Steve Heitzeg

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Steve Heitzeg
Born (1959-10-15) October 15, 1959 (age 64)
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota, Gustavus Adolphus College
Musical career
GenresContemporary classical music
Occupation(s)Composer
Years active1970s–present
LabelsInnova Recordings, Stone Circle Music
Websitesteveheitzeg.com

Steve Heitzeg (born October 15, 1959)[1] is an American composer whose works include compositions for orchestra, chorus, chamber ensemble, ballet, and film.

He is well known for themes of environmentalism and social justice in his work,[2][3][4] which often incorporates unusual instrumentation with ecological or thematic resonance to the work at hand, such as stones, driftwood, and whale bones. He has written more than 150 compositions since the late 1970s,[1][5] including the award-winning On the Day You Were Born,[3] his 2001 Nobel Symphony,[6] and soundtracks including the PBS films Death of the Dream (which won an Upper Midwest Emmy Award)[7] and A Marriage: Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz.[8]

Heitzeg's music has been performed by orchestras and ensembles across the US and Europe, including the Minnesota Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, Houston Symphony, Des Moines Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Detroit Symphony, Auckland Philharmonia, Florida Orchestra, Dale Warland Singers, VocalEssence and James Sewell Ballet.[9][10][11][12] His works have been performed by conductors including Marin Alsop, Philip Brunelle, Michael Butterman, William Eddins, JoAnn Falletta, Joseph Giunta, Giancarlo Guerrero, Sarah Hicks, Jahja Ling, Lawrence Renes, Christopher Seaman, Mischa Santora, André Raphel Smith, Joseph Silverstein, Yan Pascal Tortelier, Osmo Vänskä and Dale Warland.[13]

Early life[edit]

Heitzeg was born in Albert Lea, Minnesota,[14] and grew up on a dairy farm near the small town of Kiester. In high school, he played trombone in marching band, guitar in jazz band, and sang in the choir.[15] He also wrote a rock opera, P.S., based on the story of the prodigal son, during his senior year.[16][8]

After graduating from Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minnesota, in 1982, he earned his PhD in musical composition at the University of Minnesota in 1986, studying under Dominick Argento and Eric Stokes. His doctoral work was the 1985 composition Nine Surrealist Studies (After Salvador Dali), inspired by the Spanish surrealist painter, which was premiered in 1987 by the Florida Orchestra.[17][18][15][2][19][20][21] Kurt Loft of the Tampa Tribune praised the work, calling Heitzeg "a serious composer with much to say" and adding that Nine Surrealist Studies "suggests the enigma of time and the irrational dream world that so fascinated the famed Spanish painter."[22]

Artistic philosophy and musical style[edit]

Writing about Heitzeg's career, Kurt Loft of the Tampa Tribune wrote that "Heitzeg is remarkably prolific. His body of work includes significant orchestra and chamber pieces, opera, works for chorus and film scores. His compositions reflect a concern for environmental issues, history, art and literature."[19] Terry Blain of the Minneapolis Star Tribune has called Heitzeg "renowned for the ecological agenda of his music, and its sense of social conscience."[4] Heitzeg's belief in environmentalism and pacifism is a fundamental cornerstone of his work, with themes of social justice, ecology, and the interconnectedness of humans and the Earth interweaving in almost all his more than 150 creations.[3][10][9][6][23][24] Heitzeg described his philosophy in a 1993 interview with the Arizona Daily Star: "To write about nature and to include natural instruments is my mission. By doing that I hope to have people realize our relationship to nature, and have them respect other lives. And when that happens, peace is more possible, be it world peace or inner peace."[12]

He has taken direct inspiration from the natural world in works such as Makhato Wakpa (Blue Earth River), Voice of the Everglades, and Endangered (Written in Honor of All Turtles and Tortoises). Heitzeg has also been inspired by artists of many different disciplines, having devoted works to painters Georgia O'Keeffe and Salvador Dali, composer Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, poet Pablo Neruda, and others.[2][25] Themes of human rights and social justice are at the forefront of works such as his Nobel Symphony, Peace March for Paul and Sheila Wellstone, and the recent work How Many Breaths? (In Memory of George Floyd and Countless Others).

