Erling Wold

Last updated
Erling Wold
Ewoldrutter.jpg
Portrait of Erling Wold, painted by Lynne Rutter
Background information
Born (1958-01-30) January 30, 1958 (age 67)
Burbank, California, United States
Genres Postminimalism, Classical, Contemporary classical
Occupation(s)Composer, Engineer
Instrument(s) Piano, Guitar
Years active1976–present
Labels Table of the Elements, MinMax, Spooky Pooch
Spouse(s)Lynn Murdock, Lynne Rutter
Website www.erlingwold.com

Erling Wold (born January 30, 1958, in Burbank, California) is a San Francisco-based composer of opera and contemporary classical music. [1] He is best known for his later chamber operas, and his early experiments as a microtonalist.

Contents

Life

Wold was born into a religious family, the son of Erling Henry Wold Sr, a Lutheran minister and Margaret Barth Wold, an author of inspirational books and plays. He was given piano lessons at an early age but showed little interest in music until his teen years, when he became infatuated, teaching himself to play a variety of instruments and embracing the music of many of the modernist composers. It was also at this point that he started to write music. He first studied composition at Occidental College with Robert Gross where he was awarded the Elinor Remick Warren Composition Award in 1978. Later teachers included Gerard Grisey, Andrew Imbrie and John Chowning at the University of California, Berkeley and Stanford University, where he primarily studied computer music, gaining a facility with the mathematics of signal processing. While at Berkeley, he married Lynn Murdock, for whom he wrote a number of his early works. In 1985, they had a son, Duncan Renaldo Wold. [2] [3] He married the painter Lynne Rutter in 2010. [4]

After earning his doctorate at Berkeley in 1987, he went to work for Yamaha Music Technologies, writing a number of patents in music synthesis and processing. During this period, most of his music was electronic, and he was an early advocate of the Synclavier. His work at this time with a number of San Francisco performance artists and dancers led to his continuing interest in theater. After leaving Yamaha in 1992, he cofounded Muscle Fish, an audio and music software company, later acquired by Audible Magic. [5] By 1995 he had migrated back to writing instrumental music and wrote his first chamber opera based on Max Ernst's collage novel A Little Girl Dreams of Taking the Veil, a critical and popular success which has been revived several times, including performances by the Paul Dresher Ensemble and by the Klagenfurter ensemble. The success of the production led to a residency at ODC Theater in San Francisco, where he premiered his opera Queer based on William S. Burroughs' early autobiographical novel of the same name in 2001 and Sub Pontio Pilato in 2003. There have been few purely musical works during this period, but some notable exceptions are Close, played by Relâche and others, the piano pieces Albrechts Fluegel, premiered by Finnish pianist Marja Mutru, and Veracity. [6] He has had a close relationship with several theaters in Austria, where a number of his recent operas have been premiered, including Uksus, Rattensturm and Daphnes Garten.

Although he rejected the Christian religion in his teens, many of his operatic works deal with religious themes. A Little Girl Dreams of Taking the Veil is a surrealistic dream of young girl about to enter a convent, Sub Pontio Pilato is an epic historical fantasy on the death and resurrection of Pontius Pilate, and Certitude and Joy tells the story of a young woman who kills her three children on orders from God. His Mass named for Notker the Stammerer, commissioned by the Cathedral of St Gall is a straightforward setting of the liturgy along with several Psalms.

His earliest music was atonal and arrhythmic, but the influences of just intonation and the music of the minimalists led to the bulk of his music being composed in a variety of tonal genres. He was attracted by the theater and much of his music is either directly dramatic or is based on dramatic rather than purely musical structures. [7] Wold is an eclectic composer who has also been called "the Eric Satie of Berkeley surrealist/minimalist electro-art rock" by the Village Voice. [8]

He composed the soundtracks for a number of films by the independent film director Jon Jost [9] [10] [11] as well as Blake Eckard. [12]

There are a number of CD and DVD releases of Wold's music. He has published artistic and technical articles in several publications, including the Leonardo Music Journal, IEEE MultiMedia, [13] IEEE Signal Processing, [14] Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, SIGGRAPH, the Just Intonation Network Journal 1/1, IEEE Transactions on Computers and several books. [15]

He is the Executive Director of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra. [16]

Discography

Works

Chamber Opera

Dance

Orchestra

Choral

Chamber

Film

Songs

References

  1. Kalvos and Damien website
  2. Interview on usoperaweb, Spring 2003
  3. aworks blog
  4. "Mark Alburger, 2010: May 22 - Together". 22 May 2010.
  5. "Audible Magic Applies Patented Technology to Provide Audio Identification for Streaming Media". 16 October 2000.
  6. Retrospective archived on official website
  7. 21st Century Music, September 2001, p. 1
  8. Village Voice, August 6, 1991 (Vol. XXXVI No. 32, p. 77)
  9. Sure Fire Archived 2010-06-26 at the Wayback Machine , Jon Jost website
  10. The Bed You Sleep In Archived 2010-06-26 at the Wayback Machine , Jon Jost website
  11. La Lunga Ombra Archived 2010-06-26 at the Wayback Machine , Jon Jost website
  12. "BUBBA MOON FACE (Blake Eckard, 2011)". 20 November 2011.
  13. "IEEE MultiMedia Paper". Archived from the original on 2011-08-04. Retrieved 2012-02-13.
  14. "How to Design a Cheap Music Detection System Using a Simple Multilayer Perceptron With Temporal Integration".
  15. Erling Wold biography
  16. SFCCO staff
  17. Kosman, Joshua (24 March 2012). "'Certitude and Joy' review: Modern passion play". Sfgate.
  18. Blinde Liebe on YouTube
  19. "OPERA America - New Works Directory". Archived from the original on 2010-05-07.
  20. Kosman, Joshua (14 April 2001). "'Queer' Wanders About in a Lustful, Dreamy State". Sfgate.
  21. "Surrealist Ernst Novel Inspires Dreamy Opera". Sfgate. 28 January 1995.
  22. Ode an den scheuen Mönch
  23. La Lunga Ombra
  24. La Lunga Ombra Archived 2012-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
  25. Homecoming Archived 2012-02-06 at the Wayback Machine
  26. nytimes.com The Bed You SLeep In
  27. imdb.com Sure Fire