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Gerald Cohen (composer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerald Cohen
Birth nameGerald Cohen
Born1960
New York, New York
GenresOpera, Choral Music, Orchestra music
Occupation(s)Composer, pianist, cantor
Instrument(s)Piano, Vocals
Years active1982–present

Gerald Cohen (born 1960 in New York, NY) is an American composer and cantor. He is currently the cantor at Shaarei Tikvah in Scarsdale, New York and is based in Yonkers.[1] Cohen serves on the faculties of Jewish Theological Seminary[2] and Hebrew Union College.[3] Cohen's compositions are published by Oxford University Press, G. Schirmer/AMP, and Transcontinental Music Publications.[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Adonai Ro'i by Gerald Cohen
  • Haneshama Lach--Gerald Cohen
  • Gerald Cohen: Playing for our Lives, 1st Mvt. (Cassatt String Quartet)
  • Sea Of Reeds - Gerald Cohen
  • Gerald Cohen. "Adonai Ro'i lo Echsar"

Transcription

Biography

Cohen earned a B.A. in music from Yale University in 1982.[1] Shortly afterwards, he began working as a cantor while attending Columbia University where he received a Doctor of Musical Arts degree (D.M.A.)[1] in composition, with distinction, in 1993. His principal composition teachers were Jack Beeson, Mario Davidovsky, George Edwards, and Andrew Thomas. Jacob Mendelson was Cohen's primary cantorial studies teacher.[4] Cohen's music has been commissioned by chamber ensembles including: the Cassatt String Quartet,[5] Verdehr Trio,[6] Franciscan String Quartet,[7] Chesapeake Chamber Music,[8] Grneta Ensemble,[9] Wave Hill Trio,[10] Bronx Arts Ensemble,[11] and Brooklyn Philharmonic Brass Quintet;[12] by choruses including the New York Virtuoso Singers,[13] Canticum Novum Singers,[14] Syracuse Children's Chorus,[7] St. Bartholomew's Church in New York City,[15] Zamir Chorale of Boston,[16] Usdan Center Chorus,[17] the Cantors Assembly of America,[14] HaZamir: The International Jewish High School Choir,[18] and the Westchester Youth Symphony.[19] Battery Dance Company commissioned his Songs of Tagore[20] which accompanied dance performances on tours throughout India and Eastern Europe.

Cohen's music has been performed by the Borromeo String Quartet,[21] Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra,[22] San Diego Symphony,[13] Westchester Philharmonic,[13] Riverside Symphony,[8] Plymouth Music Series Orchestra, New York Concert Singers, Princeton Pro Musica, and many other ensembles and soloists.[23]

Music and style

Cohen's music reflects his embracing of both Western classical traditions and his Jewish roots. Ken Smith, writing for Gramaphone, says of Cohen's style:

Cohen composes with a strong sense of tradition -- one that embraces Brahms, Bartok and Britten on one hand and his own Jewish heritage on the other. Which side becomes more prominent depends, it seems, on how deeply any particular piece is rooted to text. A cantor himself, Cohen's songs and his Passover Cantata V'higad'ta L'vincha display a linguistic fluidity and a melodic gift that hints at what the Hebrew liturgy might be like today if Britten had changed faiths. Once away from the language, however, the Jewish roots recede into a broader modernist context. His String Quartet No. 2, likewise, uses traditional structures, namely sonata form in the outer movements encasing a slow and lyrical elegy to his late father. The composer's self-described synthesis of art, religion and family in this piece reveals a very personal modernism that makes for more difficult listening -- imagine Bartok spiked with Hebraic modal and metric shifts -- but offers greater emotional rewards as well.[24]

Cohen cites both his experience as a cantor and the western classical tradition (Beethoven, Mahler, and Copland) as equal influences. In a 2002 interview for New Music Box, he said, "in a way what I'm trying to do is have that all come together, perhaps not completely consciously, but just that those are also different sides of me which I want to project into whatever I'm writing."[4]

Cohen's best known work is a "shimmering setting"[25] of Psalm 43.

