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Charles Wuorinen

 
Music Encyclopedia: Charles Wuorinen

(b New York, 9 June 1938). American composer. He studied with Luening, Beeson and Ussachevsky at Columbia University, where he later taught (1964-71) before joining the faculty at the Manhattan School. His large varied output is mostly instrumental (he has written many concertos). It uses serialism and often deploys highly contrasting speeds as a means of shaping structure. He is a virtuoso pianist and conductor, and with Harvey Sollberger founded the influential Group for Contemporary Music (1962).



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Biography: Charles Wuorinen
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Pulitzer-Prize-winning composer Charles Wuorinen (born 1938) remained at the forefront of the contemporary music scene throughout his prolific career. Following in the tradition of the post-World War II serialists, his works employed techniques to achieve new heights of lyricism, richness, and subtlety.

Charles Wuorinen was born in New York City on June 9, 1938. His father taught history at Columbia University for 40 years, and his early training in composition came from Jack Beeson and Vladmir Ussachevsky, both Columbia University professors. He started playing the piano and composing at age five. At 16, he won the New York Philharmonic's Young Composers Award. Wuorinen enrolled at Columbia in 1956 and studied composition with Otto Luening. He wrote his earliest orchestral work, Into the Organ Pipes and Steeples, at 18. While working as a piano accompanist, recording engineer, and singer, Wuorinen attended the Bennington Composers Conference in Vermont for four years. At 21, he composed his first three symphonies.

At Columbia in 1962, Wuorinen founded the Group for Contemporary Music, which became the prototype for many university new music ensembles. Organized in collaboration with Harvey Sollberger, it became one of the most important agencies for the performance and recording of contemporary music. Wuorinen received a bachelor's degree in 1961 and his master's degree in music in 1963. He taught music at Columbia from 1964 to 1971 but resigned when he was not granted tenure. He held Guggenheim fellowships in 1968 and 1972, and taught at the Manhattan School of Music from 1972 to 1979.

Wuorinen's early works use conventional tones but are still modern and exhibit a penetrating control of detail. His Third Symphony (1959), for example, shows a mastery of large form orchestration and 12-tone techniques. However, Wuorinen's best-known works feature rigorous serial applications similar to the works of Olivier Messiaen, Pierre Boulez, and Milton Babbitt. His compositions were based in a "time point system" in which pitch, time, and rhythmic divisions are related.

Throughout his career, Wuorinen was receptive to new musical resources. As early as 1961 he incorporated magnetic tape in his Consort from Instruments and Voices and combined tape with orchestra in Orchestra and Electronic Exchanges (1965). In 1969 Wuorinen created Times Encomium, which used synthesized sounds in every element of the composition. In 1970 he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Times Encomium, the first ever awarded for a composition created solely for a recording.

Wuorinen's works have been widely performed and he is one of the most significant American composers of his generation. Most of his compositions are abstract instrumental music. He created pieces to showcase nearly every musical instrument.

Some of Wuorinen's music may appear dry and un-inspired on first listening. Conventional elements such as melody and harmony are superseded by the shaping of melodic contour and the creative interaction of ensemble forces. Wuorinen believed that "art is itself because it demands an active relation with him who perceives it. He cannot appreciate' it; he must himself create the work's meaning." Listeners must absorb a Wuorinen piece several times before they appreciate its depth and dimension.

Wuorinen recorded for Gold Crest, CRI, Cambridge, Advance, Nonesuch, AR-DGG, Mainstream, and Desto Records, and his main publisher was C.F. Peters. He wrote essays and articles for High Fidelity, Musical America, the New York Times, Perspectives of New Music, the Saturday Review, Prose, Musik Geschichte und Gegenwart, and the New Grove Dictionary, as well as liner notes for CRI and Nonesuch Records.

Composer, conductor, lecturer, and performer, Wuorinen was so prolific that by the age of 37 he had over 150 compositions to his credit. His reputation allowed him to work exclusively by commission. Wuorinen was a founding member of the American Society of University Composers. He was also notable as the author of Simple Composition (1978), a valuable textbook for composition. From 1985 to 1987 he was composer-in-residence for the San Francisco Symphony.

