Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon
Mexican-American composer
Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon (born 1962, in Guadalajara, México) is a Mexican-American composer and chair of the composition department at Eastman School of Music. He received the Helen L. Weiss Music Prize in 1991. His Comala (2010, Bridge Records 9325[1]) was a finalist for the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Music[2] and he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1995, a Mozart Medal in 1994, and a Lillian Fairchild Award in 2011. He was a student of George Crumb.
Comala, a cantata based on Juan Rulfo's Pedro Páramo, was premiered by The Furious Band at the Festival Música y Escena in México City.
Sources
External links
- "Biography", Zohn-Muldoon.com.
- "Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon", ESM.Rochester.edu.
- (07 Jan 2010). "An Interview with Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon", OperaToday.com.
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Finalists: Pulitzer Prize for Music (2011–2020)
- Fred Lerdahl ('11): Arches
- Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon ('11): Comala
- Tod Machover ('12): Death and the Powers
- Andrew Norman ('12): The Companion Guide to Rome
- Aaron Jay Kernis ('13): Pieces of Winter Sky
- Wadada Leo Smith ('13): Ten Freedom Summers
- John Adams ('14) The Gospel According to the Other Mary
- Christopher Cerrone ('14) Invisible Cities
- Lei Liang ('15) Xiaoxiang
- John Zorn ('15) The Aristos
- Timo Andres ('16) The Blind Banister
- Carter Pann ('16) The Mechanics: Six from the Shop Floor
- Ashley Fure ('17) Bound to the Bow
- Kate Soper ('17) Ipsa Dixit
- Michael Gilbertson ('18) Quartet
- Ted Hearne ('18) Sound from the Bench
- James Romig, ('19) Still
- Andrew Norman, ('19) Sustain
- Alex Weiser, ('20) and all the days were purple
- Michael Torke, ('20) Sky: Concerto for Violin
- (Winners)
- (Citations)
- (Finalists: '80s
- '90s
- '00s
- '10s)
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