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James Grant, DMA
Composer-in-Residence, Bay-Atlantic Symphony 1999-2003
Composer-in-Residence, Institute for the Environment Through the Arts, 1996-98
Composer-in-Residence, Fairfax Symphony Orchestra, 1993-96
Assistant Professor of Music, Middlebury College, 1988-92

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Complete Bio

James Grant, DMA

Composer-in-Residence, Bay-Atlantic Symphony 1999-2004
Composer-in-Residence, Fairfax Symphony Orchestra, 1993-96
Assistant Professor of Music, Middlebury College, 1988-92

For three decades, James Grant has been commissioned by individuals, choruses, chamber ensembles and orchestras who have performed his music throughout the world. As a composer of choral music, he has taken First Prize honors in three international competitions, and his orchestral overture Chart won first prize in the 1998 Louisville Orchestra competition for new orchestral music. In 2002, Grant was one of five American composers to win the Aaron Copland Award; and in 2004, he won the Sylvia Goldstein Award, sponsored by Copland House.

After completing the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in composition from Cornell University, Grant was Assistant Professor of Music at Middlebury College in Vermont between 1988-1992, where he taught composition, coordinated an American Music Week Festival each year, and directed the New Music From Middlebury concert series. In 1992, Grant left academe to compose full-time and from 1993-96 served as Composer-In-Residence to the Fairfax Symphony Orchestra in Fairfax, Virginia. Recently, Grant finished five years as Composer-In-Residence to the Bay-Atlantic Symphony in Bridgeton, New Jersey. 

Recognized by Cornell University's Graduate School of Humanities and Arts and by the Vermont chapter of the National Music Teachers Association for exceptional contributions as an educator, Grant continues to be active as a lecturer and private teacher of composition.

Grant's colorful musical language is known by musicians and audiences for its honed craft and immediacy. After the May 2003 Kennedy Center premiere of his 55-minute choral symphony based on the writings of Walt Whitman, Such Was The War, the Washington Times declared it “a work of outstanding power and breadth of emotion.” The Baltimore Sun wrote, “the sincerity is never in doubt, and there's an unmistakable, cumulative power generated by the text and music. Such Was the War makes an honorable contribution to the choral repertoire.”

After three October 2004 premier performances of Grant’s Concerto for Bass Clarinet and Strings by the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel commented on a following performance by the Milwaukee Chamber Orchestra: “Grant here has made music that is structurally smart, emotionally probing, rhythmically clever and harmonically subtle…. The momentum builds to some hair-raising hyena howls that had the audience howling back in approval when the 15-minute concerto ended.”

Grant’s ability to compose music appropriate to specific levels of experience has found him working with groups ranging from professional orchestras, choruses, new music ensembles and ballet companies to community choruses and youth orchestras. His music is regularly programmed at music festivals, symposia, and clinics, and his Tribute for orchestra was a featured work at the 2002 Midwest Conductor's Clinic in Chicago, performed by the Interlochen Arts Academy Orchestra.

Recent orchestral commissions have included Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra, for virtuoso saxophonist David Stambler; and Ej! Eja! for timpani, soprano solo, large chorus and orchestra, commissioned by the Choral Arts Society of Washington for its 2005 Kennedy Center Holiday Concert. Current commissions include an extended work for orchestra commissioned by the University of Mary Washington in celebration of that school’s centennial. Recently, works by James Grant have been recorded and released in separate projects by clarinetist William Helmers, tubist Mark Nelson, and by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra in Australia.

 

Further information and streaming audio of James Grant's music can be found at www.JamesGrantMusic.com.

Condensed Bio

The music of composer JAMES GRANT  is known by musicians and audiences for its colorful language, honed craft and immediacy.  In recent years, Grant's music has been performed throughout the United States, and in Australia, Azerbaijan, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, England, Finland, Japan, Mexico, and New Zealand by groups ranging from youth orchestras, to community choruses, to professional contemporary chamber ensembles, ballet companies and orchestras. In addition to receiving First Prize in the 1998 Louisville Orchestra competition for new orchestral music, Grant was one of five American composers to win the 2002 Aaron Copland Award.

After completing the DMA degree in composition from Cornell University in 1988, Grant was Assistant Professor of Music at Middlebury College in Vermont.  In 1992, Grant left academe to compose and lecture full-time and from 1993-96 served as Composer-In-Residence to the Fairfax Symphony Orchestra in Fairfax, Virginia.  Currently, Grant serves as Composer-In-Residence to the Bay-Atlantic Symphony in Bridgeton, New Jersey.  In May of 2003, his 55-minute work for baritone solo, chorus and large orchestra based on the prose, poetry, and correspondence of Walt Whitman, Such Was The War, was premiered to critical acclaim at the Kennedy Center by the Choral Arts Society of Washington

A resident of Toronto, Canada, Grant continues to be active as a lecturer and private teacher of composition.  For further information on James Grant and his music, go to www.JamesGrantMusic.com.
 

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