Quantcast
Channel: The American Prize
Viewing all 1261 articles
Browse latest View live

WINNERS: composers (instrumental chamber music). 2018-19

$
0
0
This listing includes the results of three composition contests in instrumental chamber music:  1) works for solo instrument or instrumental duo; 2) works for larger chamber ensembles, and, 3) instrumental chamber works by student composers. —DK

The American PrizeNational Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David (Volosin) Katz, chief judge, is honored to announce the winners, runners-up, honorable mentions and citation recipient of The American Prize in Composition, 2018-19, instrumental chamber music division. Congratulations!

Complete listings of finalists and semi-finalists in The American Prize competitions may be found elsewhere on this blog. Please use the chronological tool in the right-hand column to find specific results.

QUICKNOTES: Although The American Prize does not usually provide written evaluations to semi-finalists, some semi-finalist composers will receive in their certificate packets short comments, suggestions or overall impressions made during the judging. We hope they will prove valuable. All finalists receive written evaluations from a member of The American Prize judging panel.

Please make us aware of any misprints: theamericanprize@gmail.com


The American Prize in Composition—(instrumental chamber music— solos & duos) professional division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Robert Denham
La Mirada CA
Goldgräber

Robert Denham
Robert Denham’s music includes works of every genre and has been performed to great acclaim across the United States, Canada, Europe, and Asia.  He has worked closely with Carl St. Clair and the Pacific Symphony Chamber Orchestra, who recently premiered his 65-minute oratorio, Under the Shadow with the Biola University Chorale.  Other recent premiers include his three-movement Concerto for Flute and Orchestra (first performed by Brian Bensing and the Cambrian Symphony Orchestra) and The Way Home for two sopranos and piano (commissioned by the “Soprani Compagni” trio).  Other champions of Denham’s music include Timothy Lees (Concertmaster, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra), Rodney Winther (Conductor, CCM Wind Symphony and Chamber Players), Elizabeth Larson (Credo Trio), and singers Susan Ali, Tyler Thompson, and Joel Balzun.  Recent prizes include first prize in the Flute New Music Consortium Composition Competition (solo flute with piano) and an Honorable Mention for the 2017 American Prize (choral division). 


2nd Place:
Clement Reid
Lakewood WA
Morrell Variations

Clement Reid
Clement Reid was born in New York City, studying with Allen Brings, then graduating from the Eastman School of Music and University of Southern California. Studies continued with Joseph Schwantner,  Samuel Adler, Warren Benson, Frederick Lesemann, and Earle Brown. He has written for band, orchestra, chamber ensembles, educational books in composition, piano, and guitar. His music has been featured at Juilliard, Steinway Hall, Aspen Composers Conference, PLU Artist Series, WSMTA Joy of Piano Trios Festival, Classical Tuesdays, Lyrica-Choral Ensemble, Classic King FM-Seattle. Commissions and grants have included the AGO, Tacoma Symphony Orchestra, Northwest Symphony Orchestra, Tacoma Arts Commission, and the Freeman Foundation (composer exchange program in China). He was a  panelist for Artist Trust, board member-WCF, Semi-Finalist for the  American Prize in Composition (2013, 2018), Global Music Awards Silver Medal, Outstanding Achievement (2017, 2018), and Washington State Commissioned Composer of the Year (1999) by the MTNA.


3rd Place: (there was a tie): 
Olga Amelkina-Vera
Plano TX 

The Heaven's Hundred
Olga Amelkina-Vera
Olga Amelkina-Vera’s works have been called “the discovery of the evening” (Sarasota Herald-Tribune),  “brilliant” (The Royal Gazette), “incandescent” and “hypnotic” (Fort Worth Star Telegram), and “exotic” (Soundboard).  Originally from Belarus, Olga has resided in the United States since 1997. She holds an MM in Composition from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, as well as MM and DMA degrees in guitar performance from the University of North Texas. Olga’s works won top prizes in The American Prize Composition Competition, The Japan Guitar Ensemble Composition Competition, and Austin Classical Guitar Society Composition Competition.  She was the Irving Symphony Orchestra 2016-2017 SMU Student Composer-in-Residence.  Olga’s compositions for guitar are published by Les Productions d’Oz. To learn more about Olga, please visit www.olgaamelkinavera.com.
 
 
3rd Place: (there was a tie): 
Andrew Sigler
Knoxville TN
Jacana

Andrew Sigler
Andrew Sigler’s music has been commissioned, performed, and awarded by the Wellesley Composers Conference, Composer’s Inc. Suzanne and Lee Ettelson award, Earplay Donald Aird Composers Competition, Robert Avalon International Competition for Composers, SCI National Festival, NACUSA National Festival, Meir Rimon Commissioning Fund of the International Horn Society, Oregon Bach Festival, Seasons Festival, International Brass Symposium, TUTTI Festival, The American Prize, Open Space New Music Festival, University of Texas New Music Ensemble, University of Tennessee Faculty Brass Quintet, Electroacoustic Barn Dance, Hear No Evil, Compositum Musicae Novae, New Music Conflagration, Simple Measures, Bold City Contemporary Ensemble, and Fast>>Forward>>Austin, and his writing has been featured in Opera News and NewMusicBox. His music is published by Editions Musica-Ferrum and he serves as a board member of NACUSA. Andrew is Assistant Professor of Music Composition at the University of Tennessee. Do you want to know more? Go to andrewsigler.com.


Finalist Honorable Mention: 
Walter Saul
Fresno CA
Quiltings

Walter Saul
Walter Saul (waltersaul.com) joined the Fresno Pacific University music faculty in 2003. His bachelor’s degree is from Duke University and his M.M. and D.M.A. are from the Eastman School of Music. He was named “Composer of the Year” in North Carolina and in Oregon, and his compositions have been performed in 24 states and five nations. Saul has won ASCAP Special Awards each year since 1990 and performed and presented clinics on the East and West coasts. His CDs include Out of Darkness Into His Marvelous Light, From Alpha to Omega, Songs of Requited Love (with FPU Professor Emeritus Larry Warkentin), Walter Saul: Sonatas and Meditations for Piano, Quiltings (CD/DVD), Walter Saul: Sonatinas and Bagatelles and the Naxos CD of Saul’s orchestral works: Kiev 2014, with the National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine under the direction of Theodore Kuchar and featuring James Buswell, violinist, and Rong-Huey Liu, oboist.   


The American Prize in Composition—(instrumental chamber music— larger ensembles) professional division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Dante De Silva
Tarzana CA
Hungry

Dante De Silva
Dante De Silva is a Los Angeles-based composer and musician. His music has been described as “haunting” (Classical Sonoma) and “beautiful” (Los Angeles Times) to “sparkling” (San Francisco Classical Voice) and “fun” (Sequenza21). From his early days in a rock band up until the present, Dante has always aimed to create music that evokes emotions ranging from the simple to the complex. To conjure those emotions, his compositions incorporate a characteristic balance of lyricism, simplicity, humor, fragility, and even savagery.

He has received commissions from Grammy-winning pianist Gloria Cheng, Opera Parallele, the B Band, and the Humboldt State University Percussion Ensemble, among others. Performers of his work include Talea Ensemble, Pacific Serenades, pianist Ryan MacEvoy McCullough, What’s Next, and Composers Inc. His music has been performed throughout the U.S., as well as parts of Canada and Europe. Dante holds degrees from UCLA, UC Santa Cruz and Humboldt State University. www.dantedesilva.com


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Arthur Gottschalk
Houston TX
Benny, Zoot & Teddy

Arthur Gottschalk
A man whose music has been described as “rapturous, argumentative, and prickly” (Gramophone Magazine), and “fascinatingly strange” (BBC Music Magazine), Arthur Gottschalk is Professor of Music at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. He studied with renowned composers William Bolcom, Ross Lee Finney, and Leslie Bassett, and is a recipient of the Charles Ives Prize of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, annual ASCAP Awards since 1980, and has been a Composer-in-Residence at the famed Columbia/Princeton Electronic Music Center, the Piccolo Spoleto Festival, and a Visiting Artist at the American Academy in Rome. He has recently been named as the composer-in-residence for the Thailand International Composition Festival, won First Prize in the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra Competition for Upon Whose Shoulders We Stand, honored with a prestigious Bogliasco Fellowship, and received the First Prize in the Concorso Internazionale di Composizione Originale, Corciano, for his Concerto for Violin and Symphonic Winds.


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Robert Scott Thompson
Roswell GA
Metta

Robert Scott Thompson
Robert Scott Thompson is a composer of instrumental and electroacoustic music and is Professor of Music Composition at Georgia State University in Atlanta. He is the recipient of several prizes and distinctions for his music including the First Prize in the 2003 Musica Nova Competition, the First Prize in the 2001 Pierre Schaeffer Competition and awards in the Concorso Internazionale "Luigi Russolo", Irino Prize Foundation Competition for Chamber Music, and Concours International de Musique Electroacoustique de Bourges - including the Commande Commission 2007. His work has been presented in festivals such as the Koriyama Bienalle, Helsinki Bienalle, Sound, Présences, Synthèse, Sonorities, ICMC, SEAMUS and the Cabrillo Music Festival, and broadcast on Radio France, BBC, NHK, ABC, WDR, and NPR. His music is published on numerous solo recordings and compilations by EMF Media, Neuma, Drimala, Capstone, Hypnos, Oasis/Mirage, Groove, Lens, Space for Music, Zero Music, Twelfth Root, Relaxed Machinery and Aucourant record labels, among others.


3rd Place (there was a three-way tie):
Rodrigo Bussad Cesar
Chicago IL 
Nimbi

Rodrigo Bussad Cesar
Rodrigo Bussad (Sao Paulo, Brazil. b.1985) is the winner of the 2014 American Prize in Composition category in the Student Chamber Music Division with the work Loin. He was also winner of the same competition in two other occasions. Bussad is the winning composer of the 2017 Ukho Ensemble Workshop and the 2015 Valencia International Performance Academy (VIPA). He has his works premiered on three continents and selected for Music festivals and conferences such as the IRCAM’S Manifeste, Ukho Ensemble Workshop, Mise-en Festival, Composit, SoundSCAPE Festival among others. His music has travelled the Americas, Italy, Spain, France, Germnay, Ukraine, Moldova, Taiwan and Korea. Renowned ensembles highlighting the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Frost Symphony Orchestra, Spektral Quartet, Imani Winds, Ukho Ensemble, Brower Trio:B3, Ensemble motoContraio, cross.art Ensemble, Ensemble Paramirabo, NanaFormosa Percussion Duo, and performers such as Svet Stoyanov, Ermis Theodorakis, Allison Balcetis, Céline Papion and Pedro Gadelha, have commissioned/worked with him. Bussad is currently pursuing his PhD degree in Composition at The University of Chicago.  


3rd Place (there was a three-way tie):
Jun Yi Chow
Astoria NY
Neighbor

Jun Yi Chow
Malaysia-born New York-based Composer, Multi-instrumentalist and Improviser. Chow's music has been lauded by Financial Times for its "skilful contrasts in both volume and texture".  His music explores the indefinite possibilities of tone colour and sound. Chow’s thorough knowledge of skills and characteristics of both Chinese and Western instruments has made him a leading figure in merging music of East and West. March 2017, he received the Grand Prize of Best Orchestra Work by Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra International Composition Competition. He is currently the Composer-In-Residence of Teng Company (Singapore) and Vivo Experimental Orchestra (Malaysia).


3rd Place (there was a three-way tie): 
Joseph T. Spaniola
Pensacola FL
Dream     

Joseph T. Spaniola
Joseph T. Spaniola is active as a composer, arranger, educator, conductor, lecturer, producer, clinician, and adjudicator.  He has composed works for band, orchestra, chamber ensembles, solo instruments, voice, choir, and electronic tape.  His award-winning compositions have been performed and recorded by a wide variety of artists, ensembles and institutions in the North America, Europe, Japan, South America, Israel, China, Australia, Taiwan and Singapore.  His works have been premiered or presented at conferences and festivals hosted by The College Music Society, The American Bandmasters Association, The International Trombone Association, The International Clarinet Association, The Midwest Clinic, The Tuba/Euphonium Conference, The International Double Reed Society and others.  Works by the composer are available from Musica Propria, Kagarice Brass Editions, Tuba Euphonium Press, and Joseph T. Spaniola Music (www.josephspaniola.com).  Dr. Spaniola is a Professor of Music, and the Director of Music Theory and Jazz Studies at the University of West Florida.  


Finalist Special Judges' Citation: 
"Raising Awareness and Understanding for those Affilcted with Epilepsy"
Cynthia Folio
Wynnewood PA
When the Spirit Catches You…   

Cynthia Folio
Cynthia Folio is Professor and Chair of the Department of Music Studies at Temple University, where she was honored with the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1994 and the Creative Achievement Award in 2012. She received her Ph.D. in music theory and Performers Certificate in flute from the Eastman School of Music. Cynthia’s compositions have been described by reviewers as “confident and musical in expressing ideas of great substance,” “intriguing and enjoyable,” and “imaginatively scored.” Cynthia’s pieces are recorded on many CD’s, including Inverno Azul, featuring nine of her compositions (BCM+D); a recording by the Relâche Ensemble, Press Play (Meyer Music); Flute Loops: Chamber Music for Flute (Centaur Records), featuring eight of her compositions; and a jazz flute CD, Portfolio (Centaur Records), including four original compositions. She just returned from Cuba, where PARMA Records recorded her women’s choir piece, At the Edge of Great Quiet. www.cynthiafolio.com


Finalist Honorable Mention: 
Kyle Kindred
Humble TX
Inundacion  

Kyle Kindred
The melodramatic and occasionally theatrical works of Kyle Kindred (b.1978) have been performed throughout the US, Canada, Japan, Europe, and South America. Kindred is a two-time finalist in the American Prize competition. Recent projects include Symphony No. 1 for Winds and Percussion: The Remnant and A Longmont Overture, an orchestral commission by the Longmont Symphony of Longmont, Colorado. In 2015, Kindred was commissioned to compose a Spanish oratorio for the musicians of the 2015 Encuentro de Jóvenes Músicos Bolivianos and Sam Houston State University. Kindred is a featured composer in the GIA Teaching Music Through Performance in Band series as well as a contributing author for GIA Publications’ Composers on Composing for Band, Volume 4, edited by Mark Camphouse.  His principal teachers were Walter Mays, Dean Roush, Donald Grantham, and 2012 Pulitzer Prize-winner Kevin Puts. Kindred is currently Associate Professor and Director of Composition Studies at Sam Houston State University.


The American Prize in Composition—(instrumental chamber music) student division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Maria Kaoutzani  
Chicago IL
jaune doré

Maria Kaoutzani 
Maria Kaoutzani (b. 1993) is a composer originally, from Cyprus based in Chicago, IL. Color and texture are central elements in her work, and she enjoys exploring how a number of instruments can function as a unified entity that evolves in time. She is also interested in the creation of musical spaces that surround the listener, where distinct layers can be heard developing and interacting with one another. Kaoutzani's works have been performed in Europe, the US and Latin America. Her influences include Kaija Saariaho, György Ligeti and Tania León. Kaoutzani is studying towards a PhD in Music Composition at the University of Chicago, and holds a Master’s in Music Theory and Composition from New York University  and an undergraduate degree in music from the University of York.  Past collaborators include Arizona-based poet and cellist Ruth Wegner and Greek visual artist Nicos Kyprianou.  |  mariakaoutzani.com


2nd Place:
Josiah Tayag Catalan
Sacramento CA 

Wanderlust
Josiah Tayag Catalan
Josiah Tayag Catalan is a Filipino-American born in New York City and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is a recipient of the first prize of the NACUSA Young Composer's Competition and the Sacramento State Festival of New American Music’s Student Composer’s Competition. His recent compositional interests have become concerned with exploiting varying degrees of pitch and timbral resonance combined with subtle colorations of extended techniques across instruments, while taking inspiration from a wide array of topics from social issues to phenomenology. Josiah's music has been performed across North America by individuals and groups such as the Empyrean Ensemble, the Lydian String Quartet, Chris Froh, Lucy Fitz Gibbon, and the AMF Contemporary Music Ensemble. There are several premieres and performances in 2018 including a piece for harp and electronics (Jennifer Ellis), solo violin (Miranda Cuckson), the Lydian String Quartet, and ensemble Mise-en.

Outside of music, Josiah enjoys moderately binging series and sitcoms, reading, hiking, tennis, baseball, basketball, and spending time with his adopted mutt, pippin. Presently, Josiah is pursuing his Ph.D. in music theory and composition at the University of California, Davis. He has studied composition with Sam Nichols, and is currently studying with Kurt Rhode. More info can be found at josiahcatalan.com


3rd Place:
Mikaela Rose
Nashville TN
Weather Quartet: Dust Storm / Sun Shower

Minuet: Transformation of a Caterpillar  
Mikaela Rose
Mikaela Rose is a senior composition student at Belmont University. Her early ventures into music included studying piano and theory at Blair School of Music. She entered college with the plan of solely pursing a piano performance degree as a Woods Piano Scholar, but discovered she had a passion for creating music in addition to performing it. Adding a Composition degree in her sophomore year, Mikaela quickly developed as a composer under the tutelage of Dr. William Purcell and Dr. Mark Volker. Drawing from abundant creativity, extensive travel, and a vivid imagination, Mikaela seeks to create compositions that reflect the world around her, capturing beauty and wonder that are often overlooked. Performances of her works include Belmont University’s New Music Ensemble Concert, Belmont University’s Composer Honors Concert, and Luna Nova Ensemble Reading. After graduation, Mikaela anticipates further exploring her passion for creating music through composition and film scoring.


Finalist Honorable Mention: 
Jake Boring
San Diego CA
Miniatures

Jake Boring
Jake Boring studies composition at UCLA with the support of the Jerry Goldsmith, Henry Mancini Award and Colburn Scholarships. Jake has received national recognition for his work for the concert stage. In 2017, he was a national finalist in Finale’s Young Composers Contest, selected for the American Composers Concert at Liberty Hall and commissioned by the FreeLAncers concert series.
Jake has composed the music to over 20 films enabling emerging Los Angeles directors and students to win film competitions, create Web series and promote UCLA events. Jake has scored two Jury award winning Campus Movie Fest film entries that advanced to Nationals and three short films that were accepted to the Cannes festival.

In Spring 2018 Jake conducted a UCLA production of Sister Act. As a performer, Jake made the California All-State Wind Symphony four consecutive years on alto saxophone and won the All-Star Concerto Contest as a UCLA Freshman.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Kyle Krause
Marengo IL
Chrysalism

Kyle Krause
Kyle Krause is a Chicago-based composer and pianist. He holds bachelor's degrees in composition and piano performance from Northern Illinois University, and a master's degree in composition from the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University. While at the Peabody Institute, Kyle studied with Pulitzer prize-winning composer Kevin Puts. Kyle’s most recent awards include 1st place in the 2017-2018 Los Angeles Percussion Quartet Composer Initiative, and 1st place in the 2016 Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University DeLillo Composition Competition. His latest collaborations include writing for Arcomusical, the Milieu Percussion Quartet, CISUM Percussion, and the Los Angeles Percussion Quartet. Kyle was recently featured on concerts by the Fulcrum Point New Music Project and the Center for Advanced Musical Studies at Chosen Vale. More information about Kyle can be found on his website - kylekrausecomposer.com.


