Stefan Weisman

Stefan Weisman (born 1970) is an American composer of contemporary classical music. He composes opera, chamber music, orchestral music, as well as music for the theater, video and dance.

Raised in East Brunswick, New Jersey, Weisman credits his passion for music starting with his participation in the orchestra at East Brunswick High School.[1]

His opera Darkling, with a libretto by Anna Rabinowitz was commissioned, developed and produced in 2006 by American Opera Projects. Elements of composer Lee Hoiby’s song “The Darkling Thrush” were used as source material for the opera's music. Darkling was included in the Guggenheim Museum's "Works & Process" series, and premiered at the East 13th Street Theater. In a New York Times review, Anthony Tommasini described Weisman's music as "personal, moody and skillfully wrought."[2] Darkling was released internationally by Albany Records in 2011. Of the CD, Gramophone Magazine wrote: “Weisman unfolds his emotional tapestry with confident strokes…resulting in something resembling a high-art radio drama.”[3]

Weisman's opera Fade, with a libretto by David Cote, was commissioned and produced in 2008 by Second Movement Opera.

Weisman was a resident artist at the HERE Arts Center, where he developed an opera with Cote, based on the short story "The Scarlet Ibis" by author James Hurst. With Cote, he is creating an opera, American Atheist, about the life and violent death of Madalyn Murray O'Hair.

He was a recipient of a 2007 commission from Bang on a Can, and his music has also been performed by the Miró Quartet, Lisa Moore, Anthony Roth Costanzo, and Newspeak. He wrote the music for the play Calabi-Yau. In 2012, when his song "Twinkie" was featured on the nationally syndicated program The Wendy Williams Show, the host said, "Very unique...You're not going to hear opera like this anywhere else...Fabulous!" [4]

He studied composition at Bard College with Joan Tower and Daron Hagen, and at Yale University with David Lang, Jacob Druckman, Ezra Laderman and Martin Bresnick. He earned a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 2011, where he studied composition with Paul Lansky, Steven Mackey and Barbara White.

Presently, he is a music instructor at Bard High School Early College in Queens, NY. He has also taught at the Princeton University Department of Music, and Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program,[5] and the City College of New York.

Recordings

2012: "Stefan Weisman: Darkling" Albany Records

2012: "Newspeak: Sweet Light Crude" New Amsterdam Records

  • Includes Stefan Weisman: I Would Prefer Not To

2011: "Jody Redhage: of minutiae & memory" New Amsterdam Records

  • Includes Stefan Weisman: Everywhere Feathers
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gollark: Tablets can have keyboards anyway.
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gollark: Well, that *would* work, but to use your computer you would have to reinstall the kernel, and it would remain backdoored.
gollark: That wouldn't even work if `sed` got the modified copy, but it doesn't.

References

  1. Staff. "Artists Breaking Big - Classical", Inside Jersey, December 22, 2011. Accessed June 25, 2019. "Stefan Weisman, 41, developed his love for music playing violin in the orchestra at East Brunswick High School and spent summers studying at the American String Teachers Association workshop in Glassboro."
  2. Anthony Tommasini. "A Holocaust Contemplation, Inspired by a Hardy Poem". Retrieved July 25, 2012.
  3. Ken Smith. "Stefan Weisman's Take on Rabinowitz's Holocaust Poem".
  4. Wendy Williams. "Twinkie Opera Song!". Retrieved July 25, 2012.
  5. Bruce Hodges. "Illuminating a Dark Corner of History". Retrieved July 25, 2012.
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