| 17 |
Ward, Robert | 15 |
Kastendieck, Miles | 7 |
Schuller, Gunther composer | 7 |
Baker, David N. | 6 |
Hamilton, David | 6 |
Harbison, John, | 6 |
Schwantner, Joseph, composer | 6 |
Copland, Aaron | 5 |
Luening, Otto | 5 |
Wernick, Richard | 5 |
Lang, Paul Henry | 4 |
Page, Tim, | 4 |
Persichetti, Vincent, | 4 |
Bassett, Leslie | 3 |
Bergsma, William | 3 |
Bernheimer, Martin | 3 |
Dello Joio, | 3 |
Hume, Paul | 3 |
| 3 |
Lewis, John | 3 |
Lowens, Irving | 3 |
Peterson, Wayne, composer, professor emeritus, | 3 |
Wyner, Yehudi, professor of music, | 3 |
Abrams, Muhal Richard, pianist and composer | 2 |
Cowell, Henry | 2 |
Crumb, George, professor of Music, | 2 |
Druckman, Jacob, composer, (Chairman) of composition dept., school of music, | 2 |
Gideon, Miriam, composer | 2 |
Guzelimian, Ara, senior director and artistic advisor, Carnegia Hall, (Chairman) | 2 |
Husa, Karel, composer, professor of music, | 2 |
Kolodin, Irving, music editor, Saturday Review | 2 |
Kriegsman, Alan M., dance critic, Washington Post | 2 |
Lockwood, | 2 |
Martino, Donald | 2 |
Monson, Ingrid | 2 |
Perle, George | 2 |
Porter, Quincy | 2 |
Reich, Howard | 2 |
Reynolds, Roger | 2 |
Rouse, Christopher | 2 |
Sollberger, Harvey | 2 |
Trimbel, Lester | 2 |
Webster, Beveridge | 2 |
Weisgall, Hugo | 2 |
Zwilich, Ellen Taafe | 2 |
Andres, Dwight | 1 |
Argento, Dominick | 1 |
Babbitt, Milton | 1 |
Blier, Steven | 1 |
Bolcom, William | 1 |
Craft, Robert, | 1 |
Davidovsky, Mario | 1 |
Davidson, Justin | 1 |
Davis, Peter G | 1 |
Eyer, Ronald | 1 |
Fine, Vivian | 1 |
Finney, Ross Lee | 1 |
Freed, Isadore | 1 |
Hanson, Howard | 1 |
Hartke, Stephen | 1 |
Henahan, Donal J. | 1 |
James, Philip | 1 |
Kalodin, Irving | 1 |
LaMontaine, John | 1 |
Ran, Shulamit | 1 |
Rhodes, Willard | 1 |
Riegger, | 1 |
Rockwell, John | 1 |
Sargent, Winthrop | 1 |
Schaefer, John | 1 |
Scherman, Thomas C. | 1 |
Schuman, William | 1 |
Sherman, Thomas B., | 1 |
Steinberg, | 1 |
Stucky, Steven | 1 |
Swed, Mark | 1 |
Thomson, Virgil | 1 |
Tower, Joan | 1 |
Wagenaar, Bernard | 1 |
Wagner, Melinda | 1 |
Wallenstein, Alfred | 1 |
Wen Chung, Chou | 1 |
Wilson, Olly | 1 |
Wuorinen, | 1 |
Zinman, David | 1 |
Updated, April 10: Removed duplicate row.
13 comments:
Why, oh why, and when, did Mark Swed get a chance to vote?
A great thinker's review
I can't answer that first question, but as to the second, 2005, the year Steven Stucky's Second Concerto for Orchestra won - premiered by the LA Phil. The nominated finalists that year were You Are by Steve Reich and Dialogues, by Elliot Carter. With the Stucky, those are three rather different places on the new-music spectrum. (Carter: oldest composer ever to be dominated for a Pulitzer.)
How come some of the composers have "composer" after their names but many (Riegger, Cowell, Luening, etc etc.) don't?
My sloppy editing of the file I had to work with.
Lisa, I can't figure out whether this is inclusive of this year's panel. I know that John Schaefer served this year, but he was also part of last year's Ornette Coleman imbroglio.
That last bit would be an excellent band name, no? "The Ornette Coleman Imbroglio, live at (fill in the blank)!"
Ingrid Monson was on both of those committees, too -- so does this imply she served a third time?
It's inclusive of this year, and Schaefer did not serve on this year's music jury. The Pulitzer web site lists Monson, Dwight Andrews, Steven Blier, Tim Page, and Steven Stucky.
You're correct, of course. Mea culpa.
Empiricus, I knew I shouldn't have clicked on your link. Anyone have some brain bleach handy? Even after all these years, I still can't believe that Swed was who the Times chose to replace Martin Bernheimer, who's been on 3 panels.
In any case, the Pulitzer for music doesn't rate at all, in my view. It's the Grawemeyer Award that counts, I'd say. Look at this list of past winners:
2007 Currier: Static
2006 Kurtág: Concertante Op. 42
2005 Tsontakis: Violin Concerto #2
2004 Chin: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
2003 Saariaho: L`amour de loin [GREAT opera]
2002 Kernis: Colored Field
2001 Boulez: Sur Incises [Woo hoo! Boulez!]
2000 Ades: Asyla
1999 Not Awarded
1998 Tan Dun: Marco Polo [Ewww]
1997 Bainbridge: Ad Ora Incerta 1996 Tcherepnin: Double Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra
1995 Adams: Violin Concerto [Ewww]
1994 Takemitsu: Fantasma/Cantos for Clarinet and Orchestra
1993 Husa: Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra
1992 Penderecki: Adagio for Large Orchestra
1991 Corigliano: Symphony No. 1
1990 Tower: Silver Ladders
1989 Ung: Inner Voices
1988 Not Awarded
1987 Birtwistle: The Mask of Orpheus [Amazing opera]
1986 Ligeti: Etudes for Piano [brilliant pieces]
1985 Lutoslawski: Symphony No. 3 [fantastic piece]
That's some amazing music there, from men *and* women, European and American and Asian, serialist and tonal (sort of!)
That's an interesting table. I had to look up a few names, like the top man Chalmers Clifton . BTW, Miles Kastendieck (another unknown) is listed twice, one for 7 times and another for 3.
I'd also have to agree that Henry's list of Grawemeyer Award winners looks more impressive when stacked up against the Pulitzers.
I agree about the Grawemeyer Award.
That Miles Kastendieck thing is an error of some kind, undoubtedly mine. I will investigate and correct it.
He was, I believe, a music critic.
To be fair, the Grawemeyer is open to everybody, not just American composers, so it's a lot easier for them to pick a piece of music that everybody can look back on 20 years later and say, "Ah! Masterpiece!" Obviously Boulez, Saariaho, Birtwistle, Ligeti, Lutoslawski, et al would never be eligible for a Pulitzer.
That said, it is a little shameful that Tower, Corigliano, Adams, and Currier should ALL be awarded the Grawemeyer before the Pulitzer committee got around to selecting them...
To be fair, the Grawemeyer is open to everybody, not just American composers, so it's a lot easier for them to pick a piece of music that everybody can look back on 20 years later and say, "Ah! Masterpiece!"
Like I did? :-)
The American Grawemeyer Award winner composers overlap a bit with the Pulitzers, but not the partcular works: Kernis, Corigliano, Adams, Husa (a composer I've never heard). I ought to investigate who serves on the Grawemeyer juries.
Miles K. - served seven times. The second row is wrong and I'll remove it.
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