Dorothy Chang (composer): Difference between revisions

From Asian Canadian Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{AAType |Image=DorothyChang.jpg |Home page=www.dorothychang.com |Location=Vancouver, B.C. |Arts=Arts, Music |Type=Person }} Described as "evocative and kaleidoscopic" (Seattle T...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 6: Line 6:
|Type=Person
|Type=Person
}}
}}
Described as "evocative and kaleidoscopic" (Seattle Times), the music of composer Dorothy Chang (b. 1970) is characterized by an emphasis on dramatic intensity and expressive lyricism, with a more recent interest in interdisciplinary works involving video, imagery and movement.   
Described as "evocative and kaleidoscopic” (Seattle Times), the music of composer Dorothy Chang reflects an eclectic mix of musical influences ranging from popular and folk music to elements of traditional Chinese music. Many of her works are inspired by place, time, memory and personal histories.  Dorothy’s catalog includes over seventy works for solo, chamber and large ensembles with a particular interest in cross-cultural and interdisciplinary collaboration, including works for mixed Chinese and Western ensembles as well as for theatre, opera and dance.   


Dorothy's music has been performed by orchestras including the Albany (NY) Symphony, Aspen Concert Orchestra, Chicago Civic Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony, Queens Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Vancouver Island and Vancouver Symphony, as well as by chamber ensembles including eighth blackbird, the Smith Quartet (UK), the Chicago Saxophone Quartet, Collage New Music (Boston), North/South Consonance (New York), Music from China, and Soundstreams (Toronto)Her music has been featured in concerts and festivals across North America and abroad, most recently at the PAN Music Festival (Seoul), Lontano Festival (UK), and World Music Days in Hong Kong.
Dorothy’s music has been featured in concerts and festivals across North America and abroad, with performances by the Albany, Calgary Philharmonic, Indianapolis, Manitoba Chamber, Montreal, Pittsburgh, Queens, Saint Paul Chamber, Seattle, Toronto, Vancouver, Vancouver Island and Victoria Symphony Orchestras, and by chamber ensembles including eighth blackbird, Smith Quartet, the Chicago Saxophone Quartet, Chai Found Music Workshop (Taiwan) and Music from China, among othersShe has received awards and grants from organizations including the American Academy of Arts and Letters, ASCAP, Barlow Endowment, British Columbia Arts Council, Canada Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, Fromm Music Foundation, and the inaugural commission from the Women's Philharmonic Commissioning Project of Meet the Composer.  From 2005-08, Dorothy served as composer-in-residence with the Albany Symphony Orchestra.  


Awards and honours that Dorothy has received include a Charles Ives Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, awards from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, the International Alliance for Women in Music, Mu Phi Epsilon, the National Society of Arts and Letters, Meet the Composer and the Jacob Druckman Orchestra Prize from the Aspen Music Festival  She has received  commissions from the Canada Council of the Arts, the British Columbia Arts Council, the Barlow Endowment, Chamber Music America, and the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.  For the 2003-04 and 2005-08 seasons, Dorothy held a Music Alive composer residency with the Albany Symphony Orchestra.  In 2008 she was awarded the inaugural commission  from the Women's Philharmonic Commissioning Project of Meet the Composer  for a new orchestral work, Strange Air, which was premiered at the Cabrillo Festival  of Contemporary Music by  Marin Alsop and the festival orchestra.
Born in Winfield, Illinois, Dorothy began her music studies on piano at age six and began composing at the age of fourteen. She received degrees in composition from the University of Michigan (B.M., M.M.) and the Indiana University School of Music (D.M). She has served on the music faculty at Indiana State University and is presently Professor of Music at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.
 
Born in Winfield, Illinois, Dorothy began her music studies on piano at age six and began composing at the age of fourteen. She received degrees in composition from the University of Michigan (B.M., M.M.) and the Indiana University School of Music (D.M). She has served on the music faculty at Indiana State University and is presently Associate Professor of Music at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.


{{From|http://www.dorothychang.com/dorothy-chang-biography.html}}
{{From|http://www.dorothychang.com/dorothy-chang-biography.html}}

Latest revision as of 04:48, 15 October 2021

Créer la version française

Dorothy Chang (composer)


Location

Vancouver B.C.



Described as "evocative and kaleidoscopic” (Seattle Times), the music of composer Dorothy Chang reflects an eclectic mix of musical influences ranging from popular and folk music to elements of traditional Chinese music. Many of her works are inspired by place, time, memory and personal histories. Dorothy’s catalog includes over seventy works for solo, chamber and large ensembles with a particular interest in cross-cultural and interdisciplinary collaboration, including works for mixed Chinese and Western ensembles as well as for theatre, opera and dance.

Dorothy’s music has been featured in concerts and festivals across North America and abroad, with performances by the Albany, Calgary Philharmonic, Indianapolis, Manitoba Chamber, Montreal, Pittsburgh, Queens, Saint Paul Chamber, Seattle, Toronto, Vancouver, Vancouver Island and Victoria Symphony Orchestras, and by chamber ensembles including eighth blackbird, Smith Quartet, the Chicago Saxophone Quartet, Chai Found Music Workshop (Taiwan) and Music from China, among others. She has received awards and grants from organizations including the American Academy of Arts and Letters, ASCAP, Barlow Endowment, British Columbia Arts Council, Canada Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, Fromm Music Foundation, and the inaugural commission from the Women's Philharmonic Commissioning Project of Meet the Composer. From 2005-08, Dorothy served as composer-in-residence with the Albany Symphony Orchestra.

Born in Winfield, Illinois, Dorothy began her music studies on piano at age six and began composing at the age of fourteen. She received degrees in composition from the University of Michigan (B.M., M.M.) and the Indiana University School of Music (D.M). She has served on the music faculty at Indiana State University and is presently Professor of Music at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.