American Ballet Theatre (ABT) opened its 2026 Spring Season at the David H. Koch Theater with Lar Lubovitch‘s Othello: A Dance in Three Acts on Friday, March 6, 2026. This revival of the 1997 Shakespearean adaptation features an original score by Academy Award-winning composer and MSM alumnus Elliot Goldenthal (BM ’77, MM ’79).
Elliot received a Bachelors degree at MSM studying trumpet with Mel Broiles, and a Masters degree studying composition with John Corigliano.
The performances of Othello: A Dance in Three Acts run through March 20, 2026.
More about the production here.
MSM classical composition alumnus and software engineer Luis Andrei Cobo (BM ’94, MM ’96) has developed an application, called “Nerves of Steel: Focus Trainer,” for the purpose of preparing its users for the distractions that inevitably transpire during performances and auditions.
The app simulates multiple types of distractions, and of variable frequency. The app has two modes: Practice Mode adds controlled, randomized distractions so users can recover quickly, while Performance Mode creates a virtual concert space where users can run their performance program in a realistic, audience-like environment, before hitting the stage.
Click here to learn more about Nerves of Steel. Click here to learn more about Luis.
The American Academy of Arts and Letters has given awards to 20 recipients of its 2026 Awards in Music to honor both established and emerging composers. The 300 members of Arts and Letters nominate candidates for awards, and a rotating committee of composer members selects the winners.
MSM Classical Composition faculty member Ashkan Behzadi (in photo on left), along with three other musicians, have each received an Arts and Letters Award of $10,000. The award acknowledges composers who have arrived at their own voice, and an additional $10,000 grant is given to each winner to be used toward a recording of one work.
MSM alumnus Rand Steiger (BM ’80) (in photo on right) received the Otto and Catherine Brunson Luening Award of $20,000 each for two composers who have not yet been accorded due recognition.
For more information on the American Academy of Arts and Letters, please visit this link.
“At 95, David Amram Still Makes Music. And Nobody Can Put Him in a Box,” writes The New York Times.“Jazz, classical, folk, world music—for this composer, categories were never confining.”
“Amram is a composer, musician, author, conductor and boundlessly connected collaborator who has been cheerfully ignoring musical categories since the 1940s. His output includes jazz tunes, symphonies, operas, film scores, theater music, off-the-cuff talking blues and idiom-hopping folk-festival performances where he’s likely to play piano, pennywhistle and percussion.”
“Amram moved to New York City in 1955, where he was hired by (Charles) Mingus, studied composition at the Manhattan School of Music and fell in with Beat Generation writers and artists.”
Read the full article here.
MSM composition alumnus Giovanni Piacentini (MM ’13) was nominated for “Best Contemporary Classical Composition” in the 2025 Latin GRAMMY Awards. The guitar concerto, entitled El Llanto De La Guitarra features the legendary Eliot Fisk and Mexico’s renowned Orquestra de Escuela Carlos Chávez, under the direction of maestro Eduardo García Barrios.
Click here to learn more about Giovanni and this concerto recording.
The 26th Latin GRAMMYs will take place tomorrow night at 8 p.m. EST at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas and will be televised by Univision, UNIMÁS, ViX and Galavisión. Click here for more information and the full list of nominees.
MSM classical composition alumna Kenedea Lee (MM ’24) will have her new piece entitled Eunoia and inspired by Clara Schumann premiered by the Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra on November 15.
The program will also include Robert Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor (featuring Avery Gagliano) and Brahms’ Symphony No. 1.
Click here to learn more about Kenedea.
Click here for more information about the concert and for tickets.
On Monday, October 13 at 7 PM at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, Cantos de Quisqueya, presented by the Pan Global Music Initiative (PGMI), showcases Dominican classical music under the artistic direction of pianist and composer Dr. Patricio Molina (BM ’10, MM ’16).
The concert features Dominican and American artists Dr. Zuly Inirio, Gabriel de los Santos, Leonardo “Leo” De Jesus, Vic Ortiz, and Mallory Molina, performing a program that includes the world premiere of authentic Dominican pieces revived through PGMI’s Dominican Music Initiative, in partnership with Universidad Católica Nordestana.
Click here to learn more about Patricio.
Click here for concert information and for tickets.
