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Marilyn
Shrude
Composer
In
this unplanned Year of the Woman for the Cleveland Arts
Prize, Marilyn Shrude holds a special distinction: She is the first
woman composer in the 37 years of these awards to win the prize
for music.
Although
born in Chicago, Marilyn Shrude has been a notable presence on the
Northern Ohio musical scene for more than 20 years. On the faculty
of Bowling Green State University (BGSU) since 1977 and a professor
since 1984, she has become one of the most highly respected creative
musicians of this region. Her works have been heard here in major
performances by the Cleveland Chamber Symphony, the Cleveland Institute
of Music New Music Ensemble, at the Cleveland Museum of Art, and
other venues. Shrudes music has been characterized as poetic,
communicative, and refreshingly non-doctrinaire.
Shrude
earned a Mus. B. degree from Alverno College and masters and
doctoral degrees from Northwestern University; her teachers have
included Alan Stout, William Karlins, and Karel Paukert. She has
taught at the Interlochen Arts Camp and established the MidAmerican
Center for Contemporary Music at BGSU. In addition, she has initiated
numerous special programs in schools, directed festivals, and served
as a catalyst for new music and musical technology both here in
Ohio and nationally.
Marilyn
Shrudes many prizes and honors include the Music Award from
the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Ohioana Award in Composition,
a Chamber Music Americana/ASCAP Award for Adventuresome Programming,
the Kennedy Center Friedheim Award, and fellowships from the National
Endowment for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Council.
Her
published catalogue is extensive, and many of her works have enjoyed
multiple performances across the country, in Europe, and in Asia.
Over a dozen pieces have been recorded. She has held residencies
at some two dozen schools and six colleges, and she continues to
receive major commissions. Shrude is listed in nine different biographical
dictionaries, including Whos Who in American Music and
Foremost Women of the Twentieth Century. An all-around musician
composer, teacher, mentor, author, and concert director, Shrude
is also an accomplished pianist. The concept of creativity is for
her an inclusive one, but on this occasion she is once again being
honored for her remarkable contribution to the musical literature
of our time.
text
by
Klaus G. Roy
Chair, 1998 Music Jury
1965 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Music
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