Gary
Bartz of the Conservatory's jazz faculty and Professor of Conducting
Robert Spano '83, music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
(ASO), were among the winners at the Grammy Awards earlier this month.
Bartz, visiting professor of jazz saxophone, shared the award for best contemporary
jazz album for his contributions to McCoy Tyner's Illuminations (Telarc).
Bartz, who appears on the release with Tyner and fellow winners Terence Blanchard,
Christian McBride, and Lewis Nash, also wrote one of the songs on the album,
Soulstice. The album was recorded in New York City in November 2003.
Spano won the best choral performance award with Norman MacKenzie, ASO director
of choruses, for the orchestra's recording of Hector Berlioz's Requiem,
Op. 5 — another Telarc release. The album, which was recorded in Atlanta's
Symphony Hall at the Woodruff Arts Center, features MacKenzie directing the ASO
Chorus with tenor soloist Frank Lopardo.
Spano and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra also won a Grammy for best engineered
album for their Telarc recording of Jennifer Higdon's City Scape and Concerto
for Orchestra, which was also nominated in three other categories: best classical
album, best orchestral performance, and best classical contemporary composition.
John Adams was the winner in those three categories for his self-described "memory
space" commemorating the dead of 9/11, On the Transmigration of Souls,
performed by the New York Philharmonic. Lorin Maazel conducted the work, which
featured the Brooklyn Youth Chorus and the New York Choral Artists.
This is not the first Grammy for Bartz, a member of Oberlin's faculty since
2001. He has also received numerous other awards, including those from Down
Beatmagazine and Melody Maker. He has more than 35 solo recordings to his
credit as well as performances and recordings with hundreds of artists, among
them Miles Davis, Shirley Horn, the Max Roach/Abbey Lincoln group, Art Blakey's
Jazz Messengers with Lee Morgan, Charles Mingus' workshop, and, of course,
McCoy Tyner.
Spano also has to move aside a few Grammy awards on his bookshelf; in 2003 he
and the ASO swept the three categories for which they were nominated (best classical
album, best choral performance, and best engineered classical album) with their
Telarc recording of Ralph Vaughan Williams' A Sea Symphony. Spano is recognized
internationally as one of America's outstanding conductors, acclaimed for
leading vital, musically distinguished performances as well as for the breadth
of repertoire he explores. He has conducted nearly every major North American
orchestra and has appeared with orchestras and opera companies throughout Europe
and Asia. He has served as director of the Festival of Contemporary Music for
2003 and 2004 at the Tanglewood Music Center, where he has directed the prestigious
conducting fellowship program since 1998.
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