Finalist Honorable Mention: 
Pablo Rubin-Jurado
New York NY
Bats Hunting

Pablo Rubin-Jurado
Pablo Rubin-Jurado has been in the Juilliard pre-college program since 2013. He’s been in the NYYS Composition Program since 2015, and was a finalist for the ASCAP competition in 2017. In 2012, he sang “Amahl” in "Amahl and the Night Visitors" by Menotti at the Hawaii Performing Arts Festival. In 2013, he was the understudy for "Real Jake" in the Met Opera’s "Two Boys" by Muhly. As a guest artist at HPAF In 2014, he played “Miles” in “The Turn of the Screw” by Britten. In the American Protégé International Vocal Competition, he won first place and a judges’ distinction award in 2014, 2nd place in 2016, and sang in the 10th Anniversary Showcase at Stern Auditorium in 2017. In 2017, he also won 2nd place in both the Hal Leonard Vocal and the New York Lyric Opera competitions. In 2018, he won the grand prize, best vocal technique, and most expressive performer awards in the Forte International Music Competition; a grand prize in the Enkor International Music Competition; a first place in the Rondo Vanguard Competition; and a second place in the New York Lyric Opera competition.

*** 
Congratulations!

WINNERS: conductors (band/wind ensemble), 2018-19

$
0
0
The American PrizeNational Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David Volosin Katz, chief judge, is honored to announce the winners and runners-up of The American Prize in Conducting, 2018-19, in band/wind ensemble divisions. Congratulations!

Complete listings of finalists and semi-finalists in The American Prize competitions may be found elsewhere on this blog. Please use the chronological tool in the right-hand column to find specific results.

QUICKNOTES: Although The American Prize does not usually provide written evaluations to semi-finalists, some semi-finalist composers will receive in their certificate packets short comments, suggestions or overall impressions made during the judging. We hope they will prove valuable. All finalists receive written evaluations from a member of The American Prize judging panel.

Please make us aware of any misprints: theamericanprize@gmail.com


The American Prize in Conducting—band/wind ensemble (college/university division), 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Jacob Wallace
SDSU Wind Symphony
Brookings SD      
Jacob Wallace
An accomplished conductor, educator, and writer, Jacob Wallace is an emergent personality in the performance of contemporary instrumental music. Ensembles under his direction have presented world premieres by such composers as Rusty Banks, John Mackey, Jonathan Newman, and James Syler, among others. Dr. Wallace is currently on the faculty of South Dakota State University, where he serves as Director of Concert Bands. In this capacity, he conducts and administrates the wind ensemble activities of the Department of Music as a whole. Prior to this, he served as Director of Bands at Southeastern Oklahoma State University. During summers, he has served on the conducting faculty of the Cortona Sessions for New Music in Tuscany, Italy. Dr. Wallace holds a DMA from The University of Georgia. He also has degrees from Baylor University and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He remains active as an adjudicator, conductor, and clinician throughout the United States.


2nd Place & Career Encouragement Citation:
Pamornpan Komolpamorn
The University of Texas Wind Ensembles
Austin TX   
Pamornpan Komolpamorn
Pamornpan Komolpamorn, a native Thai, is currently pursuing a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in conducting at The University of Texas at Austin, where she serves as a graduate assistant with the University Bands. She is also currently an instructor of conducting at the College of Music, Mahidol University (MU), Thailand, where she works as a director and conductor of the MU Symphony Orchestra, the MU Symphonic Band, the MU Concert Band, and the MU Brass Band. She serves as
founding director and conductor of the Amass Chamber Ensemble (ACE) since 2010, performing various composers and periods from early to contemporary music. Her repertoire ranges from music of the seventeenth century to contemporary work and encompasses all genres: symphonic orchestral and wind, operatic, chamber and contemporary music. She has conducted ensembles in a number of different countries such as Italy, the Czech Republic, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and the United
States.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Timothy Shade
Wichita State University Wind Ensemble
Wichita KS
Timothy Shade
Dr. Timothy Shade is currently the Director of Bands at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas. Previous appointments include Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Alhambra Orchestra (FL), Visiting Director of Orchestras at Florida Atlantic University, and Director of Instrumental Music at Bethel College (KS). He has garnered praise for his exciting programming, engaging personality and “marvelous conducting.” Equally comfortable in the orchestral and wind realms, Shade has worked with Greater Miami Symphonic Band, The New River Orchestra, The Naples Philharmonic, The Frost Wind Ensemble, The Florida Youth Symphony, The Wichita Wind Ensemble, The Newton Mid-Kansas Symphony Orchestra, and the Delano Chamber Orchestra.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Chris David Westover
Denison University Wind Ensemble
Granville OH  
Chris David Westover
Prior to his current appointment as assistant professor of music at Denison, Westover led wind ensembles, orchestras and operatic performances at Bethel College (KS), the University of Oklahoma, and the Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University. He is in constant demand as a conductor and has received acclaim for his performances with educational and professional ensembles. Westover’s conducting has been described as “elegant, bold, vibrant, inspiring and centered,” by Augusta Read Thomas.

He is currently completing a critical wind-band transcription of Persichetti's Seventh Symphony to be premiered in the 2018-2019 season. He has lectured at Hong Kong Baptist University and CBDNA and will give a paper at the Internationale Gesellschaft zur Erforschung und Förderung der Blasmusik in July

2019. He has conducted across the United States and in the People's Republic of China and is currently developing artistic projects in Sri Lanka.

His career spans operatic performances and educational work with young singers and community orchestras. Westover commands a broad and diverse repertoire including the core symphonic repertoire and the contemporary repertoire of the symphony orchestra and wind ensemble. He served as a staff conductor for the 4x4 Prizes at OU, and has commissioned and premiered works by Ching-chu Hu, HyeKyung Lee, Kathryn Salfelder, Ken Amis, Michael Weinstein, Brad Baumgardner, Andrew McManus, and Dan Lazerescou. In 2010, Westover led the critically acclaimed Dallas premiere of Daniel Roumain’s “Darwin’s Meditation for the People of Lincoln” during the inaugural season of the Winspear Opera House. Westover’s conducting teachers include Jonathan Shames, John Carmichael, Jack Delaney, Kenneth Kiesler, and Eric Smedley. Dr. Westover is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Southern Methodist University, and Western Kentucky University.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Joseph Higgins
Rowan University Wind Ensemble
Glassboro NJ     
Joseph Higgins
Joseph Higgins is a musician who strives to inspire curiosity, creativity, and understanding through art. He believes in the expressive power of new music to communicate with modern audiences and is a passionate advocate of socially conscious programming. In 2015, Joseph joined the faculty of Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey, where he conducts the wind ensembles and teaches courses in conducting. He was awarded the University’s 2018 Values Award for Inclusivity in recognition of his curating a “Music of Social Justice” performance series. Joseph regularly serves as a guest conductor-clinician with outstanding professional, community, and student ensembles throughout the country. He earned doctor and master of music degrees in conducting from Northwestern University, where his primary teacher was Mallory Thompson, and a bachelor of music degree in music education from the University of Georgia. Prior to graduate study, he taught at North Gwinnett High School in Suwanee, Georgia.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Devin Otto
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Wind Ensemble
Oshkosh WI   
Devin Otto
Dr. Devin Otto is the Director of Bands and Instructor of Tuba/Euphonium at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, with previous faculty positions at Minot State University, Eastern Washington University, and the University of Idaho. Committed to music education at all levels, Dr. Otto is in demand as a conductor, clinician, adjudicator, and presenter.  His ongoing research in the use of improvisational theater games for conducting study resulted in well-received presentations at the 2013 National Conference of the College Band Directors National Association and the 2016 International Society for Music Education Conference.

Dr. Otto holds the Doctor of Musical Arts in Wind Conducting and Literature degree from the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he was a student of Allan McMurray. He has attended conducting symposiums under many of today’s outstanding wind conductors including H. Robert Reynolds, Craig Kirchhoff, Thomas Lee, Dick Floyd, Gary Hill, Mallory Thompson, and Rodney Winther.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Shayna Stahl
University of Washington Wind Ensemble
Seattle WA
Shayna Stahl
Dr. Shayna Stahl is the Associate Director of Bands and Director of Athletic Bands at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. In this role, Dr. Stahl serves as the Director of the “Pride of Niner Nation” Marching Band and the 49ers Basketball Band. She also serves as the conductor of the Symphonic Band and teaches a course in marching band techniques. Additionally, Dr. Stahl serves as the conductor for the Charlotte Youth Symphonic Band of the Charlotte Youth Wind Ensembles (CYWE).

Dr. Stahl holds a Bachelor of Music Education from Temple University, a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from Stony Brook University, a Master of Music Education/Wind Band Conducting from The Hartt School at the University of Hartford and a Doctor of Musical Arts in Instrumental Conducting from The University of Washington.


The American Prize in Conducting—band/wind ensemble (community division), 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Shayna Stahl
University of Washington Concert Band
Seattle WA   
Shayna Stahl
Dr. Shayna Stahl is the Associate Director of Bands and Director of Athletic Bands at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. In this role, Dr. Stahl serves as the Director of the “Pride of Niner Nation” Marching Band and the 49ers Basketball Band. She also serves as the conductor of the Symphonic Band and teaches a course in marching band techniques. Additionally, Dr. Stahl serves as the conductor for the Charlotte Youth Symphonic Band of the Charlotte Youth Wind Ensembles (CYWE).

Dr. Stahl holds a Bachelor of Music Education from Temple University, a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from Stony Brook University, a Master of Music Education/Wind Band Conducting from The Hartt School at the University of Hartford and a Doctor of Musical Arts in Instrumental Conducting from The University of Washington.


2nd Place:
Curt Ebersole
Westchester Symphonic Winds
Tarrytown NY 
Curt Ebersole
Curt Ebersole has served as the Conductor/Music Director (John P. Paynter Memorial Chair) of the Westchester Symphonic Winds since 2008. He led the ensemble in their Lincoln Center debut in March 2010 at Avery Fisher Hall, convention and exchange performances in Chicago, Poughkeepsie, Stamford, and Syracuse, and five sold-out summer festival performances at the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts (Katonah, NY). He retired from high school teaching in 2013 and now teaches at The Masters School, in Dobbs Ferry, NY. Ebersole earned a Bachelor of Music Education degree and a Master of Music in Conducting degree from Northwestern University, and a Master of Fine Arts in Clarinet Performance from SUNY-Purchase. He is the founding coordinator of the Music Educators of Bergen County Wind Conducting Symposium. Ebersole is in demand as a guest conductor, clinician, and speaker; his TED Talk, Framing Failure, premiered in September 2017.  


3rd Place:
Andrew Pease
Catskill Valley Wind Ensemble
Oneonta NY  
Andrew Pease
Andrew Pease serves as Assistant Professor of Music and Director of Instrumental Music at Hartwick College and co-conductor of the Catskill Valley Wind Ensemble, both in Oneonta, NY. His guest conducting work has taken him to several states, including two appearances at Carnegie Hall with bands from Hartwick College and Columbia University. After earning degrees from Dartmouth, Columbia, and Hofstra, he completed a DMA degree in wind conducting at Arizona State University, studying with Gary Hill. His work there earned him the 2017 American Prize in Collegiate Wind Band Conducting. He started his career in New York City, where he directed the Columbia University Wind Ensemble and the community band Columbia Summer Winds. Other past teaching positions have ranged from elementary to adult levels in New York and Arizona. He runs two websites dedicated to wind band repertoire: Wind Band Literature (http://windliterature.org) and The Wind Band Symphony Archive (http://windsymphonies.org).



The American Prize in Conducting—band/wind ensemble (high school division), 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Philip Carter
Huntley High School Wind Ensemble
Huntley IL  
Philip Carter
Philip Carter is originally from Collinsville, IL. Philip attended Illinois State University, earning a Bachelor’s in Music Education with a Minor in Jazz Performance. From 2015-2018, Philip served as Director of Bands at Huntley High School in Huntley, IL. He taught three Concert Bands, Jazz Ensemble, Percussion Ensemble, and AP Music Theory as well as the extracurricular Marching Band and Pep Band. Under his direction, the Saxophone Quartet performed at the 2018 Music for All National Chamber Music Festival and the Wind Ensemble performed at the 2018 Illinois Music Education Conference and the 2018 Illinois SuperState Concert Band Festival. Philip currently is serving in his first year as Assistant Director of Bands of the nationally recognized O’Fallon Township High School Band Program. Philip has participated in conducting symposia at the University of Minnesota, Ball State University, the University of Missouri – Kansas City Conservatory, the University of Illinois, and Northwestern University.


2nd Place:
Justin Swaim
Wharton High School Wind Ensemble & Symphonic Band
Tampa FL   
Justin Swaim
Mr. Justin O. Swaim has experiences in orchestral, wind, and chamber music settings. He currently serves as Director of Bands at Wharton High School in Tampa, Florida where he oversees all aspects of the music program and serves as department chair. His career began in North Carolina where his students earned honors at the NCMEA Orchestra MPA as well as positions in county and state honors events. He holds a BM in Music Education and a MM in Instrumental Conducting from The University of North Carolina at Greensboro. At UNCG, he studied instrumental conducting with Dr. John Locke and Dr. Kevin Geraldi. At UNCG he made appearances with the Symphony Orchestra, Sinfonia, Wind Ensemble, Casella Sinfonietta, and Symphonic Band. He served as Assistant Conductor of the University Band, was a graduate assistant for the Music Education department, and was a founding member of the Foothills Chamber Ensemble of Winston-Salem, NC. Website: www.justinswaim.us


*** 
Congratulations!

WINNERS: conductors (orchestra), 2018-19

$
0
0
The American PrizeNational Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David Volosin Katz, chief judge, is honored to announce the winners, runners-up, honorable mention and citation recipient of The American Prize in Conducting, 2018-19, in orchestra divisions. Congratulations!

Complete listings of finalists and semi-finalists in The American Prize competitions may be found elsewhere on this blog. Please use the chronological tool in the right-hand column to find specific results.

QUICKNOTES: Although The American Prize does not usually provide written evaluations to semi-finalists, some semi-finalist composers will receive in their certificate packets short comments, suggestions or overall impressions made during the judging. We hope they will prove valuable. All finalists receive written evaluations from a member of The American Prize judging panel.

Please make us aware of any misprints: theamericanprize@gmail.com


The American Prize in Conducting—professional orchestra division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
David Bernard
Massapequa Philharmonic 

Park Ave. Chamber Symphony
New York NY  
 
David Bernard
David Bernard has gained recognition for his dramatic and incisive conducting in the United Stated and in over 20 countries on four continents.

He serves as Music Director of the Park Avenue Chamber Symphony and the Massapequa Philharmonic, and also serves as conductor for the Eglevsky Ballet’s critically acclaimed production of The Nutcracker produced each December at Long Island’s Tilles Center of the Performing Arts.  As a sought after guest conductor, David Bernard will be making his debut this season with the Dubuque (IA) Symphony, Danbury (CT) Symphony and the Greenwich (CT) Symphony Orchestra, and has appeared as a guest conductor with the Brooklyn Symphony, the Greater Newburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Island Symphony Orchestra, the Litha Symphony, Manhattan School of Music, the New York Symphonic Arts Ensemble, the Putnam Symphony and the South Shore Symphony.

Noted recent performances include a Lincoln Center performance of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring (“Conducting from memory, David Bernard led a transcendent performance…vivid…expertly choreographed.”, LucidCulture) and a Carnegie Hall performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony (“taught and dramatic”, superconductor).  David Bernard’s recordings have received enthusiastic critical praise. His release of Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique was lauded by Gramophone Magazine as “…an impressively elegant, thoughtful, well balanced and sophisticated Tchaikovsky Pathétique.” Of his Beethoven Symphony No. 9 release, The Arts Desk proclaimed “Scintillating Beethoven…Edge-of-the-seat playing…it’s a winner: dramatic, witty, eloquent and boasting some startling choral work in the last movement.” His complete recorded Beethoven symphony cycle was praised by Fanfare magazine for its “intensity, spontaneity, propulsive rhythm, textural clarity, dynamic control, and well-judged phrasing”. Of his recent premiere recording of new editions of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring and The Firebird, The Art Music Lounge proclaimed “this is THE preferred recording of The Rite because of its authenticity as well as the almost startling boldness of approach.”


2nd Place:
Jordan Randall Smith
Symphony Number One
Baltimore MD   

Jordan Randall Smith
Jordan Randall Smith is the Music Director of Symphony Number One, Music Director at Hunt's Church, and Conductor of the Hopkins Concert Orchestra at the Johns Hopkins University. Jordan's leadership of Mahler's fourth symphony was praised by the Baltimore Sun: "The third movement, in particular, was quite sensitively molded." Conductor Alan Gilbert called Jordan’s conducting, “impressive.”

A 2010 Bruno Walter Fellow at the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, Smith studied with Marin Alsop and Gustav Meier and conducted the festival orchestra in concert. Jordan has recorded six commercial releases and led over 40 world premieres.

Smith has mentored hundreds of young musicians in ensembles across the country and is currently the conductor of the Frederick Regional Youth Orchestra Symphonia. A Doctor of Musical Arts candidate in Conducting at the Peabody Conservatory, Jordan was invited to give a TED Talk at TEDxMidatlantic 2017 and is a contributor to Baltimore Magazine.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Paul Mauffray
Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic

Zlin Czech Republic 
Paul Mauffray
Paul Mauffray made his 2018 New Orleans Opera debut conducting the Louisiana Philharmonic in Chadwick's opera “Tabasco” which he reconstructed from the 1894 manuscript. He has conducted Janacek and Dvorak at the Mariinsky Theatre in Russia and recorded excerpts from “The Scarlet Letter” with the Brno Philharmonic.  He conducted at the Bucharest National Opera, Slovak National Opera, Schleswig-Holstein Landestheater, Opéra Louisiane, and Mobile Opera.  Mauffray won 2nd Prize in the Bartok International Opera Conducting Competition and has 20 years conducting experience with European orchestras and operas in Prague, Brno, Bratislava, Lyon, Salzburg, St. Petersburg, and Vienna. After studies in Germany and the Czech Republic, he earned his master's degree in conducting at Indiana University. He is a frequent conductor with Czech orchestras, at Schoenbrunn Palace in Vienna, and has often performed as conductor with soloists from the Vienna Philharmonic. Paul is an honorary member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. www.paulmauffray.com


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Elaine Rinaldi
Orchestra Miami
Miami FL   

Elaine Rinaldi
Elaine Rinaldi, Founder and Artistic Director of Orchestra Miami, is a Miami native who has chosen to return home and reinvest in her community. Under her artistic supervision, Orchestra Miami has performed high quality classical music concerts to literally thousands of people through its annual “Beethoven on the Beach” Free Outdoor Concerts and introduced over 25,000 school children to classical music through its collaboration with the MDCPS Cultural Passport Program and In-School Performances. Under her tenure, Orchestra Miami has introduced countless numbers of children and their families to classical music through the Nicklaus Children’s Pinecrest Outpatient Center Family Fun Concert series and has encouraged scores of Miamians to learn more about their city through the “Discover Miami Through Music” series. In addition to her work in Miami, Ms. Rinaldi is one of the nation’s top vocal coaches, focused on training the next generation of opera singers.



