Robert Sirota Explained

Robert Sirota
Birth Name:Robert Sirota
Birth Date:13 October 1949
Origin:New York City, New York, United States[1]
Occupation:Composer, conductor
Genre:Contemporary classical
Years Active:1971–present

Robert Sirota (born October 13, 1949) is an American classical music composer based in New York City and Searsmont, Maine. Sirota has written solo instrumental, vocal, chamber, orchestral, operatic, and liturgical works. He is the father of American violists Nadia Sirota and Jonah Sirota, and husband to organist and Episcopal priest Victoria Sirota.[2] Dating back to 1994, Robert Sirota's work can be found on nine studio albums recorded by an assortment of musicians including: Dinosaur Annex Ensemble, the Chiara String Quartet, and the American String Quartet. Most recently, Sirota's 2020 work for cello and piano, Family Portraits, was recorded by the Fischer Duo for their album 2020 Visions, released on Navona Records on August 26, 2022.

Education and career

Born in New York, Sirota received his earliest compositional training at The Juilliard School. He earned his Bachelor of Music degree in piano and composition from Oberlin Conservatory,[3] studying with Joseph Wood and Richard Hoffman. Sirota received a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, which allowed him to study abroad in Paris, where his principal teacher was Nadia Boulanger.[4] Sirota went on to study with Earl Kim and Leon Kirchner, earning his Ph.D. in composition from Harvard University.

During his career he has chaired the music department at New York University and served as Director of Boston University's School of Music.[5] In 1995, he became Director of the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University. In 2005 he became President of Manhattan School of Music,[6] where he was also a composition professor. He served as president there until 2012.

Sirota has held residencies and seminars at institutions in the United States and abroad, including Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, the University of Missouri–Kansas City, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Samford University, Miami Dade College's New World School of the Arts, Peabody Institute, and the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory in Singapore.[7] In New York City he developed the Bridging the Gap concert series at National Sawdust.[8]

In 2019 and 2020 a series called Sirota @ 70 marked his 70th birthday with performances of Sirota's compositions. These included commissions for the event such as Job Fragments, written for baritone Thomas Pellaton; Dancing With the Angels which featured flutist Carol Wincenc; and Blackird Singing, which had its world premiere performance by flutist Linda Chesis at the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival. Some performances scheduled for this period were postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic and rescheduled, such as the Telegraph Quartet's premiere of his new composition Contrapassos.[9]

Grants and Publishing

Grants to Sirota have come from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, United States Information Agency, Watson Foundation, American Music Center, and Meet The Composer.[10] The publishers of his music have included Theodore Presser,[11] Schott,[12] Music Associates of New York, MorningStar, To the Fore, and Muzzy Ridge Music, the Sirotas' own publishing enterprise named for Muzzy Ridge in Searsmont, Maine, where Sirota spends part of the year.

Muzzy Ridge Concert Series

Since 2021 Sirota has presented a performance series called Muzzy Ridge Concerts at a large studio space he added to his Searsmont home.[13] The concerts have featured musicians including flutist Carol Wincenc and cellist Velléda Miragias of Duo Coquelicot, violinist Laurie Carney, pianist David Friend, pianist and composer Nico Muhly, and oboist Regina Brady, as well as Sirota's son, violist Jonah Sirota, his daughter, violist Nadia Sirota, and his wife, organist and pianist Victoria Sirota.[14]

Commissions

Compositions and Projects

Sirota has composed over 100 works. The most significant include:

His works have been performed by ensembles including Alarm Will Sound, Lincoln's Symphony, New Hampshire Symphony, New Haven Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Vermont Symphony, Virginia Symphony, the Saint Petersburg State Orchestra (Russia), the Royal Conservatory Orchestra (Toronto), and the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory Orchestra (Singapore), and at venues including the Aspen Music Festival, Caramoor, Death of Classical (Brooklyn), Bargemusic, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Kaufman Music Center, National Sawdust, Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall and Zankel Hall, and Tanglewood.

Conductors of his music have included JoAnn Falletta, Kenneth Kiesler, Gerard Schwarz, Alan Pierson, Bramwell Tovey, and Yan Pascal Tortelier.