MSM alumna Dr. Ya-Lan Chan’s (MM ’16, DMA ’23) composition Sand aSH, written for Quartet121, is one of two winning scores in the 2025 International Call for Scores (ICS) contest sponsored by arts presentation company Neif-Norf. Sand aSH will be performed at the ICS Showcase on June 14, at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.
Quartet 121 is comprised of all MSM CPP alumni: Molly Germer (MM ’17), violin; Julia Jung Un Suh (MM ’18), violin; Lena Vidulich (MM ’18), viola; and Thea Mesirow (MM ’17), cello.
Ya-Lan was a student of Dr. Reiko Fueting (DMA ’00) in MSM’s Classical Composition program.
Click here to learn more about Ya-Lan. Click here to learn more about the International Call for Scores contest.
MSM classical composition alumnus Alfonso Molina‘s (MM ’10) Monarch: A Mexican-American Musical won multiple Broadway World Washington, D.C. Regional Awards last month. The production, staged late in 2023 at Creative Cauldron, received the distinction of “Best Musical” and “Best New Play or Musical,” while Alfonso’s collaborator and sister Mayu Molina Lehmann won “Best Direction of a Musical.”
To learn more about the Molinas and Monarch, click here.
To learn more about the 2024 BroadwayWorld Washington, D.C. Awards, click here.
Composer Jacob Leibowitz (BM ’23), an MSM alumnus, is one of 13 artists who are part of the LABA fellowship — the Laboratory for Jewish Culture — at the 14th St Y in New York City. While at MSM, Jacob studied with Reiko Fueting and Mark Stambaugh.
The artists in the Fellowship will spend the next year exploring Jewish texts to inspire groundbreaking new work around the theme of CHANGE. “From painters to playwrights, composers to filmmakers, this talented group embodies artistic innovation,” writes LABA leadership in an Instagram post.
“Change is constant, yet we resist it. We long for the past while chasing transformation. This year, our 14Y LABA Fellows will grapple with these paradoxes—through words, music, movement, and ideas—culminating in powerful LABAlive events.”
Learn more about LABA here. Learn more about Jacob Leibowitz here.
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has launched a new series called 25 for 25: Sounds of the Century, which includes 25 commissions for BBC ensembles and New Generation artists. A composition by MSM alumna Anna Clyne (MM ’05) called The Eye, played by the BBC Philharmonic, launches the series.
The 25 for 25: Sounds of the Century program includes compositions inspired by notable British events of the 21st century, which will be performed between January 25th and July 12th.
The events range from 9/11 to the London 2012 Olympics to the death of Queen Elizabeth II; many of the compositions reflect on social and technological changes in our world over the past quarter century.
25 for 25: Sounds of the Century premieres on Saturday, January 25, and runs each week to 12 July, across all BBC Radio 3 schedules.
More about Anna Clyne here. More about the series here.
The music publisher Theodore Front Musical Literature, in selecting MSM alumnus Christopher Cerrone (BM ’07, DMA ’00) as composer of the month, writes that he is internationally acclaimed for “compositions characterized by a subtle handling of timbre and resonance, a deep literary fluency, and a flair for multimedia collaborations.” Christopher studied composition at MSM with Nils Vigeland and Reiko Fueting.
Recent works include In a Grove, an opera co-produced by LA Opera and Pittsburgh Opera, hailed as “a vividly immersive thriller” by The New York Times; Breaks and Breaks, a violin concerto for Jennifer Koh and the Detroit Symphony; A Body, Moving, a brass concerto for the Cincinnati Symphony; The Year of Silence for the Louisville Symphony and baritone Dashon Burton.
His first opera, Invisible Cities, was a 2014 Pulitzer Prize finalist. Cerrone is a triple-GRAMMY nominee, with his recent studio recording of In a Grove named one of the best of 2023 by The New York Times. He won the 2015–2016 Samuel Barber Rome Prize and was a resident at the Laurenz Haus Foundation in Basel, Switzerland from 2022–2023.
Learn more here.
Composer and percussionist Andy Akiho (MM ‘09) won the Young Artist Award at the 27th annual Beijing Music Festival. Founded in 1998 by Long Yu and under the artistic direction of Shuang Zou, the festival fosters a commitment to contemporary music in addition to connections between China and the West.
Andy Akiho’s work Seven Pillars was also given its Asian premiere by the Sandbox Percussion ensemble.
Andy spoke with the Violin Channel about his new composition. Read the interview here.