The American Prize in Conducting—college/university orchestra division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Rebecca Tong
Music School Festival Orchestra
Chautauqua NY 

Rebecca Tong
Rebecca Tong is the Resident Conductor of the Jakarta Simfonia Orchestra. She received her Masters at College – Conservatory of Music under Mark Gibson. In 2016/17 she was the Conducting Fellow with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. In 2017, she was the recipient of David Effron Conducting Fellowship for the Chautauqua Institution working with Timothy Muffitt. She is also the 2018 Junior Fellow in Conducting with the RNCM working with Sir Mark Elder.

She has worked with Steven Isserlis, Jahja Ling, Lev Polyakin, the Great Wall String Quartet, Jessie Chang, Jeff Thayer, Martha Aarons. The Jakarta Post called her “… the young addition for Indonesian classical music…”

Highlights include performance of Elgar Cello Concerto with Steven Isserlis and Gustav Holst "The Planets" in collaboration with astronomer & visual artist - José Francisco Salgado. She attended masterclasses with Neil Varon, Gustav Meier, Leon Fleisher, Mark Gibson, Roberto Paternostro, and John Farrer.


2nd Place:
David Rahbee
University of Washington Symphony Orchestra
Seattle WA  

David Rahbee
David Alexander Rahbee is currently Senior Artist in Residence at the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle, where he is Director of Orchestral Activities and teaches conducting. He also serves of faculty of the Pierre Monteux School and Music Festival as Conducting Associate. He is recipient of the American- Austrian Foundation's 2003 Karajan Fellowship for Young Conductors, the 2005 International Richard-Wagner-Verband Stipend, and the Acanthes Centre in Paris in 2007. He has recently worked with the Seattle Symphony, Orchesterakademie der Bochumer Symphoniker, the Seattle Modern Orchestra, and Orquesta Sinfónica de Loja. He participated in masterclasses with Kurt Masur, Sir Colin Davis, Jorma Panula, Zdeněk Mácal, Peter Eötvös, and Zoltán Peskó. His principal conducting teachers were Charles Bruck and Michael Jinbo at the Monteux School. He holds degrees from Indiana University, New England Conservatory, and University of Montreal. He also studied at Universität für Musik und Darstellende Kunst, Vienna.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Tara Villa Keith
Davidson College Symphony Orchestra
Davidson NC   

Tara Villa Keith
Tara Villa Keith is in her sixteenth season as music director of the Davidson College Symphony Orchestra (DCSO) in North Carolina and in her tenth season as music director of the Lee County Community Orchestra (LCCO) in Sanford, North Carolina. As an associate professor of music, she teaches a plethora of college courses and is a guest lecturer and clinician throughout the region. Tara also serves as a cover conductor and instructor for the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra’s Symphony 101 adult education program. Tara has won national awards for her work with both the Davidson and Lee County orchestras, and has guest conducted orchestras throughout the south, northeast, and abroad. In 2008, she was the recipient of a League of American Orchestras Women Conductors Grant. Tara holds degrees from Franklin & Marshall College, the Pennsylvania State University, and the University of South Carolina. Please visit her website at taravillakeith.com.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Yutaka Kono
The University of Vermont Symphony Orchestra
Burlington VT

Yutaka Kono
Dr. Yutaka Kono serves as the Director of Orchestra/Associate Professor of Music at the University of Vermont and also is the conductor of Vermont Youth Philharmonia of Vermont Youth Orchestra Association. He was named the Artistic Director of the Burlington Chamber Orchestra in 2015.  He received degrees from Bowling Green State University, the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, and Doctor of Musical Arts Degree from The University of Texas at Austin.  He studied conducting with Jerry Junkin, Mark Kelly, Eugene Dowdy, Peter Bay and Silas Huff, and attended the Summer Conductors Institute at the Eastman School of Music where he studied with Maestro Neil Varon and conducted the Rochester Philharmonic.  Dr. Kono was the Assistant Conductor of the Kingsville Symphony Orchestra (TX) and previously taught at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. He has been placed as the finalist for The American Prize in orchestral conducting at the college/university, professional, and youth orchestra divisions. www.yutakakono.com  



The American Prize in Conducting—community orchestra division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
David Anderson
Lake Geneva Symphony Orchestra
Lake Geneva WI

David Anderson
David Anderson is quickly gaining a reputation as a talented and versatile conductor who has led remarkable growth in a wide variety of settings. He is currently in his eighth season as Music Director of the Lake Geneva Symphony Orchestra. In addition, he is on the faculties of Seton Hill University and the University of Pittsburgh, the conductor of the Johnstown Symphony Youth Orchestra, and a freelance pianist in the Pittsburgh area. He previously served on the artistic staff of the Elgin Youth Symphony as Philharmonia Conductor and Chamber Music Institute Director, and as Conductor-in-Residence at Beloit College.

A native of Clovis, New Mexico, Anderson holds piano degrees from Baylor University (BM, summa cum laude and MM, with distinction) studying under internationally renowned artist and teacher Krassimira Jordan. After beginning conducting studies under the guidance of Stephen Heyde at Baylor, he went on to earn a degree in orchestral conducting at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign under the tutelage of Donald Schleicher. He was awarded the Kate Neal Kinley Memorial Fellowship for the 2006-07 academic year, which funded travel throughout the country to study with master conducting teachers. In 2006, David was a finalist for the Conductors Guild’s prestigious Thelma A. Robinson award.

Anderson has collaborated with soloists Midori, Rachel Barton Pine, Christopher Martin, Brandon Ridenour, Brant Taylor, Li-Kuo Chang, Matthew Treviño, Krassimira Jordan, Timothy Ehlen, and the Chicago cast of the Jersey Boys. He is an active clinician and adjudicator, having conducted numerous honors orchestras at the secondary level.


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Lois Ferrari
Austin Civic Orchestra
Austin TX 

Lois Ferrari
Lois Ferrari is Professor of Music at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas and has been a member of the faculty since 1993. Dr. Ferrari conducts the SU Orchestra and Wind Ensemble, teaches conducting classes, and serves as host and clinician for the SU Conductors Institute. In addition to conducting clinics and festivals throughout the state of Texas, Dr. Ferrari has conducted all-state and all-county ensembles in Washington and new York states. An enthusiastic champion of new music, Dr. Ferrari founded the ACO Composition Contest and is proud to have premiered more than twenty-five works during the course of her career. She has also been intimately involved with nurturing future virtuosi, most notably through the ACO's Pearl Amster Chamber Music Festival and Texas Rising Stars Contest.


A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, where she received a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Conducting, Dr. Ferrari received a full doctoral fellowship and was appointed Assistant Conductor of the Eastman Wind Ensemble. Her principal teachers were Donald Hunsberger, Rodney Winther, David Effron, and Donald Neuen. Dr. Ferrari was awarded 2nd place in the 2016 and 2012 American Prize Competition in Community Orchestra Conducting. http://loisferrari.wix.com/maestra-lois-ferrari


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Matthew Makeever
Milwaukee Philharmonic
Milwaukee WI

Matthew Makeever
Matthew Makeever is a multi-faceted conductor based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Matthew conducts the Milwaukee Philharmonic, a regional ensemble, of which he is a founding member and also serves and Artistic Director. Matthew frequently directs the premieres of new works and advocates for dialogue between living composers and the ensembles performing their works.  He is the 2017 winner of the College Orchestra Directors Association Competition in Washington D.C., where he worked extensively with the Hillsdale College and University of Tulsa Orchestras, and participated in a masterclass with renowned pedagogue Anthony Maiello.  Matthew has participated in workshops with world class conductors Diane Wittry, Sasha Mäkilä, Tito Muñoz, and Kyle Pickett.  His principal teachers include Matthew Savery, and Dr. Jun Kim.  Matthew holds a Masters of Music in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.  


3rd Place:
Pierre-Alain Chevalier
Baytown Symphony Orchestra
Baytown TX

Pierre-Alain Chevalier
French born conductor Pierre-Alain Chevalier is an engaging performer and dedicated music educator. He has performed with orchestras across the country and was a winner of the International Conductors Workshop and Competition in Atlanta, Georgia in 2016. Chevalier is Visiting Lecturer/Director of Orchestral Activities at Stephen F. Austin State University and Music Director of the Baytown Symphony Orchestra. Previous posts include adjunct instructor of music at San Jacinto College, Lone Star College, and Houston Community College. Chevalier is an active clinician and performer and holds degrees from the Moores School of Music (Doctor of Musical Arts: Orchestral Conducting), The Hartt School (Master of Music: Orchestral Conducting) and Willamette University (Bachelor of Music: Music Education).


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Reuben Blundell
The Chelsea Symphony
New York NY 
 
Reuben Blundell
Reuben Blundell became a Chelsea Symphony conductor following an October 2012 audition concert, conducting TCS in several concerts each year, also frequently serving as concertmaster. During that time, he has conducted other orchestras, including the New World Symphony in their John Cage Centennial, conducting the professional orchestra in La Serena (Chile), and for the US State Department/American Voices, repeated trips to teach and perform in Iraqi Kurdistan and Lebanon. Collaborating with the Fleisher Collection, he released three CDs of premieres of American Romantic era compositions in the last three years through New Focus Records (distributed by Naxos), the first two of string orchestra with the Gowanus Arts Ensemble (which he founded), and the third with the Lansdowne Symphony Orchestra, in suburban Philadelphia, which he directs. In New York, he leads New York’s Riverside Orchestra and teaches at Trinity School. His primary conducting studies were at Eastman (DMA) and Monteux. Website: www.reubenblundell.com   
 


The American Prize in Conducting—school and youth orchestra division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Alyze Dreiling 
YPO Festival Orchestra
San Diego CA    

Alyze Dreiling
Alyze Dreiling, www.alyzedreiling.com  is an award-winning conductor, and accomplished violinist and violist in San Diego. In addition to serving as the YPO Soloists Ensemble Artistic Director and Conductor since 2010, she conducts the San Diego Civic Youth Orchestra Symphonic Orchestra and has guest conducted the San Diego Master Chorale and Cabrillo Chamber Orchestra to name a few. She was also the founding Artistic Director and Conductor of Classics for Kids, a fully professional orchestra performing specialty youth concerts in the San Diego area. Ms. Dreiling’s performing violin credits include: soloist with the Detroit Symphony, Philharmonica Hungarica at the Vienna Summer Festival, Florida Chamber Orchestra, concertmaster of the Knoxville Symphony and Knoxville Chamber Orchestra. With composer, Myron Fink, she received a recording prize from Contemporary Recording Society for the production and release of a CD featuring Fink’s Violin Sonata #1 and subsequently the Violin Sonata #2


2nd Place: 
Michael Webster
Houston Youth Symphony
Houston TX

Michael Webster
A multifaceted musician, Dr. Michael Webster is known as clarinetist, conductor, composer, arranger and educator. Professor of music at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, he has been artistic director of Houston Youth Symphony since 1997. He led the Symphony at the inauguration of Houston Mayor Lee Brown, at Carnegie Hall, and at the 2002 National Youth Orchestra Festival in Sarasota, Florida, as one of six orchestras selected from applicants nationwide. Rarely featuring an orchestra, NPR’s national radio show “From the Top” invited HYS to perform in September 2012.

Dr. Webster served as assistant conductor of the Asian Youth Orchestra under Yehudi Menuhin, music director of the Wellesley Symphony Orchestra, and director of the Michigan Youth Symphony Orchestra. He has held faculty positions in clarinet and conducting at the University of Michigan, New England Conservatory, Boston University, and Eastman School of Music, where he had earned his three degrees. (www.MichaelWebsterClarinet.com


3rd Place:
Emily Schaad
Asheville Symphony Youth Orchestra

Greenville County Youth Orchestra 
Asheville NC  
Emily Schaad
Emily Schaad is in her third season as music director of Greenville County Youth Orchestras and Asheville Symphony Youth Orchestras, and conducts the advanced orchestras for both. She is a founder and artistic director of Stringendo, Inc., a non-profit youth orchestra school in New York’s Hudson Valley. Ms. Schaad has taught middle and high school strings, performed internationally as a fiddler, and has conducted with soloists such as Midori and Garrick Ohlsson. She performs as a violist with Asheville Symphony and Greenville Symphony and is active as a guest conductor. Studies include Curtis Institute of Music, Appalachian State University, and Boston University.


Career Encouragement Citation: 
Dorian Neuendorf
Hendersonville Symphony Youth Orchestra
Hendersonville NC

Dorian Neuendorf
Dorian Neuendorf is currently Artistic Director of the Hendersonville Symphony Youth Orchestra, Assistant Conductor of the Union Symphony Orchestra, and Operations Manager of the Hendersonville Symphony Orchestra. She has recently served as Assistant Conductor to the National Music Festival, Principal Conductor of the Columbia Community Orchestra in Columbia, South Carolina and Assistant Conductor for Opera at the University of South Carolina. Dorian has appeared in concert with the Union Symphony Orchestra, the National Music Festival Orchestra, Atlantic Music Festival Orchestra, the St. Michel Strings, the Nanchang Philharmonic, USC Symphony Orchestra, USC Campus Orchestra, and the Cleveland State University Chamber Orchestra, among others. Dorian holds a Master of Music degree in Orchestral Conducting from the University of South Carolina and a Bachelor of Music degree in Composition and Bassoon Performance from Cleveland State University. dorian-neuendorf.com


*** 
Congratulations!

FINALISTS: American Music (Ernst Bacon Award), ensembles, 2018-19

$
0
0
Ernst Bacon
The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David Volosin Katz, founder and chief judge, is pleased to announce FINALISTS for the ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, 2018-19, in the ensemble division. Congratulations! (Finalists and winners in the solo division have been published separately.)

"Many semi-finalists have been advanced. The breadth of achievement and commitment to excellence shown by the finalists in this year's Bacon contest in the performance of American music is simply astonishing. So very impressive. At The American Prize, it is never about 'too many finalists'—why should there be an arbitrary number?—but about respecting (and encouraging) artists at all levels of endeavor."—DK

The finalist categories are listed below in this order:
   *professional ensembles
   *college/university emsembles
   *community ensembles
   *secondary school ensembles

Among the many contests of The American Prize, the Ernst Bacon Memorial Award for the Performance of American Music is unique. It recognizes and rewards the best performances of American music by ensembles and individual artists worldwide, based on submitted recordings. Applications are accepted from professional, college/university, community and high school age solo artists, chamber ensembles or conducted ensembles, competing in separate divisions, and from composers with excellent recordings of their works. Beginning in 2017-18, categories were expanded to encompass performances of American music in practically any instrumentation or genre, with very few repertoire restrictions.

Focused exclusively on works by American composers from any period and in any style, the contest not only judges performances, but in the case of new or unfamiliar works, the music itself.

Ernst Bacon (1898—1990) was one of that pioneering generation of composers who, along with Thomson, Copland, Harris, and others, found a voice for American music. Winner of a Pulitzer Scholarship (for his Symphony in D minor) and no fewer than three Guggenheim Fellowships, Ernst Bacon set out to create compositions that expressed the vitality and affirmative spirit of our country. It is fitting, and with honor, that The American Prize creates an annual award in the memory of Ernst Bacon, recognizing the finest performances of American orchestral music worldwide. To learn more about the music & legacy of Ernst Bacon, please visit the website of the Ernst Bacon Society.

If you are not a finalist this year, please remember that the contests are not yet over. The American Prize reserves the right to award Honorable Mentions and Citations for Special Achievement to any contestant, regardless of final placement. TAP has honored a number of semi-finalists and quarter finalists in the past--to recognize a unique talent or focus, unusual repertoire, vital programming or outreach. Citations and Honorable Mentions are usually awarded at the same time as winners and runners-up, but can be presented at any time up to the last winners' announcement of the contest year.

As the contests unfold, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, PROFESSIONAL ensemble division, 2018-19

Edward Benyas
Southern IL Music Festival Orchestra
Southern IL
American Symphony—Lionel Semiatin

Reuben Blundell
Gowanus Arts Ensemble
Brooklyn IL
Foster / Foote / Cadman / Van Gelder 

Oliver Caplan
Juventas New Music Ensemble
Boston MA
You Are Not Alone—Oliver Caplan  

Justin Croushore
Some Assembly Required
Boston MA
Higdon / Kline / Stark

Darrell J. Jordan
Vox Nova
Columbia MO
Billings / Ives / Heruth, more

Yoon Lee
Noree Chamber Soloists
New York NY
Soul Garden—Derek Bermel

Nanette McGuinness
Ensemble for These Times
San Francisco CA
music by David Garner 

Kevin Purcell
The Synchron Stage Orchestra / Bratislava Studio Orchestra
Vienna / Bratislava
Nan Schwartz / Brenton Broadstock

Elaine Rinaldi
Orchestra Miami
Miami FL
Inquisition & Masada—Marvin David Levy  

Tom Trenney
Sounding Light
Plymouth MI
Diorio / Clausen / Elder  

Dean Whiteside
New World Symphony
Miami Beach FL
Symphony in One Movement—Barber  


NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY ensemble division, 2018-19

Nicholle Andrews
University of Redlands
Redlands CA
Messages from Myself—Christopher Theofanidis  

Heather C. Barclay
Palomar/YPO Percussion Ensemble
San Marcos CA
Daugherty / Peel / Davilla

Mark Bartley
West Texas A&M University Choirs and Orchestra with Canyon HS Chamber Singers
Canyon TX
Psalm 150—Rene Clausen  

Brian Coffill
University of Maryland Wind Ensemble
College Park MD
Decoration Day—Charles Ives  

Daniel Cook
Northwestern University Chamber Ensemble
Evanston IL
Sparrows—Joseph Schwantner  

Austin Davis
University of Redlands Symphonic Band
Redlands CA
Ticheli / Whitacre / Clarke

Zachary Durlam
UW Milwaukee Combined Choirs and Symphony Orchestra
Milwaukee WI
Chichester Psalms—Leonard Bernstein  

Jeffrey D. Gershman
Capital University Symphonic Winds
Columbus OH
George / Runestad / Ives / Maslanka

Joseph Higgins
Rowan University Wind Ensemble
Glassboro NJ
Mr. Tambourine Man—John Corigliano  

Zebulon M. Highben
Muskingum Concert Choir
New Concord OH
Simikic / Luboff / Jarjisian, more

Jeremy D. Jones
Miami University Men's Glee Club
Oxford OH
Night, Veiled Night—Anthony J. Maglione  

Travis Jurgens
Ohio Northern Symphony
Ada OH
Mandolin Concerto: From the Blue Ridge—Jeff Midkiff  

Chris Younghoon Kim
Cornell Symphony Orchestra
Ithaca NY
Blues Symphony—Wynton Marsalis 

Chris Knighten
University of Arkansas Wind Ensemble
Fayetteville AR
Concerto for  Soprano Saxophone and Wind Ensemble—Mackey  

