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Lewis Spratlan

Meriwether Lewis Spratlan Jr. (September 5, 1940 – February 9, 2023)[1][2] was an American music academic and composer of contemporary classical music.

Biography edit

Lewis Spratlan, recipient of the 2000 Pulitzer Prize in music and the Charles Ives Opera Award (2016) from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, was born in 1940 in Miami, Florida. His music, often praised for its dramatic impact and vivid scoring, is performed regularly throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe. He held undergraduate and graduate degrees from Yale University, where he studied with Mel Powell and Gunther Schuller. From 1970 until his retirement in 2006 he served on the music faculty of Amherst College, and has also taught and conducted at Penn State University, Tanglewood, and the Yale Summer School of Music. He passed away at home on February 9, 2023, at the age of 82 in the company of his son, musician Daniel Spratlan.

He was the recipient of an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Composition, as well as Guggenheim, Rockefeller, Bogliasco, NEA, Massachusetts Cultural Council, and MacDowell Fellowships.

In October 1989 Spratlan toured widely in Russia and Armenia as a guest of the Soviet Composers’ Union. Apollo and Daphne Variations for orchestra was premiered on this tour and Penelope's Knees, double concerto for alto saxophone and bass, was presented in Moscow's Rachmaninoff Hall under Emin Khatchatourian.

Recent works include the one-act opera Earthrise, on a libretto by Constance Congdon, commissioned by San Francisco Opera; a piano quartet, Streaming, commissioned by the Ravinia Festival for its centennial celebration; Sojourner for ten players, commissioned for Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble by the Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress; Zoom, for chamber orchestra, commissioned by the New York ensemble Sequitur; Wonderer, commissioned for the pianist Jonathan Biss by the Borletti-Buitoni Trust; Shadow, commissioned by the cellist Matt Haimovitz; and Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra, a consortium commission by thirty saxophonists across the country; A Summer's Day, commissioned by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Gil Rose, conductor, was premiered at Jordan Hall in May 2009.

Spratlan's opera Life is a Dream, on a libretto by James Maraniss after Calderón's La vida es sueño, received its world premiere by the Santa Fe Opera in 2010, under the baton of Leonard Slatkin. Hesperus is Phosphorus, commissioned by the Crossing Choir and Philadelphia's Network for New Music, received performances in Philadelphia and New York in June 2012, and was recently released on an Innova CD. Architect, a chamber opera based on the life and work of the architect Louis Kahn, appears on a CD/enhanced DVD released by Navona Records in the fall of 2013. He has recently completed Shining: Double Concerto for Cello and Piano, commissioned by cellist Matt Haimovitz and pianist Christopher O'Riley. In the fall of 2014 The Boston Modern Orchestra Project released a CD of A Summer's Day, Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra, and Apollo and Daphne Variations. In April 2016 Of War, for large chorus and orchestra was premiered under the direction of Andrew Megill at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Bangladesh for solo piano, commissioned by Piano Spheres, was premiered on October 27, 2015, at REDCAT, Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, by Nadia Shpachenko; and Common Ground, for soloists, chorus, and chamber orchestra was premiered on June 25, 2016, by the Crossing Choir and ICE at the Philadelphia Episcopal Cathedral and repeated at Merkin Hall in New York as part of the Mostly Mozart Festival in August 2016. This work is a component of the Crossing Choir's “Seven Responses” Initiative. Dreamworlds, for piano, four hands, was commissioned by Dana Muller and Gary Steigerwalt and premiered at Mount Holyoke College in February, 2018. A recording of this piece was released in the fall of 2019 on the Parma label.

Spratlan completed his fourth opera, Midi, a black French-Caribbean Medea, ca. 1930. An all-Spratlan concert including, Six Preludes for Piano, Piano Quartet No. 2, and Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano took place at Brooklyn's Bargemusic, as part of their Music Now series, on June 16, 2017. New England Concordance, for TTBB chorus and piano, received its premiere performance in Lexington, MA, on June 3, 2018, by the Boston Sängerfest Men's Chorus, Thomas Berryman, conductor, and has had subsequent performances by the Harvard and Rutgers Glee Clubs. Six Rags was premiered at San Francisco's Center for New Music by Nadia Shpachenko on June 18, 2019. Travels was presented by the Carmel Bach Festival on July 21, 2019, Andrew Megill conductor.

