Tag: Caroline Shaw

  • Caroline Shaw: Pulitzer Winner to Solo Violinist

    Caroline Shaw: Pulitzer Winner to Solo Violinist

    Is there nothing Caroline Shaw can’t do? A founding member of the Grammy Award-winning vocal octet Roomful of Teeth, Shaw is enrolled in the PhD program in composition at Princeton University. In 2013, at the age of 30, she became the youngest recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music for her composition “Partita for 8 Voices,” which she also recorded.

    Now Shaw makes her debut as a solo violinist in her most recent work, which receives its first performances in a series of concerts, the next of which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Sunday at 4 p.m.

    “Lo,” for violin and orchestra, is a co-commission of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra and the North Carolina and Indianapolis Symphonies, in support of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra’s MusicNOW Festival.

    PSO Music Director Rossen Milanov will conduct the concert, which will also feature the tone poem “Pohjola’s Daughter,” by Jean Sibelius, and the Symphony No. 1, by Johannes Brahms. Shaw will join Milanov for the pre-concert talk at 3.

    On Saturday at 12 p.m., Shaw will also take part in a Pi Day celebration at Nassau Inn, 10 Palmer Square, where a pop-up masterclass will be held for violinists ages 3-6. At 4 p.m., she will discuss her creative process with Milanov, as part of a PSO “Behind the Music” event, at the Arts Council of Princeton’s Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon St.

    Registration for the masterclass and tickets for “Behind the Music” – both free and open to the public – are available through the PSO website, princetonsymphony.org.

    Learn more about Caroline Shaw and the Princeton Symphony Orchestra in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/03/caroline_shaw_pso_performing_i.html

  • Pulitzer Music Prize History & Preview

    Pulitzer Music Prize History & Preview

    Tomorrow afternoon, the Pulitzer Prize committee will announce this year’s winners and nominees. In anticipation, tonight on “The Lost Chord,” we look back on the history of the Pulitzer Prize for Music.

    Really, other than Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” and Ives’ Symphony No. 3, how often do you get to hear this stuff? Okay, the operas of Menotti and Robert Ward get revived from time to time, and Jennifer Higdon has been very fortunate for a composer in her prime. Yet most of the Pulitzer winners remain elusive.

    We’ll have a chance to sample three of them, as part of our annual “Pulitzer Surprises” show – including the very first, William Schuman’s “A Free Song” (1943), recorded for the first time only in 2011, and the most recent, Caroline Shaw’s “Partita for 8 Voices” (2013).

    Shaw – at 30, the youngest recipient in the history of the category – is currently a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University. Her work for string quartet, “Ritornello 2.sq.2.j,” will be performed by the JACK Quartet in Princeton this Tuesday.

    The “Partita” is certainly the highlight of tonight’s program, with a dizzying array of genres and techniques ably navigated by the a cappella ensemble, Roomful of Teeth.

    Also on the program will be a sampling of William Bolcom’s “12 New Etudes for Piano,” the Pulitzer-winner from 1988.

    You can hear it tonight at 10:00 ET, with a repeat Thursday night at 11, or catch it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

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