Pamornpan Komolpamorn
The University of Texas Wind Ensemble
Austin TX
Dooley / Brant / Gershwin

Ianthe Marini
Columbus State University Schwob Singers
Columbus GA
Whitacre / Bernstein / Hogan  

Matthew C. Morse
Sacramento State Symphonic Wind Ensemble
Sacramento CA
Bernstein / Bennett / Mackey  

Joseph P. Scott
University of Maryland Wind Ensemble
College Park MD
Amerian Guernica—Adolphus Hailstork  

Shayna Stahl
University of Washington Recital Ensemble
Seattle WA
Albert / Schwantner  

Kevin Sutterlin
The Concordia Orchestra
Moorhead MN
Hanson / Hochstatter / Glass, more

John William Trotter
Wheaton College Concert Choir
Wheaton IL
Psalm 121—Stephen Paulus  

Chris David Westover
Denison University Wind Ensemble
Granville OH
Persichetti / Barber

Jeremy Wiggins
The Florida State University Choral Union
Tallahassee FL
O Magnum Mysterium—Libby Larsen  

Lisa Wong
The College of Wooster Chorus
Wooster OH
Runestad / Whitacre / Lauridsen, more



NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COMMUNITY ensemble division, 2018-19

Donald L. Appert
Clark College Orchestra
Vancouver WA
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra—Donald L. Appert  

Reuben Blundell
Lansdowne Symphony Orchestra
Lansdowne PA
David Stanley Smith / Carl Busch  

Patricia Brown
Texas Medical Center Orchestra
Houston TX
Merry Mount Suite—Howard Hanson  

Philip Brunelle
Vocal Essence Chorus & Ensemble Singers
Minneapolis MN
Larsen / Heggie / Paulus  

Elizabeth Patterson, conductor
Gloriae Dei Cantores Choir
Orleans MA
Neswick / Ned Rorem / Samuel Adler  

Curt Ebersole
Westchester Symphonic Winds
Tarrytown NY
Brooklyn Bridge—Michael Daugherty  

Lois Ferrari
Austin Civic Orchestra
Austin TX  
Copland / Bernstein / Ives / Barber, much more

Trent A. Hollinger
Quincy Concert Band
Quincy IL
Give Us This Day—David Maslanka  

Brian Hughes
Quad City Wind Ensemble
Davenport IA
Willson / Giroux / Moross / Curnow

Ryan James Brandau
Monmouth Civic Chorus
Red Bank NJ
Fern Hill—Corigliano, more

Erik Peregrine
Ensemble Companio
Niskayuna NY
Betinis / Trumbore  



NATIONAL FINALISTS: The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, OUTH & HIGH SCHOOL division, 2018-19

Catherine Fish
Herricks HS Chamber Orchestra
New Hyde Park NY
Michael Daugherty / David Diamond  

Michael Isadore
Houston Youth Symphony Philharmonia
Houston TX
Red Line Tango—John Mackey  

Chris Maunu
Arvada West HS Vocal Showcase
Arvada CO
Mulholland / Muehleisen 

Noreen Murdock
David Hattner, conductor
Camerata PYP
Portland OR
Muse—Christopher Theofanidis 



***

We invite finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, 2018-19. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing results in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.

WINNERS: Bacon Award (American Music Performance), ensemble division, 2018-19

$
0
0
Ernst Bacon as a young man
The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts, David (Volosin) Katz, founder and chief judge, is honored to announce winners, runners-up, citation recipients and honorable mentions of the ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, 2018-19, in the ensemble division. Congratulations! (An announcement in the solo division has been made separately.)

The extensive results are listed below in this order:
* professional division
* college university instrumental division
* college university choral division
* community instrumental division
* community choral division
* youth/high school division

Among the many contests of The American Prize, the Ernst Bacon Memorial Award for the Performance of American Music is unique. It recognizes and rewards the best performances of American music by ensembles and individual artists worldwide, based on submitted recordings. Applications are accepted from professional, college/university, community and high school age solo artists, chamber ensembles or conducted ensembles, competing in separate divisions, and from composers with excellent recordings of their works. Beginning in 2017-18, categories were expanded to encompass performances of American music in practically any instrumentation or genre, with very few repertoire restrictions.

Focused exclusively on works by American composers from any period and in any style, the contest not only judges performances, but in the case of new or unfamiliar works, the music itself.

Ernst Bacon (1898—1990) was one of that pioneering generation of composers who, along with Thomson, Copland, Harris, and others, found a voice for American music. Winner of a Pulitzer Scholarship (for his Symphony in D minor) and no fewer than three Guggenheim Fellowships, Ernst Bacon set out to create compositions that expressed the vitality and affirmative spirit of our country. It is fitting, and with honor, that The American Prize creates an annual award in the memory of Ernst Bacon, recognizing the finest performances of American orchestral music worldwide. To learn more about the music & legacy of Ernst Bacon, please visit the website of the Ernst Bacon Society.


The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, PROFESSIONAL ensemble division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Elaine Rinaldi
Orchestra Miami
Miami FL
Marvin David LevyInquisition & Masada
Elaine Rinaldi
Elaine Rinaldi, Founder and Artistic Director of Orchestra Miami, is a Miami native who has chosen to return home and reinvest in her community. Under her artistic supervision and direction, Orchestra Miami has performed high quality classical music concerts to literally thousands of people through its annual Free Outdoor Concerts and introduced over 25,000 school children to classical music through its collaboration with the MDCPS Cultural Passport Program, In-School Performances and Carnegie Hall Link Up concerts. Critics have called her work “absolutely exceptional” (El Nuevo Herald). Of her work, Lawrence Budmen of the Miami Herald wrote “Rinaldi clearly has a penchant for offering interesting thematic programming and promising soloists” and Daniel Fernandez of El Nuevo Herald wrote, “Rinaldi is a conductor who marries her professionalism with an exquisite sensitivity”.

Her recent engagements have included debuts at the Miami Music Festival for Die Zauberflöte and Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea, Opera Orlando for Don Giovanni, Mezzano Romantico Summer Festival (Fiera di Primiero, Italy) for Suor Angelica/Gianni Schicchi and at the Tri-Cities Opera for Don Giovanni. She was the Principal Guest Conductor at the Dicapo Opera Theatre from 2001-2006 and has led several tours for the National Lyric Opera, twice appeared as a guest conductor with the Albany Symphony for the Shaker Mountain Performing Arts Festival, and conducted performances of La Traviata for Island Opera Theater in Key West. Rinaldi has held many positions as an Assistant and/or Cover Conductor in many of this country’s leading regional opera theaters. From 1997-2000, she held the positions of Resident Associate Conductor and Chorus Master at the Florida Grand Opera in Miami. Critics called her work with the chorus “exquisite”, and Tim Smith of the Ft, Lauderdale Sun Sentinel said “the chorus, under Elaine Rinaldi’s direction, gets better and better.” (La Boheme).

Her awards have included the Agnis Varis/Intercities Performing Arts grant, the League of American Orchestra’s mentorship with Joann Faletta, Finalist for the American Prize for Orchestral Conducting and Orchestra Performance, the Newton Swift Prize for Accompanying at the Mannes College of Music and the M. B. Byrd full tuition scholarship at the University of Miami Frost School of Music.


2nd Place:
Dean Whiteside
New World Symphony
Miami Beach FL
Barber—Symphony in One Movement

Dean Whiteside
Dean Whiteside was born in New York City and trained in Vienna at the University of Music and Performing Arts. He is in his third season as the New World Symphony's "gifted Conducting Fellow" (South Florida Classical Review), where he leads a variety of performances and serves as assistant to Artistic Director Michael Tilson Thomas. He appears on select subscription concerts at the New World Center and Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, assisting and sharing performances with such conductors as Michael Tilson Thomas, Roberto Abbado, James Conlon, Peter Oundjian, Robert Spano, Osmo Vänskä, and Mark Wigglesworth.

Mr. Whiteside is co-founder and director of the Nashville Sinfonietta, hailed by The Tennessean as “a virtuoso band.” His European debut came in 2011 after winning the Jorma Panula Blue Danube Masterclass and Competition. He has conducted orchestras including the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony, Juilliard Orchestra, Opéra Orchestre National Montpellier, Orlando Philharmonic, Polish Baltic Philharmonic, Rousse State Opera Orchestra, Sibiu Philharmonic, Wiener Kammerorchester and Zagreb Philharmonic, as well as the Vanderbilt Orchestra on a five-city tour of China. He has served as Assistant Conductor to MTT and the San Francisco Symphony.

Mr. Whiteside came to international attention after winning Second Prize and the Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra Prize at the Sixth International Competition of Young Conductors Lovro von Matačić. Other awards include the 2017 Mahler Conducting Fellowship, Bruno Walter Memorial Foundation Conducting Scholarship, David Effron Conducting Fellowship, Bayreuth Festival Scholarship, and David Rabin Performance Prize. He has received fellowships from the Aspen Music Festival, Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music, Castleton Festival and Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Special Judges' Citation: Championing the Music of Lionel Semiatin
Edward Benyas
Southern IL Music Festival Orchestra
Southern IL
Lionel Semiatin—American Symphony

Lionel Semiatin with members of the orchestra
Edward Benyas
Lionel Semiatin (1917-2015) began to compose classical music in the 1930s.  His works have been performed by the Omaha Symphony, Denver Chamber Orchestra, Westchester Philharmonic, Southern Illinois Music Festival and Manhattan String Quartet, among many others. He won first prizes in competitions by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture, the Jewish Music Commission of Los Angeles, and the American Society of Jewish Music. Semiatin was born on June 6, 1917, in Dublin, Ireland, the son of renowned Cantor Herman Semiatin, who moved the family to America in 1920. He is a veteran of the Second World War, serving in the European Theater. Like Alexander Borodin and Charles Ives, Semiatin earned his livelihood outside of music, as the Executive Director of Temple Israel Center in White Plains, New York for 30 years. He and his wife Edith were married for 70 years, producing four children, six grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Semiatin was a graduate of Brooklyn College and received his Masters in Music Education from Columbia University. SIFest programmed three of his pieces in 2014, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Normandy, and gave the world premiere performance of the complete American Symphony in 2015. Semiatin wrote the following about his American Symphony, in preparation for the 2015 world premiere:

"It takes living outside of the United States to fully appreciate the magnificence of this country and how widely it is admired.  While I was living in Montreal, Canada many years ago, it was inevitable that I should have this experience. Being an American living outside my country impelled me to start to compose an American Symphony – one which could continue the great symphonic traditions, but in an American way. The first movement – an energetic and forceful expression – was composed from 1939 to 1941.  The second movement – more reflective of our wide-open plains and ranges – was completed in 1942. When I entered the U.S. Army in 1943, only the first eight bars of the third movement were completed. After I returned from WWII and left the Service, I completely forgot about this symphony for several decades. But in 1975, I read that the American Bicentennial was about to occur in 1976, and that prompted me to return to the symphony, which I completed in the summer of 1975. In the revised version, about five percent of the first movement was revised, as well as all of the orchestration of the first two movements. An alto saxophone was inserted in three of the four movements. The third movement – lively and joyful, and the fourth movement – in similar spirit – were completed in 1975. The last movement (the fourth) has an extensive summary of all of the main themes of the symphony. It might be interesting to note that this entire four-movement symphony was composed without the use of the piano or any other aural device or instrument, going directly from the composer’s mind to the page as a musical score. The first and third movements have been played before, both by the Westchester Philharmonic Orchestra, and in separate concerts. This performance will be the World Premiere of the entire American Symphony."

Edward Benyas is Professor of Oboe and Conducting at SIU Carbondale, Music Director of the Southern Illinois Symphony, the New Chicago Chamber Orchestra—with which he made his European conducting debut—and founder and Artistic Director of the Southern Illinois Music Festival, which presents three-dozen concerts annually each June. The Illinois Council of Orchestras named him “Conductor of the Year” in 2005, the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce presented him the inaugural “Keeping the Arts in Business” Award in 2007, the Southern Business Journal named him a “Leader Among Us” in 2012, he received the Legacy Award from Carbondale Community Arts in 2015, the Carbondale Lions Club honored him with the David Kenney Award for Outstanding Service to Country and Community in 2017, and he was named the Southern Illinois University College of Liberal Arts’ Outstanding Scholar in 2018. Under his leadership, the Southern Illinois Symphony was named Community Volunteer Orchestra of the Year. A student of Ray Still, Robert Morgan, Victor Yampolsky, and the late Charles Bruck and Georg Tintner, Mr. Benyas holds graduate degrees in Orchestral Conducting and Oboe Performance from Northwestern University, as well as Bachelor and Juris Doctor degrees from the University of Michigan. He has conducted orchestras and opera companies throughout North America and in Europe and China. Of one appearance, a California reviewer wrote: “Maestro Benyas simply swept the audience away with a beautiful presentation of this piece.” His conducted repertoire includes over 400 works, including a dozen world premieres and several dozen complete operas and ballets. Mr. Benyas also enjoys an active career as an oboe and English horn player, having performed with the Chicago Symphony under Daniel Barenboim, the Lyric Opera under Zubin Mehta, the Milwaukee and Grant Park Symphonies, the Ravinia Festival Orchestra, at the Spoleto and Banff summer music festivals, as Principal Oboe of the Des Moines Metro Opera for six seasons and for Andrea Bocelli’s National Tour. He is a member of the state bar of Illinois and has been elected to the Jackson County Board and the Carbondale Elementary School District Board of Education.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Tom Trenney
Sounding Light
Plymouth MI
Diorio / Clausen / Elder  

Sounding Light
Known for its inspiring and illuminating performances, sounding light was recently honored with the invitation to perform at the 2017 National Convention of the American Choral Directors Association.  Since its birth in 2003, sounding light has been privileged to sing with Anton Armstrong, David Davidson, Joseph Flummerfelt, Stacey Gibbs, Alice Parker, and William Weinert, and has premiered works by Carmen Cavallaro, David DiChiera, Jake Runestad, Tom Trenney, and Anne Wilson. To celebrate its fifteenth anniversary this season, sounding light has recently released its fourth CD recording - Unclouded Day.   The ensemble's founder, Tom Trenney, is in his 16th season as conductor of sounding light. He serves as Minister of Music to First-Plymouth Church in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he leads four adult choirs, accompanies the congregation in worship, and preaches. First-Plymouth’s choirs have been featured at recent conventions of the Nebraska Music Educators Association and the Nebraska, North Central and National American Choral Directors Association (ACDA).  A graduate of the Cleveland Institute of Music and the Eastman School of Music, Tom has performed and taught at choral, organ, and church music conferences from coast to coast. His recordings are featured regularly on public radio, and his choral compositions have been published by Augsburg, Morningstar, Galaxy, G. Schirmer, Musicspoke, and Pavane.



The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COLLEGE / UNIVERSITY instrumental division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Jeffrey D. Gershman
Capital University Symphonic Winds
Columbus OH
Ives—Variations on America

Capital University Symphonic Winds
The Capital University Symphonic Winds, under the direction of Jeffrey D. Gershman, is the premier wind band in the Conservatory of Music. The Symphonic Winds perform programs that draw from the cornerstones of the wind literature, the finest contemporary works, and the rich and varied repertoire composed for chamber winds.  The ensemble frequently hosts nationally and internationally recognized guest soloists, guest composers, and guest conductors and its recording with the Boston Brass, Heroes and Legends, is available nationally through Summit Records.

Outside of their campus concerts, the ensemble has toured throughout the United States and abroad and has earned frequent invitations to perform at professional conferences.  Appearances have included the Ohio Music Education Association Professional Development Conference, the College Band Directors National Association Regional Conference, and a weeklong tour of Taiwan.


2nd Place:
Chris Knighten
University of Arkansas Wind Ensemble
Fayetteville AR
Daugherty—Bells for Stokowski

University of Arkansas Wind Ensemble
The University of Arkansas Wind Ensemble is comprised of approximately sixty students who have demonstrated outstanding musicianship and are committed to musical excellence. Dedicated to the study and performance of traditional and contemporary repertoire, the Wind Ensemble performs two or three concerts each semester. Flexible instrumentation and part rotation allow diverse musical experiences and responsibilities in the performance of chamber works as well as pieces for orchestral winds or large symphonic band.

Recent tours included performances at the Meyerson Symphony Center in Dallas, TX, the Robinson Center for the Performing Arts in Little Rock, AR, and performances at the 2014 and 2016 College Band Directors National Association Southwest Division conferences, in Fayetteville, AR and Boulder, CO, respectively. The Wind Ensemble also hosts an annual conducting symposium for public school music educators in addition to touring to public schools throughout the mid-south and southwest regions of the country.


3rd Place:
Heather C. Barclay
Palomar/YPO Percussion Ensemble
San Marcos CA
Daugherty / Peel / Davilla

Palomar/YPO Percussion Ensemble
The Palomar/YPO Percussion Ensemble was formed in partnership with the Youth Philharmonic Orchestra and Palomar College both in San Diego California in 2014.  The ensemble, open to advanced percussionists aged 15 to 25, performs from the vast array of literature for percussion ensemble.  Members of the ensemble learn different and unusual techniques of playing styles and experience the use of a variety of percussion instruments, both traditional and nontraditional. The ensemble has been under the direction of Heather Barclay since it started in 2014.


Finalist Honorable Mention
Special Judges’ Citation: Championing the Music of Adolphus Hailstork
Joseph P. Scott
University of Maryland Wind Ensemble
College Park MD
Adolphus Hailstork—American Guernica
Joseph P. Scott
JOSEPH P. SCOTT graduated this spring with a Master of Music in Conducting from the University of Maryland, studying under Dr. Michael Votta.  Before coming to the UMD, Joseph was the Director of Instrumental Music at Clayton Valley Charter High School in Concord, California.

Joseph earned his B.M. in Music Education from the University of Oregon where he studied with Dr. Wayne Bennett and Robert Ponto.  After graduating, he returned to San Francisco where he received his teaching credential from San Francisco State University.  While at SFSU, Joseph was on staff at the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts where he conducted the Concert Band and taught Music Theory and Survey classes.  Joseph is a member of the College Band Directors National Association and served for three years as a board member of the California Music Educators Association-Bay Section.   Joseph was selected as a tier one conductor for the 2017 Frederick Fennell Memorial Conducting Masterclass at the Eastman School of Music where he worked with Mark Scatterday, Donald Hunsberger, and Craig Kirchhoff. 

