Richard Wilson was born
in Cleveland, where he studied piano with Leonard Shure and cello with Ernst
Silberstein. Much of his early musical study, including composition, took place
at the Cleveland Music School Settlement. Upon graduation from Harvard, he received
the Frank Huntington Beebe Award, which afforded him the opportunity to study
piano in Munich with Friedrich Wührer and composition in Rome with Robert
Moevs, his composition professor at Harvard.
Wilson has composed some ninety works, ranging in medium from solo tuba to full
orchestra, which have been played in major halls around the world. Among those
who have performed his music are Dawn Upshaw, Amy Burton, Jan Opalach,
Mary Nessinger, Rolf Schulte, Sophie Shao, Blanca Uribe, Ursula Oppens, Fred
Sherry, Walter Trampler, the Chicago Quartet, the Muir Quartet, the Delmé
Quartet, the Composers Quartet, the San Francisco Symphony under Herbert
Blomstedt, the Residentie Orkest of the Hague under Gerald Ostkamp, the London
Philharmonic, the Pro-Arte Chamber Orchestra of Boston, the Sau Paulo Symphony,
and the American Symphony all under Leon Botstein, and the Orquesta Sinfonica
de Colombia under Luis Biava.
Wilson has received numerous awards, including an Academy Award and the Walter
Hinrichsen Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Creative
Arts Award in Music from the City of Cleveland, the Stoeger Award from the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and a Guggenheim Fellowship under
which he composed his opera Æthelred
the Unready. He is composer-in-residence with the American
Symphony, where he gives pre-concert lectures. A member of the Vassar faculty
since 1966, Wilson occupies the Mary Conover Mellon Chair in Music.
contact: riwilson (at) vassar.edu |