His range of work is extraordinary. Wuorinen's opera The W. of Babylon (1975) is a "baroque burlesque" with an assortment of lewd 17th-century French men and women. His Bambula Squared (1984) is a piece for orchestra and computer-generated tape. Starting in the 1980s, Wuorinen increasingly composed chamber works with sharp textures, strong rhythms, and sustained, clear melodies.

Further Reading

In addition to his instructive publication Simple Composition (1978), recommended reading includes Introduction to Contemporary Music by Joseph Machlis (1979), American Music Since 1910 by Virgil Thompson (1970), David Ewen's American Composers (1982), and the New York Times (June 7, 1970, and April 10, 1983). Wuorinen is interviewed in T. Caras and C. Gagne, Soundpieces: Interviews with American Composers (1982).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Charles Wuorinen
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Wuorinen, Charles (wûr'ĭnən), 1938-, American composer, conductor, and pianist, b. New York City. Wuorinen studied at Columbia Univ. (B.A., 1961; M.A., 1963) and taught there, at the Manhattan School of Music, and at Rutgers Univ. In 1962 he was one of the founders of the influential Group for Contemporary Music. Composer in residence at the San Francisco Symphony (1985-89) and a guest piano soloist and conductor with many orchestras worldwide, Wuorinen has been the recipient of many awards, including Guggenheim (1968, 1972) and MacArthur (1986-91) fellowships.

In his innovative compositions he has explored and expanded electronic music and serial music; Wuorinen explains his approach in the treatise Simple Composition (1979, repr. 1994). He has written more than 200 compositions-including works for electronic media alone and with traditional instruments-for orchestra, chamber group, ballet, opera, chorus, and soloists. Among his best known pieces are Time's Encomium (1969), an electronic piece that won him the Pulitzer Prize; Reliquary for Igor Stravinsky (1975), based on Stravinsky's last sketches; Bamboula Squared (1984), for orchestra and computer-generated sound; the Dante Trilogy (1993-96), orchestral scores written for the New York City Ballet; and the opera Haroun and the Sea of Stories (2005), adapted from the novel by Salman Rushdie.

Bibliography

See bio-bibliography by R. D. Burbank (1993).

Artist: Charles Wuorinen
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Charles Wuorinen
  • Period: Contemporary (1950- )
  • Country: USA
  • Born: June 09, 1938 in New York, NY
  • Genres: Chamber Music, Concerto, Electronic/Computer Music, Keyboard Music, Orchestral Music

Biography

With over 200 compositions to his credit, Charles Wuorinen is one of the most prolific contemporary American composers. Born in 1938, he studied at Columbia University, where he worked with Otto Luening, Vladimir Ussachevsky, and Jack Beeson. A major presence in American music for over four decades, Wuorinen has taught at numerous schools, including Columbia, Princeton, the New England Conservatory, the Manhattan School of Music, Yale, and SUNY Buffalo. He has been on the faculty of Rutgers University since 1984. He has won numerous awards, such as the Lili Boulanger Memorial Award, the 1970 Pulitzer Prize (for Time's Encomium), and a McArthur Fellowship, to name a few.

Wuorinen's music is uniquely serial, and primarily 12-tone in nature. His major influences are the modernist European school, namely Schoenberg, though the influence of late Stravinsky and Babbitt are also unmistakable. Much of his music requires extreme virtuosity on the part of the performer, such as his Chamber Concertos, which typically include wide leaps, extreme dynamic contrasts, and a rapid exchange of pitches. Fractal geometry and the mathematical theories of Benoit Mandelbrot have influenced works such as Bamboula Squared and the Natural Fantasy for organ.

However, Wuorinen's later music begins to demonstrate tonal relationships, though to a limited degree, such as pitch-centered openings and conclusions, octave doublings, and timbral transpositions of thematic ideas. His music also evolved to include clear rhythmic relationships -- his earlier works avoided this characteristic -- and his melodies also became more conjunct in nature.

Wuorinen's music continues to evolve, with later works such as the Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra and New York Notes containing further rhythmic clarity, more recognizable melodic structures and clearer orchestration. Clearly this is not the style of the same composer as was found in his earlier works. His most recent works include Symphony Seven, a Piano Quintet for Ursula Oppens, and a Percussion Quartet.

