MELINDA WAGNER
Dr David C F Wright
Melinda Wagner was born in 1957 of a musical
family living in Philadelphia. She learned to play the piano at
an early age and became quite proficient. She studied at Hamilton
College where she received her BA. At the University of Chicago
she received her masters' degree and her doctorate at the University
of Pennsylvania. Among her tutors for composition were Ralph Shapey,
Richard Wernick, Shulamit Ran, Jay Reise and George Crumb. She
has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Swarthmore College,
Syracuse University and at New York University.
She has received many prodigious awards and honours
including a fellowship from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Howard
Foundation from Brown University. She has obtained grants from
Arts Councils in Illinois and New York. Her work, Presages, won
a ASCAP prize in 1986. She had already been honoured with three
ASCAP Young Composer Awards. Commissions have come from various
trusts and foundations and her music has been performed by the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the American Composers Orchestra,
the Chamber Music Group of the Lincoln Centre and other organisations.
She is the third woman to win a Pulitzer Prize
for music. Ellen Taafe Zwillich won it in 1983 for her Symphony
no.1 (Three Movements for Orchestra). Shulamit Ran won it in 1991
for her Symphony and Wagner won it in 1999 for her Concerto for
flute, string orchestra and percussion.
This prize has been won by many famous American
composers such as Samuel Barber, William Bolcom, Elliot Carter,
Aaron Copland, George Crumb, Karel Husa, Norman Dello Joio, Leon
Kirchner, George Perle, Walter Piston, Quincy Porter, Roger Sessions,
William Schuman, Gunther Schuller and Robert Ward.
Five thousand dollars was awarded to Wagner for
her Flute Concerto premiered on May 30, 1998 by the Westchester
Philharmonic in Purchase, New York. The composer made a paradoxical
remark when she said the concerto tells a story but has no programme.
Three years earlier Paul Dunkel had conducted Wagner's Falling
Angels. He asked for the flute concerto and raised the money for
it. Dunkel was the flautist in the premiere.
Falling Angels was commissioned by the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra and performed by them in 1995. Her Sextet for
flute, clarinet, violin, viola, cello and piano. It lasts about
fifteen minutes and is in four movements. The opening movement
alternates in tempi and the music is spaced and often seemingly
dysfunctional. The second movement opens with a lyrical cello
solo but the music still feels dysfunctional but, nonetheless,
it is held together by clear lines. The next movement lasts under
a minute and has been described as a collection of whispers. The
finale is a set of variations. Her music has melody and dissonance
and many mood changes.
She is a composer to watch.
Copyright David C F Wright 1999. This
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