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Michael Gordon

Over the past 30 years, Michael Gordon has produced a strikingly diverse body of work, ranging from large-scale pieces for high-energy ensembles and major orchestral commissions to works conceived specifically for the recording studio and kaleidoscopic works for groups of identical instruments. Transcending categorization, his music represents the collision of mysterious introspection and brutal directness.

Gordon’s recent works include Travel Guide to Nicaragua, a concert-length work for chorus and cello, written for The Crossing with cellist Maya Beiser, and co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall and the Annenberg Center in Philadelphia; a new chamber version of his opera Acquanetta, commissioned/premiered by Beth Morrison’s Prototype Festival in NYC; “8” commissioned by the Amsterdam Cello Octet, the latest addition to Gordon’s concert-length music for multiples; Big Space, commissioned and presented by the BBC Proms; a concert-length work for choir, Anonymous Man, commissioned/premiered by The Crossing, and three new works for orchestra — Natural History, written for the 100th Anniversary of the United States’ National Parks and premiered at Crater Lake in Oregon; Observations on Air, a concerto for bassoon for soloist Peter Whelan, commissioned by The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment; and The Unchanging Sea, a piano concerto for Tomoko Mukaiyama with a new film by Bill Morrison commissioned/premiered by the Seattle Symphony and the Rotterdam Symphony. Gordon and Morrison’s other collaborations include the DecasiaDystopiaGotham and El Sol Caliente. Gordon’s discography includes Anonymous ManAcquanettaObservations on AirThe Unchanging SeaClouded YellowSonatraNatural HistoryTimber RemixedDystopiaRushesTimberWeatherLight is CallingDecasia(purgatorio) POPOPERAVan GoghTrance, and Big Noise from Nicaragua. He is co-founder and co-artistic director of New York’s legendary music collective Bang on a Can. His music is published by Red Poppy Music (ASCAP) and Ricordi/Universal Music Classical.

Michael’s website

Photo by Peter Serling