Julia Wolfe

Julia Wolfe
Born (1958-12-18)December 18, 1958
Philadelphia
Nationality American
Alma mater
Occupation Composer, Professor of Music
Spouse(s) Michael Gordon (composer) (m. 1984)
Children 2
Website juliawolfemusic.com

Julia Wolfe (born December 18, 1958 in Philadelphia)[1] is an American composer whose music, according to the Wall Street Journal, has "long inhabited a terrain of its own, a place where classical forms are recharged by the repetitive patterns of minimalism and the driving energy of rock."[2] Her work Anthracite Fields, an oratorio for chorus and instruments, was awarded the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Music.[3][4][5][6][7] In 2015 Wolfe received the Herb Alpert Award. In September 2016 Wolfe was named a MacArthur Fellow.

Music

Wolfe has written a major body of work for strings, from quartets to full orchestra. Her quartets, as described by The New Yorker magazine "combine the violent forward drive of rock music with an aura of minimalist serenity [using] the four instruments as a big guitar, whipping psychedelic states of mind into frenzied and ecstatic climaxes."[8] Wolfe's Cruel Sister for string orchestra, inspired by a traditional English ballad of a love rivalry between sisters, was commissioned by the Munich Chamber Orchestra, received its US premiere at the Spoleto Festival USA, and was released (along with her other string orchestra piece, Fuel) on Cantaloupe Music.[9] Written shortly after September 11, 2001, her string quartet concerto My Beautiful Scream, written for Kronos Quartet and the Orchestre National de France (premiered in the US at the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music under the direction of Marin Alsop), was inspired by the idea of a slow motion scream.[10] The Vermeer Room, Girlfriend, and Window of Vulnerability show Wolfe's ability to create vivid sonic images. Girlfriend, for mixed chamber ensemble and recorded sound, uses a haunting audio landscape that consists of skidding cars and breaking glass. The Vermeer Room, inspired by the Vermeer painting "A Girl Asleep"—which when x-rayed reveals a hidden figure—received its orchestral premiere with the San Francisco Symphony. In Window of Vulnerability, written for the American Composers Orchestra and conducted by Dennis Russell Davies, Wolfe creates a massive sonic universe of dense textures and fragile windows.[11]

Young Julia Wolfe with composer John Cage, David Lang, and Michael Gordon

The influence of pop culture can be heard in many of Wolfe's works, including Lick and Believing for the Bang on a Can All-Stars. Lick, based on fragments of funk, has become a manifesto for the new generation of pop-influenced composers.[12] The raucous My Lips From Speaking for six pianos was inspired by the opening riff of the Aretha Franklin tune "Think". Wolfe's Dark Full Ride is an obsessive and relentless exploration of the drum set, beginning with an extended hi-hat spotlight, while Lad is a piece for nine bagpipes.[13]

Wolfe drew on oral histories, interviews, geography, local rhymes, and coal advertisements for her Pulitzer Prize-winning piece Anthracite Fields, an oratorio is about the coal mining community of her native Pennsylvania which premiered in Philadelphia and was performed at the New York Philharmonic Biennial in the spring of 2014.[14][15] In the 2015–16 season, the Bang on a Can All-Stars, with first the Los Angeles Master Chorale and then the Danish Radio Vocal Society, give Anthracite Fields its West Coast and European premieres, and Cantaloupe Music releases the studio recording, featuring the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and the Bang on a Can All-Stars.

Wolfe’s interest in labor history has informed her recent work, including Steel Hammer, an evening-length art-ballad that was a finalist for the 2010 Pulitzer Prize. The text is culled from more than 200 versions of the John Henry legend and based on hearsay, recollection, and tall tales that explore the subject of human versus machine. Premiered by the Trio Mediaeval and the Bang on a Can All-Stars, Steel Hammer was presented in a fully staged version by director Anne Bogart and her SITI Company at the University of Illinois, UCLA, Virginia Tech, OZ Arts Nashville, and BAM in 2015.[16]

Following her folk interests and the tradition of body percussion in American folk music also led her to compose riSE and fLY, a concerto for body percussionist Colin Currie. The piece premiered in 2012 with the BBC Concert Orchestra, conducted by Keith Lockhart,[17] and premiered in the Netherlands with the Codarts Ensemble and the United States with the Albany Symphony Orchestra in the 2014–15 season.