RECORDINGS:

Two Pieces for Orchestra - Opus One Records (LP) Night Music - Gasparo CD When Crows Gather, Concertino for Violin and Chamber Ensemble, Of Time And the Seasons, and Zoom - Albany CD Vocalise with Duck – Koch International Classic CD Shadow – Oxingale CD In Memoriam, Streaming – Navona CD Architect (chamber opera) – Navona CD and enhanced DVD Trio for Clarinet, Violin, and Piano – Albany CD A Summer's Day – BMOP/Sound CD Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra – BMOP/Sound CD Apollo and Daphne Variations – BMOP/Sound CD Vespers Cantata: Hesperus is Phosphorus ¬– Innova CD Common Ground – (Component of Seven Responses) Innova CD Dreamworlds – Parma CD (released October 9, 2018) Bangladesh from the Poetry of Places – winner of both Aaron Copland and Ditson Awards, Nadia Shpachenko, pianist; Reference Recordings CD; January 2019 release

Vocal works edit

The winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2000 for a concert version of Act 2 of his 3-act opera Life Is a Dream,[3] Spratlan had begun the opera in 1975 and completed it in 1978, originally as a commission from the New Haven Opera. By the time Spratlan had finished the work, the New Haven Opera had ceased to exist and the opera was not staged.

Act 2 of the opera received its first full performance at Amherst College in January 2000, and subsequently at Harvard University.[4] The Santa Fe Opera accepted the score for production in its 2010 season, and the complete opera received its first full production there on 24 July 2010.[5][6] Spratlan wrote his second opera, Earthrise, on commission from San Francisco Opera.[4]

Architect, a chamber opera about the architect Louis Kahn, was released by Navona Records in 2013.

A choral/solo/orchestral work titled "Of War" was premiered on April 9, 2015, at the University of Illinois. Three movements are based on texts by Spratlan and Constance Congdon, and the text of the third movement "Vigil Strange" is from the collection Drum-Taps, book 21 of Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman.[7]

List of compositions edit

Most earlier works published by G. Schirmer (Associated Music publishers); most later works published by Oxingale Music

  • Tennessee Set (1968)
  • Flange (1970)
  • Two Pieces for Orchestra (1971)
  • Images (1971)
  • Three Carols on Medieval Texts (1971)
  • Diary Music I (1972)
  • Dance Suite (1973)
  • Three Plath Songs (1973)
  • Three Ben Jonson Songs (1974)
  • Life is a Dream (opera in 3 acts) (1978)
  • Chiasmata (1979)
  • Cornucopia (1979)
  • Coils (1980)
  • Webs (1981)
  • String Quartet No. 1 (1983)
  • Celebration (1984)
  • Penelope's Knees (double concerto) (1985)
  • When Crows Gather (1986)
  • Apollo and Daphne Variations (orchestra) (1987)
  • Wolves (1988)
  • Toccapsody (1989)
  • Hung Monophonies (1990)
  • Night Music (1990)
  • In Memoriam (1993)
  • A Barred Owl (1994)
  • Psalm 42 (1996)
  • Vocalise with Duck (1998)
  • Sojourner (1999)
  • Two Orchestral Sketches (1999)
  • Mayflies (2000)
  • Rhapsody (for orchestra) (2000)
  • Dona Nobis Pacem (chorus SATB/SSAA, a cappella, 2001)
  • Moments - Memento - Momentum (violin and piano 2001)
  • Peeve (string quartet) (2001)
  • Of Time and the Seasons ( sop. and c. ensemble, 2001)
  • Earthrise (opera in one act) (2002)
  • Zoom (chamber orchestra) (2003)
  • The Manatees at Blue Springs (2003)
  • Streaming (2004)
  • Mega-Ditty (2004)
  • Piccolosophy (2005)
  • Wonderer (2005)
  • Ophélie (2005)
  • Shadow (2006)
  • Four Songs for Soprano and Women's Chorus (2008)
  • City Song (for the 150th Anniversary of the Yale Glee Club, 2010)
  • A Summer's Day (orchestra, 2009)
  • Trio for clarinet, violin, and piano (2010)
  • Travels (commissioned by the Rutgers University Glee Club, 2011)
  • Process/Bulge (chamber ensemble, 2011)
  • Sinfonietta Concertante (solo string quartet and orchestra, 2011)
  • Vespers Cantata: Hesperus is Phosphorus (commissioned by The Crossing and the Network for New Music, 2012)
  • Ballad of the Happy Kitchen (sop. piano, 2012)
  • Shining: Double concerto for cello, piano, and orchestra, 2013)
  • Joy Song (solo clarinet) (2013)
  • Horn Quartet (horn, violin, cello, piano, 2013)
  • Of War (SATB chorus, orchestra, 2014)
  • The Fish (tenor, horn, and piano, 2015)
  • Hornpipe for Ruth (Chamber ensemble, 2015)
  • Bangladesh (piano, 2015)
  • Dreamworlds (piano, four hands, 2016)
  • Common Ground (SATB chorus, chamber orchestra, 2016)
  • Gentle Soul, Find Peace (vocal quartet, 2016)
  • Six Preludes for Piano, 2017
  • Piano Quartet no. 2, 2017
  • New England Concordance (SATB chorus, piano, 2017)
  • Charlottesville: Summer of 2017 (sextet, 2017)
  • Chamber Symphony (chamber orchestra, 2017)
  • Gaia (trio, 2018)
  • Six Rags (piano, 2018)
  • Some Nebulae (large chamber ensemble, 2019
  • Fantasy Dances (violin, piano, 2019)
  • Primavera III: the vessel (2022)