While in the Bay Area, Joseph kept an active schedule playing the clarinet, performing with the Contra Costa Chamber Orchestra, Chabot Wind Symphony, Golden Gate Park Band, and the San Francisco Wind Ensemble, which performed at the World Association of Symphonic Bands and Ensembles in 2015 and recorded its inaugural CD at Skywalker Ranch in 2014.   Joseph looks forward to returning to the UMD where he will begin coursework towards a Doctor of Musical Arts degree.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Joseph Higgins
Rowan University Wind Ensemble
Glassboro NJ
Corigliano—Mr. Tambourine Man

Joseph Higgins
Joseph Higgins is a musician who strives to inspire curiosity, creativity, and understanding through art. He believes in the expressive power of new music to communicate with modern audiences and is a passionate advocate of socially conscious programming. In 2015, Joseph joined the faculty of Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey, where he conducts the wind ensembles and teaches courses in conducting. He was awarded the University’s 2018 Values Award for Inclusivity in recognition of his curating a “Music of Social Justice” performance series. Joseph regularly serves as a guest conductor-clinician with outstanding professional, community, and student ensembles throughout the country. He earned doctor and master of music degrees in conducting from Northwestern University, where his primary teacher was Mallory Thompson, and a bachelor of music degree in music education from the University of Georgia. Prior to graduate study, he taught at North Gwinnett High School in Suwanee, Georgia.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Travis Jurgens
Ohio Northern Symphony
Ada OH
Jeff Midkiff—Mandolin Concerto: From the Blue Ridge

Travis Jurgens
Jeff Midkiff
Travis Jürgens, a winner of the Leon Guide Outstanding Conductor Award, has conducted the Rochester Philharmonic, Colorado Symphony, and Alabama Symphony Orchestras, among others. He has worked with esteemed conductors, including Michael Tilson Thomas and Marin Alsop. Jürgens has been praised as "a superior conductor" and "well on his way to becoming a major conductor in the world of symphony orchestras" (Opus Colorado). Jürgens is the Music Director of the Ohio Northern Symphony and the Lima Area Youth Orchestra. Previously, Jürgens was the Music Director of the Philharmonia of Kansas City for six seasons, Associate Conductor of the Boulder Philharmonic, and a cover conductor for the Colorado Symphony. Travis earned his Bachelor’s in Piano from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, his Master’s in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Illinois, and his Artist Diploma from the Lamont School of Music. More details at www.travisjuergens.com.



The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COLLEGE / UNIVERSITY choral division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Kevin Sutterlin & Michael Culloton, conductors
The Concordia Orchestra & Chorus
Moorhead MN
Hanson—Song of Democracy

The Concordia Orchestra
Kevin Sutterlin
The nationally and internationally acclaimed Concordia Orchestra was founded in 1967. The college’s musical ensembles earned the prestigious EMMY award for its nationally broadcasted 2016 Christmas Concert productions. The Concordia Orchestra has concertized extensively across the globe, the most recent tours including Greece (2018) and The Holy Land (2014). Concordia Orchestra members have gone on to significant professional careers, as well as faculty positions at public schools, colleges and universities nationwide. About half of the students in the orchestra choose to major in fields outside of music. Regardless of career choice, the experience of performing outstanding repertoire for audiences both home and abroad is among the most cherished memories for alumni of The Concordia Orchestra.

In 2016 the college welcomed Dr. Kevin F.E. Sütterlin as the fourth orchestra conductor in the history of the college. A dedicated 21st-century musician, Sütterlin is passionate about exploring new, nontraditional forms of musical experience. He is co-music director of Sinfonietta Memphis as well as artistic director of the Northern Valley Youth Orchestras. The German conductor is an awardee of the Hirschmann Foundation scholarship (Switzerland), Hendrickson Fine Arts Grant, The University of Memphis International Research scholarship as well as the Creative Achievement Award. Recent guest conducting activities led him to The University of Hawaii, the Youth Orchestra Project of Buenos Aires, Argentina, the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, and the Fox Valley Symphony Orchestra in Appleton, WI. www.ConcordiaCollege.edu/orchestra


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Jeremy Wiggins
The Florida State University Choral Union
Tallahassee FL
Libby Larsen—O Magnum Mysterium
The Florida State University Choral Union
Jeremy Wiggins
Jeremy Wiggins is an active conductor, adjudicator, and clinician, who has worked with middle, high school, and collegiate ensembles throughout the United States. Wiggins is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Choral Conducting and Music Education at Florida State University. Prior to pursing his doctorate, Wiggins taught secondary choral music in southern California for nine years. His choirs at San Clemente High School and West Covina High School toured nationally and received top ratings and scores at regional and national choral festivals. Wiggins also served as a faculty member for the Opera Program at the Southern Orange County High School for the Arts. Wiggins holds a B.A. in Choral Music Education and M.M. in Choral Conducting from California State University, Fullerton.

FSU Choral Union: The Choral Union is one of eight ensembles at The Florida State University. This non-auditioned ensemble of eighty singers performs frequently throughout the year and is conducted by the graduate students in choral conducting. While this choir performs music from the entire cannon of choral music, it often promotes the new works by American composers. This last Spring, while composer Libby Larsen was in residence at FSU, the Choral Union was featured in a performance highlighting her choral works.


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Lisa Wong
The College of Wooster Chorus
Wooster OH
Runestad / Whitacre / Lauridsen

The College of Wooster Chorus
Founded in 1964, The College of Wooster Chorus is comprised of undergraduate students representing all academic areas within The College of Wooster’s liberal arts program.  Located in Wooster, Ohio, approximately 55 miles south of Cleveland, Wooster is considered America’s premier college for mentored undergraduate research, and has been called the “best-kept secret in higher education.” (Colleges That Change Lives) The chorus collaborates annually with The Cleveland Orchestra and Cleveland Orchestra Chorus.  Enthusiastic about the performance of new music, Wooster has recently premiered works by several American composers including Eric Whitacre and Jake Runestad.  The Chorus has performed at the Central Division conference of the American Choral Directors Association, and also at the state conference (2014, 2016, and 2018) of the Ohio Music Education Association.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Ianthe Marini
Columbus State University Schwob Singers
Columbus GA
Whitacre / Bernstein / Hogan 

Ianthe Marini
DR. IANTHE MARINI is the Paul S. and Jean R. Amos Distinguished Chair for Choral Activities and Assistant Professor of Music in the Schwob School of Music at Columbus State University.  She has served as the Professional Chorus Master for the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, DC, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in Baltimore, MD.  She currently serves as Professional Chorus Master for the Columbus Symphony Orchestra in GA. Her professional preparations include: Handel’s Messiah for the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center; the a cappella repertoire of Sir James MacMillan under his own baton at the Kennedy Center; Pops concerts at the Kennedy Center and Meyerhoff Symphony Hall; Verdi’s Requiem for the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, and Bach’s Magnificat in D for the CSU Philharmonic.  Marini received her Doctorate of Musical Arts from the University of Maryland where she studied with Edward Maclary and James Ross.  She was the recipient of the University’s Pomeroy Prize for scholarship and performance in 17th and 18th century music.  She also served as the First Female Conductor of the University of Maryland Men’s Chorus.  Dr. Marini’s research involves the effects of acting on choral singing and her work focuses on the honest communication of text.  An active performer, she was recognized by Boston Broadway Awards as Best Actress in a Musical for her work as Anita in West Side Story, and has created a rehearsal method that focuses on the growth of choral singers as active critical thinkers, honest communicators, and vulnerable actors.  She is an active clinician across the United States.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Chris David Westover
Denison University Wind Ensemble
Granville OH
Persichetti—Celebrations

Denison University Wind Ensemble
Chris David Westover
Prior to his current appointment as assistant professor of music at Denison, Westover led wind ensembles, orchestras and operatic performances at Bethel College (KS), the University of Oklahoma, and the Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University. He is in constant demand as a conductor and has received acclaim for his performances with educational and professional ensembles. Westover’s conducting has been described as “elegant, bold, vibrant, inspiring and centered,” by Augusta Read Thomas.

He is currently completing a critical wind-band transcription of Persichetti's Seventh Symphony to be premiered in the 2018-2019 season. He has lectured at Hong Kong Baptist University and CBDNA and will give a paper at the Internationale Gesellschaft zur Erforschung und Förderung der Blasmusik in July 2019. He has conducted across the United States and in the People's Republic of China and is currently developing artistic projects in Sri Lanka.

His career spans operatic performances and educational work with young singers and community orchestras. Westover commands a broad and diverse repertoire including the core symphonic repertoire and the contemporary repertoire of the symphony orchestra and wind ensemble. He served as a staff conductor for the 4x4 Prizes at OU, and has commissioned and premiered works by Ching-chu Hu, HyeKyung Lee, Kathryn Salfelder, Ken Amis, Michael Weinstein, Brad Baumgardner, Andrew McManus, and Dan Lazerescou. In 2010, Westover led the critically acclaimed Dallas premiere of Daniel Roumain’s “Darwin’s Meditation for the People of Lincoln” during the inaugural season of the Winspear Opera House. Westover’s conducting teachers include Jonathan Shames, John Carmichael, Jack Delaney, Kenneth Kiesler, and Eric Smedley. Dr. Westover is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Southern Methodist University, and Western Kentucky University.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Nicholle Andrews
University of Redlands Chapel Singers
Redlands CA
Christopher Theofanidis—Messages from Myself
University of Redlands Chapel Singers
The University of Redlands Chapel Singers is an advanced 25-voice chamber choir composed of undergraduate and graduate students. Founded in 1965, the ensemble has a long tradition of musical excellence. Chapel Singers regularly performs concerts, church services, and educational workshops in Southern California. The ensemble has toured extensively in the United States and internationally. Under the direction of Nicholle Andrews, Chapel Singers performed at the California Music Educators Conference, the Sixth National Collegiate Choral Organization convention in Portland, Oregon as well as the 2016 California All-State Music Education Conference in San Jose. In the summer of 2018, Chapel Singers will be the only American choir invited to perform at Podium, Choral Canada’s Biannual National Convention in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Performing a wide variety of repertoire, Chapel Singers was featured on the hit series Glee, as well as performed with The WHO in the Los Angeles during their 2017 tour.


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Mark Bartley
West Texas A&M University Choirs and Orchestra
with Canyon HS Chamber Singers
Canyon TX
Rene Clausen—Psalm 150
West Texas A&M University Choirs and Orchestra
with Canyon HS Chamber Singers
In addition to its performances of symphonic works, opera productions, choral-orchestral masterworks, and dance collaborations, the West Texas A&M University Symphony Orchestra has gained notoriety for its live cinema presentations of silent films with newly-composed synchronized soundtracks.  The 70-member orchestra includes graduate and undergraduate students, both those majoring in music as well as those studying other majors.  The ensemble frequently tours the West Texas region, but in May 2016 completed its first international tour with performances in Prague, Budapest, and Vienna.  Honors include awards from the American Prize, National Opera Association, Golden Nail Awards, and an appearance at the Texas Music Educators Association (TMEA) convention in San Antonio. http://www.wtamu.edu/academics/school-of-music-orchestra.aspx

World-renowned composer Dr. René Clausen has served as conductor of The Concordia Choir since 1986.  Prior to that appointment, Dr. Clausen was Director of Choral Activities at West Texas A&M University (WTAMU), then West Texas State University.  The Choirs and Orchestra of WTAMU along with the Chamber Choir from Canyon High School salute him with a rare full-orchestra performance of his Psalm 150. http://wtamu.edu/academics/music.aspx


The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COMMUNITY instrumental division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Reuben Blundell
Lansdowne Symphony Orchestra
Lansdowne PA
David Stanley Smith / Carl Busch  

Lansdowne Symphony Orchestra
In 2017-18 the LSO released its first CD, on the New Focus label, featured by Spotify, WRTI’s Fleisher Discoveries, and other radio stations across the United States. Recent and upcoming soloists include Philadelphia’s David Kim and David Cramer, cellist Julian Schwarz, violist Roberto Díaz, and soprano Lisa DiNolfo. The orchestra was founded in 1946 and is widely regarded as the best of the Philadelphia area’s community orchestras. www.lansdowneso.org

The year was Reuben Blundell’s fourth as Music Director. Attaining degrees in violin performance in Australia, he attended Tanglewood and Michael Tilson Thomas’ New World Symphony. With a doctorate in conducting from Eastman (Neil Varon and Zvi Zeitlin), and Monteux School studies, his career has included two tenure-track positions, conducting three commercial CDs, directing the Riverside Orchestra in New York, and conducting the Chelsea Symphony, and orchestras in Chile, Iraq and Lebanon. He also teaches at Trinity School, NYC. www.reubenblundell.com


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Libi Lebel
Texas Medical Center Orchestra
Houston TX
Howard Hanson—Merry Mount Suite

Texas Medical Center Orchestra
Established in 2000, the Texas Medical Center Orchestra (TMCO) is one of few community orchestras in the United States and the world with its origins in the health professions. It highlights local musicians and explores the interplay of music, visual arts, and dance. The orchestra’s mission is to provide a creative outlet, offer affordable concerts, and support medical and educational charities.
Founder and music director Libi Lebel has dedicated herself to maintaining the group’s musical excellence while keeping the experience fun and accessible to both members and audiences.


2nd Place (there was a tie):
Lois Ferrari
Austin Civic Orchestra
Austin TX  
Welcher / Still / Actor

Austin Civic Orchestra
The Austin Civic Orchestra was founded in 1977 and has since evolved into an 80-piece fully volunteer symphonic orchestra. The ACO is committed to bringing high quality classical music to Austin area communities and to supporting young musicians in particular. To this end, the Orchestra offers free admittance to all students under the age of 18 and sponsors the annual Pearl Amster Chamber Music Festival as well as the Texas Rising Stars Concerto Contest in conjunction with the University of Texas. A champion of new music, ACO Music Director Lois Ferrari founded the bi-annual Composition Contest in 2005. The ACO was awarded 2nd place in the 2016 American Prize competition and was named finalist for 2014 and 2012. www.austincivicorchestra.org

It should be noted that the ACO’s 2017-2018 season, entitled Made in America, was devoted to performing music written entirely by American composers.  

Lois Ferrari is Professor of Music at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas and has been a member of the faculty since 1993. Dr. Ferrari conducts the SU Orchestra and Wind Ensemble, teaches conducting classes, and serves as host and clinician for the SU Conductors Institute. In addition to conducting clinics and festivals throughout the state of Texas, Dr. Ferrari has conducted all-state and all-county ensembles in Washington and New York states. An enthusiastic champion of new music, Dr. Ferrari founded the ACO Composition Contest and is proud to have premiered more than twenty-five works during the course of her career. She has also been intimately involved with nurturing future virtuosi, most notably through the ACO's Pearl Amster Chamber Music Festival and Texas Rising Stars Contest. A graduate of the Eastman School of Music, where she received a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Conducting, Dr. Ferrari received a full doctoral fellowship and was appointed Assistant Conductor of the Eastman Wind Ensemble. Her principal teachers were Donald Hunsberger, Rodney Winther, David Effron, and Donald Neuen. Dr. Ferrari was awarded 2nd place in the 2016 and 2012 American Prize Competition in Community Orchestra Conducting.


3rd Place:
Curt Ebersole
Westchester Symphonic Winds
Tarrytown NY
Michael Daugherty—Brooklyn Bridge

Westchester Symphonic Winds
Curt Ebersole
Steve Cohen
Westchester Symphonic Winds is an adult community wind ensemble based at Tarrytown Music Hall, Tarrytown, NY. We exist to promote music locally, instill pride in our nation and heritage, provide opportunities for personal expression and growth within our membership, and nurture the love of music by offering an exceptional musical experience. Our programs have included a Side-by-Side Concert with the Mahopac (NY) Central School District and Exchange Program with the Northshore Concert Band of Evanston, IL. We made our Lincoln Center debut at Avery Fisher Hall in 2010, performed at the Association of Concert Bands National Convention in 2012 and New York State Band Directors Winter Symposium in 2017, and have performed to sold-out crowds at the Caramoor Festival annually since 2014. We have been the subject of articles in The New York Times and Teaching Music, the magazine of the National Association for Music Education. 

Curt Ebersole has served as the Conductor/Music Director (John P. Paynter Memorial Chair) of WSW since 2008. He retired from high school teaching in 2013 and now teaches at The Masters School, in Dobbs Ferry, NY. He earned undergraduate and graduate degrees from Northwestern University, and is in frequent demand as a guest conductor and clinician.

Steve Cohen is active as both a soloist and chamber performer throughout the U.S. and around the world. He is the Professor of Clarinet at Northwestern University, and was formerly Principal Clarinetist with the New Orleans Symphony, later known as the Louisiana Philharmonic.


Finalist Honorable Mention
Special Judges’ Citation: Championing the Music of Morton Gould
Ronald Demkee
The Allentown Band
Allentown PA
music by Morton Gould
 
The Allentown Band
Ronald Demkee
The Music of Morton Gould 
Since its first performance on July 4, 1828, Allentown Band’s venerable existence is a testament to the value the community has placed upon its contributions to the arts, culture and education.  Celebrating 190 years of service in 2018, the band has broadened its impact and reach through increased concert programming and extensive concert repertoire. Presenting 45+ stellar concerts annually with national and regional guest artists the band additionally offers high-quality youth educational opportunities reaching more than 14 regional school districts.  As a charitable organization the band presents unparalleled music experiences for all ages with performance level concerts like those performed by the premier U.S. military service bands in Washington DC and major symphony orchestras.  Band members are highly engaged in the success of the organization. Membership represents diverse occupations that include: doctors, dentists, banking personnel, educators, administrators, private business owners and accountants, all who value musicianship and stellar artistic standards.

Ronald Demkee joined the Allentown band in 1964 as tuba soloist and was elected conductor in 1977. Under his leadership the band has recorded 31 Volumes of the highly acclaimed "Our Band Heritage" series of CDs which have reached listeners in all 50 states and 24 foreign countries. and traveled to Europe four times, performing concerts in Switzerland, Austria and France. He also serves as Principal Tuba, Associate Conductor and Pops Conductor with the Allentown Symphony Orchestra. Demkee served as  Band and Orchestra Director at Freedom High School, Bethlehem, PA for 30 years and also served as an adjunct faculty in the music departments of both  Muhlenberg and Moravian Colleges. 


Finalist Honorable Mention:
Donald L. Appert
Clark College Orchestra
Vancouver WA
Donald L. Appert—Concerto for Cello and Orchestra

Clark College Orchestra
Donald L. Appert
The Clark College Orchestra is a college/community ensemble ranging in number from 75 to 90 musicians depending on the repertoire. The orchestra has had guest conductors and soloists from New Zealand, Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Macedonia, Sweden, Russia, Turkey, El Salvador, and Romania. The orchestra received 3rd Place in the 2013 American Prize in Orchestra Performance – community orchestra division. In 2014, it received 3rd Place The American Prize in Orchestral Programming - Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award – Community Orchestra Division  and then 2nd place for the same award in 2015. In 2016, it received 2nd Place in The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD in the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COMMUNITY division. The orchestra has performed premieres of works by Donald Appert, Matt Doran, and Eric Ewazen. In January of 2014 the orchestra was featured on All Classical Radio’s “Played in Oregon” show for their performance of Elgar’s Cockaigne Overture.

