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Margaret
Brouwer
Composer
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visit www.brouwermusic.com
email
mxb42@po.cwru.edu
Born
in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Brouwer studied at Oberlin College, graduating
in 1962; she earned her doctorate from Indiana University. Her teachers
have included Donald Erb (in Texas), Harvey Sollberger, Frederick
Fox, and George Crumb. Before coming to Cleveland in 1996 to succeed
Erb at CIM, she served as composer-in-residence with the Roanoke
Symphony Orchestra in Virginia and founded and directed a music
festival at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.
Having
started out as a violinist, she soon gained distinction as a composer,
winning numerous prizes and awards and undertaking residencies at
the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center in Italy, the Virginia
Center for Creative Arts, and the Charles Ives Center for American
Music. Commissions have come from the St. Louis, Roanoke, and Juilliard
orchestras and from chamber music societies and individual artists.
Her First Symphony was recently performed by the orchestras
of Akron, Wichita, and Long Beach.
Virtually
all her music is published by the prestigious firm of Carl Fischer,
New York, and much of it has been recorded. A new CD of four chamber
music works has just been released on the CRI label. Her Clarinet
Concerto was recorded by the renowned Richard Stoltzman, and
at present she is writing a percussion concerto at the request of
Evelyn Glennie, today the most acclaimed performer in that instrumental
field.
Margarets
pieces are always very engagingsatisfying to listener and
performer alike, says composer Marilyn Shrude, the 1998 Arts
Prize winner. She has a wonderful ear for color, and I have
always been impressed with the technical aspects of her work. Every
note matters! Those who play her music thoroughly enjoy it.
It
is not one of the criteria of the Arts Prize, but Margaret Brouwer
has also been consistently concerned with the well-being of her
fellow composers, whose music she features on the regular programs
of her New Music Ensemble at CIM. A dedicated teacher, she is a
respected mentor to many gifted students.
text
by
Klaus G. Roy
Chair, 1999 Music Jury
1965 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Music
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If
more composers would write in this veinlyrical, accessible,
powerful, and movingthe uneasy truce between audiences and
modern music would quickly come to an end. So wrote one critic
about the work of Margaret Brouwer, composer and head of the composition
department at the Cleveland Institute of Music (CIM).
To
be sure, Brouwer, one of the most widely performed of the composers
currently resident in Cleveland, does not aim for easy listening;
but whatever its degree of complexity or simplicity, her work means
most of all to communicate directly. As another national reviewer
has noted: The music makes no obvious concessions toward styles
of the day. . .it inhabits its own peculiarly bewitching world.
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