He is the composer of three operatic works: the 2013 opera Steal a Pencil for Me, based on a true story of love in a WWII concentration camp, which Lucid culture described as "…mesmerizingly hypnotic, intricately contrapuntal" music, with moments of "…Bernard Herrmann-esque, shivery terror…".[26] His opera Sarah and Hagar (2008), based on the story from the book of Genesis, and Seed (2011), a one-act opera about love and choices for a post-apocalyptic couple, have been performed in concert form.

Recordings

Title Year Label Catalog No. Notes
Sea of Reeds: Chamber Music of Gerald Cohen 2014 Parma Contains Variously Blue, Sea of Reeds, Yedid Nefesh, and Grneta Variations
Gerald Cohen: Generations 2007 New World Records NWCR879 Contains Trio for viola, cello and piano; Four Songs on Hebrew Texts;
String Quartet No. 2; and V'higad'ta L'vincha (And You Shall Tell Your Child)

List of works

Opera

  • 2008 Sarah and Hagar, Opera in two acts, libretto by Charles Kondek - 135’
  • 2011 Seed, Opera in one act, libretto by David Simpatico - 40’
  • 2013 Steal a Pencil for Me, Opera in two acts, libretto by Deborah Brevoort - 140’

Instrumental Chamber Music

  • 1988 Trio for violin, cello and piano - 16’
  • 1991 String Quartet #2 – 25′
  • 1994 Aria and Scherzo for violin and viola - 12′
  • 1995 Songs of Tagore, for chamber ensemble(music for choreography) – 22′
  • 1995 Quintet for Brass - 16′
  • 1999 Trio for viola, cello and piano - 20’
  • 2001 Preludes and Debka, for trombone and string quartet - 13’
  • 2007 Yedid Nefesh: Trio for clarinet, viola and piano - 26’
  • 2009 Variously Blue: Trio for clarinet, violin and piano - 14’
  • 2009 Sea of Reeds: Five Hebrew songs for two clarinets and piano - 15′
  • 2009 Preludes and Debka, for clarinet and string quartet - 13’
  • 2010 Grneta Variations, for two clarinets and piano- 14’
  • 2010 Three Hebrew Songs, for violin and piano – 12′
  • 2012 Playing for our lives, for string quartet - 23’

Orchestral Music (including works with voice)

  • 1994 Elegy for String Orchestra - 8’
  • 1997 O you who linger in the gardens…, for symphony orchestra - 10′
  • Y’varech’cha (Blessing for children)
2000 Arrangement for treble voices and orchestra
2006 Arrangement for voice and string orchestra
  • Adonai Ro’i Lo Echsar (Psalm 23)
2000 Arrangement for voice and orchestra
2002 Arrangement for chorus and orchestra
2006 Arrangement for voice and string orchestra
  • 2009 Preludes and Debka, for trombone and orchestra - 13′

Choral Music

  • 1983 Libavtini Achoti Chala, for solo voice, SATB chorus and piano - 3’
  • 1987 Lo Lanu (Psalm 115), for SATB chorus and piano - 8’
  • 1996 Hinei Ma Tov/Shaalu Sh’lom Y’rushalayim, for solo voice and SATB chorus - 3’
  • 1996 V’higad’ta L’vincha (And You Shall Tell Your Child),for children's chorus (SSA), clarinet, cello and piano - 16′
1999 Arrangement for SATB chorus, clarinet, cello and piano
  • 1998 Y’varech’cha (Blessing for children) For treble voices (2 part) and piano
2000 Arrangement for treble voices (2 part) and orchestra
  • 1999 Adonai Ro’i Lo Echsar (Psalm 23) for SATB chorus and piano - 3'
2013 Version for SSA chorus and piano
2002 Version for SATB chorus and orchestra
1992 Version for unison chorus and piano
  • 2001 Ki Heim Chayeinu (a setting of the weekday evening service, for cantor, chorus, clarinet and piano) - 20’
  • 2001 Sim Shalom, for SATB Chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2002 Sing Our Song, for SATB chorus and piano (text by Elie Wiesel) — 5’
  • 2002 Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting, for children's and SATB chorus, and organ — 5’
  • 2003 L’chu N’ran’na (Psalm 95), for SATB chorus and organ - 4’
  • 2003 All of God’s creations recite melody, for SATB chorus and organ - 5’
  • 2003 An Undaunted Heart: Songs of Elders, for SATB chorus and piano - 17’
  • 2003 Adon Olam (Eternal Lord), for SATB chorus and organ -
  • 2004 Lakol z’man/To everything a season, for SATB chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2005 Meditation and Celebration (Psalms 33 and 100), for SATB chorus and piano - 6’
  • 2006 Lo, body and soul—this land, for SSA chorus and piano (poem by Walt Whitman) - 5’
  • 2007 Lakol z’man #2, for soprano + baritone solo, unison chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2008 Yihyu l’ratson (May the words), for solo voice, SATB chorus, viola and piano - 4’
  • 2008 Dodi li vaani lo (My beloved is mine, and I am his), for SATB chorus, clarinet and piano - 3’
  • 2011 We are loved by an unending love, for mezzo solo, SATB chorus and piano - 4’
  • 2013 Uvtuvo m’chadesh (In Your goodness, You renew), for SATB chorus, viola and piano – 6′
  • 2015 "L'dor Vador" (From generation to generation), for SATB chorus and piano

