Carolyn Yarnell Explained

Carolyn Yarnell (born 1961)[1] is an American composer and visual artist. A recipient of the Rome Prize, Charles Ives Prize, and a Guggenheim Fellowship, she is particularly noted for works which combine visual and musical depictions of landscape and light, many of which were inspired by the landscapes of her native California.[2]

Background

Yarnell grew up in the Sierra Nevada region of California.[3] She studied composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music where she received a Bachelor of Music in 1986 and at Yale University where she received her master's degree in 1989. Two years later the final two movements of her five-movement Symphony No. 1, Enemy Moon and Exit, commissioned by the Tanglewood Music Center, had their world premiere at Tanglewood's Festival of Contemporary Music.[4] Yarnell is a long-time member of the Common Sense Composers Collective who via collaborations with groups such as the New Millennium and American Baroque ensembles have premiered many contemporary works by their members and other composers. The collective has produced several CDs including TIC (2007) and The Shock of the Old (2002). The latter featured contemporary compositions played on baroque period instruments.[5]

Selected works

Recordings

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Burns (2002) p. 12
  2. Dalton (2007b)
  3. [WNYC]
  4. Dyer, Richard (1991)
  5. Kosman (2002)
  6. Holland (1993)
  7. Dalton, Joseph (2007a)
  8. Hastie and Stamp (2006) pp. 107-109