On November 24, a new work by MSM Classical Composition Faculty member Dr. Paolo Marchettini (DM A ’14), Intermezzo, will be premiered by the Nuova Orchestra Scarlatti of Naples in Chiesa dei SS. Marcellino e Festo. The premiere was announced in multiple publications, including the Naples edition of Italy’s top newspapers, La Repubblica.
Click here to learn more about Dr. Marchettini. Click here to learn more about Nuova Orchestra Scarlatti.
Elaine L. Bearer (BM ’70) is an American neuroscientist, pathologist, and composer who graduated from MSM with a Bachelor of Music in Theory in 1970.
She was recently promoted as Distinguished Professor in both Music and at the Medical School (Health Sciences Center) at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she has been The Harvey Family Professor in the Dept of Pathology, and Professor, in the Department of Music (secondary).
This year, she had two new performances of her choral and string quartet work, L’Alma rapita, performed in Anaheim and Laguna Beach. She also recorded a new multi-movement piece, Soliloquies, this summer with a violinist in Norway.
More about Elaine Bearer and her impressive medical and musical accomplishments here.
The release by Christopher Cerrone (BM ’07, DMA ’00) In a Grove, is a new opera in two parts available as a digital download and limited CD release. Christopher studied composition at MSM with Nils Vigeland and Reiko Fueting. He was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in 2014, and has won numerous ASCAP awards.
In a Grove is a meditation on trauma and the fallacies of human memory, with Christopher Cerrone and librettist Stephanie Fleischmann taking their inspiration from a 1922 short story by Japanese author Ryonusuke Akutagawa.
The album features the voices of Lindsay Kesselman, Chuanyuan Liu, Andrew Turner, and John Taylor Ward, as well as the respected instrumentalists of Metropolis Ensemble. The album was produced by Christopher Cerrone, alongside his colleagues Mike Tierney and Andrew Cyr.
More about the CD and Christopher Cerrone here. Opera Wire review of In a Grove here.
Gugggenheim Fellowships are awarded to who have artists who have “demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the arts.” Pascal was nominated for a 2023 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition; he is Assistant Professor of the Practice of Music and Technology at Vanderbilt University and is a Ph.D. candidate in Music Composition at Princeton University.
More about Pascal Le Boeuf here.
Composer and MSM alumnus Juan Pablo Contreras was awarded the $50,000 prize for his work as a composer and conductor of orchestral music that draws on his Mexican heritage and for his leadership in founding the Orquesta Latino Mexicana.
The Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Music is awarded by the Vilcek Foundation as part of the Vilcek Foundation Prizes Program. The Vilcek Foundation prizes are awarded annually to immigrant artists and scientists whose work has had a profound impact on U.S. culture and society.
More information here.
The Naxos label presents this recording of brand new concertos “from two vibrant and contrasting American composers.” Adolphus Hailstork‘s (BM ’62, MM ’66, HonDMA ’19) First Piano Concerto “draws on his African American heritage to create a work brimming with energy and high spirits, reflecting the rich traditions of jazz and blues,” writes the record label.
Listen to the recording here.
Congratulations to composer and MSM alumnus Adolphus Hailstork (BM ’62, MM ’66, HonDMA ’19) who was given the 2023 Visionary Award by Composers Now in a ceremony in New York City on January 30.
Composers Now is an organization empowers all living composers, celebrates the diversity of their voices and honors the significance of their artistic contributions to the cultural fabric of society
MSM composition alumnus Juan Pablo Contreras (MM ’12) was named a winner of the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Music.
The Vilcek Prizes support immigrant professionals who have demonstrated exceptional achievements early in their careers and have made a positive impact in the U.S. Juan Pablo is the first Mexican-American to receive this award. Each winner receives a trophy and a $50,000 cash prize.
In the past, the foundation has given prizes to musicians such as Yo-Yo Ma and Osvaldo Golijov.
Learn more about the award here. Learn more about Juan Pablo here.
Alison Yun-Fei Jiang (BM ’15) has been named the RBC Affiliate composer with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (TSO). She was previously the Carrefour Composer-in-Residence with Canada’s National Arts Centre Orchestra (2020-22) and her compositions have been performed in Canada and across the United States.
The TSO’s Affiliate Composer position offers an emerging composer a chance to create works for one of North America’s finest professional orchestras, and gain insight into the organization.