'Solo Vocal Music

  • 1984 Five Songs of Stevie Smith, for mezzo-soprano and piano - 17’
  • 1992 Adonai Ro’i Lo Echsar (Psalm 23) for solo voice or unison chorus and piano – 3′
  • 1994 Grandparents, song cycle for medium voice and piano (poems by Marc Kaminsky) - 17′
  • 1999 Come Before God with Joyous Song (Bo’u L’fanav Birnana) – 20’
  • 2001 The Dogwoods (Four songs on Poems of Linda Pastan), for soprano and piano - 13’
  • 2001 Ki Heim Chayeinu (a setting of the weekday evening service, for cantor, chorus, clarinet and piano) – 20’
  • 2004 Kaddish, for voice, clarinet and piano - 5’
  • 2007 Lakol z’man #2, for soprano + baritone solo, unison chorus and piano - 5’

Works for Synagogue

LIFE CYCLE
  • 1983 Libavtini Achoti Chala, for solo voice, SATB chorus and piano
  • 1992 Adonai Ro’i Lo Echsar (Psalm 23) for solo voice or unison chorus and piano - 3′
2000 Arrangement for voice and orchestra (2000)
  • 1998 Y’varech’cha (Blessing for children), for treble voices (2 part) and piano
2000 Arrangement for treble voices (2 part) and orchestra
2010 Arrangement for solo voice and string quartet
  • 1999 Adonai Ro’i Lo Echsar (Psalm 23) for SATB chorus and piano - 3′
1992 Version for unison chorus and piano
2002 Version for SATB chorus and orchestra
2013 Version for SSA chorus and piano
  • 2004 Kaddish, for voice, clarinet and piano (poem by Marge Piercy) - 5’
COMPLETE SERVICES
  • 2001 Ki Heim Chayeinu (a setting of the weekday evening service, for cantor, chorus, clarinet and piano) - 20’
HOLIDAYS
  • 1996 V’higad’ta L’vincha (And You Shall Tell Your Child),for children’s chorus (SSA), clarinet, cello and piano - 16′
1999 Arrangement for SATB chorus, clarinet, cello and piano
SETTINGS OF HEBREW/LITURGICAL TEXTS:
  • 1987 Lo Lanu (Psalm 115), for SATB chorus and piano - 8’
  • 1996 Hinei Ma Tov/Shaalu Sh’lom Y’rushalayim, for solo voice and SATB chorus - 3’
  • 1999 Come Before God with Joyous Song - 20’
  • 2001 Sim Shalom, for SATB Chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2003 L’chu N’ran’na (Psalm 95), for SATB chorus and organ — 4’
  • 2003 Adon Olam (Eternal Lord), for SATB chorus and organ - 5’
  • 2004 Lakol z’man/To everything a season, for SATB chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2005 Meditation and Celebration, (Psalms 33 and 100), for SATB chorus and piano - 6’
  • 2007 Lakol z’man #2, for soprano + baritone solo, unison chorus and piano - 5’
  • 2008 Yihyu l’ratson (May the words), for solo voice, SATB chorus, viola and piano - 4’

