Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra (LACO) has appointed Andrew Norman
composer-in-residence for three years beginning July 2012, it was
announced by Music Director Jeffrey Kahane. The highly regarded,
prolific young composer, whose music has been hailed by The New York
Times for its “daring juxtapositions and dazzling colors” and in the Los
Angeles Times for its “Chaplinesque” wit, succeeds Derek Bermel as the
Orchestra’s eighth composer-in-residence and fifth to be appointed by
Kahane.
“Andrew Norman is without question one of the most extravagantly gifted
young composers working in America today, and I believe he is poised to
become one of the major figures in contemporary music,” says Kahane. “I
look forward enormously to the opportunity to work with him as he joins
a list of illustrious LACO composers-in-residence, and feel certain
that his luminous and articulate personal presence will be as welcome to
all of us as his astonishing music."
As composer-in-residence, Norman receives a commission through LACO’s
innovative Sound Investment commissioning initiative, a program that
offers investor members the rare opportunity to create a legacy in music
and to observe first-hand the development of a new work from the
composer’s earliest ideas to the finished composition. Participants
invest $150 to $300 for a membership, which includes multiple salons
featuring in-depth discussion with the composer about his creative
process and behind-the-scenes previews of the final work. During his
tenure, various other Norman works are also slated to be featured on
LACO’s programming. Additionally, Norman serves as an advisor to Kahane
regarding promising emerging composers and artists, reviews scores
submitted to LACO, and, under the Orchestra’s auspices, visits selected
Southland high-school and college composition classes to discuss the
composition process.
Norman joins LACO’s impressive roster of esteemed
composers-in-residence, which, over the years, has included, in addition
to Bermel, Paul Chihara, Kenneth Frazelle, Pierre Jalbert, Uri Caine,
Stephen Hartke and Donald Crockett, the latter two with whom Norman
studied composition while an undergraduate at USC Thornton School of
Music.
Describing the Brooklyn-based composer’s distinctive musical style, the
Los Angeles Times states, “There is no end to the odd sounds Norman
entices from a fairly conventional chamber ensemble. Strings buzzed
like insects. Winds burst in with pinpoint dabs of color.” A lifelong
enthusiast for all things architectural, Norman writes music that is
often inspired by forms and textures he encounters in the visual world
and draws on an eclectic mix of instrumental sounds and notational
practices. Born in 1979, Norman has established himself as an exciting
young composing talent. He has received commissions from the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra, Heidelberg Symphony
(Germany), the Oakland East Bay Symphony, the Modesto Symphony, the
Calder Quartet, the California State University Stanislaus Symphony, the
Hoff-Barthelson School and the Cascade Head Music Festival in Oregon.
He has also been commissioned by the Orpheum Foundation for the
Advancement of Young Soloists and The Colburn School in Los Angeles.
Norman was recently selected as one of four composers commissioned by
the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra for "Project 440," a program celebrating
the orchestra's 40th anniversary. Orpheus premiered his work for the
commission, Apart, Together, at Carnegie Hall in December 2011 and also
performed it later that month during its tour to Germany.
Norman served as the composer for the 2010-11 Heidelberg season and, in
addition to his works being performed by the orchestra that season, the
composer's new work for theremin and orchestra, Air, premiered in
Heidelberg in April, 2011, featuring soloist Carolina Eyck. In May,
2011, John Adams led the world premiere of Norman's Try for chamber
orchestra, on the LA Phil’s Green Umbrella series. Sonnets, for
orchestra, premiered at the Aspen Music Festival and School in August of
2011 under Hugh Wolff.
Among other highlights, Norman's Unstuck was premiered in September 2009
by the Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich under the direction of Michael
Sanderling. Unstuck – the title of which is inspired in part by the
famous sentence "Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time" from Kurt
Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five – is characterized by a driving energetic
pulse that recalls the feel of Norman's brilliant work for eight
violinists, Gran Turismo. Norman's chamber music has earned the
composer acclaim as well. In May 2008, his work Lullaby, for
mezzo-soprano and piano, premiered at the National Museum for Women in
the Arts in Washington, DC by mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke and pianist
Pei-Yao Wang. Norman's work for solo viola, Sabina was premiered by
Nokuthula Ngwenyama in November of that same year at the John F. Kennedy
Center in Washington, DC.
Norman’s music has been performed at the Aspen Music Festival, the
Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music, the Monday Evening Concerts
in Los Angeles, the MATA Festival in New York, the Chicago Chamber
Players’ Composer Perspectives Series and by the Minnesota Orchestra and
the New England Philharmonic, among others. He was a composition
fellow at the Aspen Music Festival and twice a fellow at the Chamber
Music Conference and Composers' Forum of the East in Bennington,
Vermont. He has held residencies at the National Youth Orchestra
Festival and the Copland House.
Selected as Young Concert Artists composer-in-residence for the years
2007 through 2009, Norman is also the recipient of numerous awards,
including the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, four Morton
Gould Young Composer Awards, the Leo Kaplan Prize from ASCAP and a BMI
Student Composer Award. Additionally, he has received top honors in the
National Federation of Music Club’s Composition Competition, the Music
Teachers National Association Composition Competition, the New England
Philharmonic Call for Scores and the USC Undergraduate Symposium for
Scholarly and Creative Work.
As pianist, Norman is an avid performer of contemporary music and a
committed educator. He has performed in the Los Angeles-based Ensemble
Green and served on the faculty of the Pasadena Conservatory of Music.
Norman is a graduate of the University of Southern California Thornton
School of Music, where he studied composition with Crockett and Hartke
and piano with Stewart Gordon, and was twice named the Thornton School's
most outstanding graduate. He lives and works in Brooklyn and his music
is published worldwide exclusively by Schott Music.
LOS ANGELES CHAMBER ORCHESTRA (LACO), proclaimed “America's finest
chamber orchestra” by Public Radio International, has established itself
among the world's top musical ensembles. Since 1997, LACO has
performed under the baton of acclaimed conductor and pianist Jeffrey
Kahane, hailed by critics as “visionary” and “a conductor of uncommon
intellect, insight and musical integrity” with “undeniable charisma.”
Under Kahane’s leadership, the Orchestra maintains its status as a
preeminent interpreter of historical masterworks and a champion of
contemporary composers. During its 43-year history, the Orchestra has
made 30 recordings, toured Europe, South America and Japan, performed
across North America, earning adulation from audiences and critics
alike, and garnered seven ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming.
Headquartered in downtown Los Angeles, LACO presents seven Orchestral
Series concerts at both Glendale's Alex Theatre and UCLA's Royce Hall,
five Baroque Conversations concerts at downtown Los Angeles' Zipper
Concert Hall, three Westside Connections chamber music concerts at The
Broad Stage in Santa Monica, three Family Concerts at the Alex Theatre
and an annual Discover concert at Pasadena’s Ambassador Auditorium. In
addition, LACO presents a Concert Gala, an annual Silent Film screening
at Royce Hall and several fundraising salons each year. LACO was
founded in 1968.