Female composers

Started by Diletante, January 26, 2009, 06:58:30 PM

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pjme

#80
With madame Claude Arrieu back to 1934!

https://www.youtube.com/v/inRagQI8Du4

Hanna Kulenty's trumpet concerto nr. 1 / 2002. She has written two more trumpetconcerti since then! Read more about this composer at http://www.hannakulenty.com/01.1_news.html

https://www.youtube.com/v/ZL5RBUdR464

Performers not mentioned. Possibly Marco Blaauw on trumpet.


Trumpet Concerto (2002) by Hanna Kulenty was awarded the first prize by radio music producers participating in the UNESCO 50th International Rostrum of Composers, held at the ORF in Vienna, June 2 - 6 2003.
For this achievement Hanna Kulenty received the UNESCO Mozart Medal from the International Music Council.

"One of Poland's most interesting composers of the middle generation".
[Graham Dixon, BBC Radio]

Trumpet Concerto was performed by Marco Blaauw, trumpet, and by The National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ronald Zollman.

On 22 September 2003 Trumpet Concerto was again performed, this time at the Warsaw Autumn Festival with Sinfonia Varsovia conducted by Renato Rivolta, and again Marco Blaauw on his red quarter-tone trumpet.


San Antone

Marina Khorhova : existential sounds on the border of life



"My composition VORderGRENZE (2010) for clarinet, cello and prepared piano deals with the edges of life: existential sounds on the border of life and death represented by different breath sounds, reinforced with partials and translated into the instrumental parts. The fight to the last breath is the essential message of the piece, which is expressed by some extreme sound gestures. Various processes and characteristics of inhalation and exhalation were tried in quasi sound-photographs. Suffocating breath sounds, for example, are chaotic and noisy. Last breaths have a dark timbre with delicate nuances (such as wheezing) during inhalation and exhalation. The instrumentalists were also directed to blow on megaphones and this natural and quiet breathing was compared and linked, as it were, with the inhalation and exhalation of the instrumental sounds."

Mr. Three Putt

Quote from: sanantonio on October 22, 2015, 04:12:23 AM
Marina Khorhova : existential sounds on the border of life



"My composition VORderGRENZE (2010) for clarinet, cello and prepared piano deals with the edges of life: existential sounds on the border of life and death represented by different breath sounds, reinforced with partials and translated into the instrumental parts. The fight to the last breath is the essential message of the piece, which is expressed by some extreme sound gestures. Various processes and characteristics of inhalation and exhalation were tried in quasi sound-photographs. Suffocating breath sounds, for example, are chaotic and noisy. Last breaths have a dark timbre with delicate nuances (such as wheezing) during inhalation and exhalation. The instrumentalists were also directed to blow on megaphones and this natural and quiet breathing was compared and linked, as it were, with the inhalation and exhalation of the instrumental sounds."

I couldn't find this on Youtube but sampled a work of hers there. I'm listening now from your blog. It has a Pink Floyd "Echoes" quality that I like.

San Antone

Quote from: Mr. Three Putt on October 22, 2015, 04:22:40 AM
I couldn't find this on Youtube but sampled a work of hers there. I'm listening now from your blog. It has a Pink Floyd "Echoes" quality that I like.

Glad you listened and enjoyed it.  I wish she would update her Soundcloud page with some of her more recent works; e.g. I am interested in hearing her second string quartet (2015).  Thanks.

San Antone

Sarah Kirkland Snider : Unremembered



"In the case of Unremembered, that was a project where the commissions came from two different places and the piece sort of evolved over time. It started out as a Roomful of Teeth commission. I wrote these five songs, based on these poems that I asked my friend Nathaniel [Bellows] to write. These poems felt like a leather-bound book of old stories that I wanted to dive into. I really loved writing those songs, so when we were finished, Nathaniel kept writing more poems and I decided to make it a song cycle."

Mr. Three Putt

Quote from: sanantonio on October 22, 2015, 05:42:58 AM
Glad you listened and enjoyed it.  I wish she would update her Soundcloud page with some of her more recent works; e.g. I am interested in hearing her second string quartet (2015).  Thanks.

I just made a Soundcloud page to follow a few composing friends. My page will remain blank, as I'm likely to decompose before composing anything.

San Antone

Annea Lockwood : sound artist



Born in New Zealand in 1939 and living in the US since 1973, Annea Lockwood is known for her explorations of the rich world of natural acoustic sounds and environments, in works ranging from sound art and installations, through text-sound and performance art to concert music.

