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Eric Ewazen (/ɪˈweɪzən/; born March 1, 1954,Cleveland, Ohio) is an American composer and teacher.
Ewazen studied composition underSamuel Adler,Milton Babbitt,Gunther Schuller,Joseph Schwantner,Warren Benson, andEugene Kurtz at theEastman School of Music andThe Juilliard School (where he received numerous composition awards, prizes, and fellowships). He has been on the faculty of TheJuilliard School since 1980, and has been a lecturer for the New York Philharmonic's Musical Encounters Series. He has also served on the faculties of theHebrew Arts School and the Lincoln Center Institute. He served as Vice President of theLeague of Composers –International Society for Contemporary Music from 1982–1989, and was also composer-in-residence for theOrchestra of St. Luke's.[1]
Ewazen's compositions have been performed by numerousensembles andorchestras around the world, such as theCleveland Orchestra, and at festivals such asWoodstock, Tanglewood, Aspen, Caramoor, Tidewater, and theMusic Academy of the West,[2] among others. In recent years, he has increasingly written for brass instruments. Many of these works are performed regularly.
His works have been commissioned and performed by organizations such as theSt. Luke's Chamber Ensemble, Greenwich Symphony, Fairfield Chamber Orchestra,American Brass Quintet, Borealis Wind Quintet, Bellevue Philharmonic, Detroit Chamber Winds, Western Piedmont Symphony, School for Strings, L'Amore di Musica,New York State Council on the Arts, the Philip-Morris Companies, Jerome Foundation, University of Arizona,University of Oklahoma, Music Academy of the West, and by soloists such asJulius Baker, Mindy Kaufman, Philip Smith, Joseph Alessi, and Eugene Becker (of theNew York Philharmonic), Toni Lipton and Scott Brubaker (of the Metropolitan Opera), Olegna Fuschi, Rebecca Scott, James Houlik, Linda Strommen, and Leon Russianoff, among others.[3]
The third movement of Ewazen's Symphony in Brass is used as the theme music forNational Public Radio's political coverage.[4]
Among his recorded works are the "Ballade for Clarinet, Harp & String Orchestra" (John Russo); "Colchester Fantasy" (American Brass Quintet onSummit Records);[5] "Sonata for Viola and Piano" (Eugene Becker on Clique Trak), "Symphony in Brass" (Summit Brass onSummit Records); "The Tiger" (William White on Hyperion Records), "The Diamond World" (Ahn Trio), and Well-Tempered Productions has released an all-Ewazen disc of "Frost Fire", "...to cast a shadow again", "Quintet for Trumpet and Strings", "The Palace of Nine Perfections" (University of Oklahoma Percussion Ensemble), and "Sonata for Horn & Piano" featuring the American Brass Quintet, Chamber Ensemble of St. Luke's and Grammy winner William Sharp. In the fall of 1996, the principal chairs of the New York Philharmonic recorded a disc of Mr. Ewazen's music for Cala Records. There are three discs dedicated to his music on the Albany Records label: "Sejong Plays Ewazen" with the International Sejong Soloists, "Orchestral Music and Concertos" with the Czech Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra conducted by Paul Polivnick, and "Bass Hits," a collection of concert pieces for bass trombone and various ensembles.[1]
For a more complete list of works seeList of compositions by Eric Ewazen.