Lawrence Golan Explained

Lawrence Golan (born 1966) is an American orchestral conductor and violinist. He is the Music Director of the Denver Philharmonic Orchestra in Colorado, the Yakima Symphony Orchestra in Washington state, the York Symphony Orchestra in Pennsylvania, and the Lamont Symphony Orchestra and Opera Theatre at the University of Denver where he is director of orchestral studies and professor of conducting at the Lamont School of Music.[1] [2]

Life and career

Golan was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois where his father, Joseph Golan (1930-2011), was for 49 years a member of, and for 35 years principal second violinist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He received his Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees from the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University, and went on to complete his Doctorate in music in 1995 at the New England Conservatory with a dissertation entitled Performing Bach: dotted rhythms and trills in the sonatas and partitas for solo violin. He furthered his studies in conducting at several music festivals including Aspen and Tanglewood, where in 1999 he was awarded the Leonard Bernstein conducting fellowship. Previous positions that Golan held include principal second violinist of the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra, concertmaster of the Portland Symphony Orchestra,[3] orchestra conductor and director of string studies at the University of Southern Maine, music director of the Portland Ballet Company, artistic director of the Atlantic Chamber Orchestra, music director of the Colorado Youth Symphony Orchestras, conductor of the Phoenix Youth Symphony, resident conductor of the Phoenix Symphony, and principal conductor of the New Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra in South Korea.[4] [5]

In 2001, he joined the faculty of the University of Denver's Lamont School of Music as director of orchestral studies and professor of conducting and also to serve as music director and conductor of the Lamont Symphony Orchestra and Opera Theatre. He concurrently serves as music director of the Yakima Symphony Orchestra (appointed 2010), the Denver Philharmonic Orchestra (appointed 2013), and the York Symphony Orchestra (appointed 2014).[6] [7] [8]

In 2011, Golan was the lead plaintiff of the United States Supreme Court case, now known as Golan v. Holder, which challenged the constitutionality of the application of Section 514 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act. In the United States, the Act restored copyright status to foreign works (including musical compositions) previously in the public domain.[9] [10]

Awards

Golan's awards include:

Recordings

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lawrence Golan Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences . 2024-01-07 . liberalarts.du.edu.
  2. Web site: Meier . Matt . 2015-09-29 . Playing Out with Lawrence Golan . 2024-01-07 . Denver Philharmonic . en-US.
  3. [Bates College]
  4. Not to be confused with the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra.
  5. McCracken, Erin (14 November 2013)
  6. Caro, Heather (10 September 2010). "Interview: Lawrence Golan". Yakima Magazine
  7. Rinaldi, Ray Mark (8 May 2013). "Denver Philharmonic gets new music director with Lawrence Golan". Denver Post
  8. http://www.ydr.com/lifestyle/ci_24524584/yso-conductor-search-lawrence-golan-will-take-baton "YSO conductor search: Lawrence Golan will take the baton Nov. 23"
  9. https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-545.pdf Golan v. Holder
  10. Parry, Mark (29 May 2011). "Supreme Court Takes Up Scholars' Rights". The Chronicle of Higher Education
  11. [ASCAP]
  12. McWisley (28 October 2011). "Lawrence Golan takes top honors in Global Music Awards". Jacobs School of Music
  13. Down Beat (June 2012). "Down Beat's 35th Annual Student Music Awards", p. 105
  14. Prestige Music Awards. Past winners
  15. American Prize Awards Orchestral Programming