His music often features natural instruments, such as stones, fallen tree branches, and sea glass shards.[10] Heitzeg told one interviewer that he sees his use of natural materials as instruments as "a symbolic metaphor for the fact that we're all connected and not separate from nature. All instruments come from nature."[26] He has also used other kinds of found objects as instruments to highlight thematic resonances in a particular piece, such as plowshares and olive branches in his Nobel Symphony,[6][27] and Ford Mustang hubcaps and horseshoes in Mustang (in Tribute to Wild Horses and Burros).[28]

Ecoscores[edit]

An example of one of Heitzeg's ecoscores, 2002's Peace March for Paul and Sheila Wellstone

As part of his artistic commitment to environmental issues, Heitzeg writes what he calls "ecoscores", which are hand-drawn graphics that combine musical notation and visual art, and seek to reinforce Heitzeg's themes of Earth and pacifism.[23][29][1][24][30][13] Each ecoscore is hand-drawn on recycled paper.[12] Two ecoscores, Peace March for Paul and Sheila Wellstone and American Symphony (Unfinished), are in the permanent collection of the Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis.[31][32] Ecology Symphony, written for the 40th anniversary of Earth Day in 2010, dedicated each of its movements to a different endangered species including the leatherback turtle, Javan rhinoceros, and mountain gorilla.[33]

Critical reception[edit]

Heitzeg's work has been positively reviewed by many critics. Nicholas Tawa, author of the 2009 book The Great American Symphony, singled out Heitzeg as part of "a new crop of American composers who find value in writing symphonies."[34] Bruce Hodges of MusicWeb International called the 2004 VocalEssence performance of Heitzeg's Nobel Symphony one of the best concerts of that year, calling it "a work that continues to linger in the mind" and praising its "eloquent reimagining" of a text by Chilean poet-diplomat Pablo Neruda.[35] Michael Fleming of the St. Paul Pioneer Press said that "Heitzeg's compositions, whether for orchestra, solo instrument or voice, are colorful and superbly crafted. Behind each lies a story or idea, but the music stands by itself."[8] Writing for the Star Tribune, Terry Blain called Heitzeg's American Nomad "an unashamedly accessible and emotional piece, packed with catchy tunes and pin-sharp evocations of both landscape and urban environments. Its teeming generosity of spirit and openness to new experiences now feel painfully at odds with our more inward-looking, mean-spirited present and seem almost to rebuke it."[36]

Career[edit]

1980s and 1990s: A Marriage, On the Day You Were Born, and Aqua[edit]

In 1988, Heitzeg's three-movement orchestral tribute to Vice President Hubert Humphrey, A Voice Remembered, was performed by the Civic Orchestra of Minneapolis; WCCO-TV newscaster Dave Moore read from Humphrey's speeches and writing.[15] Star Tribune classical music critic Michael Anthony praised the work as "neo-Romantic, emotive, heart-on-sleeve music" that "evokes the sound and idiom of Aaron Copland's work, especially in the outer movements. ... In its brevity and tight construction, it's an effective work."[37]

Endangered (Written in Honor of All Turtles and Tortoises), a 10-minute work for solo cello, debuted in Minneapolis in 1990. The piece uses a repeated theme around the notes E-D-A-G, shorthand for "endangered", and was inspired by the similar shapes of a cello and Galapagos tortoise. The Star Tribune's Michael Anthony called it "an odd and touching work in nine brief movements held together by a lush, elegiac theme."[38][39]

The Dale Warland Singers premiered Heitzeg's Christmas choral work little tree, based on the poem by e.e. cummings, in 1990. The company later recorded the song for their 1995 album December Stillness.[13] Described by John Shulson of the Newport News, Virginia, Daily Press as "a charming lullaby-like work of touching imagery",[40] little tree has become one of Heitzeg's most frequently performed works.[24][41]

Two compositions by Heitzeg, Flower of the Earth and Endangered, were used as the score for the 1991 PBS American Playhouse film A Marriage: Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz, starring Jane Alexander and Christopher Plummer.[42][43] Flower of the Earth was originally written in 1987 in homage to O'Keeffe, and devoted each of its four movements to a different O'Keeffe painting.[25] Alexander, who co-produced the film, chose Heitzeg to create its score, and would work with him again repeatedly.[44]

