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Sounds for all Seasons

Faculty & Staff > Composition > Daniel Weymouth


Daniel Weymouth, Associate Professor and Chair;
Composition and Theory,
Director of the Computer Music Studios;
Co-Director of the Laboratory for Technology in the Arts
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, 1992
Email Daniel Weymouth at: Daniel.Weymouth[at]stonybrook.edu


Daniel WeymouthComposer/conductor Daniel Weymouth writes for a wide array of ensembles, from standard orchestra to computer-interactive "instruments." He has studied and worked at several of the world's leading computer-music facilities, including Stanford's CCRMA, Pierre Boulez's IRCAM and Iannis Xenakis' CEMAMu (both in Paris). His compositions have been performed throughout Europe, Canada and the United States and appear on the SEAMUS and New World Record labels as well as MIT Press (sound and programming excerpted on CD-ROM). Commissions have come from numerous ensembles and individual performers; grants from Meet the Composer and ASCAP. Weymouth is a current member of the Stony Brook Academy of Scholar Teachers. A ten-year stint as an itinerant musician in popular genres may have something to do with his fascination with gadgets, as well as the kinetic and compact nature of much of his music, both acoustic and electronic.

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1984-1985, Université de Paris I, Paris, France. Course in probability theory and music, Iannis Xenakis, Instructor.

Interests:
Composition
Electronic and computer music
Acoustics
Aesthetics

Recordings:
Rare Events (1994) bass clarinet and computer-altered tape, on Spasm, New World Records CD, 1996.

Rare Events (1994) bass clarinet and computer-altered tape, on Music from SEAMUS V CD, Spring 1996

Another Violin (1992/3) MIDI violin and computer-interactive electronics, on Music from SEAMUS IV CD, 1995.

This Time, This (1991) MIDI violin and computer-interactive electronics
Excerpt and programming included on CD-ROM for Interactive Music Systems: Machine Listening and
Composing, by Robert Rowe, MIT Press, 1992.

Published Works:
Rare Events (1994) bass clarinet and computer-altered tape, JOMAR Press, 1995.

Recent Compositions and Premieres:
in no particular time at all (1996) for Piano Trio, Commissioned by the Guild Trio.
Guild Trio, Science and Arts Series, Health Sciences Center, SUNY Stony Brook, 5 May, 1996.

everything leaves a trace (1995) for Chamber Orchestra, Commissioned by the Stony Brook Contemporary Chamber Players.
Stony Brook Contemporary Chamber Players, Miller Theater, NYC, 4 May, 1995.
Waiting to Return (1994) MIDI flute, bass clarinet and computer-controlled electronics
Commissioned for the Ensemble Neue Music Lüneburg/City of Lüneburg 1000-year Jubilee.
Lüneburge, Germany, 25 November, 1994.
Rare Events (1994) Bass clarinet and computer-generated tape
Commissioned by Michael Lowenstern, bass clarinet.
Michael Lowenstern, bass clarinet. ICS (International Clarinet Society) Convention, DePaul University, Chicago, 14 July, 1994.

Selected Recent Performances
in no particular time at all: Piano Trio
Guild Trio, Science and Arts Series, Health Sciences Center, SUNY Stony Brook, 5 May, 1996.
Clear: cello, piano, and trio (flute/alto flute, clarinet, and violin)
Synchrnoia Ensemble, St. Louis, 5 May, 1996 [Postponed to Spring 97 due to performer injury].
Pocket Music: 9-12 cassette recorders and performers
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 23 November, 1996.
UMKC Conservatory of Music, 27 April, 1996.
Rare Events: bass clarinet and computer generated tape
Tom Aber, bass clarinet, UMKC Conservatory of Music, 27 April, 1996.