Selected awards and commissions

Awards

  • Copland House Borromeo String Quartet Award (2008)[21]
  • Aaron Copland Award (2007)[27]
  • Westchester Prize for New Work (2001)[13]
  • American Composers Forum Faith Partners residency (2001-2002)[28]
  • Cantors Assembly's Max Wohlberg Award for distinguished achievement in the field of Jewish composition (2003)[29]
  • Yale University's Sudler Prize for outstanding achievement in the creative arts[27]

Commissioning grants received

  • Meet the Composer/ National Endowment for the Arts[13]
  • New York State Council on the Arts[19]
  • Westchester Arts Council[13]

Residencies

  • The MacDowell Colony[30]
  • Yaddo[31]
  • Virginia Center for the Creative Arts[27]
  • American Lyric Theater[32]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Shaarei Tikva–Staff". Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  2. ^ "The Jewish Theological Seminary - Faculty". Archived from the original on 1 July 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  3. ^ "Gerald Cohen - Composer". Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  4. ^ a b Sheridan, Molly (January 1, 2002). "Gerald Cohen on Music, Religion, and the Bridge Between". New Music Box. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  5. ^ Robinson, George. "The Voices Of Terezin: Gerald Cohen's new composition takes inspiration from the concentration camp's performers". The Jewish Week. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  6. ^ "Verdehr Trio - Repertoire". verdehr.com. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  7. ^ a b "Gerald Cohen: Generations". dramonline.org. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Instrumental Works–Gerald Cohen, composer". Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  9. ^ "Sea of Reeds". Gerald Cohen, Composer. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  10. ^ "Wave Hill Trio". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  11. ^ Sherman, Robert. "MUSIC; Great Homes Series Offers Premiere". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  12. ^ Sherman, Robert. "MUSIC;Bach, Handel, Beethoven Lead the Holiday Parade". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Hershenson, Robert A. "A Piece of a $50,000 Pie". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  14. ^ a b "Works for Synagogue". Gerald Cohen - Composer. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  15. ^ Hershenson, Robert A. "Footlights: New Sacred Music Works". New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  16. ^ "Commissioned Work - Zamir Chorale". Zamir Chorale. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  17. ^ "Choral Summer Room - 2004". Spectrum-Music. Archived from the original on 12 November 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  18. ^ "L'Dor VaDor - WORLD PREMIERE - Gerald Cohen - HaZamir Festival 2015". YouTube. YouTube. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  19. ^ a b Roberta, Hershenson. "Council For Arts Makes Awards". New York Times. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  20. ^ "Battery Dance Company - Songs of Tagore". Battery Dance Company. Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  21. ^ a b "Borromeo String Quartet Awards". Aaron Copland House. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  22. ^ "Gerald Cohen music concerts". Jewish Music Web Center. Archived from the original on 6 July 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  23. ^ "Past Composition Grant Recipients". Children's Aid Society. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  24. ^ Smith, Ken (2002). "Generations: Music of Gerald Cohen- Composers Recordings CRI 879". Gramophone Magazine (Awards Issue): a9.
  25. ^ Haines, Eric. "The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Reviews the Pittsburgh Jewish Music Festival". The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  26. ^ Young, Alan. "A Holocaust Story with a Happy Ending?". Lucid Culture. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  27. ^ a b c "Gerald Cohen". Temple Emanu-el. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  28. ^ "American Composers Forum "Faith Partners History"" (PDF). Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  29. ^ "Award Recognition". Cantors Assembly. Archived from the original on 1 August 2014. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  30. ^ "MacDowell Colony Index of Fellows". MacDowell Colony. Archived from the original on 26 May 2009. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  31. ^ "Yaddo List of Composers". Yaddo. Archived from the original on 21 July 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  32. ^ "Resident Artists - American Lyric Theater". American Lyric Theater. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2015.

External links

This page was last edited on 23 July 2023, at 23:35
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