Tentative program:
Set Me as a Seal, for soprano and organ (1994) Nebraska premiere—Jamie Reimer, soprano, Christopher Marks, organ
Three Views from the Mountain, for piano trio (2018) World premiere—Hyeyung Yoon, violin, Gregory Beaver, cello, Mathew Fuerst, piano
Two Pieces for oboe and bassoon, (2009, rev. 2018) World premiere—William McMullen, oboe, Nathan Koch, bassoon
Little Suite for unaccompanied viola (2019) World premiere—Clark Potter, viola
Berceuse (dream sequence with flashbacks) for solo piano (1985) Nebraska premiere—Catherine Herbener, piano
Wind and Sky: Symphony for Six (2014) US premiere—John Bailey, flute, Diane Barger, clarinet, David Neely, violin, Karen Becker, cello, David Hall, percussion, Paul Barnes, piano, Tyler White, conductor.
Tyler Goodrich White has been Director of Orchestras at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln since 1994 and a member of the composition faculty at UNL since 1996; before coming to Nebraska, White led orchestras at Cornell University and Trinity University (Texas); he appears regularly as guest conductor and clinician with student orchestras nationwide. In 2004, he was a guest lecturer in conducting at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, China, and in September 2007 he was named Best Musical Director at the Waterford International Festival of Light Opera in Waterford, Ireland. Recent seasons have seen additional guest conducting engagements in Mexico, Brazil, and China. He has also been Resident Conductor of Lincoln’s Symphony Orchestra (2000-2019), and is currently the orchestra’s Composer-in-Residence.
A protégé of the late Maestro Robert Shaw, White was born in Atlanta, Georgia and was raised in Manhattan, Kansas. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, he earned his master’s and doctoral degrees in composition from Cornell University, studying with Pulitzer Prize-winners Steven Stucky and Karel Husa. He has also studied at the University of Copenhagen (Denmark) and the American Conservatory at Fontainebleau (France). National and international recognition for his compositions has come through awards from ASCAP, BMI, The American Conservatory at Fontainebleau (Prix Maurice Ravel), Vienna Modern Masters, the Omaha Symphony Guild, Tulane University, Indiana State University, and the Southeastern Composers League, and through commissions from the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, the Cleveland Chamber Symphony, Lincoln’s Symphony Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra, and other ensembles.
In 1997, White’s cello concerto Threnos (William Schuman in memoriam) became the first work by a Nebraskan to win the Omaha Symphony’s International New Music Competition, and in 1999 his opera O Pioneers, the first-ever operatic treatment of a Willa Cather novel, was premiered at UNL and televised on Nebraska Public Television. In 2001, Dr. White was named Composer of the Year by the Nebraska Music Teachers Association. In 2003, White’s Elegy “for the orphans of terror” was awarded the Masterworks Prize and was recorded by the Sofia Philharmonic on the inaugural volume of ERM Media’s “Masterworks of the New Era” CD series, and in 2006 his Mystic Trumpeter (Symphony No. 2) was awarded Honorable Mention in the ASCAP Foundation/Rudolf Nissim Prize competition. In 2014, the newly revised O Pioneers was awarded a Silver Medal in the Global Music Prize competition and was named a finalist for the American Music Prize. In 2017, he was awarded an Individual Artist Fellowship by the Nebraska Arts Council. White’s latest opera, The Gambler’s Son (libretto by Laura White, based on writings of Mari Sandoz and Robert Henri), premieres in November 2019.
Free and open to the public.
Additional Public Info:
music.unl.edu