Wuorinen is also the author of Simple Composition a useful text for composers who are beginning to use 12-tone techniques. Wuorinen has also been active as a pianist and has conducted his own works, as well as those of other contemporary composers, with many of major orchestras in the United States. In 1962, Wuorinen co-founded The Group for Contemporary Music, an ensemble dedicated to the performance of new chamber music. With his already impressive resume, extremely prolific output, and evolving but unique style, it is sure that Charles Wuorinen will be remembered for his numerous contributions to music, serialism and beyond. ~ Michael Blostein, All Music Guide

Discography

Lepton

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Chamber Works/Group For Contemporary Music

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Five

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Charles Wuorinen: Music of Two Decades, Vol. 3

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Charles Wuorinen

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Fast Fantasy

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Charles Wuorinen: Genesis

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The Golden Dance

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Archæopteryx

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Archæopteryx

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Wikipedia: Charles Wuorinen
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Charles Wuorinen at desk

Charles Wuorinen (b. June 9, 1938 in New York City) is an American composer. Wuorinen is a prolific composer in all genres and a high profile proponent of contemporary music. In 1970, Wuorinen became the youngest composer to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music (for the electronic work Time's Encomium) while his many other awards include a MacArthur Fellowship.

An indication of Wuorinen's historical importance can be seen in the fact that in 1975 Igor Stravinsky's widow gave Wuorinen the composer's last sketches for use in A Reliquary for Igor Stravinsky. Wuorinen was the first composer commissioned by the Cleveland Orchestra under Christoph von Dohnanyi (Movers and Shakers); and likewise the first to compose for Michael Tilson Thomas' New World Symphony (Bamboula Beach). Fractal geometry and the pioneering work of Benoit Mandelbrot have played a crucial role in several of his works including Bamboula Squared for orchestra and computer generated sounds and Natural Fantasy, a work for organ.

Wuorinen is a member of both the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. According to The New York Times[citation needed], "Charles Wuorinen has taken the decrees of 12-tone music and made them sing."

Wuorinen's most recent commission is from the Teatro Real in Madrid to compose the operatic version of Annie Proulx's short story (later Ang Lee's movie) "Brokeback Mountain"[1], though this has caused considerable speculation[2][3] and criticism[4].

Contents

Compositions

Wuorinen has written more than 250 compositions to date. His newest works include Eighth Symphony for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Scherzo a solo for Peter Serkin, Fourth Piano Sonata for Anne-Marie McDermott, Second Piano Quintet (for Peter Serkin and the Brentano Quartet), and Synaxis a sinfonia concertante for four soloists with strings and timpani. In the 2008-2009 season Serkin and the MET Orchestra under James Levine premiered Time Regained, a fantasy for piano and orchestra. Upcoming projects include an opera on Annie Proulx’s Brokeback Mountain for Gerard Mortier and the Teatro Real in Madrid. Wuorinen’s previous opera Haroun and the Sea of Stories based on the novel of Salman Rushdie with libretto by poet James Fenton was premiered by the New York City Opera in Fall 2004[5].

His works have been recorded on nearly a dozen labels including several releases on Naxos, Albany Records (Charles Wuorinen Series), John Zorn’s Tzadik label, and a CD of piano works performed by Alan Feinberg on the German label Col Legno.

Writings and lectures

Wuorinen is the author of Simple Composition. Wuorinen describes the book as

written by a composer and ... addressed to other composers — intending or actual, amateur or professional. Thus it is similar in intent to certain older books on the subject like Thomas Morley's A Plain and Easie Introduction to Practical Musicke (1597), for instance.... It outlines present practice, and while it can be used for purely didactic purposes, it can also be employed in composing "real" music.

Wuorinen has lectured at universities throughout the United States and abroad, and has served on the faculties of Columbia, Princeton, and Yale Universities, the University of Iowa, University of California (San Diego), Manhattan School of Music, New England Conservatory, State University of New York at Buffalo, and Rutgers University.