Heitzeg's choral work Litanies for the Living was premiered in 1992 in Minneapolis by the Westminster Festival Chorus and Minnetonka Choral Society. A meditation on peace between humans and nature, Litanies is set to text by poets Gary Snyder and Wendell Berry. Michael Anthony of the Star Tribune called it "effectively and skillfully composed" and "evocative ... with a tone of reverence and loss."[45]

Makhato Wakpa (Blue Earth River) was premiered in October 1992 by the Mankato Symphony Orchestra. The piece is inspired by the geography and history of the Blue Earth River, including the mass execution of 38 Native Americans after the Dakota War of 1862. The Arizona Daily Star lauded it as "a work that fully integrates Heitzeg's ecological and cultural interests".[12] It was subsequently performed by the Cabrillo Festival Orchestra, Marin Alsop conducting, in 1995.[46]

The 1995 orchestral work Mustang (in Tribute to Wild Horses and Burros) paid tribute to the role of horses in American mythology, as well as their automotive descendants; instrumentation included Ford Mustang hubcaps and horseshoes used as percussive elements. Reviewer Todd Epp of the Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Argus-Leader, reviewing a performance of the work by the South Dakota Symphony, said it "painted a vivid sound portrait of freedom, power, and the American West," and wrote that the hubcaps simultaneously served as "both a cymbal and a symbol."[28]

In 1995, Heitzeg wrote the symphony On the Day You Were Born to accompany the bestselling children's book by Debra Frasier. The work was debuted by the Minnesota Orchestra, with actress Jane Alexander as narrator, and subsequently released by the orchestra as an animated children's video on the NotesAlive! label.[44] The Minnesota Orchestra restaged the piece with Maya Angelou as narrator in 2008.[47] The symphony has been performed frequently by orchestras across the U.S.[3] On the Day You Were Born won the American Library Association's Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Children's Video in 1997.[48]

Heitzeg was commissioned in 1997 by Gustavus Adolphus College to write Blessed are the Peacemakers, a work for alto soloist, chorus and orchestra which honored the 25th anniversary of the college's annual student-performed "Christmas in Christ Chapel" program. The work also honored five historic peacemakers: Martin Luther King, Hildegard von Bingen, St. Francis, Dag Hammarskjöld and Raoul Wallenberg.[49]

Heitzeg's debut album, Earthworks: Music in Honor of Nature, was released in 1998 on Innova Recordings. A collection of his chamber works, the album includes performances by flutist Julia Bogorad, soprano Maria Jette, cellist Laura Sewell, the House of Hope Children's Choir and Zeitgeist.[50][5][51]

Aqua (Hommage a Jacques-Yves Cousteau), a tribute to the oceans and the influential French explorer and environmentalist, was debuted in 1999 by the Virginia Symphony. In 2000, the game show Jeopardy! featured Heitzeg and Aqua as the subject of a Final Jeopardy question.[52][53][54]

2000s: Death of the Dream, Voice of the Everglades, and Nobel Symphony[edit]

Heitzeg wrote the words and music for What the River Says, a 15-minute work for chorus, piano and percussion in three movements, which was inspired by the 1997 Red River flood that devastated North Dakota and commissioned by the American Composers Forum and the National Endowment for the Arts. It was premiered by the Grand Forks Master Chorale in 2000. Heitzeg used stones and driftwood he gathered from the Red River banks as natural instrumentation. The title was taken from a poem by William Stafford.[55][56][57]

Heitzeg's score for the PBS documentary Death of the Dream: Farmhouses in the Heartland won an Upper Midwest Emmy in 2000 from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.[7] It was performed by cellist Laura Sewell, pianist Thomas Linker, fiddle and mandolin player Peter Ostroushko, Heitzeg himself on guitar, and members of the new-music ensemble Zeitgeist. The score was released on disc by Innova Recordings.[58][59]

Voice of the Everglades (A Tribute to Marjory Stoneman Douglas) was commissioned by Florida's Naples Philharmonic Orchestra in honor of conservationist Stoneman Douglas, and premiered in November 2000. To create the work, Heitzeg spent time in Florida's Everglades and Ten Thousand Islands collecting audio recordings and found objects later used in the final piece, including manatee vocalizations, coral, river stones, sawgrass bundles and manatee bones. The premiere performance was accompanied by large-scale projection of images of the Everglades by nature photographer Clyde Butcher, who also narrated excerpts from Stoneman Douglas' writings. Cathy Chestnut of the Fort Myers, Florida News-Press called it "a celebration of Douglas' life and the land she fought to protect, and an elegy for the endangered manatee."[26] The Czech Republic's Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra's recording of Voice of the Everglades was released on the label Stone Circle Music in 2005. Reviewer John Leeman of MusicWeb International called it "heartening" and likened it to "a spoken documentary set to music. You could perhaps think of it as a kind of conservationist Peter and the Wolf."[60]

