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An assistant professor
of composition at Cleveland State University, where he also serves
as coordinator of the electronic and computer music program, Gregory
D'Alessio earned his master's and doctor's degrees from Columbia
University, where he studied with Mario Davidovsky, Fred Lerdahl,
Arthur Krieger, and George Edwards. Clearly a young composer of
great promise, he was accepted for further studies by such leading
creative figures as Milton Babbitt, Louis Andriessen, Jacob Druckman,
Andrew Imbrie, Bernard Rands, and Chinary Ung.
In addition to
composing and teaching, he is co-founder and editor of New
Modern Music, an on-line magazine dedicated to contemporary
music. Prior to joining the CSU faculty, he was on the staff of
Opcode Systems, a major producer of music software and technology.
D'Alessio has won
numerous awards and grants, including a Guggenheim Fellowship for
2001-2002, an Ohio Arts Council individual artist award, and the
Board of Directors Prize from the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music
(SEAMUS); fellowships to the Berkshire Music Festival at Tanglewood,
Aspen Music Festival, Wellesley Composers Conference, and Idahos
Sandpoint Festival; and residencies at the MacDowell Colony, the
Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the Atlantic Center for
the Arts.
His works have
been performed at conferences of the Society of Composers International
(SCI) and the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music. Such noted ensembles
as Speculum Musicae, the New Millennium Ensemble, the Manhattan
Wind Quintet, the Tanglewood Contemporary Music Ensemble, and the
Cleveland Chamber Symphony have programmed his compositions to audience
and critical acclaim. D'Alessio has also served as visiting composer
at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the University of Wisconsin
Madison. His music is available on CD from the Society for Electro-Acoustic
Music US.
text
by
Klaus
G. Roy
Chair, 2000 Music Jury
1965 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Music
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