Spratlan's music has been recorded/released commercially for Navona Records,[8] Albany Records,[9] Opus One, Innova,[10] Pentatone, and Gasparo.

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Lewis Spratlan
  2. ^ Genzlinger, Neil (2023-03-16). "Lewis Spratlan, 82, Dies; Took Winding Route to Music Pulitzer". The New York Times. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  3. ^ Kozinn, Allan (2003-11-14). "Eclecticism and Humor in Works by Lewis Spratlan". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-04-07.
  4. ^ a b Tommasini, Anthony (2002-06-23). "New Operas Are Booming, But the Bold Aren't Heard". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-04-07.
  5. ^ Daniel J. Wakin (2010-04-11). "An Opera's Very Long Overture". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-17.
  6. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (2010-07-25). "Overdue Debut for Composer and Exiled Prince". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-04-07.
  7. ^ Frayne, John (2015-04-26). "UI groups join forces for fantastic performance". The News-Gazette. Retrieved 2015-04-29.
  8. ^ "Lewis Spratlan: In Memoriam Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  9. ^ "Amherst College Composer Lewis Spratlan Has New Recording" (Press release). Amherst College. 17 February 2005. Retrieved 2010-04-17.
  10. ^ "Innova Recordings: Hesperus is Phosphorus". Retrieved 14 July 2015.
Sources
  • Heinz Dietrich Fischer; Erika J. Fischer (2002). Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners, 1917-2000 Journalists, Writers and Composers on Their Ways to the Coveted Awards. Walter de Gruyter. p. 230. ISBN 978-3-598-30186-5.

External links edit

  • Official Lewis Spratlan homepage
  • Amherst College page with Spratlan teaching duties
  • G Schirmer Inc publisher page on Lewis Spratlan
  • Oxingale Music publisher page on Lewis Spratlan