Heitzeg's 2001 Nobel Symphony celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Nobel Peace Prize, and was commissioned by Gustavus Adolphus College, which hosted the 33rd annual Nobel Conference that year. The 75-minute symphony was the largest work of Heitzeg's career up to that point, involving 400 musicians from the Gustavus Orchestra and five separate choirs. Each of its six movements is dedicated to a particular category of Nobel Prize—Peace, Literature, Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, and Economics—and includes writings from Nobel laureates such as Martin Luther King, Desmond Tutu, the Dalai Lama, and Rigoberta Menchú. Heitzeg's use of unconventional instruments continues here, with percussionists playing plowshares, olive branches, Tibetan singing bowls, African drums, empty soup cans (representing hunger) and hollow prosthetic legs (representing the folly of war). Kay Miller of the Minneapolis Star Tribune wrote that the work's focus on the need for world peace took on added significance given the political circumstances at the time, with its debut performance coming only two weeks after the September 11 attacks.[6][27]

Symphony to the Prairie Farm, a 20-minute work in four movements, was first performed in 2002 by the Des Moines Symphony.[61] Robert C. Fuller of the Des Moines Register called it "an eclogue to Midwestern agrarianism", and praised the use of squeaky toys to mimic prairie dogs "strangely evocative and effective."[62] Ghosts of the Grasslands, the first movement of the symphony, was performed by the Boulder Philharmonic, with Michael Butterman conducting, in 2017 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.[63]

Heitzeg wrote Centennial Fanfare (A Common Call) in honor of the Minnesota Orchestra's 100th season in 2002.[64]

We Are Met at Gettysburg, co-commissioned by the Minnesota Orchestra and The Philadelphia Orchestra and debuted in 2003, was jointly created with Pennsylvania composer Amy Scurria. With a title taken from Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, the work honored the 140th anniversary of the Civil War battle.[65]

The choral concert River Journey Suite, debuted in 2004 by the Dale Warland Singers, included compositions by Heitzeg, William Banfield, Kirke Mechem, and John Muehleisen; Heitzeg's work, Elegy on Water, was inspired by a Robert Bly poem, "Mourning Pablo Neruda." Bly read his poem during the performance; reviewer Michael Anthony praised the music's "whirling figures [which] coalesced into a folklike hymn at the end."[66]

Song Without Borders, a four-part work for string quartet, was written in memory of the victims of a 2003 bombing attack on UN workers in Baghdad, and was performed by the Daedalus Quartet in 2008 at the UN Headquarters in New York to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the attack.[67][68] Soon afterward, it was performed by the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra String Quartet in Baghdad.[5]

In 2008, the James Sewell Ballet collaborated with Heitzeg on Social Movements, a 30-minute dance piece scored by Heitzeg on the themes of war, global warming, refugees and human rights and inspired in part by the self-sacrifice of the Quaker peace activist Norman Morrison, who set himself on fire in 1965 to protest the Vietnam War. Reviewer Camille Lefevre, writing for the Star Tribune, praised the music's "sensory and historical barrage ... packed with emotional and dramatic cues."[69][70][30]

While We Breathe, We Hope (Fanfare For Obama), which included text from Barack Obama's victory speech after his 2008 election win, was commissioned and premiered by The Chamber Music Society of Minnesota in 2009.[18]

2010s and 2020s: Symphony in Sculpture, American Nomad, and How Many Breaths?[edit]