Performance and conducting

Wuorinen has also been active as a performer, a pianist and a conductor of his own works as well as other twentieth century repertoire. His orchestral appearances have included the Cleveland Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, New York Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the American Composers Orchestra.

In 1962 he co-founded the Group for Contemporary Music, an ensemble dedicated to performance of new chamber music. In addition to cultivating a new generation of performers, commissioning and premiering hundreds of new works, the Group has also been a model for similar organizations which have appeared in the United States since its founding.

Influence

His works have influenced a number of other composers. Robert Black cited Wuorinen as a particular influence on his own style of composition. Black also recorded Wuorinen's New York Notes.

Selected works

  • Oros - 2009
  • Marimba Variations - 2009
  • The Haroun Pianobook - 2009
  • Time Regained, a fantasy for piano and orchestra - 2008
  • Viola Variations - 2008
  • Metagong - 2008
  • Trio for Flute, Bass Clarinet and Piano - 2008
  • Second Piano Quintet - 2008
  • Synaxis - 2007
  • Fourth Piano Sonata - 2007
  • Spin 5 for Violin and 18 Players - 2006
  • Iridule for Oboe and 6 players - 2006
  • Eighth Symphony (Theologoumena) - 2006
  • Flying to Kahani for piano and chamber orchestra - 2005
  • Theologoumenon for orchestra - 2005
  • Duo Sonata for Flute and Piano - 2004
  • Ashberyana - texts of John Ashbery - 2004
  • Fourth Piano Concerto - 2003
  • Fenton Songs II - poems of James Fenton - 2002
  • Buttons and Bows (or Superparticular Variations) - 2001
  • September 11, 2001 - text of W.H. Auden - 2001
  • Haroun and the Sea of Stories - libretto by James Fenton, based on the novel by Salman Rushdie - 2001[6]
  • Fourth String Quartet - 2000
  • Cyclops 2000 for 20 Players - 2000
  • An Orbicle of Jasp - 1999
  • Brass Quintet - 1999
  • Lepton - 1998
  • Symphony Seven - 1997
  • Fenton Songs - poems of James Fenton - 1987
  • Cello Variations III - 1987
  • Schoenberg Orchestra Variations Op. 31 recast for two pianos 1996
  • The River of Light - inspired by scenes from Dante's Paradiso - 1996
  • The Great Procession - inspired by scenes from Dante's Pugatorio - 1995
  • Sonata for Guitar and Piano - 1995
  • Guitar Variations - 1994
  • Percussion Quartet - 1994
  • Piano Quintet - 1994
  • Christes Crosse (after Thomas Morley) - 1994
  • The Mission of Virgil -inspired by scenes from Dante's Inferno - 1963
  • Concerto for Saxophone Quartet and Orchestra - 1993
  • Saxophone Quartet - 1992
  • Microsyphony - 1992
  • Missa Renovata - 1992
  • A Winter's Tale - text by Dylan Thomas - 1991
  • Delight of the Muses - based on works of Mozart - 1963
  • String Sextet - 1989
  • Genesis for chorus and orchestra - 1989
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano - 1988
  • Galliard for chamber orchestra - 1987
  • Five: Concerto for Amplified Cello and Orchestra - 1987
  • Third Piano Sonata - 1986
  • The Golden Dance - 1986
  • Bamboula Beach - 1986
  • Double Solo for Horn Trio - 1985
  • Horn Trio Continued - 1985
  • Natural Fantasy - 1985
  • Trombone Trio - 1985
  • Prelude to Kullervo - 1985
  • Crossfire - 1984
  • Movers and Shakers - 1984
  • Bamboula Squared - 1984
  • Third Piano Concerto - 1983
  • Spinoff - 1983
  • Piano Trio - 1983
  • Divertimento for Alto Saxophone and Piano - 1982
  • Mass - 1982
  • New York Notes - 1982
  • Horn Trio - 1981
  • Capriccio for piano - 1981
  • Short Suite for orchestra - 1981
  • Trio for Bass Instruments - 1981
  • The Celestial Spehere, an oratorio - 1980
  • The Blue Bamboula - 1980
  • The Magic Art: An Instrumental Masque Drawn from the works of Henry Purcell - 1979
  • Percussion Duo - 1979
  • Second String Quartet - 1979
  • Fortune - 1979
  • Two-Part Symphony - 1978
  • Archaeopteryx for Bass Trombone and 10 Players - 1978
  • Archangel for Bass Trombone and String Quartet - 1977
  • Fast Fantasy - 1977
  • The Winds - 1977
  • Six Pieces for Violin and Piano - 1977
  • Second Piano Sonata - 1976
  • Percussion Symphony - 1976
  • Tashi - 1975/6
  • Cello Variations II - 1975
  • Hyperion - 1975
  • A Reliquary for Igor Stravinsky - 1975
  • The W. of Babylon, a baroque burlesque in two acts - 1975
  • Cello Variations II - 1975
  • Second Piano Concerto - for Amplified Piano and Orchestra - 1974
  • Fantasia - 1974
  • Arabia Felix - 1973
  • Grand Union - 1973
  • Third Trio for Flute, Cello and Piano - 1973
  • Speculum Speculi - 1972
  • Concerto for Amplified Violin and Orchestra - 1972
  • On Alligators - 1972
  • First String Quartet - 1972
  • Violin Variations - 1972
  • Grand Bamboula - 1971
  • Chamber Concerto for Tuba with 12 Winds and 12 Drums - 1970
  • Ringing Changes - 1970
  • Cello Variations - 1970
  • A Song to the Lute in Musicke - 1970
  • Contrafactum - 1969
  • Time's Encomium - 1969
  • Nature's Concord - 1969
  • First Piano Sonata - 1969
  • The Politics of Harmony - 1967
  • Duo for Violin and Piano - 1967
  • The Bells for carillon - 1965
  • Bicinium - 1966
  • Salve Regina:John Bull - 1966
  • Harpsichord Divisions - 1966
  • First Piano Concerto - 1966
  • Janissary Music - 1966
  • Orchestral and Electronic Exchanges - 1965
  • Composition for Oboe and Piano - 1965
  • Chamber Concerto for Oboe and 10 Players - 1965
  • Composition for Violin and 10 Instruments - 1964
  • Chamber Concerto for Flute and 10 Players - 1964
  • Flute Variations I - 1963
  • Chamber Concerto for Cello and 10 Players - 1963
  • Piano Variations - 1963
  • Bearbeitungen ueber das Glogauer Liederbuch - 1962
  • Second Trio for Flute, Cello and Piano (Piece for Stefan Wolpe) - 1962
  • Duuiensela for cello and piano - 1962
  • Invention for Percussion Quintet - 1962
  • Concert for Double Bass Alone - 1961
  • Evolutio for organ - 1961
  • Evolutio Transcripta for chamber orchestra - 1961
  • Madrigale Spirituale sopra salmo secondo - 1960
  • Music for Orchestra - 1956

