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Lloyd Ultan
Lloyd Ultan (b. New York City, June 12, 1929; d. 1998) was an American
composer of contemporary classical music.
Ultan received a bachelor's degree from New York University, a master's
degree from Columbia University, and a doctorate from the University of
Iowa. In 1971, he founded, and, from 1971 to 1974, served as Director of
the Composer's Residency Program at Wolf Trap Farm Park in Vienna,
Virginia.
Ultan served as chairman of the Department of Music at American
University in Washington, D.C. for 13 years, and spent a year as
Visiting Professor of Composition and Theory at the Royal College of
Music in London. He has also lectured at Cambridge University and been a
visiting composer on numerous college and university campuses in the
United States.
He was a professor and chairman (and later emeritus professor and
chairman) of composition, music theory, and electronic and computer
music at the School of Music University of Minnesota, and also served as
the Director of the Electronic/Computer Music Studio. He was responsible
for founding the School of Music and served as its director from 1975 to
1986.
He composed over 60 works for a wide variety of genres including
electronic music, solo and chamber works, and compositions for voice.
His works have been performed and broadcast throughout the world,
including in China and Taiwan. His works have been performed by the
Tokyo String Quartet, the Pro Arte String Quartet, the Minnesota
Orchestra, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Boston Symphony, William
Blount, Alexander Braginsky, Young Nam Kim, Tanya Remenikova, and Thomas
Murray. He has written numerous articles and a book, Music Theory:
Compositional Problems and Practices in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
(with an accompanying workbook/anthology).
Ultan's notable students include Edie Hill and Scott L. Miller.
Among his numerous fellowships, grants, and awards were a Rockefeller
Foundation Residency Fellowship and three residencies at the MacDowell
Colony, with a Norlin/MacDowell Outstanding Composer of the Year Award
for 1982.
The 160-seat Lloyd Ultan Recital Hall at the University of Minnesota's
School of Music (Donald N. Ferguson Hall) is named for him.
Works
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
Curved Mirrors, oboe, clarinet, and piano
Dialogues III, violin and viola
Suite for Brass Quintet |
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