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Steven
Smith is currently in his fifth season as assistant conductor of The Cleveland
Orchestra, his fourth season as music director of the Cleveland Orchestra
Youth Orchestra, and his third year as music director of the Santa Fe
Symphony and Chorus. Effective July 1, 2002, he will be visiting associate
professor of conducting and music director of the Oberlin Conservatory
Orchestras.
Recent guest-conducting appearances by Smith include debuts with the symphony
orchestras of Detroit, Houston, Taiwan, and Hong Kong, and engagements
with the orchestras of Akron, Memphis, Kansas City, and Kalamazoo. He
has led Chicago's Grant Park Symphony, Cleveland's Ohio Chamber Orchestra,
New York's Chautauqua Symphony, the Annapolis Symphony, and the Colorado
Symphony in Denver. Smith's recent debuts include appearances with the
Hartford and Long Beach symphony orchestras, the Long Island Philharmonic,
and Mexico's Orquesta Sinfónica de Xalapa. During the 2000-2001
season, he led the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra in special appearances
at Carnegie Hall and at Penn State University.
From 1996-98, Steven Smith was associate conductor of the Kansas City
Symphony. Concurrent with this appointment, he was the sole recipient
of the Conductor Career Development Grant and was named Foundation Artist
by the Geraldine C. and Emory M. Ford Foundation. Previous positions include
music director of the San Juan Symphony, assistant conductor of the Colorado
Springs Symphony, and conductor of "Epicycle: an ensemble for new music."
Smith is also an active composer. In 1991, The Cleveland Orchestra commissioned
and gave the world premiere of Shake, Rattle & Roar, an interactive
piece for orchestra and audience. The work was featured on National Public
Radio and has since been performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the
National and Columbus symphonies, and other ensembles. Additional compositions
include La Chasse (premiered by the Chautauqua Symphony) and
A Journey.
A native of Toledo, Ohio, Steven Smith earned master's degrees from the
Eastman School of Music and the Cleveland Institute of Music. He is the
recipient of the Cleveland Institute of Music Alumni Association 1999
Alumni Achievement Award. Further conducting studies include workshops
and seminars with Daniel Barenboim and Daniel Lewis through the American
Symphony Orchestra League, Pierre Boulez at Carnegie Hall, Günther
Schuller at the Festival at Sandpoint, and Charles Bruck at the Monteux
School. In addition, he has worked with Otto-Werner Mueller and Walter
Hendl.
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