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21. Christopher Taylor, Pianist
vacancy created by the retirement of Howard Karp, the magnificent pianist who has theone recording of Taylor's playing I've heard, william bolcom's Twelve New
http://www.madisonmusicreview.org/doc/p_200010_taylor.html
Christopher Taylor, Pianist
Pianist Christopher Taylor has big shoes to fill on the UW School of Music faculty. He has just stepped into the vacancy created by the retirement of Howard Karp, the magnificent pianist who has been a local institution since 1972. On Sunday, Oct. 22, Taylor will show Madison what he has to offer in his first local concert appearance (4 p.m. at Mills Hall in the UW Humanities Building), playing a very interesting recital of music by Beethoven, Brahms and Messiaen. To judge by the one recording of Taylor's playing I've heard, William Bolcom's Twelve New Etudes , he should have little problem with the notes, for most of the Bolcom pieces are fearsomely demanding. A native of Boulder, Colorado, Taylor has a list of accomplishments that are remarkable for one so young he is 30 beginning with his first public recitals at age 10 and continuing to ever-increasing critical acclaim. In 1990 he was one of the first four recipients of the Gilmore Young Artists Award, a scholarship for exceptionally promising American pianists aged 22 or younger. Soon after he won the first prize in the William Kapell International Piano Competition. In 1993, he was the Bronze Medalist in the ninth quadrennial Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, the first American to reach the finals of this important contest since 1981. In 1996 he was awarded a coveted Avery Fisher Career Grant, designed to give professional assistance and recognition to instrumentalists who have demonstrated potential for significant careers as soloists.

22. - Classical Music Dictionary - Free MP3
william Elden bolcom Life. Born Seattle, 26 May 1938, American composerand pianist. He studied with Milhaud at Mills College (1958
http://www.karadar.com/Dictionary/bolcom.html
Composers Biography Languages William Elden Bolcom (b. 1938) Life Operas Photo Gallery Home Page William Elden Bolcom Life Born Seattle, 26 May 1938, American composer and pianist. He studied with Milhaud at Mills College (1958-61) and Leland Smith at Stanford (1961- 4) and began teaching at the University of Michigan in 1973. As a pianist he has taken a leading part in the revival of ragtime and other American vernacular music. His works are polystylistic and concerned with momentous philosophical and religious themes: they include a monumental setting of Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience for soloists, choirs and orchestra (1956-81). William Elden Bolcom Operas
The Operas of William Elden Bolcom

Karadar Bertoldi Ensemble
Studio Informatico Anesin

23. Excite France - Répertoire - Pianists
6) Bernstein, Leonard@ ( 1 9) Biret, Idil ( 2) bolcom, william@ ( 4) Borge YoungAlbanian pianist living in London, the site includes biography, engagements
http://www.excite.fr/directory/Arts/Music/Instruments/Keyboard/Piano/Pianists
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France Deutschland ... Yancey, Jimmy 178 sites web dans la cat©gorie Pianists Find Classical Music on eBay Find Classical Music on eBay.co.uk. With over a million items listed daily, you're bound to find what you're looking for on the world's online marketplace. www.ebay.co.uk
sponsored link Classical Sheet Music Browse our range of choral, orchestral, chamber and operatic scores. From Tallis to Tavener, this is your first stop for classical music scores. i.musicroom.co.uk sponsored link Classical Music World Music professionals and enthusiasts - find the job that's right you - read magazines online - discover specialist books and CDs and search our directories for music businesses and courses. www.classicalmusicworld.com sponsored link ‡ingo, Mariela Young Albanian pianist living in London, the site includes biography, engagements, repertoire and contact. http://www.cingo.co.uk/

24. James Wierzbicki / William Bolcom
Interviews with the composer.Category Arts Music Composition Composers B bolcom, william...... In the case of william bolcom, whose Symphony No. These days, bolcom is best knownas a pianist who records albums of ragtime music and with his wife
http://pages.sbcglobal.net/jameswierzbicki/bolcom.htm
James Wierzbicki / writings William Bolcom interview with the composer re: "Symphony No. 4 (The Rose)"
interview with the composer re: "Songs of Innocence and Experience"

review of "Songs of Innocence and Experience"

