Harold Meltzer is an Americancomposer. Harold is inspired by a wide variety of stimuli, from architectural spaces to postmodern fairy tales and messages inscribed in fortune cookies. In Fanfare Magazine, Robert Carl commented that he “seems to write pieces of scrupulous craft and exceptional freshness, which makes each seem like an important contribution.” The first recording devoted to his music, released in 2010 by Naxos on its American Classics label, was named one of the CDs of the year in The New York Times and in Fanfare; new all-Meltzer recordings will issue from Open G Records, Bridge Records, and BMOP/Sound. A Pulitzer Prize Finalist in 2009 for his sextet Brion, Meltzer has been awarded the Rome Prize, the Barlow Prize;, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and both the Arts and Letters Award in Music and the Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Among his recent works are Vision Machine, commissioned by NewMusicUSA for the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra; Bride of the Island, a song cycle to poems of Ted Hughes commissioned by the Minnesota Commissioning Club for tenor Paul Appleby and pianist Natalia Katyukova; Piano Quartet ; commissioned by the Boston Chamber Music Society; Variations on a Summer Day, a song cycle to the Wallace Stevens poem for mezzo-soprano and nine instruments commissioned by the Fromm Foundation for Mary Nessinger and the Maverick Concerts and its director, Alexander Platt; In Full Sail, commissioned by Piano Spheres for Nadia Shpachenko; and Fortunes, commissioned by the Roger Shapiro Fund for the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Among his more often performed chamber works are Sindbad, a chamber music theater work for narrator and piano trio, commissioned by Meet The Composer for the Peabody Trio and actor Walter Van Dyk; Aqua, a string quartet commissioned through the award of the Barlow Prize in 2008 for the Avalon, Lydian, and Pacifica Quartets; and Kreisleriana, commissioned by the Library of Congress for violinist Miranda Cuckson and pianist Blair McMillen. Current projects include a piano concerto commissioned by Brandon Fradd for the Boston Modern Orchestra Project and songs for mezzo-soprano Abigail Fischer commissioned by the Brooklyn Art Song Society. Founder and co-director for fifteen years of the new music ensemble Sequitur, he lives with his wife and two children in the East Village of Manhattan. He has taught at Amherst and Vassar Colleges, and teaches currently at the Setnor School of Music at Syracuse University.
Exiles for baritone, flute, clarinet, violin, and cello
Two Songs from Silas Marner for soprano and cello
Rumors for solo flutes
Recordings
Brion, Sindbad, Exiles, and Two Songs from Silas Marner, on Naxos American Classics, 2010
Toccatas on Sono Luminus, 2014
Virginal on Albany Records, 2002
Rumors on Albany Records, 2002
forthcoming recording on Bridge Records
forthcoming recording on BMOP/Sound
Critical reception
Meltzer’s 2010 Naxos disc was named one of the best recordings of the year in The New York Times and named to Fanfare Magazine’s annual Want List and American Record Guide’s Critics Choice List in 2011. In Fanfare, the composer and critic Robert Carl wrote that Meltzer “seems to write pieces of scrupulous craft and exceptional freshness, which makes each seem like an important contribution. Part of the trick is that Meltzer needs to find a unique take on any piece, and in particular its sound world, before he can write.” Carl described Meltzer’s style as tending “to feature brightly contrasted colors that simultaneously aren’t flashy. Rather, they provide delight in their well-calibrated contrasts one to another. The little low-register piccolo lick at the start of the 2008 Brion is an example—I still can’t get it out of my head a few days later. Another aspect I hear throughout is an ability to take simple, clear ideas and enliven them by putting them in a new context. Sometimes this is the aforementioned mix of colors. At other times it’s more complex modernist textures. At still others it’s a dreamlike archaism; one feels as though one is hearing music from a distant time through a glass darkly. He’s also unafraid of repetition, but also not obsessive, as in some Minimalist musics. And finally, there’s a lovely recurrent danciness." In a 2011 interview, The New York Times chief music Anthony Tommasini describes himself as a “weighty supporter” of three artists in particular: composer Stephen Hartke, pianist Leif Ove Andsnes, and Meltzer.