Sarah Nemtsov

Sarah Nemtsov (née Reuter, born 28 May 1980) is a German composer. Nemtsov was born in Oldenburg and now lives in Berlin. She started her music lessons and composing aged eight.[1] She started playing the oboe aged 14. Her compositions are recognizable through their confrontation with literature and other art forms. More recently, her compositions are a combination of the styles of classical and music theater.[1]

She became a full-time composer in 2007. All of her works are published by Peermusic Classical GmbH.[1] She is married to the pianist and musicologist Jascha Nemtsov.

Education

She studied composition under Nigel Osborne and Johannes Schöllhorn, and oboe under Klaus Becker at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hannover. At the Universität der Künste Berlin, she continued her oboe studies under Burkhard Glaetzner, and her composition at post-graduate level with Walter Zimmermann, where she graduated with distinction.[1]

Awards and scholarships

Nemtsov has won several awards as a composer, including the national competition for young composers, "Schueler kompomieren", fives times between 1995 and 1999, as well as the international Delmenhorst competition for composers in 1995. In 2007, Nemtsov won the Hanns-Eisler-Preis for Composition. In 2012, she was awarded the “Deutscher Musikautorenpreis” for the support of upcoming composers.[1]

In addition, she has received several scholarships, including one from the German Academic Foundation in 2003, and one from the Aribert Reimann Foundation in 2007. In 2009 she received a scholarship from the Wilfried Steinbrenner Foundation, and in 2011, she was a fellow at Villa Serpentara (Italy).[2] She has also received grants from the Berlin Senate and the Stiftung Zurückgeben.[1]

Notable performances

Her music has been performed at many international festivals including Donaueschinger Musiktage, Bregenz Festival, Münchener Biennale, Holland Festival, Wien Modern and Festival Musica.[3]

Selected works

Operas

Herzland

Chamber opera in five acts, 30'. Libretto after the correspondence between Paul Celan and Gisèle Celan-Lestrange. Premiered in on January 20, 2006, Alte Zeche, Barsinghausen, (original version);
24 Nov 2009, Hubert-Burda-Saal, Munich (revised version)

L'Absence

Full-length opera in five acts with prologue and epilogue. Libretto by the composer, after Livre des Questions by Edmond Jabès. Premiere on May 3, 2012 by Munich Biennale.

Sacrifice

Opera in four acts written in 2016. Premiered on March 5, 2017 by Oper Halle. Libretto by Dirk Laucke (excerpts from “Trenches of Joy”).[4]

Orchestral works

Scattered ways

Work for large orchestra written in 2015. Duration of 10 minutes. World premiere by Philharmonisches Orchester Erfurt.[4]

SHESH

A work for amplified string orchestra written in 2014. Duration of 18 minutes. World premiere was by Orchester Jakobsplatz.[4]

Other

Room I-III

"Layering for 8 musicians" written in 2013. Duration of 18 minutes.[4]

gollark: Rationals have issues. You can't do square roots, for example.
gollark: In a sense, osmarks internet radio™ is just an arbitrarily long base256 number.
gollark: Solution: use infinitely long numbers.
gollark: Maybe I should implement these in potatOS, in the most hilariously inefficient way possible.
gollark: As far as I know the reason for it is that IEEE 754 makes NaNs a range of values rather than just one, but at least you still keep reflexivity that way.

References

  1. "Schott Music". en.schott-music.com.
  2. "Sarah Nemtsov | Pro Musica Hebraica". promusicahebraica.org.
  3. "Sarah Nemtsov". Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  4. "Sarah Nemtsov". www.ricordi.com.
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