review of "McTeague"
interview with the composer re: "Symphony No. 4 (The Rose)" MOST COMPOSERS who write pieces involving poetry hope that audiences will familiarize themselves with the text before hearing the music. In the case of William Bolcom, whose Symphony No. 4 will be premiered in Powell Hall next weekend by conductor Leonard Slatkin and the St. Louis Symphony, the hope is especially intense. Not that it's necessary to know the poem ahead of time in order to understand it. On the contrary, it's a long but verbally simple poem, and Bolcom has deliberately set it in a way that promises to make its content intelligible to any listener on first hearing. And just in case his mostly syllabic treatments of the words and their generally transparent accompaniments aren't enough to make things perfectly clear, he suggests that the mezzo-soprano soloist be amplified so that she can pay particular attention to matters of diction and nuance. Homework is not required. Nevertheless, Bolcom says, an advance reading of the text - even if it takes place moments before the performance - would give audience members an enormous advantage in appreciating what the entire symphony is about.

25. Christopher Taylor
new recording of william bolcom's Pulitzer Prizewinning Twelve New Etudes (1977-86)features Christopher Taylor The etudes require a pianist of equally
http://www.jwentworth.com/taylor/taylor.htm
"The young pianist Christopher Taylor is so talented it's almost frightening...Taylor revealed limpid, legato lines of plaintive beauty. His ear was alert to the fantasy and drama in this work." The Boston Globe
"...and his performance of three of William Bolcom's splendid "Twelve New Etudes" [was] delivered with a daring spontaneity that masked some phenomenal technique...Taylor should be watched. He may be one of the most impressive young pianists on the horizon today." Washington Post

" "...his performance was a highlight of the season and already represents an astonishing achievement." The New York Times
"...Taylor really nailed it, certainly deserving the multiple bows he gave and standing ovation he got when it was over. He drew a plump, cushy sound from the big Steinway." (with St. Louis Symphony) St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"Taylor returned to the stage...and once again displayed a remarkable combination of brain, heart and fingers. In past appearances here, he has demonstrated his ability to bound from Bach to Messiaen, from Rachmaninoff to Boulez and do it all persuasively. Taylor can do it all." Fort Worth Star-Telegram
"Taylor made the Steinway work, finding a curiously successful balance between the distinct articulation required for the terraced baroque textures and propelling momentum of the Allegros with the absolute legato of a Chopin cantilena in the Adagio." (with The Polish Chamber Philharmonic)

26. Christopher Taylor
wouldn't say with remarkable grace; he is not a leggiero pianist so accurately Hesent his works to the composer william bolcom, himself a rag lover, who sent
http://www.jwentworth.com/taylor/times.htm
The New York Times ran a feature article about pianist Christopher Taylor recently, during a run of engagements he gave in New York in February (2001). Here's what Times reporter Kathryn Shattuck had to say about this remarkable young artist: Christopher Taylor: Seeking Adventure for Fingers and Mind
By KATHRYN SHATTUCK Those who know the pianist Christopher Taylor tend to speak of him in the hushed, reverent tones typically reserved for natural wonders if not the otherworldly. Colleagues trip over words like "innocence," "fervor," "beauty" and "vision" in an attempt to capture his elusive personality. Critics praise his virtuosity, his cerebral interpretations tempered by an aching tenderness, his unconventional programming and his advocacy of late-20th-century music. Mr. Taylor's bold individuality may never have been more evident than at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in 1993, where he took the bronze medal, becoming the first American to place in the event since 1981. In a year when Rachmaninoff dominated the concerto round, Mr. Taylor bucked the trend with renditions of the Brahms B flat and the Bach D minor. He saved his Rachmaninoff, an "Étude-Tableau," for an encore. Mr. Taylor " Kit to his friends " has always had a mind of his own. "I have described Kit as a kind of Parsifal with a computer mind, with a tremendous innocence in what he projects in music and a fervent belief and devotion that shows in certain works with tremendous conviction," said the pianist Russell Sherman, with whom Mr. Taylor studied on and off for a decade. "He is one of those strange genius types but very well balanced. The basic package is powerful."

27. Chamber Solo Music Of Ross Lee Finney William Bolcom, Ross
Total playing time 7134. william bolcom (b. Seattle, WA, 26 May 1938),composer and pianist, began studying piano at the age of five.
http://www.composersrecordings.com/releases_detail.cfm/release_id/159

28. William Bolcom
Prize Winners. william bolcom (b. Seattle, WA, 26 May 1938), composerand pianist, began studying piano at the age of five. At eleven
http://www.composersrecordings.com/artist_bio.cfm/artist_id/48