Donald Appert has been Music Director/Conductor of the Clark College Orchestra since 1990. His music has been performed in the US, Japan, Australia, Central America, and throughout Europe. His Viola Concerto is currently a finalist in The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD in the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COMMUNITY division. In 2015 the Rocco Parisi Bass Clarinet Quartet performed his Quartetto Basso at the  Fifth Annual European Clarinet Festival in Ghent, Italy. They recorded the work in 2013 for Amirani Records (www.amiranirecords.com) on the CD “A tempo, a modo” Path-tracking Vito Marsico. In 2012 he was a Semifinalist for the American Prize in Composition – Orchestra, Professional Division. He has guest conducted orchestras in Europe, Central America, Japan and Australia. Currently he is a Professor of Music and Head of the Music Department at Clark College in Vancouver, Washington. In addition he is the Music Director/Conductor of the Oregon Sinfonietta and Music Director/Conductor of the Jewish Community Orchestra, both in Portland, Oregon.  He received The American Prize in Orchestral Programming—Vytautas Marijosius Memorial Award in 2011 for his work with the Oregon Sinfonietta.In 2014 he received the Lifetime Achievement in the Arts award from the Clark County Arts Commission. He has received the ASCAPLUS Award numerous times. His music may be heard via the Internet on his web site at www.maestrodonappert.com.



The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, COMMUNITY choral division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Elizabeth Patterson, conductor emerita
Gloriae Dei Cantores Choir
Orleans MA
American Psalmody: Neswick / Rorem / Adler  

Elizabeth Patterson
Under the inspired leadership of Elizabeth Patterson, Gloriæ Dei Cantores has achieved its present status as a world-class choir internationally recognized for its exceptional artistry and compelling spirituality. Known for her interpretive vision and her commitment to performance authenticity, Ms. Patterson is considered one of America’s finest choral conductors.

As the founding director in 1988, Elizabeth Patterson transformed Gloriæ Dei Cantores from a small church choir to a world-class concert choir. She established an aggressive program of study for the choir including three extended study tours in England with choral masters Dr. George Guest of St. John’s College, Cambridge, and Dr. Stephen Cleobury of King’s College, Cambridge. She has garnered respect from colleagues around the world, including Margaret Hillis, Keith Lockhart, Craig Timberlake, Dorothy Richardson, and Gerre Hancock.

Ms. Patterson directed the choir on numerous national and international tours, from New York to San Francisco, from London to Venice, from Prague to Moscow to Siberia. Her dedication to international understanding and cultural integrity have won her critical acclaim in concert halls throughout Albania, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Czech Republic, England, France, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Russia, Scotland, Slovakia, Switzerland, and Wales.

In addition to conducting the choir’s discography of over 50 recordings, Elizabeth Patterson has overseen the development of a repertoire incorporating over 2,400 works, seeking to preserve sacred choral gems worthy of being heard and performed. In addition, she oversaw the commissioning and world premiers of numerous works including Transfiguration Mass by Samuel Adler, The Vision by Dominick Argento, Resurrexi by Gerald Near, and Folk Mass and Let Us Move by Grammy award-winning artist Mark O’Connor.

Under Ms. Patterson’s direction, Gloriæ Dei Cantores collaborated in ten holiday tours with Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops; performed at the annual Christmas Tree-Lighting Ceremony at Rockefeller Center where Ms. Patterson directed the premiere of Bruce Saylor’s A Christmas Garland on a televised broadcast; sang with the Regimental Band of Her Majesty’s Coldstream Guards at Boston Garden; and opened the 900th Anniversary Celebration of the Basilica at San Marco in Venice.

“Ms. Patterson is a true choral alchemist, and never fails to draw truly golden sound and beautifully nuanced singing from her hard-working musicians. Sacred illumination is their mission, and they achieve it with spiritual sincerity and power.”
—AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE

Gloriæ Dei Cantores (Singers to the Glory of God) holds a passionate dedication to illuminate truth and beauty through choral artistry, celebrating a rich tradition of Sacred choral music from Gregorian chant through the twenty-first century.

Founded in 1988, Gloriæ Dei Cantores from Orleans, MA, under the direction of Richard K. Pugsley, has touched the hearts of audiences in twenty-three countries in Europe, Russia, and North America, receiving extensive critical acclaim for its artistic elegance, performance authenticity, and compelling spirituality. Distributed in the United States and internationally by Naxos, the choir’s catalog of more than fifty recordings showcases their extensive repertoire, encompassing both masterpieces and rarely performed musical treasures from Gregorian chant to the twenty-first century. “Superb” BBC; “Lovely, pure and radiant” Gramophone; “Rapturous a capella passages” Chicago Tribune.

Highlights of the choir’s career include three invitational tours to Russia, opening the 900th anniversary of St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice, Italy, live radio and television broadcasts with the BBC, film soundtracks, the tree-lighting ceremony at Rockefeller Plaza, and performances in some of the finest concert halls throughout Eastern and Western Europe and across the United States.

The choir’s collaborative ventures have included a sixteen-city US tour of Mozart’s Requiem with Philippe Entremont and the Munich Symphony Orchestra (Columbia Artists, CAMI, LLC), performances in the United States and the United Kingdom with Her Majesty’s Coldstream Guards, concerts of of Mozart’s Requiem with the St. Petersburg Philharmonic in Russia, numerous collaborations with Vox Cæli Symphonia, world premiere concerts and recordings with Grammy-award-winning artist Mark O’Connor, and ten Holiday Tours with Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops Symphony Orchestra. They have also appeared on the concert stage and in recordings with John Williams, Samuel Adler, Stephen Cleobury, Vladimir Minin, and the late George Guest, Dr. Mary Berry, and Margaret Hillis, among others.

Gloriæ Dei Cantores makes its home at the Church of the Transfiguration (Orleans, MA) where the choir sings weekly worship services, seasonal concerts, and records throughout the year. The members’ ongoing life of worship—Sunday Eucharist, Choral Evensong, and Liturgy of the Hours in Gregorian Chant—is the foundation of the choir’s artistry, enabling their extensive repertoire to become a vibrant form of prayer in any setting. Their music conveys “a kind of utter, rapt, spiritual intensity, that you simply can’t imagine unless you’ve experienced it for yourself.” (American Record Guide)


2nd Place:
Philip Brunelle
Vocal Essence Chorus & Ensemble Singers
Minneapolis MN
Larsen / Heggie / Paulus  

Philip Brunelle
Philip Brunelle, artistic director and founder of VocalEssence, is an internationally renowned conductor, scholar, and visionary. He has made his lifelong mission the promotion of the choral art, especially rarely heard works of the past and worthwhile new music. Under his leadership, VocalEssence has commissioned more than 150 works to date. Philip has conducted symphonies, choral festivals, and operas on six continents. He is editor of two choral series for Boosey & Hawkes and chairman of the review committee for Walton Music. Over the past decade Philip has been deeply involved with the International Federation for Choral Music (IFCM). He served as president of the Sixth World Choral Symposium, held in Minneapolis in 2002. He is a Vice President of the IFCM Board and served as Executive Director for the 2014 World Choral Symposium to be held in Seoul, South Korea. Philip is the recipient of the North Central American Choral Directors Association (ACDA) Weston H. Noble Lifetime Achievement Award; the F. Melius Christiansen Lifetime Achievement Award, ACDA -Minnesota Chapter’s highest honor; and the Michael Korn Founder’s Award for Development of the Professional Choral Art, Chorus America’s highest lifetime achievement award. Philip holds five honorary doctorates and has been recognized for his commitment to choral music by Norway (Commander of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit), the United Kingdom (Honorary Member of the Order of the British Empire), Hungary (Kodály Medal), Sweden (Royal Order of the Polar Star) and Mexico (Ohlti Recognition Award).


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Ryan Brandau
Monmouth Civic Chorus
Red Bank NJ
Corigliano—Fern Hill
Monmouth Civic Chorus
Ryan Brandau
The Monmouth Civic Chorus is a volunteer community of singers dedicated to artistic excellence. In addition to singing locally in Monmouth County, New Jersey, we have brought the finest in choral music to audiences around the world since 1949. Among our most memorable performances are Carnegie Hall, the New Jersey Performing Arts Center with the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, St. Thomas Church on Fifth Avenue in New York City, St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican in Rome, and St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin. The Chorus has been called “close to perfect” and “among the very best in the entire Northeast” (Asbury Park Press). We are proud to be the 2008 winner of the Chorus America/ASCAP Alice Parker Award, given to only one chorus in North America each year, and the 2010 Spinnaker Award for Arts and Culture from the Eastern Monmouth Area Chamber of Commerce. For further information, please call (732) 933-9333 or visit monmouthcivicchorus.org. Artistic Director Ryan James Brandau is on the faculty of Westminster Choir College, where he prepared the Westminster Symphonic Choir for performances with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Vienna Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic and New Jersey Symphony. He received the Doctor of Musical Arts and Master of Music degrees from the Yale School of Music, and attended the University of Cambridge in the UK as a Gates Scholar, earning an M.Phil. in historical musicology. He received his B.A. in music, magna cum laude, from Princeton University.


3rd Place (there was a tie);
Erik Peregrine
Ensemble Companio
Niskayuna NY
Betinis / Trumbore   

Ensemble Companio
Ensemble Companio’s mission is to build bridges between people through authentic, inspiring performances of the finest choral music. Founded in 2011 by director emeritus Joseph Gregorio, Ensemble Companio is an award-winning volunteer chamber choir comprised of members who hail from across the Eastern seaboard and perform together throughout the Eastern United States. Ensemble Companio takes its name from a Latin form of “companion”, the historical meaning of which is “one with whom one shares bread.” The name reflects the musicians’ belief that sharing in choral music, like the sharing of food, is an essential, nourishing, and healing experience.  www.ensemblecompanio.org


The American Prize ERNST BACON MEMORIAL AWARD for the PERFORMANCE of AMERICAN MUSIC, HIGH SCHOOL division, 2018-19

The American Prize winner:
Michael Isadore
Houston Youth Symphony Philharmonia
Houston TX
John Mackey—Red Line Tango

Michael Isadore
Houston Youth Symphony Philharmonia
Founded in 1946, Houston Youth Symphony (HYS) is the recipient of national acclaim including the 2017 first prize winner of the Mark of Excellence Award from The Foundation for Music Education and the 2017 American Prize in Orchestral Performance – Youth Orchestra Division Each season approximately 400 musicians between the ages of seven and 19 come from across the greater Houston area to perform in one of five HYS orchestras. In addition to the core orchestra program, HYS offers advanced musicians a chamber music training program and an annual concerto competition.

In the community, HYS provides free private music lessons for talented youth in select economically disadvantaged communities through the Melody Program. In January 2015, HYS launched the Coda Music Program, an after-school effort modeled after El Sistema that brings graduated, intensive string instruction to three elementary schools using classical music and group instruction to build community and social transformation. (www.HoustonYouthSymphony.org)

An energetic and dynamic musician, Michael Isadore serves as Associate Conductor of the Houston Civic Symphony, Philharmonia Conductor with the Houston Youth Symphony, and director of orchestras at Dulles High School.  Under his direction, the Dulles High School orchestra symphony and string orchestras have been consistent “commended winners” in the Mark of Excellence competition and recognized as the 2012 National Winner. Other honors include performances at the Midwest Clinic in 2016 and 2004 and runner up for TMEA Honor Orchestra in 2005. In 2010 Mr. Isadore was recognized with the Spec’s Charitable Foundation Award for Excellence in Music Education presented by the Houston Symphony. An accomplished clarinetist, Isadore also holds the second clarinet position with the Victoria Symphony and freelances in the Houston area.  Isadore holds degrees in clarinet and conducting from Baylor University and the University of Missouri—Kansas City, Conservatory of Music.


2nd Place:
Chris Maunu
Arvada West HS Vocal Showcase
Arvada CO
Mulholland / Muehleisen 

Arvada West HS Vocal Showcase
Since Chris Maunu took over Arvada West choirs in 2006, the department has grown from 120 to over 340 students and has become one of the nation’s premier choral programs. Arvada West’s mixed chorus, Vocal Showcase, performed at the 2017 National ACDA Conference in Minneapolis and were winners of the Youth Division of the 2017-2018 American Prize in Choral Performance. Choirs from Arvada West have performed at eight Colorado CMEA conferences since 2009. The ensembles consistently receive superior ratings and 1st place finishes at festivals and contests. AWHS choirs have performed at Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, Orchestra Hall in Chicago and Minneapolis, and High Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome and St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice. Mr. Maunu was 1 of 10 national finalists for the Music Educator Award at the 60th GRAMMY Awards this last January. Away from AWHS, he is co-founder/director of the new 16-voice professional choir, Anima Chamber Ensemble and serves as the High School Repertoire and Resources Chair for Colorado ACDA.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
Catherine Fish
Herricks HS Chamber Orchestra
New Hyde Park NY
Michael Daugherty / David Diamond  

Herricks HS Chamber Orchestra
The Herricks High School Chamber Orchestra is an elite string orchestra from New Hyde Park, NY. Acceptance to this curricular honors-level ensemble is by audition only, resulting in a highly competitive audition process and a rigorous rehearsal environment. Under the direction of teacher and conductor Catherine Fish, the Herricks High School Chamber Orchestra has grown into a nationally recognized ensemble, acclaimed for their performance of challenging repertoire and their nuanced musicianship. In March of 2018, the ensemble won First Prize High School String Orchestra in the American String Teachers Association (ASTA) National Orchestra Festival competition, held in Atlanta, GA. The orchestra’s recent credits also include ratings of “Gold with Distinction” four years in a row at the New York State School Music Association (NYSSMA) Major Organization Festival, a 2017 performance at Carnegie Hall, and annual participation in the Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society’s Young Musicians Program competition.


3rd Place (there was a tie):
David Hattner, conductor
Camerata PYP
Portland OR
Christopher Theofanidis—Muse

Camerata PYP
Camerata PYP, the flexible-instrumentation chamber orchestra of Portland Youth Philharmonic, performs two programs annually of diverse and often unusual repertoire. Recent achievements include a landmark collaborative production of Voices of Light, an oratorio by Richard Einhorn, performed with a screening of the iconic 1928 silent film, The Passion of Joan of Arc, and a collaboration with Hossein and Bobak Salehi featuring music by Bobak Salehi and Henry Cowell.

David Hattner is the fifth Musical Director of the Portland Youth Philharmonic Association. “The Portland Youth Philharmonic roared like a Maserati on Saturday in its first concert under music director David Hattner.” wrote David Stabler for The Oregonian in 2008. David Hattner’s conducting credits include the Eugene Symphony Orchestra, the Garden State Philharmonic Orchestra, Camerata Atlantica, and multi-media work with silent film in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, and Sao Paulo, Brazil.


***

Congratulations!



WINNERS: The American Prize Chicago Oratorio Award, 2019 (MESSIAH SOLOISTS)

$
0
0
The four individuals below have been selected to perform the solo roles in Handel's MESSIAH with the Chicago Bar Association Symphony Orchestra and CBA Chorus in St James Episcopal Cathedral, Chicago, as winners of The American Prize Chicago Oratorio Award, 2019. Congratulations! The performance, Wednesday, December 11, 2019 at 7:30 pm, will be under the direction of Maestro Stephen Blackwelder, director of the CBA Chorus.

The winners are:
Laura STRICKLING, soprano
St Thomas VI

Kara MORGAN, mezzo-soprano
Andover MN

Daniel O'HEARN, tenor
Tinley Park IL

Will HUGHES, baritone
Richardson TX

Purchase tickets here. (Substantial savings for advance purchase.)

***

Laura STRICKLING
Soprano
St Thomas VI


First place winner of the inaugural American Prize in Vocal Performance (Opera, Professional Division, 2011) Laura Strickling was praised by The New York Times for her, "flexible voice, crystalline diction, and warm presence." She has performed at Carnegie Hall, Avery Fisher Hall, the Kennedy Center, National Sawdust, Trinity Church on Wall Street, Washington National Cathedral, Tanglewood Music Festival, Ravinia Music Festival, Songfest at the Colburn School, Mexicoliederfest, Liederfest in Suzhou (China), and the Afghanistan National Institute of Music. An acclaimed oratorio soloist, she has appeared with the Indianapolis Symphony, Richmond Symphony, Asheville Symphony, Berkshire Choral International, and the Cathedral Choral Society. Ms. Strickling created the role of Fanni Radnòti in the World Premiere of Tom Cipullo's opera The Parting with Music of Remembrance. A devoted recitalist, she curated The NewMusicShelf Anthology for Soprano, and has appeared with the Brooklyn Art Song Society, Yellow Barn Music Festival, New Music Gathering, Lyric Fest of Philadelphia, and Trinity Concerts at One. Her discography includes her recording of James Matheson's Times Alone , Glen Roven's The Vineyard Songs, Jake Heggie's Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Tom Cipullo's Of a Certain Age. A Chicago native, Ms. Strickling is an avid traveler, having lived in Morocco, where she studied classical Arabic at the Arabic Language Institute of Fez, and Afghanistan, where her husband was the founding chair of the Department of Law at the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul. She currently makes her home in St. Thomas, U. S. Virgin Islands. For further information, visit www.laurastrickling.com.


Kara MORGAN
Mezzo-soprano
Andover MN


Kara Morgan is a mezzo soprano pursuing her passion to make a name for herself in the opera house and on the concert stage. This fall, Kara returned to Fargo-Moorhead Opera as Hansel in their production of Hansel and Gretel after making her company and role debuts earlier this year singing Dorabella (Così fan tutte) and Mercédès (Carmen) as a Gate City Bank Young Artist. Kara spent her summer with the Lakes Area Music Festival covering the title role in their production of Offenbach's La belle Hélène and with Mill City Summer Opera covering Dorabella in Così fan tutte. Kara has sung lead roles with The Gilbert and Sullivan Very Light Opera Company (Melissa, Princess Ida) and the College Light Opera Company (Mad Margaret, Ruddigore) and was heard as an Apprentice Artist with the Santa Fe Opera in 2017. As a student, Kara realized the roles of Ottone (Agrippina), Angelina (La Cenerentola), the Old Prioress (Dialogues of the Carmelites), Mrs. Soames (Our Town), Katisha (The Mikado) and Dritte Dame (Die Zauberflöte) among others. A longtime lover of concert and choral repertoire, Kara made her debut with the Oratorio Society of Minnesota this November as a soloist in their performance of Duruflé's Requiem and Roger-Ducasse's Crux Fidelis. Kara is an alumna of Drake University (BM '14) and the New England Conservatory (MM '16). More information about Kara and her upcoming events can be found on her website at kmorganmezzo.com.


Daniel O'HEARN
Tenor
Tinley Park IL


Daniel O'Hearn is a tenor from Tinley Park, Illinois. He has most recently performed as Egisto in Francesco Cavalli's "L'Egisto," Captain Macheath in John Gay/Benjamin Britten's "The Beggar's Opera," and as Endymion in J.S. Bach's "Hunting Cantata." Within the last year, Daniel was the Casa Italia Vocal Scholarship Raimondi Scholar 2018, first place winner of the graduate division of the  Kleinman Vocal Competition 2019, and the first place winner of the Joseph P. Glimco Vocal Competition 2019. Daniel was the 2018 Musica nella Marche Angeli Scholar, and received a scholarship to sing, study opera, and learn the Italian language in Urbino, Florence, Verona, and Venice last summer. He is currently working on his master's degree in operatic vocal performance at the DePaul University School of Music in Chicago, Illinois, where he studies with the tenor on the school's faculty, Scott Ramsay. Daniel also performs the national anthem for the DePaul Blue Demons at sporting events throughout the school year. Outside of the world of public performance and academia, Daniel has been on the faculty at The House of Music in Orland Park, IL as a private voice instructor for over four years, where he teaches people of all ages from all over Chicagoland how to sing.