Notable students

Footnotes

  1. ^ Adams, Stephen (2008). Brokeback Mountain to be turned into an opera, Telegraph.co.uk.Last Updated: 11:52AM BST 10/06/2008. Retrieved June 11, 2008.
  2. ^ Shoard, Catherine (2008) "Will Brokeback Mountain: the opera have us singing for joy?", guardian.co.uk Film. June 10, 2008 12:15 PM. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  3. ^ Abramovitch, Seth (2008). 'Brokeback Mountain' Rendered Even Gayer With Announcement Of New Opera, Defamer.com. Jun 9, 2008. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  4. ^ Katz, Ivan (2008). Bad Idea, Mr. Wuorinen [Brokeback Mountain opera], HuffingtonPost.com. Posted June 11, 2008, 12:27 PM (EST). Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  5. ^ Kerner, Leighton,Haroun and the Sea of Stories, New York City Opera, 10/31/04, Opera News January 2005 http://www.metoperafamily.org/operanews/review/review.aspx?id=528&issueID=43
  6. ^ Peter G. Davis, "Good Time Charlie". New York, 15 November 2004.

References and interviews

Burbank, Richard D., Charles Wuorinen: A Bio-Bibliography. Greenwood Press, 1994. ISBN 0-313-25399-4

External links


 
 
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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Charles Wuorinen" Read more