“Alison’s music is full of originality and colour, and she has an important voice to share with our orchestra and audiences,” said TSO Music Director Gustavo Gimeno in a media release. “We were impressed by Alison’s blending of cultures and genres into exciting melodies and textures.”
Read more about her appointment here.
MSM alumna Anne Leilehua Lanzilotti (DMA ’16) was named one of the two finalists in the Pulitzer Prize category for music for her composition “with eyes the color of time.” The other finalist in music is MSM alumnus Andy Akiho (MM ’09) for his composition “Seven Pillars.” The winning Pultizer Prize for music was awarded to Raven Chacon for his composition “Voiceless Mass.”
Andy Akiho also received a 2022 Grammy Awards nomination this year for his composition.
The Pulitzer music jury was headed by The New Yorker‘s music critic Alec Ross.
Learn more about Anne’s composition here.
Learn more about Andy’s composition here.
Congratulations to MSM faculty and alumni who won 2022 GRAMMY Awards for classical, jazz, and composing/arranging!
The awards were presented on April 3, 2022 in Las Vegas. Winners include MSM alumni Anthony Roth Costanzo (MM ’08) (in photo on left) and J’Nai Bridges (BM ’09) soloists in the Metropolitan Opera’s production of Philip Glass’ Ahknaten which won Best Opera Recording.
View the full list of winners here.
View all MSM faculty and alumni nominated for the 2022 awards here.
The GRAMMY Awards take place on Sunday, April 1, with more than 30 MSM alumni and faculty members nominated, including MSM trustees Terence Blanchard (HonDMA ’19) and Anthony Roth Costanzo (MM ’08), as well as J’nai Bridges (BM ’09), and faculty member, Miguel Zenón.
Read the full list of MSM community nominees here.
Dr. Elaine Bearer (BM ’70) MA, MD, PhD, is a neuroscientist, pathologist, and composer who is a professor in the Department of Music at the University of New Mexico where one of her areas of specialty is music and the mind. She is also a Professor in the Department of Pathology where she uses imaging technologies, molecular genetics and computational modeling to study circuitry dynamics in health and disease states.
The Strømstad Academy, based in Sweden, is a Nordic Institute for Advanced Studies that names as members professors from Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and other Universities worldwide, including four Nobel laureates.
More about Dr. Bearer here.
MSM Alum Eun-Kyung Kim (MM ’90, DM ’97) received the honor by State Senator John Liu (in photo on right). Eun-Kyung Kim’s work over the past two decades has focused on advocacy, management and fundraising for her community and most recently, helping families during COVID-19. She is the Executive Director of the YWCA (Young Women’s Christian Association) in Queens.
During the pandemic, the YWCA of Queens opened a food pantry that provided fresh produce for more than 22,000 of the borough’s families and offered virtual classes for the community.
Read more about Eun-Kyung Kim here.
From July 26 to 30, the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene, the world’s longest continuously running Yiddish theatre in the world, is having a benefit concert online honoring its director of long standing, Zalmen Mlotek (BM ’72), who is celebrating his 70th birthday.
Zalmen received his Bachelor of Arts from MSM in Theory, and is an internationally recognized authority on Yiddish folk and theater music. He is a leading figure in the Jewish theatre and concert worlds, as well as a conductor, pianist, musical arranger, accompanist, and composer.
His acclaimed production of “Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish” with Folksbiene ran for two years after a planned run of just two weeks at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, moving to Off Broadway. It closed in January, 2020.
The benefit concert, entitled “Yiddish Renaissance” will include 140 artists from around the world, is also being billed as a celebration of the growing interest in Yiddish language and culture.
Anna Clyne‘s Within Her Arms will open the concerts being held on Sept 17, 18, and 19 at Alice Tully Hall, kicking off the New York Philharmonic‘s new season. NY Phil Music Director Jaap van Zweden conducts.
It’s the orchestra’s long-awaited return to live performances after what will be an an 18-month period of cancellations due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
For tickets to hear Anna Clyne’s composition, or to find out more about the 2021-2022 season, visit the NYPhil website here.
Recent MSM graduates Elizabeth Gartman (MM ’21) and Elliot Roman (BM ’21) are 2021 winners of the 69th Annual BMI Student Composer Awards for classical composition.
The annual awards recognize superior musical compositional ability with educational scholarships totaling $20,000.
This year’s group of talented composers are being showcased across BMI’s and BMIF’s digital platforms in honor of their outstanding accomplishments.
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