveros represented the U.S. at the 1970 World’s Fair in Osaka, Japan, and was honored in 1985 with a retrospective at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. She is a distinguished research professor of music at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a Darius Milhaud composer-in-residence at Mills College in Oakland, California.

(—from the press release)

Koussevitzky Foundations Announce Commission Winners

The Serge Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress and the Koussevitzky Music Foundation, Inc. have awarded commissions for new musical works to eight composers. Jointly granting the commissions are the foundations and the performing organizations that will present the newly composed works.

Award winners and the groups co-sponsoring their commissions are:

John Aylward and the Washington Square Contemporary Music Society
Anthony Cheung and the Talea Ensemble
Jason Eckardt and the NOVA Chamber Music Series
Agustín Fernández and the Momenta Quartet
Jennifer Higdon and the Cypress String Quartet
Laura Kaminsky and the St. Petersburg (Russia) Chamber Philharmonic
Harold Meltzer and the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra
Benoît Mernier and the Pro Arte Quartet

Additional information about the awardees and their project plans is available here.

Serge Koussevitzky, conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1924 to 1949, established the Koussevitzky foundations to continue his lifelong commitment to composers and new music.

Applications for commissions are accepted annually, though an announcement on the site currently notes that the commissioning program is under review and applicants are encouraged to refer to this site after January 26, 2012, for information as to any changes to the existing guidelines that may be adopted for the 2012 grant cycle.

(—from the press release)

Vijay Iyer Named $30,000 Greenfield Prize Winner

Vijay Iyer

Vijay Iyer

The Hermitage Artist Retreat and the Greenfield Foundation have announced that composer and pianist Vijay Iyer is the winner of the $30,000 Greenfield Prize, awarded this year in the field of music.

Iyer will receive the award at a special celebration dinner on April 1, 2012, in Sarasota, Florida. Serving on the jury that selected Iyer were Linda Golding, past president of Boosey & Hawkes, Inc. music publishers and founder of The Reservoir; Jennifer Koh, solo violinist and prolific recitalist, and Limor Tomer, general manager of concerts and lectures at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Bruce E. Rodgers, executive director of the Hermitage, noted, “We look forward to April 1 when we not only present Vijay with the prize, but also begin the two-year process of working with him and provide whatever support he needs to realize his commission.”

The prize in the form of a commission is awarded annually, and rotates each year among three areas; drama, music, and a “wild card.” In the “wild card” years, the prize may be awarded in any field or combination of fields, or themes in an effort to accommodate new forms, fields, technologies, and the blending of traditional disciplines.

Details about the prize and the 2012 Greenfield Weekend are available here.

(—as reported on greenfieldprize.org)