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Gregory Youtz |
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Gregory Youtz was born in 1956 in
Beirut, Lebanon. He received his B.M. in composition from the University
of Washington in 1980 and his D.M.A. in composition from the University
of Michigan in 1987. His principal teachers have included Leslie
Bassett, William Bergsma, William Bolcom and William Albright.
He was awarded a Charles Ives Award in 1984 from the American Academy
and Institute of Arts and Letters, and his Scherzo for a Bitter Moon
for band won the 1984 National Bandmasters Association contest. A choral
work If We Sell You Our Land based on a speech by Chief Seattle
was the subject of a story on National Public Radio's Morning Edition
in 1987. His opera Songs from the Cedar House based on the
history and legends of Native American and Immigrant cultural
interaction in the Pacific Northwest premiered in February of 1991 at
Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. His other
compositions include works for orchestra, band, choir, voice, chamber
ensembles, and a one-act opera.
A native Pacific Northwesterner, Youtz is presently Professor of Music
on the faculty at Pacific Lutheran University where he teaches
composition, theory, history and ethnomusicology.
Source: Correspondence with the composer.Close Window |
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