29. William Bolcom
william bolcom. The following interview appeared in 20thCentury Music in October,1999 Composer and pianist william bolcom was born in Seattle in 1938.
http://www.angelfire.com/music2/davidbundler/bolcom.html
William Bolcom
The following interview appeared in 20th-Century Music in October, 1999: I spoke with William Bolcom in early August, 1999, a few days after the opening of the film "Illuminata." He talks a mile a minute (appropriately so for a musician so much on the go), and a chat with him is a little like taking a wide-ranging musical tour that keeps ducking around the corner to uncover some unusual niche of classical or vintage pop music.
DB: In the last year or so, it seems that Hollywood has come a'courting to what you would call the serious classical composer. I've seen movie scores by Tan Dun ("Fallen"), John Corigliano ("The Red Violin"), Joan La Barbara ("Alien Resurrection") and now yourself. Do I smell a trend here? DB: I vaguely remember that film. DB: Wow! Extraordinary! DB: The use of a small ensemble, was that an economic choice or an aesthetic choice? DB: I notice that just listening through the score - WB: I should tell you that No. 9 is not by Arnold Black, No. 10 is. There was a mistake that was put in there. And so Arnold did do a couple of things. I don't particularly like to underscore. And I've never had much experience with it either, but Arnie, as I say, has done all kinds of things. He's done many other projects before for television, for films, as well as commercials. So, he's an extremely experienced person. He wanted to do a couple of cues, so he did a few and he did them very well. I remember I actually orchestrated one of them for him as he wrote it out.

30. Music Of William Albright
Gary, IN 1998, Ann Arbor, MI) American compoers, organist and pianist of great Hewas a prinipal figure with william bolcom in the revival of interest in
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cyoungk/albright.htm
Music of William Albright Brave New Works WElcome WHo NExt PAst ... STuff
JazzTimes
Magazine Description JazzTimes provides comprehensive and in-depth coverage of the international jazz scene. In addition to insightful profiles of emerging and established stars, every issue contains over 100 reviews of the latest CDs, books, videos and performances. Often controversial and always entertaining, JazzTimes is a favorite of musicians and fans alike. Music of
William Albright
8 pm, Saturday,
October 23, 1999
Britton Recital Hall
For more info all 800-896-7340 New piano piece by Carter Pann Shadows : Eight Serenades for solo guitar Matthew Ardizzone , Guitar Abiding Passions for Woodwind Quintet Emily Perriman , flute
Gabriela Cohen
, Clarinet
Jared Hauser
, Oboe
Chris Troxell
, Bassoon Kyle Hoyt , Horn Sonata for alto saxophone and piano Tim McAllister , Alto Saxophone Kathryn Goodson , Piano William Hugh Albright (1944, Gary, IN - 1998, Ann Arbor, MI) Carter Pann student(Jan '96 - April '97) Paul Griffiths, in the N.Y. Times caption of Bill Albright's death, reported: "William Albright, 53, Composer of Ragtime Music for the Organ." 53!! I have always thought of Bill as a young composer, and 53 still seems young to me.

31. 10.24.2002 Concert No. 3 Are You Brave? Festival V. 5.0
Piano Quintet by william bolcom I've known Isaac Stern tangentially for many a chamberpiece involving him, other players, and the young pianist Jonathan Biss.
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cyoungk/102402.htm
Are You Brave ? Festival V.5.0 10.24.02 Brave New Works Britten Recital Hall
U of M school of Music

WElcome
WHo ...
V.5.0

October 24, 2002
Thursday
8 pm concert
An
Evening
of
Chamber Music [No themes!] Bruce Broughton Tyvek Wood Emily Perryman, flute Tim Christie, viola Amy Ley, harp Luciano Berio violin duets Maria Sampen, violin Tim Christie, violin Carter Pann Differences Katri Ervamaa, cello Winston Choi, piano intermission Forrest Pierce Moses and the Shepherd Jennifer Goltz, voice Katri Ervamaa, cello William Bolcom Piano Quintet Maria Sampen, violin Steve Miahky, violin Tim Christie, viola Katri Ervamaa, cello Winston Choi, piano Tyvek Wood by Bruce Broughton Bruce Broughton was born March 8, 1945 in Los Angeles, California. He was a successful composer of many TV credits during the 60's and 70's including "Dallas" and "Hawaii Five-O". In the 1980's Broughton began to write film scores and was soon awarded an Oscar for best original score for the music of "Silverado" in 1985. To this date he as been nominated for nineteen Emmys and awarded seven. His Film scores include "Lost in Space", "A Miracle on 34th Street", "Field of Dreams" and many more. Tyvek Wood displays Broughton's diversity as a composer as a chamber work for flute , viola and harp. It was premiered at the World Harp Conference in Prague, Czech Republic in 1999 by the Debussy Trio.-Notes by Amy Ley Differences by Carter Pann Differences was composed in February of 1998 for Derek Snyder. The work is comprised of five short movements very much like a suite or a partita in the Baroque style. However, the individual little pieces are radically different from each other in style and musical content. Derek had the idea of transcribing a larger chamber work of mine (in which he performed) for cello and piano. The end result would have been a six or seven movement work entitled "Dance Partita" after the larger chamber piece. The project began as such and grew into its own by the end. It happened that the only movements taken from the chamber orchestra piece were the "Air" and the "Country dance."

