about the composer: (long version: under 500 words)
Mark Phillips (b. 1952) won the
1988 Barlow International Competition with his orchestral composition Turning, which has been performed
by the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra, and the
NHK Symphony Orchestra of Japan, with Leonard Slatkin conducting, as
well as by the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, with Uriel Segal
conducting. His String Quartet
No. 2 was commissioned, premiered, and recorded by the Lark
Quartet. In 2004 he premiered Turning Two Hundred, a 50-minute
commissioned work for orchestra, jazz band, drum corps, handbell choir,
electronic music, eight instrumental soloists, video, and dance.
Commissioned for a 2005 premiere in Memphis, his Dreams Interrupted has received
subsequent performances in Pittsburgh, Duluth, Baltimore, Dallas,
Birmingham (AL), and Athens
(OH). Following a national competition, Pi Kappa Lambda
commissioned a chamber work from Phillips, which led to the premiere of
Bushwhacked! in San Antonio,
Texas (September 2006). Other significant performances of his
music have taken
place at Carnegie Hall and Merkin Hall in NYC, the Kennedy Center for
the Performing Arts in Washington, Wigmore Hall in London,
Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, and in Chicago,
Stockholm, Krakow, Warsaw, Graz, Greece, and the Netherlands. His works
have been performed by the Kansas City Symphony, the San Antonio
Symphony Orchestra, the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, the
Duluth-Superior Symphony Orchestra, the Baltimore Chamber Orchestra,
the Huntington Symphony Orchestra,
the Baltic Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, the Pro Musica Chamber
Orchestra, the Bahia Blanca Symphony Orchestra, the Pittsburgh New
Music Ensemble, the Ensemble Eclipse (Beijing), and the Icelandic
Symphony. Rain Dance
for flute and electro-acoustic music, winner of the 1994 Newly
Published Flute Music Competition, has been recorded by flutist Jill
Felber on the Neuma label. T.
Rex for trombone and electro-acoustic music has been recorded by
both John Marcellus and Andrew Glendening. Richard Stoltzman recorded Three of a Kind with the Warsaw
Philharmonic conducted by George Manahan for the MMC label. Sonic Landscapes has been recorded
by oboist Stephen Caplan for Musician’s Showcase. Other awards
and distinctions include the 1990 Delius Chamber Music Award, ASCAP
Standard Awards, an ASCAP Raymond Hubbell Award, grants from Meet the
Composer, and fellowships from the Ohio Arts Council, the Indiana Arts
Commission, Ohio University, and Indiana University. His music
has been featured at the Blossom Festival, Chautauqua Summer Music
Festival, Bowling Green New Music and Art Festival, Memphis State New
Music Festival, Florida State University Festival of New Music,
conferences of the National Flute Association, International Double
Reed Society, International Trombone Association, International Trumpet
Guild, the World Saxophone Congress, and the national conferences of
both the Society of Composers, Inc. and the Society of Electro-Acoustic
Musicians in the United States.
Mr.
Phillips is a Distinguished Professor of Music at the Ohio University,
where he has taught since 1984. From 1982-84 he was a Visiting
Instructor of
composition at the Indiana University School of Music. Born in
Philadelphia, he holds a B.M. degree from West Virginia University and
both an M.M. degree and a D.M. degree from Indiana University.