In 2011, Innova Recordings released Wild Songs, an album of compositions by Heitzeg and Lori Laitman sung by soprano opera and chamber music singer Polly Butler Cornelius and Zeitgeist members Heather Barringer and Patti Cudd, as well as recorded bonobo vocalizations. It features texts by Rachel Carson, Jane Goodall and Terry Tempest Williams.[71][72] Reviewing the album, Steven Ritter of Audiophile Audition magazine called Heitzeg "a composer who is fiercely melodic and knows how to integrate disparate sounds into a whole".[73] Dominy Clements of MusicWeb International magazine called the album "highly approachable" and praised the music as "full of fascination and variety. ... These are works which lead their own environmental consciousness-raising life with considerable communicative depth."[74] Cheryl Coker of the Journal of the International Alliance for Women in Music called it "intriguing" and said that Cornelius was "excellent" and "consistently effective throughout her vocal range."[75]

In 2012, the Des Moines Symphony debuted Symphony in Sculpture, a 25-minute work commissioned for the Pappajohn Sculpture Park in Des Moines and for the 75th season of the Des Moines Symphony itself. It is divided into nine short movements, each representing one of the sculptures in the park. Music critic Michael Morain of The Des Moines Register felt the piece was too short, but said that "the music matches the sculptures with just a few thoughtful strokes."[76] Symphony in Sculpture II followed in 2015, covering six more sculptures and including windchimes made from chakra stones and olive branches, a steel mixing bowl from Heitzeg's late mother's kitchen, and trilobite and whalebone fossils. 2019's Symphony in Sculpture III pays tribute to three more sculptures, including a sculpture by Ai Weiwei.[77]

In 2015, the Minnesota Orchestra premiered Heitzeg's trumpet concerto American Nomad, a work for full orchestra which also included instrumentation such as an armature bar from the Statue of Liberty, New York City subway spikes, a piece of steel from the Golden Gate Bridge, and fallen branches from a Joshua tree.[78] Michael Anthony of the Star Tribune, writing about its debut performance, called it an "intriguing" and "vividly rhythmic ... rumination on the American spirit: its loneliness, its medley of cultures, its restless ambition and grandiosity," which he felt was "so good that one is led to predict it will be performed by numerous orchestras across the country."[79] Terry Blain, writing about a 2019 performance, praised its "exuberant, multifaceted writing for solo trumpet, laced with jazzy stylings and suffused with the irrepressible curiosity of the American spirit."[36]

His chamber music work Seabirds and Stones: In Memory of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies and Refugee (Variations on Immigration) debuted together at Lakeville Area Arts Center in January 2018; performers included Anna Christofaro, soprano, and Mary Jo Gothmann, piano.[80]

For violinist Ariana Kim, Heitzeg wrote the music for How Many Breaths?, an 18-minute multimedia work for solo violin and spoken word inspired by the 2020 protests in the Twin Cities against the murder of George Floyd. Kim not only performed the violin but edited the video presentation of demonstrations and art created during the protests, with spoken text by Penumbra Theatre artistic director Sarah Bellamy. The video premiered in September 2020 on the website of the Chamber Music Society of Minnesota. Star Tribune critic Terry Blain called Heitzeg's score "jaggedly expressive."[81][4]

Other work[edit]

In addition to composing, Heitzeg has also taught at Minnesota State University Mankato and Gustavus Adolphus College, and worked in the Minnesota Orchestra library.[42][54] He was the 1993–1994 composer-in-residence at the University of Saint Thomas.[1]

Awards and accolades[edit]

Gustavus Adolphus College maintains an archive of materials related to Heitzeg's composing career.[16][1]

Personal life[edit]

Heitzeg lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, with his wife Gwen and daughter Zadie.[10][84]

Selected works[edit]

Orchestral works[edit]

  • Nine Surrealist Studies (After Salvador Dali) (1987)
  • A Voice Remembered (in Memoriam Hubert H. Humphrey) (1988)
  • Makhato Wakpa (Blue Earth River) (1992)
  • On the Day You Were Born (1995)
  • Blessed are the Peacemakers (1997)
  • Mustang (in Tribute to Wild Horses and Burros) (1998)
  • Aqua (Hommage a Jacques-Yves Cousteau) (1999)
  • Voice of the Everglades (A Tribute to Marjory Stoneman Douglas) (2000)
  • Nobel Symphony (2001)
  • Blue Liberty (2002)
  • Symphony to the Prairie Farm (2002)
  • We Are Met at Gettysburg (2003)
  • Wounded Fields (2003)
  • Madeline Island: Sanctuary in Blue (2005)
  • The Tin Forest (2005)
  • Together (Divided We Are Nothing…) (2007)
  • While We Breathe, We Hope (Fanfare For Obama), (2009)
  • Symphony in Sculpture (2012)
  • Now We Start the Great Round (2014)
  • Symphony in Sculpture II (2015)
  • American Nomad (2015)
  • Symphony in Sculpture III (2019)

Instrumental and chamber works[edit]

  • Endangered (Written in Honor of All Turtles and Tortoises) (1990)
  • Centennial Fanfare (A Common Call) (2002)
  • Of Wind and Wood (2003)
  • Peace March for Paul and Sheila Wellstone (2003)
  • Open Spaces (2004)
  • Peace Cranes (2006)
  • Song Without Borders (2008)
  • The Legend of the Bluebonnet (2009)
  • While We Breathe, We Hope (Fanfare for Obama) (2009)
  • Ecology Symphony (2010)
  • Seabirds and Stones: In Memory of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (2018)
  • How Many Breaths? (In Memory of George Floyd and Countless Others) (2020)

Vocal and choral works[edit]

  • Enduring Earth (1990)
  • little tree (1990)
  • Litanies for the Living (1992)
  • What the River Says (2000)
  • Elegy on Water (2004)
  • River Journey Suite: "Mourning Pablo Neruda" (2004)
  • We, Too, Rise (2006)
  • I Pray to the Birds (2010)
  • Long Walk To Freedom (2014)
  • I Will Be a Hummingbird (2015)

Film, theater and ballet scores[edit]

  • A Marriage: Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz (1991)
  • Inheriting the Holocaust (1994)
  • Death of the Dream: Farmhouses in the Heartland (2000)
  • Ghosts (2003)
  • Lincoln and Lee at Antietam: The Cost of Freedom (2006)
  • Social Movements (2008)

Songs and cycles[edit]

  • Refugee (Variations on Immigration) (2018)

Discography[edit]

As primary artist[edit]

  • On the Day You Were Born (video, Minnesota Orchestra, 1996)
  • Steve Heitzeg, Earthworks (Music In Honor Of Nature), (1998, Innova Recordings)
  • Steve Heitzeg, Death of the Dream: Farmhouses in the Heartland (Original Score), (2000, Innova Recordings)[50]
  • Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra, Voice of the Everglades: A Tribute to Marjory Stoneman Douglas, (2000, Stone Circle Music)
  • Polly Butler Cornelius, Wild Songs: Polly Butler Cornelius performs songs by Steve Heitzeg and Lori Laitman, (2011, Innova Recordings)[71]
  • Des Moines Symphony, Steve Heitzeg, Symphony in Sculpture I, II, and III (DVD set, 2012)

Compilations and other works[edit]