Will HUGHES
Baritone
Richardson TX


Will Hughes, a Dallas, TX native, has recently performed and covered roles in La bohème (Schaunard), Doctor Atomic (Jack Hubbard), Ariadne auf Naxos (Harlequin), Madama Butterfly (Yamadori, Yakusidé), Les pêcheurs de perles (Zurga), The Consul (John Sorel), Così fan tutte (Guglielmo), and the title role in Billy Budd for The Santa Fe Opera, The Dallas Opera, Des Moines Metro Opera, and Florida Grand Opera. He has also performed scenes from Wuthering Heights (Heathcliff), A Street Scene (Henry), and the title role in Gianni Schicchi with The Santa Fe Opera and Iphigénie en Tauride (Oreste) and Sweeney Todd (Anthony) with Des Moines Metro Opera.

Will has recently sung the title role in a fully staged version of Elijah. His other concert work includes the baritone solos in the requiems of Brahms, Duruflé, and Fauré: the latter of which he sang under the baton of Maestro Rutter along with the baritone solo in the maestro's Mass of the Children. Will has also sung the role of Petrus in a partially staged version of Bach's Matthäus-Passion with the Philadelphia Symphony under the direction of Yannick Nézet-Séguin. Will earned his Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees from Wheaton College and Westminster Choir College respectively.

Remembering TAP Laureate Composer NANCY BLOOMER DEUSSEN

$
0
0
NANCY BLOOMER DEUSSEN
The American Prize notes with sadness the passing of TAP Laureate composer, Nancy Bloomer Deussen. A multi-year participant in The American Prize competitions, she was a second place winner in chamber music in 2013, received several honorable mentions for her music and was one of the first Honored Artists of The American Prize, presented in 2014. She was 88.

Nancy Bloomer Deussen, a prominent Californian, was co-founder of the San Francisco Bay Area National Association of Composers, also serving on the national body for a number of years.

Deussen was educated at the Juilliard School, the Manhattan School of Music, USC School of Music and San Jose State University, studying composition with Vittorio Giannini, Lukas Foss, Ingolf Dahl and Wilson Coker.

Bloomer Deussen’s was an advocate of accessible contemporary music, a fact reflected in her own style, which is melodic and tonal. She also was known for using the natural world as a source for inspiration.

A recipient of many grants, including The Peninsula Community, Silicon Valley Arts Council, The American Composer's Forum, The Contemporary Record Society and the Mu Phi Epsilon Memorial Foundation, she also won the Mu Phi Epsilon Original Composition Contest for her Woodwind Quartet (1987), The Bay Area Composer's Symposium Award for Reflections on the Hudson, for orchestra (1994), The Britten on-the-Bay Prize for Trio for Violin, Clarinet and Piano (1996) and the Mu Phi Epsilon Original Composition Contest for Concerto for Clarinet and Small Orchestra (1999).

Maestro David Katz writes: "Nancy was a composer of gracious insight and lovely, lyrical music. We communicated often and I was delighted to conduct her music more than once. I was so pleased to be able to extend to her additional recognition when she was named one of the first Honored Artists of The American Prize. Lovely lady. She will be missed."

Semi-finalists: CHAMBER MUSIC ENSEMBLES, 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is delighted to announce SEMI-FINALIST chamber ensembles for 2019-20. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. In certain cases, The American Prize may have moved an auditioning ensemble to a more appropriate category.)

As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from these lists. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Chamber Music Performance, 2019-20, professional division:

Szlubowska-Belsky Duo
Svetlana Belsky
Northbrook  IL

Fidelis Quartet
Jeffrey Butler
Houston TX

Amosa Duo 
Chia-Ying Chan 
Urbana IL

Anima Vox
Carole Jean Ott Coelho
Greensboro NC

Duo MemDi
Igor Kalnin
Decorah IA
 
Prairie Duo
Jessica Koebbe
Leawood KS

Serenade Duo
Michelle LaPorte
Saint James NY

Pure Winds
Natalie Law
Lansing MI

Pegasus Chamber Ensemble
Jonathan Lusher
Guanajuato  GTO

RASHAN
Aria Minasian
Bainbridge Island WA

Fenglire
Ashley Rollins
McKinney TX

Eason-Seregow Duo
Michael Seregow
Muncie IN

Sophia Tegart and Michael Seregow
Michael Seregow
Muncie IN

Luna Nova
Sabrina Laney Warren
Cordova TN


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Chamber Music Performance, 2019-20, college/university division:

The Raritan Trio
Alexander Bui
Egg Harbor  NJ

Khroma Quartet
Michael Chapa
The Colony  TX

Tsukervanik-Liu Duo
Ming-Jui Liu
Arcadia  CA


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Chamber Music Performance, 2019-20, high school division:

Zeitlos Trio
Tia Chang 
Palo Alto  CA 

Trio Centauri
Lei Gui 
San Jose CA 

Vivo String Quartet 
Ya-Fei Hsu 
Pittsburgh PA 


***

Semi-finalists: make the most of your selection by announcing it on your facebook page, tweet the news, and include a link to this announcement on your website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! Our ensemble just been selected as a SEMI-FINALIST in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing FINALISTS in my division later this year. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists!


Semi-finalists: INSTRUMENTAL SOLOISTS, 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is delighted to announce SEMI-FINALIST instrumental soloists for 2019-20. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from these lists. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Instrumental Performance, 2019-20, professional division:

Mary Elizabeth Bowden
Winston-Salem  NC 
Trumpet 

Mili Chang 
Jersey City NJ 
Flute
 
Christopher Dickey
Pullman WA 
Tuba 
 
Andrew Harrison
Riverside CA 
Alto Saxaphone 
 
Cora Swenson Lee
Rochester NY 
Cello
 
Christopher Leslie
New York NY 
Euphonium 
 
Sam Nelson
Sarasota  FL 
Organ
 
Todd Oxford
Austin TX 
Saxophone 
 
Sarah Shin  
Centreville VA 
Flute
 
Kellach Waddle
Austin TX 
Bass 


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Instrumental Performance, 2019-20, college/university division:

Nicholas Buonanni
Lansing MI 
Flute
 
Giorgio Consolati  
Baltimore MD 
Flute
 
Logan Fox
Greenwood IN 
Percussion
 
Anita Graef 
Evanston IL 
Cello
 
Sooah Jung  
Rochester NY 
Violin  
 
Rajan Kapoor
Hebron CT 
Cello
 
Zachary Ploeger 
Pipestone MN 
Trumpet 


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Instrumental Performance, 2019-20, high school division:

Aaron Hsia 
Santa Clara CA
Violin 
 
Phoebe Wang 
Englewood CO
Cello
 
Christian Wong 
Huntington NY
Violin 

Sheeline Yu
Brentwood TN
Violin  


***

Semi-finalists: make the most of your selection by announcing it on your facebook page, tweet the news, and include a link to this announcement on your website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a SEMI-FINALIST in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing FINALISTS in my division later this year. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists!

Semi-finalists: PIANO (concerto), 2019-20 —The Lorin Hollander Award

$
0
0

Lorin Hollander
The American Prize is delighted to announce SEMI-FINALIST piano concerto soloists for 2019-20, The Lorin Hollander Award. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from these lists. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

The American Prize LORIN HOLLANDER AWARD celebrates the artistry of one of the greatest pianists of his generation. Lorin Hollander has appeared as guest soloist with virtually every major symphony orchestra in the world and is a veteran of over 2,500 performances across the globe. The American Prize is delighted to share the legacy of this legendary artist through the re-naming of the award for Piano Concerto Performance in his honor. For more about the extraordinary life and career of Lorin Hollander, please visit http://lorinhollander.com/

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com


The American Prize in Piano Concerto Performance, 2019-20, The Lorin Hollander Award, professional division:

Hyekyeong Hanna Cho 
Lacey WA      

Anna Dmytrenko    
Newark DE      

Susan Merdinger    
Highland Park IL      

Amaury Morales  
Pittsburgh PA      

Lei Weng
Greeley CO        


The American Prize in Piano Concerto Performance, 2019-20, The Lorin Hollander Award, college/university division:

Eunhae Choi
Savoy   Il      

Bogyeong    Lee 
North Liberty   IA        




***

Semi-finalists: make the most of your selection by announcing it on your facebook page, tweet the news, and include a link to this announcement on your website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a SEMI-FINALIST in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing FINALISTS in my division later this year. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists!

Semi-finalists: PIANO (solo), 2019-20

$
0
0

The American Prize is delighted to announce SEMI-FINALIST piano soloists for 2019-20. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from these lists. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

The American Prize in Piano Performance, 2019-20, professional solo division:

J. Bradley Baker  
Newton     KS

Ezra Donner
Ypsilanti  MI

Karen Salicath Jamali              
Winter Park     FL

Jiyoung Jeoung 
Muncie     IN

John Kamfonas    
Devon PA

Lei Weng   
Greeley    CO

Jentao Yu 
Oakland    CA

Yuting Zhou   
New York   NY


The American Prize in Piano Performance, 2019-20, college/university solo division:

Igor Filipe Do Amaral 
New York   NY     

Eunhae Choi   
Savoy IL     

Shun-Jung Hsu    
Madison    WI     

Bogyeong   Lee    
North Liberty  IA     

Jiayun Li 
Panzhihua  Sichuan

Zhan  Shi 
Panzhihua  Sichuan

Chenyu Wang   
Hartford   CT  


The American Prize in Piano Performance, 2019-20, high school solo division:

Marc Soong  
Alhambra   CA     

Christopher Zhu    
West Roxbury   MA


***

Semi-finalists: make the most of your selection by announcing it on your facebook page, tweet the news, and include a link to this announcement on your website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a SEMI-FINALIST in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing FINALISTS in my division later this year. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists!

SEMI-FINALISTS: men (opera), 2019-20

$
0
0
Friedrich Schorr as Wotan
The American Prize is pleased to announce SEMI-FINALIST men in opera and operetta for 2019-20, The FRIEDRICH and VIRGINIA SCHORR MEMORIAL AWARD in VOICE. Congratulations! As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first. Semi-finalist men in opera will be published separately.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email:theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—opera & operetta, professional division (men),  2019-20

Geoffrey Agpalo    
Evanston    IL                    

Troy Castle    
Marion   IN                    

Dante Doganiero 
Wellsboro     PA                    

Daniel Kamalic   
Rochester     NY                    

Nicholas Perna     
Clinton  MS                    

Leo Radosavljevic        
Wilmette IL                   

Dennis Patrick Ryan     
Jewett City      CT    


***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.






SEMI-FINALISTS: men (art song), 2019-20

$
0
0
Friedrich Schorr as Wotan
The American Prize is pleased to announce SEMI-FINALIST men in art song & oratorio for 2019-20, The FRIEDRICH and VIRGINIA SCHORR MEMORIAL AWARD in VOICE. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first. Semi-finalist men in opera will be published separately.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, professional division (men),  2019-20

Ryan Bradford
Walnut Creek CA   

Emanuel Cristian Caraman 
South Bend     IN   

Dominick Cicco 
Lemoyne  PA    

Dante Doganiero 
Wellsboro    PA    

Daniel Kamalic 
Rochester    NY   

Patrick Muehleise 
Hoffman Estates  IL   

Bryan Pinkall 
Manhatan KS    



The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, college/university division (men),  2019-20

Wooju Kim
Busan  South Korea  

Morgan Manifacier
Stony Brook    NY   

Mats Roolvink
Singapore 



The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, high school division (men),  2019-20

Andreas Ghosh 
New York NY    

Morgan Hunt
Tiburon  CA    

Pablo Rubin Jurado    
New York NY    

Nathan Schludecker   
Terre Haute  IN    
  

***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.






SEMI-FINALISTS: women (opera), 2019-20

$
0
0
Friedrich Schorr as Wotan
The American Prize is pleased to announce SEMI-FINALIST women in opera and operetta for 2019-20, The FRIEDRICH and VIRGINIA SCHORR MEMORIAL AWARD in VOICE. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first. Semi-finalist women in art song/oratorio was published separately.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email:theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—opera & operetta, professional division (women),  2019-20

Aida Baligh
Encino CA

Laura Basse
Helenville WI

Beatrice Beer
Philadelphia PA

Christina Bernardoni
West Dundee IL

Zarah Brock
Frederiksburg VA

Lisa Bryce
Brooklyn NY

Melanie Burbules
East Dundee IL

Diana Cantrelle
Columbia MD

Silvana Chu 
New York NY

Joan Marie Dauber
Chicago IL

Taylor-Alexis Dupont
New York NY

Hillary Esqueda
Chicago IL

Francesca Federico
New York NY

Alba Franco-Cancel
Atascadero CA

Lauren Frey
Pittsburgh PA

Chelsea Friedlander
Port Murray NJ

Anne Fuchs
South Bend IN

Abigail Halon
Atlanta GA

Helen Hassinger
Brookline MA

Lauren Hunt
Fair Lawn NJ

Elizabeth Lewis
Chicago IL

Rachael Long
Chicago IL

Jacquelyn Matava
San Antonio TX

Laura McHugh
Quincy MA

Madison Marie McIntosh
West Palm Beach  FL

Dana Pundt-Barbosa
Cincinnati OH

Stephanie R. Sanchez
Las Cruces NM

Gyu Yeon Shim
New York NY

Letitia Stevens
Malden MA

Ariana Strahl
Chicago IL

Lauren Yokabaskas
Cape Elizabeth  ME


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—opera & operetta, college/university division (women),  2019-20

Anneliese Ayers               
Forest Park IL 

Chantal Braziel
Pittsburgh PA    

Leah Brzyski
Branford CT    

Amalia Crevani
Milford NJ    

Ally Dunavant
Franklin TN    

Kathie Kane
Tonawanda NY    

Karen Kelley
Tempe AZ    

Carolina Lopez Moreno
New York NY

Myka Murphy
Roswell GA    

Maria Nacouzi
Philadelphia   PA    

Elisabeta Racolta
Belmont MA    


***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.






SEMI-FINALISTS: women (art song & oratorio), 2019-20

$
0
0
Friedrich Schorr as Wotan
The American Prize is pleased to announce SEMI-FINALIST women in art song & oratorio for 2019-20, The FRIEDRICH and VIRGINIA SCHORR MEMORIAL AWARD in VOICE. Congratulations! (Be sure to check all divisions. The American Prize may have moved an audition to a more appropriate category.) As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first. Semi-finalist women in opera will be published separately.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on social media and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, professional division (women),  2019-20

Ashley Kay Armstrong   
Winterset  IA

Laura Basse 
Helenville WI
   
Lisa Bryce 
Brooklyn NY
   
Silvana Chu   
New York NY

Ann  Cravero
West Des Moines IA

Rachel Deatherage  
New York   NY

Carley De Franco
Somerville MA
   
Samantha Farmilant   
Chicago IL
   
Anne Fuchs 
South Bend IN
   
Michele Elizabeth Kennedy
Oakland  CA
   
Evangelia Leontis
Jamaica  VT
   
Thea Lobo
Sarasota FL
   
Jacquelyn Matava
San Antonio  TX
   
Courtney Miller
Miami Beach FL
   
Kimberly Prins Moeller
Houghton  NY
   
Amy Pfrimmer
Destrehan  LA
   
Stella Dayrit Roden 
Warrensburg  MO
   
Jenna Schroer
Flossmoor  IL

Penelope Shumate
Macomb  IL
   
Letitia Stevens
Malden  MA
   
Christine Steyer
Oak Park   IL
   
Susan Wheeler
Burke  VA
   
Anne Wright
Greenville TX
   
Lauren Yokabaskas  
Cape Elizabeth ME
   
Melissa Zgouridi
Salzburg   Austria
     


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, college/university division (women),  2019-20

Anneliese Ayers 
Forest Park IL 
   
Jessica Arielle Bloch 
Bradenton  FL  

Chantal Braziel
Pittsburgh PA  
   
Leah Brzyski
Branford  CT  

Alexandra Colaizzi
Hollywood  FL  
   
Clare Demer 
Tucson AZ  
   
Kathleen Kane  
Tonawanda  NY  
   
Jillian Krempasky   
Schnecksville  PA  
   
Monica Ramich
Rochester  NY  
   
Lucine Topouzian   
Evanston   IL  
   
Samantha Williams
Manhattan  KS  


The American Prize in Voice / Friedrich & Virginia Schorr Memorial Award—art song/oratorio, high school division (men),  2019-20

Malaina Kapoor
Redwood City   CA

Krystal Y. Mao   
Fremont  CA

Pauline Rogers
Fremont  CA

Michelle Skylar
Sunny Isles  FL    

***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.







Semi-finalists: COMPOSERS (pops division), 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is pleased to announce 2019-20 SEMI-FINALIST composers in the pops / light music division. Congratulations!
As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—Pops / Light Music, 2019-20

Aaron Alter                
Carlsbad  CA      
Solar Rays; Vanilla, Chocolate and Strawberry  
 
Jennifer Bellor               
Las Vegas  NV      
High Resolution        
 
M.L. Daniels               
Round Rock  TX      
Mysterious Journey    
 
Jonathan Graybill             
Baltimore  MD      
Winter Celebration    
 
Douglas Hedwig               
Chattanooga  TN      
Fanfare Alegre: Dia dl la fiesta            
 
Penka Kouneva              
Tujunga  CA      
EARTH
 
Heather Niemi Savage               
Wood River Jct  RI      
Daughter of the Stars                
     
Stephen C. Sullivan             
Greenwood  IN      
Vale of Tears    


***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.


***

Semi-finalists: COMPOSERS (opera/theater/film/dance division), 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is pleased to announce SEMI-FINALIST composers in the OPERA/THEATER/FILM/DANCE divisions, 2019-20. Congratulations!

As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

Please make us aware of any misprints in the listings below by emailing: theamericanprize@gmail.com

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—OPERA/THEATER/FILM/DANCE, professional division, 2019-20

Richard Chiarappa     
West Hartford    CT   
Lincoln and Booth: The Concert Musical         

Roger Cichy     
Scituate     RI   
Survivors of Malmedy: December 1944       

Wallace De Pue, Sr.    
Bowling Green    OH   
Something Special         

Paul Elwood            
Marseille  France 
Lulu of the Plains        

Paul Geraci      
West Lafayette   IN   
ROBOTS       

Eva Conley Kendrick    
Millis     MA   
Misfortune            

Sheli Nan
Berkeley     CA   
SAGA of the 21st Century Girl            

Zach Redler      
Greenwich    CT   
The Falling and The Rising      

Judith Lynn Stillman    
Providence     RI   
Small Step, Giant Leap: A Lunar Fantasy 
 

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—OPERA/THEATER/FILM/DANCE, student division, 2019-20

Nicolas Chuaqui     
Rochester    NY   
The Forest of Dreams        

Hans Bridger Heruth      
Liberty      MO   
A Certain Madness   

Calvin Hitchcock     
Chesapeake     VA      
819: based on the Stanford Prison Experiment       

Evan L. Snyder      
Okemos     MI   
A Capacity for Evil         

Margaret Vignola  & Raphael Lucas   
Dix Hills    NY   
Confessions



***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.



Semi-finalists: COMPOSERS (band/wind ensemble division), 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is pleased to announce 2019-20 SEMI-FINALIST composers for band / wind ensemble in both professional and student divisions. Congratulations!