Daverz

#88
Has Vivian Fung been mentioned.  There is an excellent Naxos CD:

[asin]B008N66KNO[/asin]

Or Judith Lang Zaimont?  She has had several Naxos CDs.  I found the CD below in the bargain bin at Amoeba, and it's pretty good

[asin]B00004TVAE[/asin]

Her Symphony No. 1 and other orchestral works.


San Antone

Lisa Bielawa : Singing Rilke



Lisa Carol Bielawa (born in San Francisco, California, September 30, 1968) is a composer and vocalist. She is a 2009 Rome Prize winner in Musical Composition and spent a year composing as a Fellow at the American Academy in Rome. She takes inspiration for her work from literary sources and close artistic collaborations.  Her song cycle, The Lay of the Love and Death, has recently received a very good recording by baritone Jesse Blumberg and violinist Colin Jacobsen (both premiered the work in 2006) on Innova Records.



Rinaldo

Whoa. for flute, bass clarinet, piano, percussion, violin I, violin II, viola & cello.

https://www.youtube.com/v/m_4JM4rcn70

Second piece by Anna Þorvaldsdóttir I've heard, after aequilibria, and I like this one even better.
"The truly novel things will be invented by the young ones, not by me. But this doesn't worry me at all."
~ Grażyna Bacewicz


Rinaldo

Quote from: psu on October 31, 2015, 04:40:07 AM
Caroline Shaw ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogu7Wfg1MLY

Shaw's amazing, I keep returning to both the celebrated Partita and other pieces she's done. Even Kanye West is a fan!
"The truly novel things will be invented by the young ones, not by me. But this doesn't worry me at all."
~ Grażyna Bacewicz

relm1

Quote from: Rinaldo on October 31, 2015, 11:32:05 AM
Shaw's amazing, I keep returning to both the celebrated Partita and other pieces she's done. Even Kanye West is a fan!

If it has Kanye West's endorsement which is hard to get (ask Taylor Swift) then that's all I need to know...

ibanezmonster

Quote from: Rinaldo on October 30, 2015, 11:37:22 AM
Whoa. for flute, bass clarinet, piano, percussion, violin I, violin II, viola & cello.
Whoa, indeed. Very beautiful piece. Between this and Halloween, I'm kind of getting in the mood to play Silent Hill!

Rinaldo

Another name that's new to me, the Estonian composer Helena Tulve.

https://www.youtube.com/v/AjdkyBKF57Q
"The truly novel things will be invented by the young ones, not by me. But this doesn't worry me at all."
~ Grażyna Bacewicz

San Antone

Quote from: Rinaldo on November 02, 2015, 05:29:25 AM
Another name that's new to me, the Estonian composer Helena Tulve.

https://www.youtube.com/v/AjdkyBKF57Q

Wonderful composer.  I interviewed her for my blog - HERE.

Rinaldo

Quote from: sanantonio on November 02, 2015, 05:51:04 AM
Wonderful composer.  I interviewed her for my blog - HERE.

Cool, thanks for the link! I need to go through the older entries in your archive.
"The truly novel things will be invented by the young ones, not by me. But this doesn't worry me at all."
~ Grażyna Bacewicz

Brian

This March the Houston Symphony will deliver the premiere performance of Gabriela Lena Frank's viola concerto. She's a very good composer - I'm thinking about making the trip.

Mirror Image

#99
Another good female composer: Ester Mägi (b. 1922).



Ester Mägi (born 10 January 1922) is an Estonian composer, widely regarded as the First Lady of Estonian Music.

Her compositional output is substantial and represents all genres, from chamber and vocal music to choral and highly regarded symphonic works. She trained initially under Mart Saar at the Tallinn Conservatory, then from 1951 to 1954 at the Moscow Conservatory under Vissarion Shebalin. Amongst her best-known works are her Piano Sonata (1949), Piano Trio in F minor (1950), Piano Concerto (1953), Violin Concerto (1958), Symphony (1968), Variations for Piano, Clarinet and Chamber Orchestra (1972), Bukoolika for orchestra (1983) and Vesper for violin and piano/organ (1990, arranged for strings in 1998). Much of her work has been inspired by Estonian folk music.

https://www.youtube.com/v/OfkXE_bsakE

https://www.youtube.com/v/Ady_84T2ESU