Joan Tower
Joan Tower
Joan Tower (born September 6, 1938 in New Rochelle, New York) is a
contemporary American composer. She became known for her first
orchestral composition, Sequoia, a tone poem which structurally depicts
a giant redwood from trunk to needles. Among her other prominent pieces
are the Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman, which is something of a response
to Aaron Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man, her two string quartets,
and an assortment of other tone poems. Tower was pianist and founding
member of the Naumburg Award-winning Da Capo Chamber Players, which
commissioned and premiered many of her early works, including her
widely-performed Petroushskates.
Tower's style is of the 20th century, and the 21st. The rhythm and
melodic flow of her music are very flexible, not limited by tonality or
time signature, and her orchestration encompasses a wide range of tone
colors. She teaches that the best pieces are the ones that are not
"safe" in terms of sitting within a key or meter or standard group of
instruments.
She was the first woman to win the Grawemeyer Award for Music
Composition. In addition, she is the first composer chosen for Made in
America, an ambitious and groundbreaking commissioning program that is a
collaboration of the American Symphony Orchestra League and Meet the
Composer. The commissioned work Made in America is to be performed by
orchestras in every state in the union during the 2005-2006 season. This
is the only project of its kind to involve smaller-budget orchestras as
commissioning agents of new work by major composers.
Tower's writing is exclusively instrumental. She has expressed no
intention to compose using vocalists or extramusical texts, noting that
she simply does not feel that words are required to express anything in
music.
She is currently the Asher B. Edelman Professor of Music at Bard College
in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, a member of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters and serves on the Artistic Advisory panel of the BMI
Foundation. She is a graduate of The Walnut Hill School.
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