Music for film and theatre

Wolfe's work with film includes Fuel for the Hamburg-based Ensemble Resonanz and filmmaker Bill Morrison, and Impatience and Combat de Boxe for the Asko/Schönberg Ensemble and 1920s film experimentalist Charles Dekeukeleire.[18]

Wolfe has collaborated with theater artist Anna Deavere Smith, architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro, filmmaker Bill Morrison, Ridge Theater, director François Girard, Jim Findlay, and choreographer Susan Marshall, among others. Her music has been heard at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Sydney Olympic Arts Festival, Settembre Musica (Italy), Théâtre de la Ville (Paris), Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, and Carnegie Hall, and has been recorded on Cantaloupe Music, Teldec, Point/Universal, Sony Classical Records, and Argo/Decca.[19] Wolfe received a 2000 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award.

Her music for theatre includes the score for Anna Deavere Smith's House Arrest, and she won an Obie Award for her score to Ridge Theater's Jennie Richie. She has composed a series of collaborative multimedia works with composers Michael Gordon and David Lang, including Lost Objects (Concerto Köln, directed by François Girard),[20] Shelter (musikFabrik and Ridge Theater),[21] and The Carbon Copy Building (with comic-book artist Ben Katchor).[22] Wolfe created the citywide spectacle Traveling Music with architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro in Bordeaux, France, filling the streets of the old city with 100 musicians walking and riding in pedi-cabs.[23]

Life

Born in Philadelphia, Wolfe has a twin brother and an older brother. As a teenager she learned piano but she only began to study music seriously after taking a musicianship class at the University of Michigan. In her early twenties Wolfe wrote music for an all-female theatre troupe, and on a trip to New York she became friends with composition students Michael Gordon and David Lang, both of whom had recently attended Yale’s graduate program and who encouraged her to apply. She went to Yale in 1984 and studied primarily with Martin Bresnick, and she married Michael Gordon the same year. In 1987 Wolfe, Gordon, and Lang founded the Bang on a Can Marathon.[24]

In 1992 Wolfe received a Fulbright Scholarship to travel to Amsterdam. In 2012 Wolfe completed a PhD at Princeton University. She has been a Professor of Music Composition at New York University in the Steinhardt School since 2009, prior to which she was an Adjunct Professor at the Manhattan School of Music for seven years. In 2015 Wolfe won the Pulitzer Prize for music for her work Anthracite Fields, and in 2016 she was named a MacArthur Fellowship recipient.[24]

Bang on a Can is now an organization with a concert series and tours, and a summer festival in the Berkshires for emerging composers and performers.[24] Wolfe, Gordon and Lang founded Red Poppy Music in 1993 as a printed music publishing company. The three founded record label Cantaloupe Music in 2001.

Wolfe and Gordon have two children and live in lower Manhattan.[24]

Bang on a Can

Wolfe is one of the founders and artistic directors of Bang on a Can (alongside fellow composers Michael Gordon—her husband—and David Lang), best known for its Marathon Concerts [25] during which an eclectic mix of pieces are performed in succession over the course of many hours while audience members are welcome to come and go as they please. For the twentieth anniversary of their Marathon Concerts, Bang on a Can presented twenty-six hours of uninterrupted music at the World Financial Center Winter Garden Atrium in New York City. In 1992, Bang on a Can founded chamber ensemble the Bang on a Can All Stars.

Among Bang on a Can's early events were performances by John Cage, premieres of Glenn Branca’s epic symphonies for massed electric guitars, and fully staged operas by Harry Partch, featuring the composer's original instruments.

Wolfe, Gordon, and Lang occasionally collaborate on jointly-composed large-scale staged works, often without revealing which sections each contributed. The opera The Carbon Copy Building,[26] is a collaboration with comic book artist Ben Katchor, received the 2000 Village Voice Obie Award for Best New American Work. A projected comic strip accompanies and interacts with the singers, and the frames fall away in the telling of the story. Gordon, Wolfe and Lang have subsequently collaborated on the 'oratorio' Lost Objects, the recording of which was released in summer 2001 (Teldec New Line).[27]

A further project, Shelter,[28] is a multi-media work that was commissioned by the ensemble musikFabrik and features the Scandinavian vocalists Trio Mediaeval in a staged spectacle that, in the words of librettist Deborah Artman, "evokes the power and threat of nature, the soaring frontier promise contained in the framing of a new house, the pure aesthetic beauty of blueprints, the sweet architecture of sound and the uneasy vulnerability that underlies even the safety of our sleep."[29] Shelter was premiered in Cologne, Germany in spring 2005, and received its US premiere in November 2005.

