| José Serebrier | |
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All of Serebrier's music displays a sense of drama and flair for the unexpected. Symphony No. 3, for strings and soprano vocalise (here presented with stylish spookiness by Serebrier's wife Carole Farley), begins with a frantic movement. ... It's a fine work... The other major works sustain the overall great impression of high quality composition, particularly the evocative Fantasia for strings (one of Serebrier's best known pieces). Perhaps most impressive is the Passacaglia and Perpetuum Mobile for accordion and chamber orchestra, [which] here emerges as completely successful and ravishingly beautiful, the solo part effortlessly and naturally integrated into the instrumental tapestry. The other works range from the darkly expressionistic Momento psicologico to the comparatively jocose Variations on a Theme from Childhood--and all of them reveal Serebrier's innate feeling for instrumental color and shapeliness of form. Excellent sonics round out this very enjoyable and rewarding musical portrait. A must! --David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com, on Naxos 8.559183 |
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| Symphony No. 1 Released on Naxos | |
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Symphony No. 2 on Naxos |
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| Biography | |
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José Serebrier, who is one of today's most frequently recorded conductors, established himself as a significant composer as far back as the 1950s. Serebrier's most recent work, Symphony No. 3 for string orchestra and soprano vocalise, has been released on Naxos along with a number of his other works for strings (see reviews). Serebrier was born in
Montevideo, Uruguay on December 3, 1938, of Russian and Polish parents.
At the age of nine he began to study the violin, and at age eleven
made his conducting debut. While in high school he organized and
conducted the first youth orchestra in Uruguay, which toured the
country and gave more than one hundred concerts over four years.
Upon graduating from the Municipal School of Music in Montevideo
in violin, solfege, theory, and Latin American folklore at age fifteen,
opportunities for conducting Uruguay's only major orchestra were
not forthcoming. That year, the annual composition contest by the
National Orchestra, known as SODRE, was announced very late, only
two weeks before the deadline. The young musician, thinking that
if he won he might be permitted to conduct his work, entered the
contest with a hastily written Legend of Faust overture. The 18-minute
work was orchestrated in the last four days and nights, and the
last page composed on a taxi while rushing to meet the deadline.
Serebrier won the contest. But the composer being fifteen, his work
was assigned to another guest conductor, Eleazar de Carvalho. Today,
Serebrier conducts most major orchestras around the world, and has
become one of the most recorded conductors of his generation, with
well over one hundred releases. His published compositions, many
of them written at an early age, also number over one hundred. Early in his career, Serebrier was the recipient of many of music's most coveted honors. In 1956 and1957 he received a United States State Department Fellowship to study composition at the Curtis Institute of Music with Vittorio Giannini and with Aaron Copland at Tanglewood. In 1956 he was awarded a Koussevitzky Foundation Award at Tanglewood and in the same year a BMI Young Composers Award with his First Symphony and Quartet for Saxophones. The State Department Fellowship was followed by two consecutive Guggenheim Fellowships in 1957 and 1958. At nineteen, he was the youngest ever to obtain these awards in any field. Serebrier has also been honored with two Dorati Fellowships at the University of Minnesota where he received his MA in 1960 (he graduated from the Curtis Institute in 1958), a Pan American Union Publication Award (for his Elegy for Strings), and the Ford Foundation American Conductors Project Award. Many other awards followed: a Rockefeller Foundation award to be Composer-in-Residence of the Cleveland Orchestra, at the invitation of George Szell during the seasons 1958/69 and again 1969/70; a Harvard Musical Association Commission Award (for Fantasia for string quartet); a National Endowment for the Arts Commission (for a ballet, "Orpheus x Light" for the Joffrey Ballet); a Grammy nomination for his recording of the Fourth Symphony by Charles Ives, with the London Philharmonic Orchestra; the U.K. Music Retailers Association award for best orchestral recording (for the Mendelssohn symphonies, with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra); the Deutsche Schallplatten Award for best orchestral recording (for the first of three CD's of Shostakovich's Film Suites, with the Belgian Radio Orchestra), and many others. |
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