ELLEN
TAAFFE ZWILICH, Francis Eppes Distinguished
Professor, is widely considered to be one
of America's leading composers. She studied
at the Florida State University and the
Juilliard School, where her major teachers
were Roger Sessions and Elliott Carter.
She also studied violin with Richard Burgin
and Ivan Galamian and was a member of the
American Sympony Orhcestra under Leopold
Stokowski.
Zwilich
is the recipient of numerous prizes and
honors, including the 1983 Pulitzer Prize
in Music (the first woman ever to receive
this coveted award). She was elected to
the Florida Artists Hall of Fame and the
American Academy of Arts and Letters and,
in 1995, was named to to the first Composer's
Chair in the history of Carnegie Hall. Musical
America designated her the 1999 Composer
of the Year. A prolific composer in all
media except opera, Zwilich has produced
four symphonies and other orchestral essays,
numerous concertos for a wide variety of
solo instruments, and a sizable canon of
chamber and recital pieces. Her works are
commissioned and played regularly by the
leading orchestras and ensembles throughout
the world.
Many
of her works have been issued on recordings,
and Baker's Biographical Dictionary
of Musicians (8th edition) states:
"There are not many composers in the
modern world who possess the lucky combination
of writing music of substance and at the
same time exercising an immediate appeal
to mixed audiences. Zwilich offers this
happy combination of purely technical excellence
and a distinct power of communication."
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