As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

Please make us aware of any misprints in the listings below by emailing: theamericanprize@gmail.com


SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—Band / Wind Ensemble (professional division), 2019-20

Adrienne Albert     
Los Angeles  CA      
COURAGE for Winds
      
David Avshalomov 
Santa Monica  CA      
"Nigun Prophecy," Lifeboat Variations 
     
Howard J. Buss
Lakeland  FL      
Vibrant Horizons 
       
Ashley Floyd
Athens  GA      
Glitch         
 
Gregory Fritze     
Daytona Beach  FL      
The Four Seasons
      
Cooper Minnis     
St. Louis  MO      
The Darkest Hour
 
Shawn E. Okpebholo  
Wheaton  IL      
This is Africa  
 
Andrew David Perkins    
Fenton  MI      
Until the Night Collapses       
 
Walter Saul
Fresno  CA      
Concerto for Flute and Symphonic Band 
 
Larry Tuttle     
Van Nuys  CA      
Big World, Utopia Rising  
 
Tyler Goodrich White
Lincoln  NE      
Caldera         
 
Michael Glenn Williams   
Marina Del Rey      CA      
Let Freedom Ring   



SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—Band / Wind Ensemble (student division), 2019-20

Zach Gulaboff Davis
Salem  OR      
Reverie     
    
Martin Hebel
Hamden  CT      
Tides Within
    
Jorge Machain    
Henderson  NV      
Bite the Bullet       
 
Teddy Mason
East Providence  RI      
Sea of Clouds

Zachary  Ploeger    
Pipestone  MN      
Symphony No.1         

Matt Ridge
Bloomington  IN      
Flirting with Disaster     

Chee Weng Yim 
Lamoni  IA      
Meditation No.1   


***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.

HONORED ARTISTS of The American Prize, 2019

$
0
0
The American Prize National Nonprofit Competitions in the Performing Arts is delighted to recognize eight contest laureates as Honored Artists of The American Prize, 2019.  Honored Artists are individuals (or ensembles) who have proven themselves to be artists of "sustained excellence" over a number of seasons as laureates in the competitions. Honored Artists will be highlighted in a separate section on The American Prize website and on the competition's Facebook pages, will receive expanded listings on The American Prize blog, will be featured in individualized press releases sent to local, regional and national media, and receive a special, framed certificate. Honored Artists also receive an application fee waiver for a future competition.

The 2019 HONORED ARTISTS of The American Prize are:
  • Oliver Caplan, composer and artistic director, Medford, MA
  • Gregory Fritze, composer, Daytona Beach Shores, FL
  • Tara Villa Keith, conductor, Davidson, NC
  • Darren Lawson, stage director and producer, Greenville, SC
  • Susan Merdinger, pianist and chamber musician, Highland Park, IL
  • Judith Stillman, pianist and composer, Providence, RI
  • William Vollinger, composer, Woodcliff Lake, NJ
  • Allentown Band, Ronald Demkee, music director, Allentown, PA
Photos and biographies of these artists may be found below.

Several years ago Maestro David Katz, chief judge of The American Prize, expressed a hope for the competitions "to do more" to advance the arts. The creation of the Honored Artist designation is one way the contests seek to bring additional recognition to laureates the organization deems especially worthy. First awarded in 2014, Honored Artists of The American Prize will now become an annual part of The American Prize contest activities, presented as New Year's Day honors.  

Previously inducted Honored Artists of The American Prize include: 

    •    Lee Actor, composer, Monte Sereno, CA
    •    Donald Appert, conductor, Vancouver, WA
    •    Jesse Ayers, composer, Canton, OH
    •    David Avshalomov, composer, Santa Monica, CA
    •    Robert Butts, conductor, Madison, NJ
    •    Peggy Dettwiler, conductor, Mansfield, PA
    •    Nancy Bloomer Deussen, composer, Mountain View, CA
    •    Jonathan Handman, conductor, LaGrangeville, NY
    •    David Sartor, composer and conductor, Hermitage, TN
    •    Robert Wendel, composer, New York, NY
    •    University of South Dakota Chamber Singers, David Holdhusen, director, Vermillion, SD
    •    "Re-choired Element" Chamber Choir of Linn-Benton Community College, James Reddan, director, Albany, OR


Honored Artists of The American Prize are awarded in memory of Maestro Katz's father, Abraham R. Katz, a gifted amateur musician, who died in 1999.




Oliver Caplan, composer and artistic director,
Medford, MA
Oliver Caplan
Award-winning American composer Oliver Caplan writes melodies that nourish our souls, offering a voice of hope in an uncertain world. Inspired by the resiliency of the human spirit and beauty of the natural world, his music celebrates stories of social justice, conservation and community. Mr. Caplan’s works have been performed in over 125 performances nationwide. He has been commissioned by the Atlanta Chamber Players, Bella Piano Trio, Bronx Arts Ensemble, Brookline Symphony Orchestra, Columbia University Wind Ensemble and New Hampshire Master Chorale, among others. Winner of a Special Citation for the American Prize in Orchestral Composition, additional recognitions include two Veridian Symphony Competition Wins, the Fifth House Ensemble Competition Grand Prize, seven ASCAP Awards, and fellowships at VCCA and the Brush Creek Foundation. Recordings of Mr. Caplan’s music include his 2017 release You Are Not Alone, which has been featured on Apple Music’s Classical A-list, 2012 debut album Illuminations and a track on the Sinfonietta of Riverdale’s 2016 album New World Serenade (Albany Records).

Mr. Caplan is the Artistic Director of Juventas New Music Ensemble. He holds degrees from Dartmouth College and the Boston Conservatory, is a voting member of the Recording Academy, and resides in Medford, Massachusetts.


Gregory Fritze, composer, Daytona Beach Shores, FL
Gregory Fritze
Gregory Fritze is a prize-winning composer and Fulbright Scholar. His compositions have been performed more than one thousand times in twenty-six countries. He has written over ninety compositions for orchestra, band, chamber ensembles and soloists.  He won over sixty composition awards including First Prize in 2017 WASBE (World Association of Symphonic Bands and Ensembles) Composition Contest, First Prize Winner in Concurso Tenerife, Spain and others. Several professional ensembles have commissioned and played his music including the Rhode Island Philharmonic, The Army Band “Pershing’s Own”, The Banda Municipal of Madrid, and others. His music is published by several publishers in the US, South America and Europe and recorded on Albany Records, MSR Classics and others. He has been a guest lecturer at many universities and music festivals in the United States, Canada, Japan, South America and Europe. He taught at Berklee College of Music as Professor and Chair of Composition from 1979 to 2016. He has Composition degrees from the Boston Conservatory and Indiana University with Distinction. 


Tara Villa Keith, conductor, Davidson, NC
Tara Villa Keith
Tara Villa Keith is in her sixteenth season as music director of the Davidson College Symphony Orchestra (DCSO) in North Carolina and in her tenth season as music director of the Lee County Community Orchestra (LCCO) in Sanford, North Carolina. As an associate professor of music, she teaches a plethora of college courses and is a guest lecturer and clinician throughout the region. Tara also serves as a cover conductor and instructor for the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra’s Symphony 101 adult education program. Tara has won national awards for her work with both the Davidson and Lee County orchestras, and has guest conducted orchestras throughout the south, northeast, and abroad. In 2008, she was the recipient of a League of American Orchestras Women Conductors Grant. Tara holds degrees from Franklin & Marshall College, the Pennsylvania State University, and the University of South Carolina. Please visit her website at taravillakeith.com.  


Darren Lawson, stage director and producer,
Greenville, SC
Darren Lawson
Dr. Darren P. Lawson is dean of the School of Fine Arts and Communication at Bob Jones University in Greenville, SC.  He has a BA in Rhetoric and Public Address from Bob Jones University, an MA in Platform Arts from Bob Jones University, and PhD in Communication Studies from the University of Kansas.  He is a member of the University Classic Players and has portrayed such roles as Cyrano in Cyrano de Bergerac, Leontes in The Winter’s Tale, Henry in King Henry IV, Duke of Buckingham in Richard III: The Terrible Reign, Bottom the Weaver in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Macduff in Macbeth, Jaques in As You Like It, Feste in Twelfth Night, and many others.  He stage directs for the Bob Jones University Opera Association with productions including Little Women: The Broadway Musical, Aida, Samson et Dalila, Andrea Chenier, Mefistofele, L’Elisir d’Amore, Rigoletto, Il Trovatore, and Simeon.  http://www.bju.edu/events/fine-arts/concert-opera-drama/archive/ 


Susan Merdinger, pianist and chamber musician, Highland Park, IL
Susan Merdinger,
Steinway Artist, Susan Merdinger has been internationally acclaimed in prestigious newspapers and journals for her stunning performances. Among her many honors, Merdinger is a two-time First Prize Winner of the Bradshaw and Buono International Piano Competition in Professional Solo and Duo Piano, a two-time Gold Medalist of the Global Music Awards, Winner of Best Classical Album in the Clouzine international Music Awards, Winner of the Dewar’s Young Artists Award in Music, Winner of the Artists International Young Musicians Competition, and 2nd Prize Winner in the American Prize for Chamber Music. Performing her sold-out solo recital debut in Carnegie Recital Hall at age twenty-four, Merdinger has continued to grace the stages of some of the world’s best concert halls. She has appeared as soloist with professional orchestras such as the Chicago Philharmonic, the State Symphony Orchestra of Mexico, the Adelphi Chamber Orchestra, the Ridgewood Symphony, the Rockland Symphony and the Northbrook Symphony and has been a frequent Visiting Artist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chamber Music Series. Merdinger’s live performances and recordings have been broadcast worldwide on WQXR, WFMT, BRT-3 (Belgian National Radio), NPR and BBC Television. Merdinger received her formal education at Yale University, the Yale School of Music, and the Manhattan School of Music. She is on the Faculty of Summit Music Festival in New York, Burgos Music Festival in Spain, and is Founder and Artistic Director of Sheridan Music Studio LLC, The Five Greene, Sheridan Solisti, and Pianissimo! Ensemble. 


Judith Stillman, pianist and composer, Providence, RI
Judith Stillman
Judith Lynn Stillman holds Bachelor’s, Master’s and Doctoral degrees from Juilliard. Hailed by Wynton Marsalis as “remarkable, a consummate artist." Winner 18 competitions, Pell Award in the Arts; Artist-in-Residence and Professor at Rhode Island College, and an internationally-renowned composer, pianist, choral conductor.

Stillman's compositions have received extensive national media coverage: "breathtaking masterpiece,""Stillman's true genius shines... she reaches for the stars and succeeds brilliantly...transports us through darkness toward life and growth,""startlingly beautiful musical score."

World premieres at Lincoln Center, highlights include Marlboro, Tanglewood, Grammy's honoring Rostropovich, Artist-in-Residence in China, Russia, Czech Republic, Beijing's Central Conservatory, Prague Conservatory, Royal Conservatoire. Collaborators include Wynton Marsalis (duo album, SONY), Mark O'Connor, Richard Stoltzman, Herbie Hancock (BOSE commercial), members of NY Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, Borromeo, Cassatt, Shanghai Quartets. 

As composer-filmmaker, winner Best Score, Best Multimedia Film, Best Music Video, Audience Choice Awards in international film festivals in NYC, LA and in the UK. 


William Vollinger, composer, Woodcliff Lake, NJ
William Vollinger
William Vollinger’s music is described as “3D: different, direct and deep.” His music is published by Abingdon, API, Heritage, Kjos, Lawson-Gould, and Laurendale. Five works were editor's choices in the J.W. Pepper Catalogue. Recent premieres included Jackson State Symphony, San Francisco Choral Artists, Ridgewood Concert Band, Hamilton-Fairfield Symphony, Garden State Philharmonic and Classic V Winds. Thirteen of his compositions have been nominated for the American Prize and two of his works “Stalin and the Little Girl” and “It Takes a Long Time to Grow up in New Jersey” received Judge's Citations.  


Allentown Band, Ronald Demkee, music director, Allentown, PA
Allentown Band, Ronald Demkee, music director
A prominent feature of nineteenth-century musical Americana was the concert band, and the Allentown Band has kept that tradition alive since 1828. Drawn from within a fifty-mile radius, the band’s musicians, as different as their backgrounds, share one common goal: to create and preserve concert band music at a level of excellence rarely heard from a community band.

All members of the Allentown Band approach their music-making in a professional manner, though none makes his or her living from music performance alone. Many, however, are teachers of music in schools and in private studios. Some teach a variety of subjects unrelated to music. Others are engaged in engineering, accounting, sales, insurance, medicine and dentistry, or in various office work or building trades. When they meet to perform, however, whether in a public park setting, retirement community, or in Carnegie Hall, both age and daytime vocation disappear. All effort is concentrated, striving for integrity, inspiration and impact whether performing an overture transcribed from opera, a modern composition written especially for concert band, or a Sousa march.

A typical Allentown Band schedule includes roughly forty-five yearly performances. The venue fluctuates, from concert stage to city park, from church picnic to university commencement, from Allentown’s Miller Symphony Hall to New York’s Carnegie Hall. The band realizes the importance of engaging and encouraging our youth, and is committed to Education Outreach, that includes annual free concerts for the greater Lehigh Valley’s elementary and middle school children and a yearly “Side-by-Side Concert,” where talented secondary-school student musicians perform a concert “side-by-side” with the band.

The Allentown Band is recognized worldwide, having appeared on Good Morning America, and The American Experience in a feature called “If You Knew Sousa;” and is heard regularly on radio both regionally and as far away as Sydney, Australia, on a program called “Music That’s Band.” The band has made four European concert tours, performing in Switzerland, Austria and France. The band has recorded 31 Volumes of “Our Band Heritage which have reached listeners in all 50 states and 24 countries.

The honors. awards and accolades accrued by the Allentown Band over the years at local, state and national levels, are too numerous to list here, so perhaps the City of Allentown’s “Arts Ovation Award” presented to the band “for significant contributions to the cultural life of the community” will provide a succinct if not comprehensive summary.

***
Congratulations to all our honorees. 






Semi-finalists: COMPOSERS (orchestra division), 2019-20

$
0
0
The American Prize is pleased to announce an extensive listing of 2020 SEMI-FINALIST composers for orchestra in both professional and student divisions, representing many styles and aesthetics. Congratulations!

As the contests unfold, finalists, runners-up and winners will be selected from this list. To know the exact date when finalists will be announced, please like our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter #AmericanPrize, where that information will be published first.

All contestants are reminded they are responsible for the viability of their online links to audition materials. Those links must remain active until the end of the contest year. Questions, or to make us aware of any misprints in the listings below, please email: theamericanprize@gmail.com

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog. A sample announcement may be found at the end of the post.

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—Orchestra (professional division), 2020

Lee Actor
Monte Sereno  CA  
Symphony No. 2
   
Jean Ahn  
Orinda  CA  
Woven Silk
  
Bruce Babcock 
Pasadena  CA  
Event Horizon 
   
John Baboukis
New Cairo Egypt  
A Symphony for Cairo 
  
Robert J. Bradshaw
Gloucester   MA  
Echoes in the Deep: meditation on the depth of our impact on the Earth's oceans 
   
Sabrina Clarke  
Philadelphia    PA  
Still ist's im Wald
  
Tina Claussen
Springfield  MO  
Shimmer
  
Mark Dal Porto 
Portales NM  
Mystic Mountain  
   
Ken Davies  
Gautier  MS  
Strings Ablaze
  
Brent  Edstrom 
Spokane  WA  
Prairie Songs: Remembering Antonia  
  
Peter Solomon Gross
Bayville NY  
AUTUMNUS: Chaconne in F# Minor 
  
Gregory J. Jackson 
Montgomery   AL  
Symphony No. 4, Op. 113 " The Four Horsemen"  
   
Misook Kim  
Naperville   IL  
The AWAKENING 
  
Penka Kouneva 
Tujunga  CA  
BETRAYAL OF TECHNOLOGY  
  
Hye Kyung Lee  
Granville    OH  
Climbing Tomorrow
  
Lawrence R. Mumford 
Laguna Niguel   CA  
The Sunset Wind  
  
Alla Pavlova 
Huntington   NY  
Symphony No. 2, For the New Millennium
  
Leanna Primiani
Santa Monica    CA 
1001
 
Lucas  Richman 
Bangor ME  
Symphony: This Will Be Our Reply 
  
Miguel A. Roig-Francoli 
Cincinnati   OH  
Sinfonia, "De Profundis"
  
Maxim Samarov 
Harvey LA  
Ars moriendi  

Joseph Sowa 
Watertown    MA  
Glimmer, Glisten, Glow  
  
Lauren Spavelko
Pickerington    OH  
Kéyah
   
Aaron Spotts  
Tallahassee  FL  
Life for Life 
   
Larry Tuttle  
Van Nuys CA  
Thousand Mile Suite
  
William Vollinger 
Woodcliff Lake  NJ  
Portraits of the Jersey Shore
 
Kellach Waddle  
Austin TX  
The Chemical Composition of Tears; Were You Dreaming of January Vampires
  
Tyler Goodrich White
Lincoln  NE  
A Brand-New Summer
  
Kevin Wilt 
Boynton Beach   FL  
Imagined Adventures: Running on Rooftops;  Song of the Phoenix

       

SEMI-FINALISTS: The American Prize in Composition—Orchestra (student division), 2020

Nicholas Bentz  
Los Angeles  CA  
A Cosmos in Stone, Respawning  

Dinah Bianchi 
Belleville   MI  
Anaphora 

Cory Brodack 
Saint Peters    MO  
Nodus Tollens  

Nicolas Chuaqui 
Rochester    NY  
Aurora

Zachary Gulaboff Davis
Salem  OR  
Tailwind 

Moni Guo  
Los Angeles  CA  
Night Ghost

Jeffry Langford
Katy   TX  
Ricercar Ner   

Luis Enrique McDougal
McAllen  TX  
Puisque je suis fumeux

Wai Leung William So   
Kennedy Town    Hong Kong
Blue Fire

Patrick Andrew Thompson
Jersey City  NJ  
Through a Glass, Darkly

Evan Jay Williams
Baltimore    MD  
"That Which We Cannot Live Without"  
  
Miranda Yu   
Palo Alto    CA  
Reflections of A Sixteen Year Old Girl  



***

We invite semi-finalists to make the most of their selection by announcing it on their facebook page, tweeting the news, and including a link to this announcement on their website or blog.

Here is a sample announcement:

"Great News! I've just been selected as a semi-finalist in the (blank) division of The American Prize national non-profit competitions in the performing arts. Here's the link: (copy link here). The American Prize will be announcing finalists in my division soon. You can learn more about this prestigious national competition here: www.theamericanprize.org or follow the news on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-American-Prize-celebrating-American-excellence-in-the-arts/214320622728 or Twitter: https://twitter.com/americanprize"

Please feel free to modify or expand this announcement to suit your needs.

Congratulations to all semi-finalists.
Viewing all 1261 articles
Browse latest View live