Harvey Sollberger
Harvey Sollberger is often mentioned in the company of icons like Charles Wuorinen and Donald Martino as being among the more important American composers from the latter 20th century. Sollberger, a virtuoso flutist, has written many works for flute, especially in the chamber music genre, like the 1970 Divertimento for flute, cello, and piano (which he recorded with Wuorinen on piano and Fred Sherry on cello, for CRI) and the 1981 Angel and Stone, for flute and piano. But Sollberger has also composed a fair number of works for orchestra, chorus, and various other instrumental combinations. Sollberger's compositions are among the more progressive and finely crafted works of their time, often employing non-Western techniques and divulging a challenging yet imaginative expressive language. Tonalities on one instrument may seem to waiver, suspended and searching, while chords on another jarringly crash. Even early works like the Chamber Variations for 12 Players (1964) exhibit an advanced musical language. Perhaps because of Sollberger's progressive style, he has appeared on recordings more often as a performer than as a composer. His recordings are available from CRI, Centaur, New World Records, and Neuma.
Harvey Sollberger was born in Cedar Rapids, IA, on May 11, 1938. He studied composition at Columbia University under Jack Beeson and Otto Luening. While still a student at Columbia, Sollberger, with Joel Krosnick and Charles Wuorinen, co-founded the Group for Contemporary Music (1964). Sollberger would serve as the ensemble's director for the next 27 years.
He remained active throughout this period both as a composer and flutist, often collaborating in performance with the GCM, as well as with other chamber groups and soloists. Sollberger received many commissions for his works, including from the Koussevitzky Foundation, the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, National Endowment for the Arts, and scores of others. During the 1989-1990 concert season Sollberger was composer-in-residence with the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players and at the American Academy in Rome. His In Terra Aliena, for 5 soloists and orchestra, drew international notice at its highly successful 1995 Rome premiere.
From 1997-2005 Sollberger was music director of the La Jolla Symphony Orchestra. Throughout his career, Sollberger has also been active as a teacher, serving on the faculties of Columbia University (1966-1982), Manhattan School of Music (1972-1983), Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University (1983-1992), and UC San Diego, where, since 1992, he has been a professor of music and later emeritus professor.
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Diskografie
7 Album, -en • Geordnet nach Bestseller
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Electro Acoustic Music: Classics
Judith Bettina, Harvey Sollberger
Klassik - Erschienen bei Soundset am 01.01.2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Roger Reynolds: Whispers Out of Time
Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, Cleveland Chamber Symphony, La Jolla Symphony Orchestra, Kotarō Satō, Edwin London, Harvey Sollberger
Klassik - Erschienen bei Mode Records am 28.08.2007
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Shapey/Riegger/Piston/Crumb/Sollberger/Berger
Paul Zukofsky, violin, Gilbert Kalish, piano
Klassik - Erschienen bei CP2 am 01.09.2002
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Wuorinen: Music of 2 Decades, Vol. 1
Speculum Musicae, Group for Contemporary Music, The, Easley Blackwood, Harvey Sollberger, Charles Wuorinen, Fred Sherry
Kammermusik - Erschienen bei Music and Arts Programs of America am 01.04.2011
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Felder: A Pressure Triggering Dreams
June in Buffalo Festival Orchestra, Jean Kopperud, Magnus Martensson, James Winn, Harvey Sollberger, David Felder
Klassik - Erschienen bei Mode Records am 25.07.2000
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Harvey Sollberger: A New York Retrospective
Klassik - Erschienen bei NWCRI am 01.01.1997
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
New Music Series, Vol. 3
Harvey Sollberger, Carol Lieberman, Leslie Amper
Klassik - Erschienen bei Soundset am 01.06.1993
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo