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Alan Mauritz Swanson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alan Mauritz Swanson (born Chicago, Illinois October 29, 1941) is an American composer and academic who lives in the Netherlands.

He took his BA (1963) and MA (1965) at Indiana University and his PhD at the University of Chicago (1973). In between he studied at Stockholm University. As an academic, he taught at Augustana College (Rock Island, Illinois), Brigham Young University (Provo, Utah), and the University of Groningen (the Netherlands), and came to specialize in the theatre and opera of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.[1] Trained as a singer, many of his early compositions are for voice, but recent work has tended to be varied in form: string quartets, a viola concerto, a partita for piano, and others. In 2006, he was honored for his academic and community work by being appointed Officer in the Order of Oranje-Nassau.[2]

Partial works list

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Vocal

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Choral

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  • 1988: Missa Aestiva SSAATTBB[3]
  • 2011: Alleluia: Laudate Dominum SATB
  • 2013/2014: Veni sancte spiritus/Komm heiliger Geist, Gott und Herr – SSATB
  • 2020: O sacrum convivium for SSA
  • 2020: La primera leccion for SSA and piano
  • 2021: In omni tempore: Alleluia (Any number of voices)
  • 2022: O magnum mysterium for Choir (SSA)

Songs

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  • 2010: Song-Set No. 2: Fem sånger till dikter av Arthur Landfors – Low voice, Piano
  • 2017: Sur un poète moderne – Low voice, Piano
  • 2018: À Arthur Rimbaud – Low voice, Piano
  • 2020: Song-Set No. 3 Passage. Trois chansons, Voice and Piano
  • 2021: miniLieder divers short songs for Voice and Piano (mostly)
  • 2022: Song-Set No. 4 Of lost remembrance, Middle-Voice and Piano

Chamber

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Solo

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  • 2002-2004: Three Aspects of Time for Organ
  • 2011: Partita pour piano
  • 2011/12: Algorithm. Percussion solo
  • 2018: Résonances – Violoncello
  • 2019: Air et Badinages – Piano
  • 2019: Something understood – Clarinet
  • 2019: Trouvé sur un pont inconnu -Flute solo
  • 2019: Spirals for clarinet solo
  • 2020: There Were Twelve for violin solo

Ensemble

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  • 1992–93: Essay for String Quartet
  • 1993–2003: Second Essay for String Quartet
  • 2006: Equale per quattro tromboni, "Academic Discussion in Groningen"
  • 2012/2015: Trio for Piano, Violin, and Cello
  • 2015: Equale per quattro sassofoni, Tre frasi di Dante – SATBaritone Saxophones
  • 2016: Away - A Trio for Violist, Dancer, and Chair
  • 2016: Trio No. 2, for Piano, Violin, and Cello
  • 2017: One, Two, Three – String Trio
  • 2019: Words – High voice, Cello
  • 2017-2020: A Third Essay for String Quartet
  • 2021: In Porter County for String Quartet and Medium Voice
  • 2021: A Fourth Essay for String Quartet
  • 2021: Hexagons for Marimba, Xylophone, Tympani, and Conga Drums
  • 2022: Seven Ways of Looking at a Line for String Trio

Orchestra

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  • 2013: Concerted Music for Viola and Strings. – Strings
  • 2022: The Curve, for String orchestra
  • 2023: And then, they erased the name, for Oboe d'amore and Strings

Libretti

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  • 2018: A Deep Black Sleep, Premiere Hobart Tasmania, February, 2023. [4]
  • 2021: The Box

References

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  1. ^ Recent books are Joshua Barnes: The Academie, ed. Alan Swanson (Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2011)
    David Garrick and the Development of Eighteenth Century Comedy (Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2013)
    Articles on Mozart in Mozart Studien 2005, 2008.
  2. ^ Trouw, October 31, 2006. University news report; http://www.rug.nl/news-and-events/news/archief2006/114_06 (Both in Dutch)
  3. ^ Alan Swanson, Missa Aestiva (Orleans, MA: Paraclete Press, 1992).
  4. ^ Reviewed Australian Book Review, 28 February 2023
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