32. The PIANOLA News - From ARTCRAFT: 1-17-98
The 'Eighties were also the decade in which composerpianist william bolcom(and his wife, singer Joan Morris) frequented Maine concert halls.
http://wiscasset.net/artcraft/oldnews3.htm
The PIANOLA News
Information for Player and 'Reproducing' Piano enthusiasts
from
The ARTCRAFT Studio in Maine
[Return to Home Page] "THE PIANOLA NEWS" — Saturday: January 17, 1998 - Vol. I, No. 2
[Updated Weekly]
Will the real William Bolcom please stand up?
Long before ARTCRAFT Music Rolls began, Arranger Douglas Henderson received many requests for perforating William Bolcom's (then-new) composition GRACEFUL GHOST RAG from his 'Ghost Rag Trilogy' of piano solos. At that time Mr. Henderson was wrapping-up his near ¼-Century of work at The Musical Wonder House (a music museum he co-founded with the Konvalinkas in 1962) ... and cutting rolls for the celebrated 'Candlelight Concerts', which took place in Summer evenings with seated audiences. Many a concert-goer often asked, "How about making a Duo-Art roll of GRACEFUL GHOST RAG ?" ... with Bolcom's SEABISCUITS RAG a close second in the suggestion department.
When the ARTCRAFT label began in the early 'Eighties, GRACEFUL GHOST RAG was at the top of the stack for projects-to-be-done , due to the amount of prior requests.

33. Lee Alan Nolan
Club, San Francisco (Light classical and Jazz music) 19961998 pianist for Alternate bolcom,william, Whisper Moon (1971) for alto fl, cl, vl, vcl, and piano.
http://www.pianoteachers.com/lee_nolan.htm
Lee Alan Nolan
Burbank, CA 91506
Email: LeeNolanLA@aol.com
Fax: (818) 556-6444 CURICULUM VITAE Education: Master of Music, San Francisco Conservatory of Music
Bachelor of Music, University of South Florida, Tampa
Accompanying Experience: Xanaduo Concerts with Esther Landau, flute
-20th-Century Music Flute/Piano Duo, San Francisco
Golden Gate Men's Chorus, Theater Artaud, San Francisco
-"Love is Everything" Jazz/Blues/Pop concerts
September, 1998 Metropolitan Community Church, San Francisco (Assistant Music Director)
Staff Accompanist, San Francisco Conservatory of Music Spring, 1995 Pianist for cocktails and dinners at the Pacific Union Club, San Francisco (Light classical and Jazz music) Pianist for Alternate Currents Performance Ensemble, San Francisco Teaching Experience: Piano Instructor at the Community Music Center, San Francisco Private piano instructor-classical, jazz, pop, and ragtime styles 1990-present Solo Performances/Recordings: Alumnus Piano Recital-included premiere of Bruce C. Bennett's

