Leilehua Lanzilotti née Anne Victoria Leilehua Lanzilotti (born November 5, 1983), is a Kanaka Maoli[1] composer,[2] multimedia artist,[3] curator,[3] and scholar of contemporary classical music.[4]
Leilehua Lanzilotti | |
---|---|
Born | Anne Victoria Leilehua Lanzilotti November 5, 1983 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Occupation | Musician |
Website | leilehualanzilotti.com |
Early life and education
editLanzilotti grew up in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. She began her violin studies with Hiroko Primrose,[5] renowned pedagogue and protégé of Shinichi Suzuki. In addition to western classical music, Lanzilotti studied Hawaiian language, culture, and dance at Hālau Hula O Maiki. Lanzilotti attended Punahou School[6] and Beijing Normal University Middle School No. 2 (School Year Abroad), and then continued her education at Oberlin College Conservatory of Music,[7] Yale School of Music,[8] and Manhattan School of Music. She was a fellowship violist in both the New World Symphony[9] and the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin.
Professional life
editAs a performer, Lanzilotti is known for her collaborations with living composers such as Dai Fujikura,[10] Ted Hearne,[11] Andrew Norman,[12] Caroline Shaw,[13] Anna Thorvaldsdottir,[14] Jagoda Szmytka, Scott Wollschleger,[15] and Nina C. Young.[16] Lanzilotti premiered Dai Fujikura's Viola Concerto, Wayfinder, at the Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre during the 2022 Born Creative Festival.[17]
In addition to her work as a soloist, she has performed as a guest with Alarm Will Sound, Ensemble Éschappé, Ensemble Interface, Ensemble Signal, International Contemporary Ensemble, and with bands such as DeVotchKa, and She & Him.[18] Lanzilotti performed in the Björk Vulnicura Live tour in New York City, and appears on the album of the same name.
Collaborations with dancers include Sinking, a commission for Periapsis Music and Dance[19] with choreographer Wendell Gray II; a new version of with eyes the color of time with additional rattle and bell elements for Dana Tai Soon Burgess Dance Company's work[20] Landscapes, and projects with collaborator brooke smiley.
As an Andrew Norman scholar, Lanzilotti has written for Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, London Symphony Orchestra,[21] and has spoken at conferences internationally[22] on Norman's use of architecture and visual art as musical inspiration. Her doctoral dissertation is also on the topic of music and architecture in Norman's string trio, The Companion Guide to Rome.[23] Lanzilotti is the creator of Shaken Not Stuttered, a free online resource demonstrating extended techniques for strings.[24]
In her role as Curator of Music at The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC),[25][26] she invited artists such as Ethan Heard & Heartbeat Opera,[27] Sarah Hennies,[28] Ken Ueno,[29] and in 2020–21 season commissioned Maria Chavez,[30] Lesley Flanigan,[31] Bora Yoon,[32] Pamela Z,[33] Caroline Shaw and Vanessa Goodman, King Britt and Saul Williams, Miya Masaoka, and Mary Kouyoumdjian and Alarm Will Sound.[34] Additionally, she co-curated the nationally touring exhibition Toshiko Takaezu: Worlds Within with Glenn Adamson and Kate Weiner.[35]
Lanzilotti has been on the faculty at New York University, University of Northern Colorado, Casalmaggiore International Music Festival,[36] Point CounterPoint[37] and Wintergreen Performing Arts.[38] Lanzilotti was co-founder and artistic consultant for Kalikolehua – El Sistema Hawaiʻi.[39] She is currently on the faculty teaching composition and viola at UH Mānoa.[40]
Music
editLanzilotti's compositions are characterized by the frequent use of field recordings and extended techniques. She creates soundscapes that invite the audience to engage with sound and listen carefully to the subtleties of resonance. “Lanzilotti’s score brings us together across the world in remembrance, through the commitment of shared sonic gestures.” (Cities & Health)[41] The 2022 Pulitzer Prize in Music committee noted that her work "distinctly combines experimental string textures and episodes of melting lyricism."[42]
Lanzilotti has been commissioned by The Noguchi Museum several times to write musical works.[43] [Switch~ Ensemble] received a MAP Fund grant[44] for the development and performance of her new work hānau ka ua. Lanzilotti has also been commissioned by groups such as Roomful of Teeth, Merian Ensemble, and Argus Quartet. She was a 2021 McKnight Visiting Composer.[45]
Her album in manus tuas (New Focus Recordings, 2019), was featured in Bandcamp's The Best Contemporary Classical Albums of 2019[46] and The Boston Globe Top 10 Classical Albums of 2019.[47] Other albums including Lanzilotti's music are her debut EP Wanderweg and experimental LP The Akari Sessions.
In 2022 Lanzilotti's work with eyes the color of time, commissioned by The String Orchestra of Brooklyn and premiered at Tenri Cultural Institute in New York City, was selected as a Pulitzer Prize Finalist in Music.[2]
Multimedia Work
editIn both installation work and film, Lanzilotti's multimedia works have been shown at festivals and exhibitions such as Art Electronica[48] (Austria), The Noguchi Museum[49] (USA), and in international collections from residencies such as Casa Wabi[50] (Mexico).
