- John Metcalfe on arranging Peter Gabriel’s “Scratch My Back”
- Strictly Composing winner Julian Pombo is a Sibelius Student
- Avatar composer James Horner: “Without Sibelius, we’d be lost”
- Composer Blake Neely on HBO’s The Pacific
- Best Original Score Oscar-winner “Up” scored in Sibelius
- Last few days to switch from Finale and save!
- Huffington Post says Sibelius is “a technological wonder”
- Special offer for multi-seat Sibelius 6 upgrades in the UK
- Sibelius training in Sheffield this Sunday 7 March
- Composer Yalil Guerra scores Univision’s World Cup theme
2004 Pulitzer Prize is not a "Fantasy" for Paul Moravec
Sibelius is Composer's Software Choice for Tempest Fantasy
Composer Paul Moravec has captured the 2004 Pulitzer Prize in Music for Tempest Fantasy a composition for clarinet, violin, cello and piano. Moravec used Sibelius as his notation software to write this musical meditation on his favorite Shakespearean play, which was commissioned and premiered by Trio Solisti and clarinetist David Krakauer in May 2003 at the Morgan Library in New York City.
Moravec, who names the piano as his primary instrument, has composed more than 80 published orchestral, chamber, lyric and choral compositions. In addition to the Pulitzer, his numerous awards include a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, a Goddard Lieberson Fellowship and Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts & Letters, and a number of important commissions. His current projects include an oboe concerto, a composition for string orchestra, a piano trio and a cantata about Benjamin Franklin.
"Sibelius was recommended to me in 1998 by my publisher, Steve Culbertson of Subito Music," states Moravec. "Ever since, I have used the program at every stage of the composition process, from a work's inception to the printout of the final score. Sibelius enhances my musical creativity on every level, and I value the comprehensive power, range and versatility of its myriad options, especially the ease of notation input and the MIDI playback features."
Moravec, a graduate of Harvard and Columbia universities, has taught at Harvard, Columbia, Dartmouth and Hunter College. He currently serves as the Music Department Chair at Adelphi University in Garden City, NY.
"We have been using Sibelius programs at Adelphi's digital music studio since 2001," notes Moravec. "Our students find it quite effective for virtually all of their musical projects and needs. The program is especially useful to a composer like myself, for whom composition is as much about revision as anything else. Sibelius is more than just composer-friendly - it's composer-empowering."
Moravec joins five previous Pulitzer Prize in Music honorees using Sibelius: Charles Wuorinen (1970), Joseph Schwantner (1979), Ellen Taaffe Zwillich (1983), William Bolcom (1988) and Aaron Jay Kernis (1998).
To date, there are more than 100,000 Sibelius users worldwide, including conductor Michael Tilson-Thomas, guitarist Andy Summers, choral composer John Rutter and television composer Alf Clausen.
About Sibelius
Sibelius Software Ltd. is based in London, England. Its U.S. subsidiary, Sibelius USA, Inc., is located at 1407 Oakland Blvd., Suite 103 , Walnut Creek , California , 94596 and has offices in Baltimore , Cleveland , Dallas and Nashville . Sibelius products are available worldwide in more than 100 countries. For more information, contact Sibelius USA at phone (925) 280-0600; fax (925) 280-0008; on the Web at www.sibelius.com; or via e-mail at infoUSA@sibelius.com.
21 July 2004
All information correct at time of press release.
For further information please contact Sibelius.