Home

Home
Concerts & Events
Purchase Tickets & CDs
About ROCO
Founder
Musicians
Conductors
Composers
Board of Directors
Administrative Staff
Collaborations & Community Partners
Past Seasons
ROCOrooters Children's Program
Listen to ROCO
Press & Recognition
Support Us
Photos
Join Our Email List
Contact

 

FEATURED COMPOSERS FOR THE 2008-2009 SEASON

KARIM AL-ZAND

The work of Canadian-American composer Karim Al-Zand (b.1970) has been called “strong and startlingly lovely” (Boston Globe). His compositions are wide-ranging, from settings of classical Arabic poetry to scores for dance and pieces for young audiences. Many of his works explore connections between music and other arts, and draw inspiration from diverse sources such as 19th century graphic art, fables of the world, folksong and jazz. Al-Zand’s music has enjoyed success in the US, Canada and abroad, and he is the recipient of several national awards, including the Sackler Composition Prize, the ArtSong Prize and the Louisville Orchestra Competition Prize. He holds degrees from Harvard and McGill Universities and is currently on the faculty of the Shepherd School of Music (Rice University) in Houston. Al-Zand is also a founding member and vice-president of Musiqa, Houston’s premiere contemporary music group.

Performers of Al-Zand’s music include groups such as the American Modern Ensemble, California E.A.R. Unit, the New Millennium Ensemble, Mendelssohn String Quartet, Third Angle Ensemble, Collegium Novum, New England Conservatory Camerata, Ensemble Noir, The Flux Quartet, North/South Consonance, Brave New Works, Pinotage, Indiana University Wind Ensemble and OrchestraX. He has been awarded three times in the Canadian SOCAN Competition; for Fantasy and Fanfare, Sonata and String Quartet. His two string quartets have received awards and recognition from the 1997 Blodgett Composition Competition, the Salvatore Martirano Award, Harvard’s Bohemians Prize and the Tampa Bay Composers’ Forum Prize for Excellence in Chamber Music. While a fellow at the 2000 Oregon Bach Festival Composers’ Symposium, Al-Zand’s work Parizade and the Singing Tree was performed to critical acclaim.

Other awards and fellowships include those from the American Modern Ensemble, Composer’s Guild, Collegium Novum, ASCAP, the Society of Composers Incorporated, the National Association of Composers USA, the June in Buffalo Festival, Wellesley Composers Conference the MusicNinetySeven Festival in Cincinnati. and the MacDowell Colony. He has received commissions from Harvard University, the Fromm Foundation, ALEA III, ASCAP/SCI and OrchestraX in Houston.

Al-Zand received his Bachelor of Music from McGill University, with majors in both music theory and composition. While there he studied composition with Donald Steven, John Rea and the late Bengt Hambraeus and worked in the McGill's Group of the Electronic Music Studio with alcides lanza. As a pianist he has studied under Eugene Plawutsky and Louis-Philippe Pelletier. At Harvard University he studied composition with Mario Davidovsky and Bernard Rands, and music theory with David Lewin.

While in Boston, Al-Zand worked periodically as a jazz musician, both as a pianist and directing for two years the Dudley House Big Band, a 17-piece jazz ensemble he formed at Harvard University in 1994. One of his several compositions for the ensemble, It’s About Time, was awarded in the 1996–1997 Massachusetts Association of Jazz Educators Composition Contest.

In his scholarly work, Al-Zand has pursued several diverse areas of music theory, include topics in jazz, counterpoint, and improvisation (both jazz and 18th century extemporization). He has also developed with Martin Shultz, an online ear training application, Hearing AID. His dissertation is entitled Theoretical Observations on Jazz Improvisation: The Solos of Julian Cannonball Adderley.

From www.alzand.com

CARTER PANN

Carter Pann is one of the most versatile talents among composers of his generation. His music has been performed around the world by ensembles and soloists including the London Symphony, City of Birmingham Symphony, Seattle Symph., Budapest Symph., Irish National Symph., New York and Chicago Youth Symphonies; the Radio Symphonies of Berlin, Stockholm, and Finland; the National Repertory Orchestra; Richard Stoltzman, the Ying Quartet, pianists Barry Snyder and Winston Choi, and the Antares Ensemble.

Honors include the K. Serocki Competition for his Piano Concerto (premiered by the Polish Radio Symphony in Lutoslawski Hall, Warsaw 1998), a Charles Ives Scholarship from the Academy of Arts and Letters, and five ASCAP awards including the Leo Kaplan award. In 2000 his Piano Concerto was nominated for a Grammy Award.

In the last decade, SLALOM has been performed extensively by American and European orchestras.

Carter is currently on faculty at the University of Colorado in Boulder.

From www.carterpann.com

Copyright © 2005 - 2008 River Oaks Chamber Orchestra. All rights reserved.