Ann Moss (musician)
This article needs to be updated.(October 2019) |
Ann Moss is an American operatic soprano. She is best known for her commitment to contemporary music, having premiered and recorded works by many living composers including Vartan Aghababian, Weslie Brown, David Conte, Kenneth Froelich, Keiko Fujiie, Heather Gilligan, Jake Heggie, Miriam Miller, Miya Masaoka, Kirk O'Riordan, Wayne Peterson, Eric Sawyer, Allen Shearer, John Thow and Liam Wade, among others.
Biography
Moss was born in Lincoln, Massachusetts and was raised in a musical family, studying piano from a young age with her grandmother, Frances Moss.[1] Her grandfather, Leonard G. Moss, was a violinist with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the New York Opera Company, the New York Ballet Theatre, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, and retired in 1996 after 43 years with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.[2] Ann Moss received a bachelor's degree with a concentration in Music and the Related Arts at Hampshire College, a master's degree in Vocal Performance at the Longy School of Music of Bard College and a post-graduate degree in Vocal Performance from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.[1] She resides and teaches in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, jazz violinist and classical violist Justin Ouellet.[3]
Moss has released three solo albums: Nordwell & Moss: Vartan Aghababian Songs for Voice and Piano (Angels Share Records 2018), Currents (Angels Share Records 2013)[4] and Love Life (ASR 2016),[5] the latter two produced and recorded by multi-GRAMMY Award winner Leslie Ann Jones at Skywalker Sound, a Lucasfilm, Ltd. company. These feature premiere recordings of compositions by Jake Heggie, John Thow, Liam Wade and Vartan Aghababian, as well as songs by Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Weslie Brown and Lennon-McCartney, with collaborators from the chamber, new music, and jazz communities including the Hausmann Quartet, cellist Emil Miland, pianists Karen Rosenak, Steven Bailey and Matt Berkeley, flamenco guitarist Jeremías García, and vocal ensemble Chanticleer. She can also be heard on releases from labels including PARMA,[6] Arsis Audio,[7] Naxos Records, Albany Records,[8] Navona Records and Jaded Ibis Productions.[3]
Notable world premieres
- 2019 The River-merchant's Wife (Allen Shearer)
- 2018 Gaman: to persevere (Christophe Chagnard)[9]
- 2018 Madrigals for the Seasons (David Conte)[10]
- 2018 Hard Stones (Griffin Candey) and (Lisa DeSiro)[11]
- 2017 Down the deep stair (Jered Redmond)[7]
- 2017 Wilderness Mute (Keiko Fujiie)[9]
- 2016 A Line Becomes a Circle (Miya Masaoka)[7][12]
- 2016 Finite Differences (Kenneth D. Froelich) and (John Grimmett)[13][7]
- 2016 Regrets Only (John Grimmett)[14]
- 2015 Erbsensuppenlieder (Vartan Aghababian)[15]
- 2015 As I ride the late night freeways (Matt Schumaker)[16][17]
- 2015 Full Fathom Five (Liam Wade)[18]
- 2014 things that had no opposites (Sam Nichols) and (Tim Horvath)[19]
- 2012 Nerd Songs (Kenneth D. Froelich)[20]
- 2012 Gertrude & Alice: Scenes from a Shared Life (Sanford Dole) and (Brad Erickson)[20]
- 2011 Three Dickinson Songs (Vartan Aghababian)[21]
- 2010 Mame Loshn (Miriam Miller) and (Sarah Traister Moskovitz)[22]
- 2009 Battlegrounds (Heather Gilligan) and (E. Ethelbert Miller)[23]
- 2007 Freedom and Love (Wayne Peterson)[24][25]
Notable United States premieres
- 2019 you'll drown, dear (Sivan Eldar)[26]
Discography
- Autumn Winds (Ravello Records, 2020)
- Nordwell & Moss: Vartan Aghababian Songs for Voice and Piano (Angels Share Records, 2018)
- Everyone Sang: Vocal Music of David Conte (Arsis, 2018)
- Love Life (Angels Share Records, 2016)
- Don Walker: The Thoughtfulness of Thirst (Albany, 2016)
- Nerd Songs (Kenneth D. Froelich, 2015)
- Michael Murray: Precipience (Navona, 2015)
- Currents (Angels Share Records, 2013)
- Music for Between Appear and Disappear (Jaded Ibis Productions, 2013)
- Salir el amor del mundo (Naxos, 2010)
References
- ^ a b Waugh, A. (January 16, 2014). "Singer returns to her Lincoln roots in Jan. 31 concert". The Lincoln Squirrel.
- ^ "Leonard G. Moss". www.legacy.com.
- ^ a b "New Music USA: Ann Moss". www.newmusicusa.org.
- ^ Kaliss, J. (June 18, 2013). "Inside Skywalker Sound". San Francisco Classical Voice.
- ^ "Love Life (Angels Share)". www.jakeheggie.com.
- ^ "The PARMA Album of the Day: PERCIPIENCE". www.parmarecordings.com.
- ^ a b c d "Everyone Sang: Extended Notes".
- ^ "Don Walker: Emily Dickinson Songs". www.prestomusic.com.
- ^ a b "Music of Remembrance 2017-18 features music commissions inspired by Japanese and Japanese American wartime experience". The North American Post. September 2, 2017.
- ^ "David Conte, composition". www.sfcm.edu.
- ^ "Faculty Opening Recital 40th Seminar on Contemporary Music for the Young". www.riversschoolconservatory.org.
- ^ "A Chamber Opera Based on Haiku is Coming to the Theatre of Yugen". therehearsalstudio.blogspot.com.
- ^ "Music Compositions World Premiere is Oct. 29". www.fresnostatenews.com.
- ^ "Meet Liam Wade and John Grimmett, Winning Composer/Librettist Team of FSOO 2016". www.oneounceopera.com.
- ^ "Longy School of Music of Bard College Honors Long-Time Educator, the Late Ruth Gessner=Schocken as Part of Centennial Celebration 10.16.15". October 1, 2015.
- ^ "MIT Music & Theater Arts People - Matthew Schumaker". www.mta.mit.edu.
- ^ "CNMAT - Matthew Schumaker". www.cnmat.berkeley.edu.
- ^ Rudio, M. (January 26, 2015). "A Musical Homecoming for Noe Valley Chamber Music". San Francisco Classical Voice.
- ^ Frandzel, B. (December 12, 2014). "Left Coast Chamber Ensemble Explores Music for Guitar". San Francisco Classical Voice.
- ^ a b Gereben, J. (August 7, 2012). "Music News: Two Mosses Make One Other Acronym". San Francisco Classical Voice.
- ^ "Aghababian Recital (Cambridge, Mass.)". www.armenianweekly.com.
- ^ "One Art Ensemble". www.oneartensemble.org.
- ^ "MIT Events April 2009". www.mit.edu.
- ^ Dunn, J. (September 25, 2007). "The Modern in Wayne Peterson". San Francisco Classical Voice.
- ^ "This page lists 28 Earplay performances of works by composer Wayne Peterson". www.earplay.org.
- ^ Wishnia, R. (March 5, 2019). "Eco Ensemble Makes the Case for Berkeley Composers". San Francisco Classical Voice.