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David Ward-Steinman
David Ward-Steinman (born November 6, 1936) is an American composer
and music professor.
Ward-Steinman studied at Florida State University and the University
of Illinois, where he received the Kinley Memorial Fellowship for
foreign study. After receiving his doctorate, he was a fellow at
Princeton University from 1970. His teachers included John Boda,
Burrill Phillips, Darius Milhaud (at Aspen, Colorado), Milton
Babbitt (at Tanglewood) and Nadia Boulanger. He studied piano under
Edward Kilenyi, and in 1995 attended a course at IRCAM.
From 1970 to 1972, Ward-Steinman was the Ford Foundation
composer-in-residence for the Tampa Bay area of Florida and he spent
1989-90 in Australia under a Fulbright Senior Scholar Award, with
residencies at the Victorian Centre for the Arts and La Trobe
University in Melbourne.
Ward-Steinman has received a number of commissions, most notably
from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. His orchestral works have been
performed by a number of ensembles, including the Japan Philharmonic
Orchestra, New Orleans Philharmonic Orchestra, San Diego Symphony
Orchestra, and the Seattle Symphony Orchestra. His music has been
recorded on a number of labels, including Harmonia Mundi.
Ward-Steinman has written a book, Toward a Comparative Structural
Theory of the Arts, and co-authored Comparative Anthology of Musical
Forms.
Ward-Steinman is currently dividing his time between San Diego State
University and Indiana University in Bloomington. He was formerly
Composer-in-Residence and Professor of Music at San Diego State, and
is now Distinguished Professor of Music Emeritus there, and also an
Adjunct Professor of Music at Indiana, where he teaches in the
spring.
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