Awards and honors
edit- SHIFT — Transformative Change and Indigenous Arts, 2023[51]
- Finalist, Pulitzer Prize in Music, with eyes the color of time, 2022[42][2]
- OPERA America, Opera Grant for Women Composers: Discovery Grant, 2022[52]
- Chamber Music America, Artistic Projects for a new work for Longleash on Toshiko Takaezu’s sculptures, 2022[53]
- Empowering ʻŌiwi Leadership Award (E OLA), 2022
- First Peoples Fund Artist in Business Leadership Fellowship, 2022[54]
- New World Symphony, Build, Learn, Understand and Experiment (BLUE) Alumni Award, 2022
- McKnight Visiting Composer, 2021[55][2]
- National Performance Network, Creation & Development Fund 2021[56]
- MAP Fund for [Switch~ Ensemble] for development and performance of hānau ka ua, 2020[57]
- Native Launchpad Advancing Indigenous Performance Award, 2020–23[58]
Discography
editCompositional Discography
edit- Various Artists: forever forward in search of the beautiful. New York, NY: New Focus Recordings, 2024[59]
- Longleash & Sō Percussion: the sky in our hands, our hands in the sky. Saint Paul, MN: Innova, 2024[60][61]
- String Orchestra of Brooklyn: enfolding. New York, NY: New Focus Recordings, 2022[62]
- Jordan Bak: Impulse. Bright Shiny Things, 2022
- India Gailey: to you through. North Vancouver, BC: Red Shift Records, 2022[63]
- Adam Morford and Leilehua Lanzilotti: Yesterday is Two Days Ago. Self-release, 2021
- Borderlands Ensemble: the space in which to see. New Focus Recordings, 2021
- Lanzilotti: in manus tuas (New Focus Recordings, 2019)[13][64][65][66]
- The Yes &: Thrush (2017)[67] music by Lanzilotti and Gahlord Dewald
- Lanzilotti: Wanderweg EP (2017) Works for viola(s) and electronics[68]
Performing Discography
edit- Dai Fujikura: Wayfinder Viola Concerto on Wayfinder. Tokyo: Sony Japan, 2023
- Dai Fujikura: Star Compass on Glorious Clouds. Tokyo: Sony Japan, 2021
- Anna Thorvaldsdottir: Sola. New York, NY: New Focus Recordings, 2020
- Jacob Cooper: Terrain[69][70] (New Amsterdam Records, 2020)
- Ted Hearne: hazy heart pump[71] (New Focus Recordings, 2019)
- David Lang: Anatomy Theater (Cantaloupe Music,[72] 2019)
- Lanzilotti: in manus tuas (New Focus Recordings, 2019)[13][64][65][66]
- Scott Wollschleger: Soft Aberration[73][15] (New Focus Recordings, 2017)
- Dai Fujikura: Chance Monsoon (Sony Japan[74] & Minabel, 2017)
- Björk: Vulnicura Live[11] (One Little Indian Records, 2015).
- Ted Hearne: The Source[75][11] (New Amsterdam Records, 2015)
- Joan Osborne: Love and Hate[76] (Womanly Hips, 2014)
- Sean Hickey: Pied A Terre (Delos Productions, Inc., 2014)[77]
- Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin: Leoš Janácek – Mša Glagolskaja (Missa Solemnis) & Taras Bulba (Pentatone, 2013)[78]
- Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin: Richard Wagner – Parsifal (Pentatone, 2012)[79]
- Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin: Richard Wagner – Der fliegende Holländer (Pentatone, 2011)[80]
Selected compositions
edit- on stochastic wave behavior—eight voices (2021), commissioned by Rónadh Cox, with the support of the National Science Foundation.[81]
- with eyes the color of time for string orchestra (2020), commissioned by the String Orchestra of Brooklyn[2]
- find (2019) for viola and electronics, commissioned by Kieran Welch
- beyond the accident of time for percussion and voices (2019), commissioned by The Noguchi Museum, premiered June 13, 2019[82]
- the space in which to see for French horn, violin, viola, and cello (2019), commissioned by Johanna Lundy for the Borderlands Ensemble[83][84]
- of moments for baritone and baroque violin (2018) commissioned by Jesse Blumberg and Johanna Novom
- to you (the architects are most courageous) for two violins, viola, cello, and piano (2018)[85]
- Postcards II: Akari for viola, voice, harp, and fixed media (2018) Commissioned by The Noguchi Museum, premiered April 6, 2018[86]
- gray for viola and percussion (2017)[87][88]
- birth, death, for obsidian sound sculptures, strings, and voice (2017).[89] Commissioned by The Noguchi Museum
- Casalmaggiore for viola(s) and electronics (2016)
- leap year for viola(s) and electronics (2016)
- with their I you your fuse for double bass (2016)
Selected multimedia work
edit- the sky in our hands, our hands in the sky[90] (2023, single-channel video, 47 minutes, directed by Leilehua Lanzilotti, music by Leilehua Lanzilotti, cinematography by Gahlord Dewald)
Selected publications
editWritten
- "Alone at Noguchi" Program notes for koʻu inoa and Star Compass (The Noguchi Museum, 2020)[91]
- "Music is Everywhere Steeped in Time," The 20/19 Project Monograph (Studio Will Dutta, 2019)[92]
- "A Trip to the Moon" (London Symphony Orchestra, 2017)[21]
- "Anna Thorvaldsdottir: A Part of Nature" (Music & Literature, 2017)[14]
- "Architektur der Gesellschaft: Der US-Amerikanische Komponist Andrew Norman" (Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, 2017)[12]
- "'Cut to a Different World': Andrew Norman" (Music & Literature, 2016)[93]
- "Andrew Norman's The Companion Guide to Rome: Influence of Architecture and Visual Art on Composition" (DMA Diss, Manhattan School of Music, 2016)[23]
Editions of musical scores
References
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