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Composers

Robert Kapilow


© Peter Schaaf, 2004
Born: 1952

With his diverse array of talents and his infectious enthusiasm for all things musical, Rob Kapilow has been compared to Leonard Bernstein for bringing the pleasures of classical music to audiences of all ages and backgrounds. As the Boston Globe said, "It's a cheering thought that this kind of missionary enterprise did not pass from this earth with Leonard Bernstein. Robert Kapilow is awfully good at what he does. We need him."

What characterizes all of Kapilow's work is his ability to create an "aha" moment for his audiences and collaborators, and his dedication to the idea of bringing music into people's lives. Opening new ears to musical experiences, Kapilow is helping people to understand how music can enrich, reflect and enhance their daily lives - whether it's through his "What Makes It Great?" presentations, his "Family Musik" pieces and shows, or his "Citypieces" compositions.

Traveling the country enlightening audiences about classical music, Kapilow is well known for his acclaimed program "What Makes It Great?" He initially gained recognition through regular installments on National Public Radio, which were soon expanded into full-length concert evenings and series throughout North America where Kapilow's interactive presentation has lured thousands of new listeners to the concert hall. The series has become a recurring event at New York's Lincoln Center (where Kapilow has the distinction of being the only artist to have his own series), in Boston, Los Angeles and Kansas City, and more venues are catching on to his infectious entertainment all the time.

During the 2005-06 season Kapilow will introduce a new FamilyMusik series to Vancouver, while continuing to entertain his regular young fans in New York and Boston (where he embarks on his 10th-anniversary season.


As a composer, Kapilow has written the first musical setting of a Dr. Seuss work, Dr. Seuss's Green Eggs and Ham, which was premiered by the New Jersey Chamber Music Society in 1995. It has since achieved great popularity in the children's theater world, prompting Boston Globe music critic Richard Dyer to name it the most popular children's piece since Peter and the Wolf.

Kapilow's "Citypieces," involve entire communities in the process of conceiving and creating a new piece of music: Union Station, commemorating the 150th anniversary of Kansas City and premiered by the Kansas City Symphony, and Citypiece: DC Monuments, premiered by the National Symphony in spring 2000 with the composer conducting. For the bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase, he composed 03 (This New, Immense, Unbounded World), which the Lousiana Philharmonic toured throughout the state in early 2003.


Kapilow's most ambitious "Citypiece," commemorating the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark expedition, premiered in September 2004. Co-commissioned by the Carlsen Center, the Saint Louis Symphony, and the Louisiana Philharmonic, Summer Sun, Winter Moon has a text by Darrell Robes Kipp, a member of the Blackfeet Tribe of Montana, and recalls the events from the perspective or those "on the banks of the river." Summer Sun, Winter Moon comes full circle when it returns to Montana with the Helena Symphony in October 2005.


Other compositions include ; orchestral versions of both Seuss pieces (for the Minnesota Orchestra); a Christmas-Hannukah pair of pieces: Chris Van Allsburg's Polar Express, for the Fleet Bank Celebrity Series in Boston where he runs the Family Musik series, and Elijah's Angel, a setting of the celebrated children's book by Michael Rosen; and his first opera, Many Moons, based on the James Thurber story with a libretto by Hilary Blecher, which premiered in January 1997. Recent family pieces include And Furthermore They Bite (2000), a companion piece to Carnival of the Animals, and Play Ball!, a setting of the famous Thayer poem, "Casey at the Bat." Kapilow was a featured composer on Chicago Public Radio's prestigious "Composers In America" series and is a recipient of an Exxon "Meet-the-Composer" grant and numerous ASCAP awards.


Kapilow's "What Makes it Great" series are avaliable on Vanguard Classics.


As a conductor, Kapilow has led orchestras throughout the United States including the Philadelphia Orchestra, National Symphony, and Minnesota Orchestra, performances of a Lukas Foss opera, and leading Robert X. Rodríguez's Frida for the opening of the Next Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the American Repertory Theatre. In addition, Kapilow conducted the Hagen Symphony (Germany) in the world premiere of his commissioned work for orchestra, Sing God: in Memoriam Leonard Bernstein.


Kapilow has also been active in musical theater. He conducted over 300 performances of the Tony Award-winning musical Nine on Broadway, and, in 1991, joined Angelina Reaux in an acclaimed performance of Stranger Here Myself at the Boston Kurt Weill Festival, later recorded for Koch International Records. He was music director of the American Musical Theater Festival's revival of Kurt Weill's Love Life and he conducted Reaux and the Music Today Orchestra in an evening of Weill's Broadway music I am an American at Merkin Hall.


Kapilow was music director of the Yale Symphony Orchestra and Opera New England, as well as assistant conductor of the Opera Company of Boston and the Bridgeport Symphony. Born on 22 December 1952, Kapilow is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Yale University, a graduate of the Eastman School of Music, and a student of Nadia Boulanger. He was an assistant professor of music for six years at Yale University and has lectured and taught at universities throughout America.

Robert Kapilow's music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer.


September 2005






Booking requests and conducting engagements:

IMG Artists

Charles Letourneau

152 West 57th Street, 5th Floor

New York, NY 10019

cletourneau@imgworld.com

212-994-3524


Publicist/Special Projects:

21C Media Group

Louise Barder

162 West 56th Street, Suite 201

New York, NY 10019

lbarder@21cmediagroup.com

212-245-2110 x202

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