Etchings 2012 Guest Composers

Philippe Hurel

Philippe Hurel, was born in 1955. French composer of mostly orchestral and chamber works that have been performed throughout Europe and elsewhere. Philippe Hurel studied musicology at the Université de Toulouse from 1974-79 and composition with Betsy Jolas and Ivo Malec at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris from 1980-83. He also had private studies in musical computer science with Tristan Murail in Paris in 1983. His honors include the Pensionnaire à la Villa Médicis à Rome (1986-88), the Förderpreis der Siemens-Stiftung in Munich 1995, for Six miniatures en trompe l'œil, the Prix des Compositeurs from SACEM (2002), and the Prix de la Meilleure Création de l'Année from SACEM 2003, for Aura. Mr. Hurel is also active in other positions. He worked as a music researcher at IRCAM in 1985-86 and 1988-89. He taught composition at IRCAM from 1997-2001.

He also served as composer-in-residence to both the Arsenal de Metz and the Philharmonie de Lorraine from 2000-02. With Pierre André Valade he founded the new music ensemble Court-circuit in 1990 and has since served as its artistic director.
His music has been performed by numerous orchestras and ensembles and by conductors such as by Pierre Boulez, David Robertson, Ludovic Morlot, Tito Ceccherini, Jonathan Nott, Esa Pekka Salonen, Kent Nagano, Pierre-André Valade, François Xavier Roth, Christian Eggen, Lorraine Vaillancourt, Reinbert de Leeuw, Bernard Kontarsky…

Among his concerts of the season 2011-12, Espèces d'espaces - theater musical piece based on the Georges Perec's book - will be premiered at the Biennale de Lyon (Théâtre de la Renaissance in Oullins) by Elise Chauvin (soprano), Jean Chaize, (actor), Ensemble 2e2M, La Muse en circuit (electronics), Alexis forestier (stage director) with Pierre Roullier conducting. Moreover, les Siècles, the flutist Marion Ralincourt and François Xavier Roth will perform Phonus at the theater of Nîmes and at the Cité de la musique in Paris in the frame of the cycle dedicated to Claude Debussy.
In the spring 2012 the new version for clarinet and ensemble of Phasis will be premiered at the Philadelphia museum of Art by Carol Macgonnell and Argento chamber ensemble of New york conducted by Michel Galante. Finally his music will be played numerous times by Pascal Contet, ensemble Nikel and Les Cris de Paris.

Philippe Hurel is actually composing the third part of the orchestral cycle Tour à Tour - commissioned by the Printemps des Arts for the Monaco Philharmonic Orchestra - which will be premiered in march 2012. After this piece he will compose an opera for the Capitole de Toulouse on a libretto written by the french writer Tanguy Viel. This opera will be premiered in Toulouse in april 2014.

His next pieces has been commissioned by the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and the Festival Messiaen au pays de la Meije.
Editions Billaudot publishes his music written between 1981-96 and Éditions Lemoine publishes his music written since 1997.

Visit Philippe's website.


George Tsontakis

In December, 2006, George Tsontakis was named the fourth recipient of the Charles Ives Living by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Thus, in the space of two years, Tsontakis has been awarded two of composition’s richest prizes, since his Violin Concerto No. 2 also won the 2005 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award. This celebrated international composition award gives deserved recognition to a composer who already enjoys a global career. Other previous awards include the American Academy’s award for lifetime achievement in 1995; and in 2002, Tsontakis spent several months at the American Academy in Berlin as a result of the 2002 Berlin Prize (Alberto Vilar Fellowship). He also served as the first Composer-in-Residence with the Oxford Philomusica (England) from 1998-2002.