lewis, spratlan, meriwether, september, 1940, february, 2023, american, music, academic, composer, contemporary, classical, music, contents, biography, vocal, works, list, compositions, references, external, linksbiography, edit, recipient, 2000, pulitzer, pri. Meriwether Lewis Spratlan Jr September 5 1940 February 9 2023 1 2 was an American music academic and composer of contemporary classical music Contents 1 Biography 2 Vocal works 3 List of compositions 4 References 5 External linksBiography editLewis Spratlan recipient of the 2000 Pulitzer Prize in music and the Charles Ives Opera Award 2016 from the American Academy of Arts and Letters was born in 1940 in Miami Florida His music often praised for its dramatic impact and vivid scoring is performed regularly throughout the United States Canada and Europe He held undergraduate and graduate degrees from Yale University where he studied with Mel Powell and Gunther Schuller From 1970 until his retirement in 2006 he served on the music faculty of Amherst College and has also taught and conducted at Penn State University Tanglewood and the Yale Summer School of Music He passed away at home on February 9 2023 at the age of 82 in the company of his son musician Daniel Spratlan He was the recipient of an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Composition as well as Guggenheim Rockefeller Bogliasco NEA Massachusetts Cultural Council and MacDowell Fellowships In October 1989 Spratlan toured widely in Russia and Armenia as a guest of the Soviet Composers Union Apollo and Daphne Variations for orchestra was premiered on this tour and Penelope s Knees double concerto for alto saxophone and bass was presented in Moscow s Rachmaninoff Hall under Emin Khatchatourian Recent works include the one act opera Earthrise on a libretto by Constance Congdon commissioned by San Francisco Opera a piano quartet Streaming commissioned by the Ravinia Festival for its centennial celebration Sojourner for ten players commissioned for Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble by the Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress Zoom for chamber orchestra commissioned by the New York ensemble Sequitur Wonderer commissioned for the pianist Jonathan Biss by the Borletti Buitoni Trust Shadow commissioned by the cellist Matt Haimovitz and Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra a consortium commission by thirty saxophonists across the country A Summer s Day commissioned by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project Gil Rose conductor was premiered at Jordan Hall in May 2009 Spratlan s opera Life is a Dream on a libretto by James Maraniss after Calderon s La vida es sueno received its world premiere by the Santa Fe Opera in 2010 under the baton of Leonard Slatkin Hesperus is Phosphorus commissioned by the Crossing Choir and Philadelphia s Network for New Music received performances in Philadelphia and New York in June 2012 and was recently released on an Innova CD Architect a chamber opera based on the life and work of the architect Louis Kahn appears on a CD enhanced DVD released by Navona Records in the fall of 2013 He has recently completed Shining Double Concerto for Cello and Piano commissioned by cellist Matt Haimovitz and pianist Christopher O Riley In the fall of 2014 The Boston Modern Orchestra Project released a CD of A Summer s Day Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra and Apollo and Daphne Variations In April 2016 Of War for large chorus and orchestra was premiered under the direction of Andrew Megill at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Bangladesh for solo piano commissioned by Piano Spheres was premiered on October 27 2015 at REDCAT Walt Disney Concert Hall Los Angeles by Nadia Shpachenko and Common Ground for soloists chorus and chamber orchestra was premiered on June 25 2016 by the Crossing Choir and ICE at the Philadelphia Episcopal Cathedral and repeated at Merkin Hall in New York as part of the Mostly Mozart Festival in August 2016 This work is a component of the Crossing Choir s Seven Responses Initiative Dreamworlds for piano four hands was commissioned by Dana Muller and Gary Steigerwalt and premiered at Mount Holyoke College in February 2018 A recording of this piece was released in the fall of 2019 on the Parma label Spratlan completed his fourth opera Midi a black French Caribbean Medea ca 1930 An all Spratlan concert including Six Preludes for Piano Piano Quartet No 2 and Trio for Clarinet Violin and Piano took place at Brooklyn s Bargemusic as part of their Music Now series on June 16 2017 New England Concordance for TTBB chorus and piano received its premiere performance in Lexington MA on June 3 2018 by the Boston Sangerfest Men s Chorus Thomas Berryman conductor and has had subsequent performances by the Harvard and Rutgers Glee Clubs Six Rags was premiered at San Francisco s Center for New Music by Nadia Shpachenko on June 18 2019 Travels was presented by the Carmel Bach Festival on July 21 2019 Andrew Megill conductor RECORDINGS Two Pieces for Orchestra Opus One Records LP Night Music Gasparo CD When Crows Gather Concertino for Violin and Chamber Ensemble Of Time And the Seasons and Zoom Albany CD Vocalise with Duck Koch International Classic CD Shadow Oxingale CD In Memoriam Streaming Navona CD Architect chamber opera Navona CD and enhanced DVD Trio for Clarinet Violin and Piano Albany CD A Summer s Day BMOP Sound CD Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra BMOP Sound CD Apollo and Daphne Variations BMOP Sound CD Vespers Cantata