Submission declined on 31 December 2023 by
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Edward Green is a contemporary American composer and musicologist. He is a professor at Manhattan School of Music, where he has taught music history, jazz, ethnomusicology, and composition, [1] and at the Aesthetic Realism Foundation. [2] Dr. Green received an American Symphony Orchestra League Music Alive! Award in 2004-5, [3] In 2017, he received the First International Symphonic Composition prize of the Orquesta Sinfónica del Congreso Nacional del Paraguay, for his Symphony in C. [4] He received the Kodaly Composer's Award for his Brass Quintet, and a Delius Prize for his Genesis: Variations for Guitar, which premiered at Carnegie Recital Hall performed by David Starobin. [5] His Concerto for Clarinet and Strings, was performed by the North/South Chamber Orchestra under the direction of Max Lifchitz, at Merkin Concert Hall. [6] His choral music has also been warmly reviewed. [7]
Named a Fulbright Senior Specialist by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars in 2009, Dr. Green taught a doctoral course in contemporary American music at the Catholic University of Argentina in Buenos Aires, and later delivered a lecture series under Fulbright sponsorship on Aesthetic Realism and Music in Asunción, Paraguay. [8] He is the editor of China and the West: The Birth of a New Music. [9] and The Cambridge Companion to Duke Ellington. He has given master classes in the U.S. and abroad on the music of Ellington, whom he regards as "America's greatest composer". [10] [11] Since 2009, he has also served on the editorial board of the International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music. [12]
Edward Green was born in Queens, New York on November 12, 1951 to Bernard and Dorothy Spieler Green, and grew up in Jericho, Long Island. In his teenage years he studied piano with Morton Estrin, and composition with Meyer Kupferman. His undergraduate studies in music were at Oberlin College where he studied composition with Richard Hoffman, who had been Arnold Schoenberg’s secretary and amanuensis. Green's interest in Schoenberg resulted in various publications, including on the Op. 24 Serenade, Schoenberg's first overtly 12-tone work. [13] He earned his PhD from New York University in 2008 for his dissertation, Chromatic Completion in the Late Vocal Music of Haydn and Mozart: A Technical, Philosophic, and Historical Study and has lectured by invitation on this topic at academic institutions in the U.S. and abroad [14]
Dr. Green's musical works have been recorded on several labels, including Bridge Records, Traditional Crossroads, North/South Recordings, and Albany Records. [15] His Concerto in C for Trumpet and Orchestra, inspired by the poetry of Eli Siegel, was premiered by the New River Valley Symphony (Virginia) with Paul Neebe, trumpet, who later recorded the piece with the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra ( David S. Wiley, conductor) for Albany Records. [16] [17] Edward Green has collaborated with Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Ken Kimmelman on several award-winning films, including “What Does a Person Deserve” about hunger and homelessness in America, and "Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana" based on Eli Siegel's poem of the same title. [18]
Submission declined on 31 December 2023 by
Mach61 (
talk). This submission is not suitable for Wikipedia. Please read
"What Wikipedia is not" for more information.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
|
Edward Green is a contemporary American composer and musicologist. He is a professor at Manhattan School of Music, where he has taught music history, jazz, ethnomusicology, and composition, [1] and at the Aesthetic Realism Foundation. [2] Dr. Green received an American Symphony Orchestra League Music Alive! Award in 2004-5, [3] In 2017, he received the First International Symphonic Composition prize of the Orquesta Sinfónica del Congreso Nacional del Paraguay, for his Symphony in C. [4] He received the Kodaly Composer's Award for his Brass Quintet, and a Delius Prize for his Genesis: Variations for Guitar, which premiered at Carnegie Recital Hall performed by David Starobin. [5] His Concerto for Clarinet and Strings, was performed by the North/South Chamber Orchestra under the direction of Max Lifchitz, at Merkin Concert Hall. [6] His choral music has also been warmly reviewed. [7]
Named a Fulbright Senior Specialist by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars in 2009, Dr. Green taught a doctoral course in contemporary American music at the Catholic University of Argentina in Buenos Aires, and later delivered a lecture series under Fulbright sponsorship on Aesthetic Realism and Music in Asunción, Paraguay. [8] He is the editor of China and the West: The Birth of a New Music. [9] and The Cambridge Companion to Duke Ellington. He has given master classes in the U.S. and abroad on the music of Ellington, whom he regards as "America's greatest composer". [10] [11] Since 2009, he has also served on the editorial board of the International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music. [12]
Edward Green was born in Queens, New York on November 12, 1951 to Bernard and Dorothy Spieler Green, and grew up in Jericho, Long Island. In his teenage years he studied piano with Morton Estrin, and composition with Meyer Kupferman. His undergraduate studies in music were at Oberlin College where he studied composition with Richard Hoffman, who had been Arnold Schoenberg’s secretary and amanuensis. Green's interest in Schoenberg resulted in various publications, including on the Op. 24 Serenade, Schoenberg's first overtly 12-tone work. [13] He earned his PhD from New York University in 2008 for his dissertation, Chromatic Completion in the Late Vocal Music of Haydn and Mozart: A Technical, Philosophic, and Historical Study and has lectured by invitation on this topic at academic institutions in the U.S. and abroad [14]
Dr. Green's musical works have been recorded on several labels, including Bridge Records, Traditional Crossroads, North/South Recordings, and Albany Records. [15] His Concerto in C for Trumpet and Orchestra, inspired by the poetry of Eli Siegel, was premiered by the New River Valley Symphony (Virginia) with Paul Neebe, trumpet, who later recorded the piece with the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra ( David S. Wiley, conductor) for Albany Records. [16] [17] Edward Green has collaborated with Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Ken Kimmelman on several award-winning films, including “What Does a Person Deserve” about hunger and homelessness in America, and "Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana" based on Eli Siegel's poem of the same title. [18]