ZWILICH, ELLEN TAAFFE BIOGRAPHY(b 1939 )
The
American composer and violinist was born in Miami, studied at Florida State University and then with Ivan Galamian in New York. She played in the
American Symphony Orchestra under Stokowski and later studied with Elliott
Carter and Roger Sessions at the Juilliard School of Music, taking a DMA in
composition in 1975, the first woman to do so. In 1983 she was awarded
the Pulitzer Prize for her Symphony No.1. From a more astringently
contemporary style, her music has developed into a more generally tonal idiom,
using more conventional materials, blending suggestions of neo-classicism with
the neo-romantic, in a language that has proved popular with American
audiences.
Orchestral Music
Ellen
Taaffe Zwilich's orchestral music includes four symphonies, Symphony No.1
(THree Movements for Orchestra) in 1982, Symphony No.2 (Cello Symphony)
in 1985, Symphony No.3 in 1992, and Symphony No.4, for
children's chorus, mixed chorus and orchestra, in 1999. She has written
solo concertos for trombone, flute, oboe, horn, trumpet, bassoon, and violin,
two piano concertos, and a double concerto for violin and cello, with a triple
concerto for violin, cello and piano.
|