Hesperus is Phosphorus Innova CD Common Ground Component of Seven Responses Innova CD Dreamworlds Parma CD released October 9 2018 Bangladesh from the Poetry of Places winner of both Aaron Copland and Ditson Awards Nadia Shpachenko pianist Reference Recordings CD January 2019 releaseVocal works editThe winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2000 for a concert version of Act 2 of his 3 act opera Life Is a Dream 3 Spratlan had begun the opera in 1975 and completed it in 1978 originally as a commission from the New Haven Opera By the time Spratlan had finished the work the New Haven Opera had ceased to exist and the opera was not staged Act 2 of the opera received its first full performance at Amherst College in January 2000 and subsequently at Harvard University 4 The Santa Fe Opera accepted the score for production in its 2010 season and the complete opera received its first full production there on 24 July 2010 5 6 Spratlan wrote his second opera Earthrise on commission from San Francisco Opera 4 Architect a chamber opera about the architect Louis Kahn was released by Navona Records in 2013 A choral solo orchestral work titled Of War was premiered on April 9 2015 at the University of Illinois Three movements are based on texts by Spratlan and Constance Congdon and the text of the third movement Vigil Strange is from the collection Drum Taps book 21 of Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman 7 List of compositions editMost earlier works published by G Schirmer Associated Music publishers most later works published by Oxingale Music Tennessee Set 1968 Flange 1970 Two Pieces for Orchestra 1971 Images 1971 Three Carols on Medieval Texts 1971 Diary Music I 1972 Dance Suite 1973 Three Plath Songs 1973 Three Ben Jonson Songs 1974 Life is a Dream opera in 3 acts 1978 Chiasmata 1979 Cornucopia 1979 Coils 1980 Webs 1981 String Quartet No 1 1983 Celebration 1984 Penelope s Knees double concerto 1985 When Crows Gather 1986 Apollo and Daphne Variations orchestra 1987 Wolves 1988 Toccapsody 1989 Hung Monophonies 1990 Night Music 1990 In Memoriam 1993 A Barred Owl 1994 Psalm 42 1996 Vocalise with Duck 1998 Sojourner 1999 Two Orchestral Sketches 1999 Mayflies 2000 Rhapsody for orchestra 2000 Dona Nobis Pacem chorus SATB SSAA a cappella 2001 Moments Memento Momentum violin and piano 2001 Peeve string quartet 2001 Of Time and the Seasons sop and c ensemble 2001 Earthrise opera in one act 2002 Zoom chamber orchestra 2003 The Manatees at Blue Springs 2003 Streaming 2004 Mega Ditty 2004 Piccolosophy 2005 Wonderer 2005 Ophelie 2005 Shadow 2006 Four Songs for Soprano and Women s Chorus 2008 City Song for the 150th Anniversary of the Yale Glee Club 2010 A Summer s Day orchestra 2009 Trio for clarinet violin and piano 2010 Travels commissioned by the Rutgers University Glee Club 2011 Process Bulge chamber ensemble 2011 Sinfonietta Concertante solo string quartet and orchestra 2011 Vespers Cantata Hesperus is Phosphorus commissioned by The Crossing and the Network for New Music 2012 Ballad of the Happy Kitchen sop piano 2012 Shining Double concerto for cello piano and orchestra 2013 Joy Song solo clarinet 2013 Horn Quartet horn violin cello piano 2013 Of War SATB chorus orchestra 2014 The Fish tenor horn and piano 2015 Hornpipe for Ruth Chamber ensemble 2015 Bangladesh piano 2015 Dreamworlds piano four hands 2016 Common Ground SATB chorus chamber orchestra 2016 Gentle Soul Find Peace vocal quartet 2016 Six Preludes for Piano 2017 Piano Quartet no 2 2017 New England Concordance SATB chorus piano 2017 Charlottesville Summer of 2017 sextet 2017 Chamber Symphony chamber orchestra 2017 Gaia trio 2018 Six Rags piano 2018 Some Nebulae large chamber ensemble 2019 Fantasy Dances violin piano 2019 Primavera III the vessel 2022 Spratlan s music has been recorded released commercially for Navona Records 8 Albany Records 9 Opus One Innova 10 Pentatone and Gasparo References editNotes Lewis Spratlan Genzlinger Neil 2023 03 16 Lewis Spratlan 82 Dies Took Winding Route to Music Pulitzer The New York Times Retrieved 2023 03 17 Kozinn Allan 2003 11 14 Eclecticism and Humor in Works by Lewis Spratlan The New York Times Retrieved 2015 04 07 a b Tommasini Anthony 2002 06 23 New Operas Are Booming But the Bold Aren t Heard The New York Times Retrieved 2015 04 07 Daniel J Wakin 2010 04 11 An Opera s Very Long Overture The New York Times Retrieved 2010 04 17 Tommasini Anthony 2010 07 25 Overdue Debut for Composer and Exiled Prince The New York Times Retrieved 2015 04 07 Frayne John 2015 04 26 UI groups join forces for fantastic performance The News Gazette Retrieved 2015 04 29 Lewis Spratlan In Memoriam Review AllMusic Retrieved 16 November 2011 Amherst College Composer Lewis Spratlan Has New Recording Press release Amherst College 17 February 2005 Retrieved 2010 04 17 Innova Recordings Hesperus is Phosphorus Retrieved 14 July 2015 SourcesHeinz Dietrich Fischer Erika J Fischer 2002 Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 2000 Journalists Writers and Composers on Their Ways to the Coveted Awards Walter de Gruyter p 230 ISBN 978 3 598 30186 5 External links editOfficial Lewis Spratlan homepage Amherst College page with Spratlan teaching duties G Schirmer Inc publisher page on Lewis Spratlan Yale Spizzwinks Winkipedia page on album The Yale Spizzwinks 1967 Oxingale Music publisher page on Lewis Spratlan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lewis Spratlan amp oldid 1148272827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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