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Composer,
pianist, and keyboardist Wayne Horvitz has performed
extensively throughout Europe, Japan, and North America. Over the
past ten years, he has been leading various ensembles of his own,
including The President, The Horvitz-Morris-Previte Trio, the
Seattle based Pig Pen, and since the winter of 94/95, an acoustic
quartet with saxophonist Briggen Krauss, bassist Phil Sparks and
drummer Kenny Wollesen. He is the founder and co-leader of the
New York Composers Orchestra and a member of John Zorn's Naked City. As a sideman, he has worked with
such diverse artists as Marty Ehrlich, Billy Bang, Butch Morris, Bill Frisell, Bobby Previte, and blues guitarist Bobby Radcliff among others.
He appears on over fifty recordings.
As a composer, he has been commissioned by The Kitchen, The Kronos Quartet, New World Records and Earshot Jazz for
the International Creative Music Orchestra. He has received
grants from Meet the Composer, the NEA, the N.Y. State Arts
Council, The Mary Flagler Carey Trust, The Seattle Arts
Commission, and the Lila-Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund.
Commissions for theater have included productions of Ezra Pound's
Elektra and the American Premiere of Harold Pinter's Mountain
Language, both directed by Carey Perloff. In 1992
choreographer Paul Taylor created a new work, Oz, to
eleven compositions by Wayne Horvitz in collaboration with the
White Oak Dance Company. Other theater and dance works include
music written for Bill Irwin's Broadway show Strictly NY,
the Liz Lerman Dance Company in Washington D.C., the Crispin
Spaeth Dance Company in Seattle, and others. Wayne Horvitz has
also composed and produced music for a variety of video,
television and other multimedia projects, including science
programs for children, interactive CD-ROMS and laser discs, for
PBS, Microsoft and other clients.
As a record producer, Mr. Horvitz has produced albums for
Elektra, New World Records, Nonesuch, Antilles and Sound Aspects.
Artists include Bill Frisell, Butch Morris, Robin Holcomb, John
Adams, and Peter Apfelbaum and the Hieroglyphics Ensemble. In
1988 his Sound Aspects release Nine Below Zero received
the German critics award "Preis der Deutschen
Schallplattenkritik". His album Miracle Mile on
Elektra was named "Best of the Month" by Stereo Review
and received 5 stars in Down Beat Magazine. The 1992 Down Beat
Critics Poll placed him #1 talent deserving wider recognition in
the synthesizer category. The educational CD-ROM Dinosaurs
(Microsoft) received an EMMA award in Germany for the Best Sound
Design in 1993. Born in New York City in 1955, Wayne Horvitz now
lives in Seattle with his wife, composer Robin Holcomb, and their
daughter Nica.
Biography courtesy of Saudades
Tourneen
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