Musicians who have performed his music include pianists Jeffrey Kahane, Vicky Chow, Ben Pasternack, David Friend, Soyeon Kate Lee, and Jeanne Kierman Fischer; flutists Carol Wincenc, Alex Sopp, and Linda Chesis; violinists Laurie Carney, Hyeyung Sol Yoon, Rebecca Fischer, and Nicholas Mann; violists Cynthia Phelps, Daniel Avshalomov, Jonah Sirota, and Nadia Sirota; cellists Norman Fischer, Gregory Beaver, and David Geber; and organists Hatsumi Miura, Victoria Sirota, and Heinrich Christensen.

Discography

Studio Recordings

2020 Visions2022
  • Released: August 26, 2022
  • Label: Navona Records
  • Format: CD, Digital
New York Rising2019
  • Released: August 20, 2019
  • Label: Classax Records
  • Format: CD, Digital
Elegy for a Lost World2018
  • Released: June 22, 2018
  • Independent Release
  • Format: CD, Digital
Parting the Veil2014
  • Released: December 1, 2014
  • Label: Albany Records
  • Format: CD, Digital
Celestial Wind: Organ Works of Robert Sirota2014
  • Released: May 6, 2014
  • Label: Albany Records
  • Formal: CD, Digital
Triptych2004
  • Released: 2004
  • Label: New Voice Singles
  • Format: CD, Digital
The Kay Africa Memorial Organ2002
  • Released: 2002
  • Independent Release
  • Format: CD
Works for Cello2001
  • Released: 2001
  • Label: Gasparo Records
  • Format: CD
New Sounds from the Village1994
  • Released 1994
  • Capstone Records
  • Format: CD

Arrangements

Paul Simon

In the Blue Light

2018
  • Released September 7, 2018
  • Legacy Recordings
  • Format: CD, Digital
Paul Simon: Seven Psalms2023
  • Released May 19, 2023
  • Owl Recordings
  • Format: CD, Digital

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: String quartet to perform Sirota’s ‘American Pilgrimage’ . Kathaleen Roberts . 2017-06-11 . 2023-01-17 . Albuquerque Journal.
  2. Web site: Artists announced for August Muzzy Ridge Concerts Series in Searsmont . 2023-01-16 . Penobscot Bay Pilot.
  3. Web site: Oberlin Conservatory Magazine :: 2005 . 2022-11-03 . www2.oberlin.edu.
  4. Web site: At 70, Composer Robert Sirota Is Busier Than Ever. Just Ask His Wife and Kids. . Emily Wilson . 2020-04-17 . 2023-01-16 . Classical Voice.
  5. Web site: Holly Selby. N.Y. music professor to head Peabody . 1995-05-12. 2023-01-16 . Baltimore Sun.
  6. Web site: Presidents . 2022-11-03 . Manhattan School of Music . en.
  7. Web site: The Johns Hopkins Gazette: December 3, 2001 . 2022-11-03 . pages.jh.edu.
  8. Web site: BWW News Desk . 'Bridging the Gap' Concert Series by Robert Sirota to Continue at National Sawdust . 2022-11-03 . BroadwayWorld.com . en.
  9. Web site: Musbach . Julie . After Almost Two Years Sirota Will Get Premiere . 2021-12-18. 2023-01-16 . The Rehearsal Studio . en.
  10. Web site: Musbach . Julie . Composer Robert Sirota Continues 'Bridging the Gap' Series at National Sawdust . 2017-03-24. 2022-01-16 . BroadwayWorld.com . en.
  11. Web site: Concerto for Cello and Orchestra . 2022-11-03 . www.presser.com . en.
  12. Web site: Robert Sirota . 2022-11-03 . www.morningstarmusic.com.
  13. Web site: Dunkle . Christine . 2022-07-07 . Searsmont composer’s Muzzy Ridge Concerts series set for August . 2022-11-03 . Waldo County VillageSoup.
  14. Web site: Searsmont composer’s Muzzy Ridge Concerts series set for August . 2022-07-07 . 2023-01-16 . Republican Journal . en.