34. MMD Archives: Bolcom, Morris And Pianola Concerts In Maine
the wellannotated score as well as a Nonesuch LP by another pianist who played whilethe other half told me that it doesn't sound like william bolcom playing
http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/Digests/200207/2002.07.07.02.html
Mechanical Music Digest Archives MMD Archives July 2002 Prev ... Next
Bolcom, Morris and Pianola Concerts in Maine
By Douglas Henderson
http://www.wiscasset.net/artcraft/pianolas.htm
(updated for the Independence Day concert) and an excerpt showing the drawings of the Duo-Art music roll projector attached to a Steinway AR grand piano at http://www.wiscasset.net/artcraft/a-series.htm http://www.wiscasset.net/artcraft/
(Message sent Sun 7 Jul 2002, 19:52:55 GMT, from time zone GMT-0400.)
Key Words in Subject: Bolcom Concerts Maine Morris ... Info
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35. Mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/RawDigests/00.11/digest.00.11.14.txt
Music by william bolcom (Paul Johnson) Subject Ragtime Music by william bolcom(Steve Sorenson He was recording a pianist onto the reel to reel tape and then
http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/RawDigests/00.11/digest.00.11.14.txt
Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2000 12:40:04 -0000 Subject: Dixon Recording Piano of 1920s In addition to being an MMD subscriber I belong to a jazz cyberlist. A recent posting there was directed to me but, not being at all knowledgeable in this area, I could not comment. Here is the relevant part of the message : "Five or six years ago I visited a music museum in a town on the West coast of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. I can't remember the name of the town, or even the name of the museum, but I videotaped rather extensively there; if there is any interest, I could retrieve the videotapes and provide additional info. "One of the things that fascinated me there was an instrument called a Dixon Recording Piano (I think; again, the videotape could provide precise details). This grand piano was an amazing instrument back in the 1920s. It recorded on a perforated roll, but was capable of recording all the dynamics of the music. It was extremely expensive I seem to recall that they cost $35-50,000, a vast sum at that time and only a small number were ever made, something like six to ten." Can anybody provide more information about this instrument? John Farrell http://homepages.tesco.net/~stridepiano/ From: aeolian@bestweb.net.geentroep (Randolph Herr) To: "Mechanical Music Digest" Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2000 01:14:55 +0000 Subject: Philipps Ducanola Roll Tracking System I am surprised that Dan Wilson states that he roll tracking system with 16 pairs of narrow vertical slots above the 88 note holes is a Philipps system. I have certainly never heard it called that, and it is in fact an Aeolian system covered by two British patents. The first patent, 14,251 dated 13 June 1914, was awarded to Mr A J Mason, Orchestrelle/Aeolian Co Managing Director. The right and left slots (which overall occupy the same width as the note hole below) are respectively connected to two passages in a bar which connect with a pair of coupled bellows that operate a cam to move the top right roll chuck. The bellows are evacuated through two bleeds, like the Duo-Art ears system. No mention is made about cutting off and centring the system on re-roll, but this was necessarily done in practice. The pairs of slots are evenly but cleverly disposed to maximise the probability of tracking music in any key with notes in the centre of the keyboard compass, which is very common. The system works reasonably well if the bleeds have not been enlarged and the cam and return spring are set up well. The bleeds seem often to have been enlarged in an effort to make the system work faster (for badly warped or re-rolled rolls?) but this makes it too sensitive and to centre too fast if several pairs of slots come into operation. The second patent, 139,257 dated 17 January 1919, obviously cured this problem somewhat by making the grouped signals operate two conventional tracking valves which are connected to the tracking bellows. The slots are connected by flexible tracker bar tubing to two manifolds and the tracker bar itself is moved by the bellows, a British Aeolian invention and preference. Somewhat superfluously the tracking is cut off during re-roll. I think I'm right in saying that Malcom Cole's late 'teens Steinway O Pianola grand has this system, which works fine. This patent was awarded to the Aeolian Co and E G Nicholson. The late Ernie Nicholson, a terrific chap whom I once met, was one of Aeolian's top technicians. He was later given a reward by Aeolian for inventing the excellent British four hole/moving tracker bar tracking system, commonly found on Duo-Arts here, which is very kind to rolls and does not work like other four hole systems but uses negative logic to cope with damaged roll edges: it tracks on two edges if possible, one edge if necessary, or where both edges are torn lets the bar remain uncentred at its last signalled position until a good edge comes along. I am sending copies of the patent abridgements and drawings to Julian Dyer who can post them if anyone's interested and will probably do a piece in the Player Piano Group Bulletin. Patrick Handscombe Wivenhoe, Essex, UK [ The description of the control logic of Mr. Nicholson's four-hole [ tracking system sounds remarkably alike the four-hole tracking [ system of the Standard Pneumatic player action in USA. I wonder [ how the systems differ. Robbie From: jconway@lausd.k12.ca.us.geentroep (Jack M. Conway) To: MMD Articles

36. Iclassics.com - Classical Music And More
Composer and pianist william bolcom, born in Seattle, Washington, entered theUniversity of Washington at age 11, where he studied piano and composition
http://www.iclassics.com/iclassics/artists_bio.jsp?lastName=bolcom&firstName=wil

37. Los Angeles Times: Something To Sing About
music, is william bolcom. As stylistically diverse a musician and composer as theycome, bolcom will be featured as composer, pianist, accompanist, teacher and
http://www.calendarlive.com/music/classical/cl-wk-swed30jan30,0,305837.story?col

