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For distinguished musical composition of significant dimension by an American that has had its first performance in the United States during the year, Five thousand dollars ($5,000).

Life is a Dream, Opera in Three Acts: Act II, Concert Version, by Lewis Spratlan

Premiered on January 28, 2000 by Dinosaur Annex in Amherst, MA. Libretto by James Maraniss.

Columbia University President George Rupp (right) presents Lewis Spratlan with The 2000 Pulitzer Prize in Music.

Winning Work

Life is a Dream, Opera in Three Acts: Act II, Concert Version

N/A

Biography

Lewis Spratlan, a native of Miami, is a widely performed and much honored composer. A student of Mel Powell and Gunther Schuller at Yale, he has taught and conducted at Tanglewood, The Yale Summer School of Music and Art, and Amherst College, where he has been on the faculty since 1970. His music has been performed in New York, Los Angeles, Washington, Pittsburgh, Miami, London, Moscow, Montreal, Toronto, and perhaps most significantly, Boston, where he has received commissions and premieres from the Boston Musica Viva, The Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble, soprano Karol Bennett, and pianist John McDonald, among others. Other New England-based ensembles, including the Springfield Symphony Orchestra, the Lydian String Quartet, the Windsor Quartet, and Ancora have performed his works as well. He is the recipient of Guggenheim, NEA, Massachusetts Artists Foundation, and MacDowell Fellowships. His opera Life is a Dream won a top prize in the Rockefeller Foundation-New England Conservatory Opera Competition and Apollo and Daphne Variations won the New England Composers Orchestra Competition for readings of new works.

In October, 1989, Mr. Spratlan toured widely in Russia and Armenia as a guest of the Soviet Composers' Union. Toccapsody, for solo piano, and Apollo and Daphne Variationswere premiered on this tour and Penelope's Knees was presented in Moscow's Rachmaninoff Hall under Emin Khatchatourian. Recent projects include the world premiere of In Memoriam, for five soloists, double chorus, and orchestra, a work which honors the victims of conquest, focusing on the Mayans and their lineage; the December, 1993, release of a CD of Night Music, for violin, clarinet, and percussion on the Gasparo label; the American premiere and two additional performances of Apollo and Daphne Variations by the Florida Orchestra under Jahja Lin in May, 1994; a commission from the Mohawk Trail Concerts for a setting of Richard Wilbur's A Barred Owl, for baritone, flute, bass clarinet, violin, cello and piano, premiered in July, 1994; the premiere of Concertino for violin and chamber ensemble in April, 1994; and the premiere on April 6, 1996, ofPsalm 42, commissioned by the soprano Judith Jones-Gale.

In August 1997, Mr. Spratlan was awarded a $15,000 commission by the Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress for the composition of a new work to be premiered by the Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble in Boston. Vocalise with Duck for soprano and chamber ensemble was commissioned by the New York Ensemble Sequitur and was premiered at The Knitting Factory in New York on January 10 and 12, 1999. On January 28 (Amherst) and 30 (Boston), 2000, Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble presented two world premieres, Sojourner for ten instruments, The Koussevitzky commission, and Life Is a Dream, opera in three acts (Act II, concert version). Soloists in these performances included John Cheek and Allan Glassman of the Metropolitan Opera and Christina Bouras of Glimmerglass and New York City Opera.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Music in 2000:

Donald Martino

Premiered on April 19, 1999 at Merkin Concert Hall, New York City

John Zorn

Premiered on February 17, 2000 at the Society for Ethical Culture, New York City

The Jury

Gunther Schuller(chair )*

composer-conductor

David Hamilton

doctoral faculty

Wayne Peterson*

composer, professor emeritus

Melinda Wagner*

composer

Yehudi Wyner*

Walter Neumburg Professor of Composition

Winners in Music

Melinda Wagner

Premiered on May 30, 1998 by the Westchester Philharmonic in Purchase, New York, and commissioned by that orchestra for Paul Lustig Dunkel.

Aaron Jay Kernis

Premiered on January 10, 1998, at Merkin Concert Hall, New York City, by The Lark Quartet.

Wynton Marsalis

Premiered on January 28, 1997 at Woolsey Hall, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.

George Walker

Premiered on February 1, 1996, in Boston by the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and was commissioned by that orchestra.

2000 Prize Winners

George Dohrmann

For his determined reporting, despite negative reader reaction, that revealed academic fraud in the men's basketball program at the University of Minnesota.