Dean Rosenthal Explained

Dean Rosenthal
Birth Name:Dean Rosenthal
Birth Date:August 27, 1974
Origin:Concord, Massachusetts
Instrument:guitar, piano, electronics
Genre:21st-century classical music, Experimental music, Field recording, Electronic music
Occupation:Composer, musician
Years Active:1996–present
Label:Edition Wandelweiser, Tone Glow

Dean Rosenthal is an American composer[1] of instrumental and electronic music, sound installations, and field recordings.[2] [3] [4] His pieces have included field recordings, text scores, digital pastiche, and instrumental works focussed on natural observations of properties in mathematics such as perfect tilings, combinations, graph theory, and permutations.[5] He has conducted and performed internationally since 1996.[6] He is the composer of the ongoing international community experimental music work Stones/Water/Time/Breath [7] that is celebrated annually by Fête de la Musique in multiple cities across North America and Europe.[8] [9] He also serves as co-editor of The Open Space Web Magazine and is a contributing editor to The Open Space Magazine.[10] [11] He has worked closely with Guggenheim Fellow David Parker's dance company The Bang Group[12] [13] [14] on several works, including their collaboration Turing Tests.[15] [16] Most recently, he was commissioned by the Oral History of American Music at Yale to compose a new work on the life of Vivian Perlis.[17] This piece, There Was Only One of Her (Vivian Perlis), was placed in the Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.[18]

His music is associated with American composers Tom Johnson, John Cage, and Wandelweiser[19] [20] and he has been commissioned to write or arrange his music by the Oral History of American Music collection at Yale, Barbara Galli, Morton Subotnick, the Flexible Orchestra, the Washington Square Winds, and others.[21] [22] [23]

In late 2019, Edition Wandelweiser Records released his first full length recording Stones/Water/Time/Breath. This recording was acquired by the BBC Radio 3 for their music archives in 2020.[24] [25] Dean Rosenthal conducted, produced, and released a live concert of the music The Great Learning by Cornelius Cardew with the Montréal Scratch Orchestra ensemble to critical acclaim in 2021.[26] Underpinnings, was released as part of a compilation of postminimalism[27] in 2007 and he has contributed to recording projects on the Another Timbre and Motor Image labels of the music of Joseph Kudirka and Wandelweiser composer Manfred Werder.[28] [29] Our Gazes, a round for 2 voices that sets the poetry of American poet Henry Lyman is published in Rounds Unbound by Frog Peak Music.[30] His music is performed, broadcast, and choreographed internationally in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia, including performances of his music at Incubator Arts Project, Spectrum, Brooklyn Museum, Symphony Space and other prominent venues in New York City, Ohrenhoch der Geräuschladen and O Tannenbaum in Berlin, Elastic Arts Foundation in Chicago, the Taipei Contemporary Art Center in Taiwan, and dozens of other venues and sites nationally and internationally, reaching 23 countries.[31] [32] [33] He lives on Martha's Vineyard.[34]

List of works

Notes

  1. http://www.voxnovus.com/resources/American_Composer_Timeline.htm American Composer Timeline
  2. Web site: Menemsha Village.
  3. Web site: Island.
  4. Web site: Dean Rosenthal. www.voxnovus.com. 2019-11-07.
  5. Web site: Menemsha Village.
  6. lanza, a: "auditory perceptions..", Musicworks 65, Summer 1996
  7. Web site: Home . stonespiece.com.
  8. Web site: Mass Appeal Concerts Archive.
  9. Web site: Performance History.
  10. Web site: The Open Space Web Magazine . 2011-02-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110516104839/http://www.the-open-space.org/webmag.html . 2011-05-16 . dead .
  11. Web site: Magazine. 2 March 2012.
  12. Web site: David Parker Dance . dance.barnard.edu . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150927193015/https://dance.barnard.edu/profiles/david-parker . 2015-09-27.
  13. Web site: John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | David Parker.
  14. Web site: About.
  15. Web site: The Bang Group: A Mouthful of Shoes – Danspace Project.
  16. The Bang Group. The New Yorker.
  17. Web site: The New York Times Highlights CalArtian-Curated Oral History Project.
  18. Book: There was only one of her (Vivian Perlis) . 2020 . Dean Rosenthal .
  19. Web site: Dean Rosenthal.
  20. Web site: Frog Peak Music UNBOUND.
  21. Web site: About » Washington Square Winds.
  22. Web site: Dean Rosenthal.
  23. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: There Was Only One of Her (Vivian Perlis) . YouTube.
  24. Web site: Home . stonespiece.com.
  25. Web site: Edition wandelweiser records.
  26. Web site: Dusted magazine review.
  27. Web site: Pupusse & pat rack : Dès le matin . 2008-04-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080703212822/http://www.tracelab.com/03page/artiste/postmini.htm . 2008-07-03 . dead .
  28. Web site: Rosenthal 2005.
  29. Web site: Motor Image - MI03 Joseph Kudirka: Kids in sandbox.
  30. http://www.frogpeak.org/unbound/index.html Rounds Unbound
  31. Web site: Dean Rosenthal :: Select Performances, Broadcasts, and Recordings.
  32. Web site: Island.
  33. Web site: Brooklyn Museum: Brooklyn Dance Festival.
  34. Web site: Heard the New Stones?. September 2014.

External links