 |

Front Page

Welcome

Biography

Compositions

Compositions Performed

New Music Director

Ensemble Conductor

Piano Performance

Discography

More Photos


|
 |
 |

Welcome
Welcome to my website. In these pages, I mean to introduce aspects of my professional life as a musician - as a composer, pianist and conductor. I have provided audio files and sample scores of my compositions written over the past 15 years, each of which you are welcome to download.

My work as a composer can be likened to that of an architect -- an artist whose creative efforts begin with a vision, but are brought to life with materials that serve functional and formal purposes. Just as buildings are designed to be pleasant, inviting and engaging to the eye, so it is with music, which is successful in part owing to the beauty of its melodies, its rhythms, and other musical features -- all of which are assembled in such a way as to attract the ear. What is more, a successful musical composition will transport the listener beyond their daily concerns.

I respond personally to a wide range of composers: from Machaut to Boulez and the current group of French spectralists; from Bach, the great contrapuntalist and advocate of contemporaneous styles, to the current group of Austrian composers centered in Graz. I am also drawn to the rich tradition of Russian music, and especially to the music of Rachmaninoff, and contemporary Russian composers living in Moscow. Further, I revere the Americans Ives and Feldman. I am also sensitive to the great impact our folk music and jazz continues to exert in many countries.

While such tastes may seem ecumenical, by me, there is one crucial and critical measure for all music: does it pass the "goose-pimple" test? has it moved us emotionally? have we allowed ourselves to get lost in its beauty, and to forget our concerns, in a state where time is suspended? In music, in other words, we must open ourselves to new experiences, and as a champion of contemporary music, I find it imperative to ask such real and penetrating questions of our creative artists.

I am a modernist, but only in the broadest of terms -- for modernism provides freedom and liberty to work as an individual. At the same time, we have an obligation to know historical models if we are to make informed decisions, for it is in the retooling of "old" ideas that "the new" emerges.

As a teacher of young composers, I serve as a role model and as a guide, ensuring that students have grappled with the following issues -- issues that serve as my mantra: "know your audience," and "know what you are trying to say."

I believe that all music derives from the concept of "dialogue," be it among the smallest details of the inherent qualities of sound -- the interval, say, as the relationship between two pitches -- to the interaction between a composer and a performer. The latter association is particularly essential in a composer's development, for one taps into a wealth of musical experiences when working with performers. And the relationship is reciprocal, for performers learn to reconsider performing traditions by gaining insight into a composer's thought processes. The result of these relationships is a growing body of repertoire that represents and mirrors our lived sets of experiences.

|
|
 |



David Gompper with Ursula Vaughan Williams, 2003



Visiting Phyllis Sellick Christmas 2004



David Gompper with the director of the Moscow Autumn series, Igor Golubev, 2005
|
 |