  • Dale Warland Singers, December Stillness, (1995, American Choral Catalog); features Heitzeg's little tree
  • Teresa McCollough, New American Piano Music, (2001, Innova Recordings); features Heitzeg's Sandhill Crane (Migration Variations)
  • Zeitgeist, Here and Now: Celebrating Thirty Years of Zeitgeist (2011, Innova Recordings); features Heitzeg's American Indian Movement (No Reservations)[85][86]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Appold, Juliette (November 1, 2018). "American Composers and Musicians from A to Z: H (Part 1 – Heitzeg, Steve)". NLS Music Notes. Library of Congress. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Fleming, John (January 28, 1993). "Composer has topical approach". Tampa Bay Times. Tampa, Florida. p. 5B.
  3. ^ a b c d Meier, Peg (October 17, 1995). "A symphony is born". Star Tribune. Minneapolis-St. Paul. p. E1. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Blain, Terry (October 4, 2020). "Life in a Minor Key: For Minnesota composers, the pandemic has brought a host of changes, not all of them bad". Star Tribune. Minneapolis-St. Paul. p. E4. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d "Steve Heitzeg". Source Song Festival. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d Miller, Kay (September 29, 2001). "Playing for peace: Nobel symphony underscores global need for unity". Star Tribune. Minneapolis-St. Paul. p. 1E. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c "The 2000 Upper Midwest Emmy® Awards Nominees & Recipients". National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Upper Midwest Chapter. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d Fleming, Michael (November 15, 1992). "Rising Star: Steve Heitzeg". St. Paul Pioneer Press. St. Paul, Minnesota. p. 1E.
  9. ^ a b Yellow, Dorreen (September 1, 1999). "Composer to Use River Sounds for Sweet Music". Grand Forks Herald. Grand Forks, North Dakota. p. A5.
  10. ^ a b c d Divine, Mary (June 27, 2016). "St. Paul composer retreats to Afton for nature's soundtrack". Minnesota Public Radio/St. Paul Pioneer Press. St. Paul, Minnesota. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  11. ^ Divine, Mary (June 27, 2016). "St. Paul composer retreats to Afton for nature's soundtrack". St. Cloud Times. Saint Cloud, Minnesota. p. A3. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d Reel, James (November 15, 1993). "Heitzeg integrates ecology and culture". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. p. 3B. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c "Biography". Steve Heitzeg. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
  14. ^ Daniels, David (2005). Orchestral Music: A Handbook. Scarecrow Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780810856745.
  15. ^ a b c Flanagan, Barbara (January 13, 1988). "The Flanagan Memo: Pia Zadora's huband lived in St. Paul". Star Tribune. Minneapolis-St. Paul. p. 1B. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  16. ^ a b c "Heitzeg, Steve. Collection of Steve Heitzeg, 1978-Ongoing". Gustavus Adolphus College and Lutheran Church Archives. Gustavus Adolphus College. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  17. ^ Holdhusen, David (2011). Commitment to Musical Excellence: A 75 Year History of the Gustavus Choir. Cambridge Scholars Pub. p. 118. ISBN 9781443828048.
  18. ^ a b "Alumni News". Tutti. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota School of Music. Fall 2009. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  19. ^ a b Loft, Kurt (January 28, 1993). "Surreal Symphony: Musical studies, based on Salvador Dali's paintings, represent the dream world and explore the mystery of time". Tampa Tribune. Tampa, Florida. p. 1.
  20. ^ a b "Southwest Florida is favorite of a few". The News-Press. Fort Myers, Florida. September 22, 2002. p. 12. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  21. ^ Palmer, Susan (February 16, 1992). "Dali Paintings Inspire Composer's "Nine Surrealist Studies'". Anchorage Daily News. Anchorage, Alaska. p. G3.
  22. ^ Loft, Kurt (February 1, 1993). "Orchestra offers high five, low nine". Tampa Tribune. Tampa, Florida. p. 1. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  23. ^ a b Thompson, William Forde, ed. (July 18, 2014). Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. p. 402. ISBN 9781483365589.
  24. ^ a b c Anstead, Alicia (December 4, 1998). "Composer hears the Earth's music". Bangor Daily News. Bangor, Maine. p. C5. Retrieved February 10, 2022.
  25. ^ a b Shulgold, Marc (February 10, 1991). "Composer's Sense of Purpose Carries Over to Classical Works". Rocky Mountain News. Denver, Colorado.
  26. ^ a b Chestnut, Cathy (September 22, 2002). "Many artists have found their muse in Florida's landscapes". The News-Press. Fort Myers, Florida. p. 10. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  27. ^ a b Roberts, Chris (April 16, 2004). "A symphony where the audience interacts with more than sound". Minnesota Public Radio. St. Paul, Minnesota.
  28. ^ a b Epp, Todd (March 23, 1998). "Symphony scores with the new and 'Rhapsody in Blue'". Argus-Leader. Sioux Falls, South Dakota. p. 4B. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  29. ^ Blackburn, Philip (May 2005). "Interviews with artists, composers, researchers and scientists". Music and Nature: A Natural History of Listening. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  30. ^ a b "Teacher's Resource Guide: Meet the Composers and Their Music: Steve Heitzeg" (PDF). Des Moines Symphony. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  31. ^ "American Symphony (Unfinished)". Weisman Art Museum. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  32. ^ "Peace March for Paul and Sheila Wellstone". Weisman Art Museum. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  33. ^ "For Earth Day, an ecology symphony". The Hub. League of American Orchestras. April 30, 2010. Retrieved February 11, 2022.
  34. ^ Tawa, Nicholas (March 26, 2009). The Great American Symphony: Music, the Depression, and War. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253002877.
  35. ^ "Concerts of the Year 2004". MusicWeb International. May–August 2004. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  36. ^ a b Blain, Terry (January 14, 2019). "Orchestra offers vision of America". Star Tribune. Minneapolis-St. Paul. p. E1. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
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External links[edit]