38. Brian Connelly
BRIAN CONNELLY is recognized as a pianist of exceptional range and accomplishmentin Carnegie Hall series Making Music in a tribute to composer william bolcom.
http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~musi/facbios/connelly.htm

Faculty Quicklist

Staff Quicklist

Departments

Emeritus Faculty
...
Media Contacts

Brian Connelly
Artist Teacher of Piano.
B. Mus. (1980), M.Mus. (1983) University of Michigan.
1109 Alice Pratt Brown Hall
milkbone@rice.edu
BRIAN CONNELLY is recognized as a pianist of exceptional range and accomplishment in both historical and modern repertoires. His performances this season include concertos, recitals, chamber music, and several performances of the complete Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jesus , a two-hour masterwork for solo piano by Olivier Messiaen. Mr. Connelly was recently featured in the Carnegie Hall series Making Music Undergraduate Programs Graduate Programs Calendar Faculty/Staff ... Preparatory Program

39. Untitled
11, 1997 780 words. A william bolcom premiere is an event not be missed,especially when the composer/pianist is himself a participant.
http://artists-in-residence.com/~ljlehrman/articles/aufbau48.html
Articles written for AUFBAU by Leonard J. Lehrman
Premieres by William BolcomWith and Without Him

AUFBAU 63:26 Dec. 19, 1997 p13
by Leonard Lehrman
Dec. 11, 1997
780 words A William Bolcom premiere is an event not be missed, especially when the composer/pianist is himself a participant. I first heard him perform his own 12 Etudes for Piano in the early 1960s at Tanglewood, and have been an avid follower of his career through numerous stage works and awards, including a Pulitzer Prize, since then. Malfitano at Tully Announced as Catherine Malfitano's accompanist for a varied program at Alice Tully Hall November 26, he unfortunately had to cancel. Chicago Lyric Opera Assistant Conductor Robert Tweten filled in instead, in a program of Rodrigo, Barber, Satie, Poulenc, Weill, and Bolcom - with Gershwin's "My Man's Gone Now" as an audacious second encore. All, the singer noted from the stage, were written in the 20th century, including the delightful "Three Songs" of Satie, written in 1916 (not 1887 as misnoted on the program). Bolcom is writing for her both a role (Beatrice) in his new opera ( A View from the Bridge , after the play by Arthur Miller, to be premiered in Chicago in fall, 1999) and a new song cycle ("on a mythical figure whose name begins with M - and it's not Malfitano!" - she asked that no more than that about the new work be revealed), with collaborator Arnold Weinstein, to be premiered in 2000, in English, though translations have already been made of the text into Italian and German. For this concert, she gave the professional premiere of his 1978 "Mary," on a William Blake text.

40. Major Presenters' Biographies
william bolcom, Renowned as a composerpianist, Pulitzer Prize-winning williambolcom believes that all true artists are and must be laws unto themselves.
http://www.nasaa-arts.org/nasaanews/bios_am_02.shtml
Driving New Agendas
The 2002 NASAA Annual Meeting
October 17-20, 2002
Detroit, Michigan
Hosted by the
Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs
Major Presenters' Biographies
William Bolcom
Laurier L. LaPierre
Robert A. Lutz

Robert A. Lutz is General Motors vice chairman of product development and chairman, GM North America. Within the auto industry, Robert Lutz is known as an innovative executive who, while at the former Chrysler Corporation, oversaw what some analysts described as the most expressive designs in the automobile business: the PT Cruiser, Dodge Ram, Dodge Viper, Plymouth Prowler, Chrysler's cab-forward sedans like Chrysler Concorde and Dodge Intrepid, and the industry-leading minivan. These designs are often credited with Chrysler's comeback in the 1990s. Creativity is an important part of Lutz's success. In a 1996 interview he said, "A lot of people think the car business is just technology, an accumulation of assembly plants and money. It's all those things, but it's fundamentally a lot like the movie business. You must have the creativity people who passionately love automobiles."
Lutz began his automotive career with General Motors in the early 1960s, did a stint at BMW then moved on to Ford Motor Company for 12 years, rising to become chair of Ford of Europe. In the 1980s he joined Lee Iacocca at Chrysler Corporation and chronicled his experiences there in his 1998 book, Guts: The Seven Laws of Business That Made Chrysler the World's Hottest Car Company. Besides his successful career as an automobile executive, Lutz is a retired Marine pilot and remains an avid flyer.

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