Mr. Tsontakis's catalogue continues to grow dramatically as prominent orchestras and musicians commission and record new works. In recent seasons, his works have been heard with great frequency in concerts throughout the world (including dozens in Europe), with over 100 performances of his major works in the 2006-2007 season alone. Spring 2007 saw the premieres of his Naumburg-commissioned Midnight Rain song cycle for Sari Gruber and Clair de Lune by the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. Performances in recent years have included the premieres of his Third Piano Quartet (Opus One Quartet), his Fifth String Quartet (Cypress Quartet), and a Piano Concerto, Man of Sorrows (Stephen Hough and the Dallas Symphony), as well as performances by the Chicago, American, Albany, Jerusalem and Oregon Symphonies, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Athens State Orchestra. Pianist Stephen Hough performed Mr. Tsontakis’s epic Ghost Variations (nominated for a Grammy for Best Composition) at the 2006 Salzburg Festival and on the Paris-Louvre Series.

Mr. Tsontakis’s music consistently enjoys performances by the world’s most prestigious orchestras, and in some of the world’s most vaunted concert halls. The Millennium season alone brought performances to a dozen European countries in such venues as Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, Berlin’s Philharmonic Hall, London’s Queen Elizabeth and Wigmore Halls, Oxford’s Sheldonian, Radio France, Auditorium Bank de Luxembourg, Athen’s Megaron and Oslo’s Gamle Logen. In the late 1990s, six CDs representing his works were released, including his acclaimed Four Symphonic Quartets with James DePreist and the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte Carlo on the KOCH label, and Stephen Hough’s monumental Hyperion recording of the Ghost Variations, nominated for a Grammy for Best Contemporary Classical Composition, and the only classical recording cited in TIME magazine’s 1998 Top Ten Recordings. Two recordings of Mr. Tsontakis’s piano chamber music were released on KOCH International Classics in November, 2004, featuring the Broyhill Chamber Ensemble and Da Camera of Houston. Three all-Tsontakis orchestral CDs have been or will soon be released, including a Hyperion disc of his Man of Sorrows piano concerto and KOCH CDs featuring the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Albany Symphony.

The Grawemeyer Award-winning Violin Concerto No. 2 was written for violinist Steven Copes and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and was premiered in 2003. Other recent premieres have included a percussion concerto, Mirologhia (2001), for Evelyn Glennie, with the National Symphony at Carnegie Hall, and a horn concerto, Shiver (2002), for soloist David Jolley in Santa Fe; as well as October, a work for the Baltimore Symphony; he wrote Cathedral on a commission from the Aspen Music Festival to inaugurate the festival’s acclaimed Benedict Music Tent in 2000, as well as a violin concerto for Cho-Liang Lin (Violin Concerto No. 1), premiered with the Oregon and Albany Symphonies. The piano concerto Man of Sorrows, for Stephen Hough with the Dallas Symphony, was premiered under the direction of Andrew Litton in September, 2005. Mr. Tsontakis has composed works for the American, Blair, Colorado and Emerson string quartets, Da Camera of Houston, the American Brass Quintet, Orpheus, flutist Ransom Wilson, violinist Glenn Dicterow, violist Lawrence Dutton with pianist Misha Dichter, the New York Virtuoso Singers, the Broyhill Chamber ensemble, the Aspen Wind Quintet, Aureole and numerous American orchestras and ensembles.

Mr. Tsontakis has twice been a winner of Kennedy Center Awards — in 1989 for String Quartet No. 4 and in 1992 for the orchestral work Perpetual Angelus. He studied composition with Roger Sessions at Juilliard and conducting with Jorge Mester, and has directed the Riverside Orchestra and the Metropolitan Greek Chorale. A faculty member of the Aspen Music School since 1976, he was the founding director of the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble from 1991 until 1998, and is Composer-in-Residence at the Aspen Music Festival. Mr. Tsontakis will be the featured composer-in-residence for the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center in 2008-09, where he will write a work to commemorate the reopening of Alice Tully Hall. He served as Composer-in-Residence with the Music from Angel Fire festival in summer, 2005, and in September of that year, he began a 3-year Meet the Composer residency with the Albany Symphony. He is Distinguished Composer-in-Residence at Bard College.

Mr. Tsontakis’s music has been recorded on the Hyperion, INNOVA, New World, CRI, KOCH International and Opus One labels and is published exclusively by Theodore Presser.