Both Shelter and Carbon Copy Building were staged by New York's Ridge Theater, in collaboration with Laurie Olinder (visual graphics), Bill Morrison (film-maker) and Bob McGrath (director).

List of works

Orchestra

Soloist(s) and orchestra

Large ensemble (7 or more players)

Soloist(s) and large ensemble (7 or more players)

Works for 2–6 Players

Solo

Collaborations

Arrangements

Film

Selected recordings

References

  1. "Julia Wolfe :: Foundation for Contemporary Arts". www.foundationforcontemporaryarts.org. Retrieved 2016-03-26.
  2. "Julia Wolfe". Cantaloupe Music. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  3. "The Pulitzer Prize". The Pulitzer Prize. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  4. "See the 2015 Pulitzer Prize Winners and Finalists". Time. April 20, 2015. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  5. Huizenga, Tom (April 20, 2015). "Julia Wolfe Wins Music Pulitzer For 'Anthracite Fields'". Deceptive Cadence. NPR. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  6. "Wolfe's 'Anthracite Fields' Wins Pulitzer for Music". ABC News. April 20, 2015. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  7. Vankin, Deborah (April 20, 2015). "Julia Wolfe's 'Anthracite Fields' wins 2015 Pulitzer Prize in music". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  8. Platt, Russell (3 March 2003). "String Theory". The New Yorker. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  9. "Julia Wolfe: String Quartets". Classics Today. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  10. Kozinn, Allan (24 April 2007). "Music of the Spheres and the Pain of Earthly Matters". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  11. Holland, Bernard (11 March 1992). "Review/Music; A Common Language Of Layered Loudness". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  12. Beggs, Jo (19 March 2013). "Richard Alston Dance Company – The Lowry, Salford". The Public Reviews. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  13. Strohm, Adam (12 November 2009). "Dark Full Ride: Music in Multiples". Dusted Reviews. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  14. Oteri, Frank J. (April 20, 2015). "Julia Wolfe Wins 2015 Pulitzer Prize in Music". NewMusicBox. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  15. Swed, Mark (June 5, 2014). "NY Phil Biennial laudable, yet in need of curatorial vision". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 19, 2014.
  16. "Steel Hammer". SITI Company. Retrieved August 21, 2015.
  17. Clements, Andrew (12 October 2012). "BBCCO/Lockhart – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  18. Kozinn, Allan (1 February 2011). "Post-Minimalism and Folk Ballads Fuel a Composer". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  19. Ziporyn, Evan. "Julia Wolfe". United Phoenix Records. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  20. Kozinn, Allan (2 December 2004). "MUSIC THEATER REVIEW; Socks to Souls: Finding Meaning in What Goes Missing". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  21. Meyer, Robinson (20 March 2013). "Album Preview: Gordon/Lang/Wolfe's 'Shelter'". The Atlantic. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  22. "Gordon, Lang, Wolfe, Katchor: The Carbon Copy Building". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  23. "Traveling Music". Diller Scofidio + Renfro. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  24. 1 2 3 4 Robin, William (22 September 2016). "A MACARTHUR FOR THE COMPOSER JULIA WOLFE". New Yorker. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  25. Marathon page Bang on a Can website
  26. "Michael Gordon; David Lang; Julia Wolfe: Red Poppy: The Carbon Copy Building". G. Schirmer Inc. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  27. Kozinn, Allan (2 December 2004). "Socks to Souls: Finding Meaning in What Goes Missing". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  28. "Michael Gordon; David Lang; Julia Wolfe: Red Poppy: Shelter". G. Schirmer Inc. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  29. Artman, Deborah. "Libretti/Texts for Music". Deborah Artman. Retrieved 19 August 2014.

External links

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